Detection of Cytosolic Shigella flexneri via a C-Terminal Triple-Arginine Motif of GBP1 Inhibits Actin-Based Motility

2017 
Dynamin-like guanylate binding proteins (GBPs) are gamma interferon (IFNgamma)-inducible host defense proteins that can associate with cytosol-invading bacterial pathogens. Mouse GBPs promote the lytic destruction of targeted bacteria in the host cell cytosol but the antimicrobial function of human GBPs and the mechanism by which these proteins associate with cytosolic bacteria are poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that human GBP1 is unique amongst the seven human GBP paralogs in its ability to associate with at least two cytosolic Gram-negative bacteria, Burkholderia thailandensis and Shigella flexneri. Rough lipopolysaccharide (LPS) mutants of S. flexneri co-localize with GBP1 less frequently than wildtype S. flexneri, suggesting that host recognition of O-antigen promotes GBP1 targeting to Gram-negative bacteria. The targeting of GBP1 to cytosolic bacteria, via a unique triple-arginine motif present in its C-terminus, promotes the co-recruitment of four additional GBP paralogs (GBP2, GBP3, GBP4 and GBP6). GBP1-decorated Shigella replicate but fail to form actin tails leading to their intracellular aggregation. Consequentially, wildtype but not the triple-arginine GBP1 mutant restricts S. flexneri cell-to-cell spread. Furthermore, human-adapted S. flexneri, through the action of one its secreted effectors, IpaH9.8, is more resistant to GBP1 targeting than the non-human-adapted bacillus B. thailandensis. These studies reveal that human GBP1 uniquely functions as an intracellular glue trap inhibiting the cytosolic movement of normally actin-propelled Gram-negative bacteria. In response to this powerful human defense program S. flexneri has evolved an effective counter-defense to restrict GBP1 recruitment.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    62
    References
    15
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []