Microbial Pathogenicity

Absence of O antigen suppresses Shigella flexneri IcsA autochaperone region mutations

  • Discipline of Microbiology and Immunology, School of Molecular and Biomedical Science, University of Adelaide, Adelaide 5005, Australia
  • Correspondence
    Renato Morona renato.morona{at}adelaide.edu.au
  • Microbiology 2012; 158(Pt 11):2835–2850 · https://doi.org/10.1099/mic.0.062471-0

    View at publisher PubMed

    Abstract

    The Shigella flexneri IcsA (VirG) protein is a polarly distributed autotransporter protein. IcsA functions as a virulence factor by interacting with the host actin regulatory protein N-WASP, which in turn activates the Arp2/3 complex, initiating actin polymerization. Formation of F-actin comet tails allows bacterial cell-to-cell spreading. Although various accessory proteins such as periplasmic chaperones and the β-barrel assembly machine (BAM) complex have been shown to be involved in the export of IcsA, the IcsA translocation mechanism remains to be fully elucidated. A putative autochaperone (AC) region (amino acids 634–735) located at the C-terminal end of the IcsA passenger domain, which forms part of the self-associating autotransporter (SAAT) domain, has been suggested to be required for IcsA biogenesis, as well as for N-WASP recruitment, based on mutagenesis studies. IcsAi proteins with linker insertion mutations within the AC region have a significant reduction in production and are defective in N-WASP recruitment when expressed in smooth LPS (S-LPS) S. flexneri. In this study, we have found that the LPS O antigen plays a role in IcsAi production based on the use of an rmlD (rfbD) mutant having rough LPS (R-LPS) and a novel assay in which O antigen is depleted using tunicamycin treatment and then regenerated. In addition, we have identified a new N-WASP binding/interaction site within the IcsA AC region.

    • Two supplementary tables and three supplementary figures, with a supplementary reference, are available with the online version of this paper.

    • Edited by: F. Sargent

    Abbreviations:
    AT
    autotransporter
    DSP
    dithiobis[succinimidyl propionate]
    IF
    immunofluorescence
    OM
    outer membrane
    OMP
    outer-membrane protein
    PMBN
    polymyxin B nonapeptide
    R-LPS
    rough LPS
    SAAT
    self-associating autotransporter
    S-LPS
    smooth LPS
    WT
    wild-type