Combs David J, Lu Zhe
Department of Physiology, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104.
Department of Physiology, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104
J Gen Physiol. 2015 Aug;146(2):161-72. doi: 10.1085/jgp.201511359.
Infections caused by certain bacteria including Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis provoke inflammatory responses characterized by the formation of granulomas with necrotic foci-so-called caseous necrosis. The granulomas of infected animals show prominent infiltration by T lymphocytes, and T cell depletion increases host mortality. Notorious zoonotic C. pseudotuberculosis secretes sphingomyelinase (SMase) D, a phospholipase that cleaves off the choline moiety of sphingomyelin, a phospholipid found primarily in the outer leaflet of host cell plasma membranes. Experimental C. pseudotuberculosis strains that lack SMase D are markedly less infectious and unable to spread in hosts, indicating that this enzyme is a crucial virulence factor for sustaining the caseous lymphadenitis infections caused by this microbe. However, the molecular mechanism by which SMase D helps bacteria evade the host's immune response remains unknown. Here, we find that SMase D inhibits store-operated Ca(2+) entry (SOCE) in human T cells and lowers the production of the SOCE-dependent cytokines interleukin-2, which is critical for T cell growth, proliferation, and differentiation, and tumor necrosis factor α, which is crucial for the formation and maintenance of granulomas in microbial infections. SMase D inhibits SOCE through a previously unknown mechanism, namely, suppression of Orai1 current, rather than through altering gating of voltage-gated K(+) channels. This finding suggests that, whereas certain genetic mutations abolish Orai1 activity causing severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID), bacteria have the ability to suppress Orai1 activity with SMase D to create an acquired, chronic SCID-like condition that allows persistent infection. Thus, in an example of how virulence factors can disrupt key membrane protein function by targeting phospholipids in host cell membranes, our study has uncovered a novel molecular mechanism that bacteria can use to thwart host immunity.
由某些细菌引起的感染,包括结核分枝杆菌和伪结核棒状杆菌,会引发炎症反应,其特征是形成带有坏死灶的肉芽肿,即所谓的干酪样坏死。受感染动物的肉芽肿显示有T淋巴细胞的显著浸润,而T细胞耗竭会增加宿主死亡率。臭名昭著的人畜共患伪结核棒状杆菌分泌鞘磷脂酶(SMase)D,这是一种磷脂酶,可切割鞘磷脂的胆碱部分,鞘磷脂是一种主要存在于宿主细胞质膜外小叶的磷脂。缺乏SMase D的实验性伪结核棒状杆菌菌株的传染性明显降低,且无法在宿主体内传播,这表明该酶是维持这种微生物引起的干酪样淋巴结炎感染的关键毒力因子。然而,SMase D帮助细菌逃避宿主免疫反应的分子机制仍然未知。在这里,我们发现SMase D抑制人T细胞中的储存式钙(Ca2+)内流(SOCE),并降低SOCE依赖性细胞因子白细胞介素-2的产生,白细胞介素-2对T细胞生长、增殖和分化至关重要,以及肿瘤坏死因子α的产生,肿瘤坏死因子α对微生物感染中肉芽肿的形成和维持至关重要。SMase D通过一种以前未知的机制抑制SOCE,即抑制Orai1电流,而不是通过改变电压门控钾通道的门控。这一发现表明,虽然某些基因突变会消除Orai1活性,导致严重联合免疫缺陷(SCID),但细菌有能力用SMase D抑制Orai1活性,从而产生一种获得性的、慢性SCID样病症,使感染得以持续。因此,在一个毒力因子如何通过靶向宿主细胞膜中的磷脂来破坏关键膜蛋白功能的例子中,我们的研究揭示了细菌可用来挫败宿主免疫的一种新分子机制。