Zou Jun, Shankar Nathan
Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA.
Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA
Infect Immun. 2014 Dec;82(12):5132-42. doi: 10.1128/IAI.02426-14. Epub 2014 Sep 29.
Apoptosis is an intrinsic immune defense mechanism in the host response to microbial infection. Not surprisingly, many pathogens have evolved various strategies to manipulate this important pathway to benefit their own survival and dissemination in the host during infection. To our knowledge, no attempts have been made to explore the host cell survival signals modulated by the bacterium Enterococcus faecalis. Here, we show for the first time that during early stages of infection, internalized enterococci can prevent host cell (RAW264.7 cells, primary macrophages, and mouse embryonic fibroblasts [MEFs]) apoptosis induced by a wide spectrum of proapoptotic stimuli. Activation of caspase 3 and cleavage of the caspase 3 substrate poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase were inhibited in E. faecalis-infected cells, indicating that E. faecalis protects macrophages from apoptosis by inhibiting caspase 3 activation. This antiapoptotic activity in E. faecalis-infected cells was dependent on the activation of the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)/Akt signaling pathway, which resulted in the increased expression of the antiapoptotic factor Bcl-2 and decreased expression of the proapoptotic factor Bax. Further analysis revealed that active E. faecalis physiology was important for inhibition of host cell apoptosis, and this feature seemed to be a strain-independent trait among E. faecalis isolates. Employing a mouse peritonitis model, we also determined that cells collected from the peritoneal lavage fluid of E. faecalis-infected mice showed reduced levels of apoptosis compared to cells from uninfected mice. These results show early modulation of apoptosis during infection and have important implications for enterococcal pathogenesis.
细胞凋亡是宿主对微生物感染作出反应时的一种内在免疫防御机制。不足为奇的是,许多病原体已进化出各种策略来操纵这一重要途径,以利于它们在感染期间于宿主体内的存活和传播。据我们所知,尚未有人尝试探索粪肠球菌调节的宿主细胞存活信号。在此,我们首次表明,在感染早期,内化的肠球菌可预防多种促凋亡刺激诱导的宿主细胞(RAW264.7细胞、原代巨噬细胞和小鼠胚胎成纤维细胞[MEF])凋亡。在粪肠球菌感染的细胞中,半胱天冬酶3的激活以及半胱天冬酶3底物聚(ADP-核糖)聚合酶的裂解受到抑制,这表明粪肠球菌通过抑制半胱天冬酶3的激活来保护巨噬细胞免于凋亡。粪肠球菌感染细胞中的这种抗凋亡活性依赖于磷脂酰肌醇3-激酶(PI3K)/Akt信号通路的激活,这导致抗凋亡因子Bcl-2的表达增加,促凋亡因子Bax的表达减少。进一步分析表明,活跃的粪肠球菌生理状态对于抑制宿主细胞凋亡很重要,并且这一特征似乎是粪肠球菌分离株中不依赖菌株的特性。利用小鼠腹膜炎模型,我们还确定,与未感染小鼠的细胞相比,从粪肠球菌感染小鼠的腹腔灌洗液中收集的细胞凋亡水平降低。这些结果显示了感染期间细胞凋亡的早期调节,并且对肠球菌的发病机制具有重要意义。