Salomon Dor, Sessa Guido
Department of Plant Sciences, Tel-Aviv University.
J Vis Exp. 2010 Mar 30(37):1865. doi: 10.3791/1865.
Many Gram-negative pathogenic bacteria use a type III secretion system to translocate a suite of effector proteins into the cytosol of host cells. Within the cell, type III effectors subvert host cellular processes to suppress immune responses and promote pathogen growth. Numerous type III effectors of plant and animal bacterial pathogens have been identified to date, yet only a few of them are well characterized. Understanding the functions of these effectors has been undermined by a combination of functional redundancy in the effector repertoire of a given bacterial strain, the subtle effects that they may exert to increase virulence, roles that are possibly specific to certain infection stages, and difficulties in genetically manipulating certain pathogens. Expression of type III effectors in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae may allow circumventing these limitations and aid to the functional characterization of effector proteins. Because type III effectors often target cellular processes that are conserved between yeast and other eukaryotes, their expression in yeast may result in growth inhibition phenotypes that can be exploited to elucidate effector functions and targets. Additional advantages to using yeast for functional studies of bacterial effectors include their genetic tractability, information on predicted functions of the vast majority of their ORFs, and availability of numerous tools and resources for both genome-wide and small-scale experiments. Here we discuss critical factors for designing a yeast system for the expression of bacterial type III effector proteins. These include an appropriate promoter for driving expression of the effector gene(s) of interest, the copy number of the effector gene, the epitope tag used to verify protein expression, and the yeast strain. We present procedures to induce expression of effectors in yeast and to verify their expression by immunoblotting. In addition, we describe a spotting assay on agar plates for the identification of effector-induced growth inhibition phenotypes. The use of this protocol may be extended to the study of pathogenicity factors delivered into the host cell by any pathogen and translocation mechanism.
许多革兰氏阴性病原菌利用III型分泌系统将一系列效应蛋白转运到宿主细胞的胞质溶胶中。在细胞内,III型效应蛋白会破坏宿主细胞的正常生理过程,以抑制免疫反应并促进病原体生长。迄今为止,已鉴定出许多动植物细菌病原体的III型效应蛋白,但其中只有少数得到了充分的表征。由于给定细菌菌株的效应蛋白库中存在功能冗余、它们增加毒力的作用可能很微妙、作用可能特定于某些感染阶段以及对某些病原体进行基因操作存在困难等多种因素,这些效应蛋白的功能研究受到了阻碍。在出芽酵母酿酒酵母中表达III型效应蛋白可能有助于克服这些限制,并有助于对效应蛋白进行功能表征。由于III型效应蛋白通常靶向酵母和其他真核生物之间保守的细胞过程,它们在酵母中的表达可能会导致生长抑制表型,可利用这些表型来阐明效应蛋白的功能和靶点。使用酵母对细菌效应蛋白进行功能研究的其他优势包括它们的遗传易处理性、绝大多数开放阅读框的预测功能信息,以及用于全基因组和小规模实验的大量工具和资源。在这里,我们讨论设计用于表达细菌III型效应蛋白的酵母系统的关键因素。这些因素包括用于驱动感兴趣的效应基因表达的合适启动子、效应基因的拷贝数、用于验证蛋白表达的表位标签以及酵母菌株。我们介绍了在酵母中诱导效应蛋白表达并通过免疫印迹验证其表达的方法。此外,我们描述了一种在琼脂平板上进行的点样分析,用于鉴定效应蛋白诱导的生长抑制表型。该方案的应用可扩展到对任何病原体通过任何转运机制递送到宿主细胞中的致病因子的研究。