Department of Infection Biology, Interfaculty Institute for Microbiology and Infection Medicine Tübingen (IMIT), University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany.
Electron-Microscopy, Department of Dermatology, University Hospital Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany.
mBio. 2018 Nov 20;9(6):e01851-18. doi: 10.1128/mBio.01851-18.
The innate immune system uses Toll-like receptor (TLR) 2 to detect conserved bacterial lipoproteins of invading pathogens. The lipid anchor attaches lipoproteins to the cytoplasmic membrane and prevents their release from the bacterial cell envelope. How bacteria release lipoproteins and how these molecules reach TLR2 remain unknown. has been described to liberate membrane vesicles. The composition, mode of release, and relevance for microbe-host interaction of such membrane vesicles have remained ambiguous. We recently reported that can release lipoproteins only when surfactant-like small peptides, the phenol-soluble modulins (PSMs), are expressed. Here we demonstrate that PSM peptides promote the release of membrane vesicles from the cytoplasmic membrane of via an increase in membrane fluidity, and we provide evidence that the bacterial turgor is the driving force for vesicle budding under hypotonic osmotic conditions. Intriguingly, the majority of lipoproteins are released by as components of membrane vesicles, and this process depends on surfactant-like molecules such as PSMs. Vesicle disruption at high detergent concentrations promotes the capacity of lipoproteins to activate TLR2. These results reveal that vesicle release by bacterium-derived surfactants is required for TLR2-mediated inflammation. Our study highlights the roles of surfactant-like molecules in bacterial inflammation with important implications for the prevention and therapy of inflammatory disorders. It describes a potential pathway for the transfer of hydrophobic bacterial lipoproteins, the major TLR2 agonists, from the cytoplasmic membrane of Gram-positive bacteria to the TLR2 receptor at the surface of host cells. Moreover, our study reveals a molecular mechanism that explains how cytoplasmic and membrane-embedded bacterial proteins can be released by bacterial cells without using any of the typical protein secretion routes, thereby contributing to our understanding of the processes used by bacteria to communicate with host organisms and the environment.
天然免疫系统利用 Toll 样受体 (TLR) 2 来检测入侵病原体的保守细菌脂蛋白。脂质锚将脂蛋白固定在细胞质膜上,并防止它们从细菌细胞外膜释放。细菌如何释放脂蛋白以及这些分子如何到达 TLR2 仍然未知。已经描述了释放膜泡。这些膜泡的组成、释放方式以及与微生物-宿主相互作用的相关性仍然不清楚。我们最近报道,只有在表达表面活性剂样小肽即酚可溶性调节素 (PSM) 时, 才能释放脂蛋白。在这里,我们证明 PSM 肽通过增加膜流动性促进 从细胞质膜释放膜泡,并且我们提供了证据表明细菌膨压是在低渗渗透压条件下囊泡出芽的驱动力。有趣的是,大多数脂蛋白都是作为膜泡的组成部分由 释放的,并且这个过程依赖于表面活性剂样分子,如 PSM。在高去污剂浓度下破坏囊泡会促进脂蛋白激活 TLR2 的能力。这些结果表明,由细菌衍生的表面活性剂引起的囊泡释放是 TLR2 介导的炎症所必需的。我们的研究强调了表面活性剂样分子在细菌炎症中的作用,这对炎症性疾病的预防和治疗具有重要意义。它描述了一种潜在的途径,用于将疏水性细菌脂蛋白(主要 TLR2 激动剂)从革兰氏阳性菌的细胞质膜转移到宿主细胞表面的 TLR2 受体。此外,我们的研究揭示了一种分子机制,解释了细胞质和膜嵌入式细菌蛋白如何在不使用任何典型的蛋白质分泌途径的情况下被细菌细胞释放,从而有助于我们理解细菌用于与宿主生物和环境进行通信的过程。