Center for Molecular Biology of Inflammation (ZMBE), Institute of Infectiology, University of Muenster, Münster, Germany.
National Institute of Public Health, Reference Laboratory for E. coli and Shigellae, Prague, Czechia.
Front Cell Infect Microbiol. 2020 Mar 6;10:91. doi: 10.3389/fcimb.2020.00091. eCollection 2020.
Outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) are nanoscale proteoliposomes secreted from the cell envelope of all Gram-negative bacteria. Originally considered as an artifact of the cell wall, OMVs are now recognized as a general secretion system, which serves to improve the fitness of bacteria and facilitate bacterial interactions in polymicrobial communities as well as interactions between the microbe and the host. In general, OMVs are released in increased amounts from pathogenic bacteria and have been found to harbor much of the contents of the parental bacterium. They mainly encompass components of the outer membrane and the periplasm including various virulence factors such as toxins, adhesins, and immunomodulatory molecules. Numerous studies have clearly shown that the delivery of toxins and other virulence factors via OMVs essentially influences their interactions with host cells. Here, we review the OMV-mediated intracellular deployment of toxins and other virulence factors with a special focus on intestinal pathogenic . Especially, OMVs ubiquitously produced and secreted by enterohemorrhagic (EHEC) appear as a highly advanced mechanism for secretion and simultaneous, coordinated and direct delivery of bacterial virulence factors into host cells. OMV-associated virulence factors are not only stabilized by the association with OMVs, but can also often target previously unknown target structures and perform novel activities. The toxins are released by OMVs in their active forms and are transported via cell sorting processes to their specific cell compartments, where they can develop their detrimental effects. OMVs can be considered as bacterial "long distance weapons" that attack host tissues and help bacterial pathogens to establish the colonization of their biological niche(s), impair host cell function, and modulate the defense of the host. Thus, OMVs contribute significantly to the virulence of the pathogenic bacteria.
外膜囊泡(OMVs)是所有革兰氏阴性菌的细胞包膜分泌的纳米级脂蛋白体。最初被认为是细胞壁的一种假象,现在已被认为是一种普遍的分泌系统,有助于提高细菌的适应性,并促进多微生物群落中细菌的相互作用以及微生物与宿主之间的相互作用。一般来说,致病性细菌会大量释放 OMVs,并被发现含有大量母菌的内容物。它们主要包含外膜和周质的成分,包括各种毒力因子,如毒素、粘附素和免疫调节分子。大量研究清楚地表明,通过 OMVs 输送毒素和其他毒力因子,实质上会影响它们与宿主细胞的相互作用。在这里,我们综述了 OMV 介导的毒素和其他毒力因子的细胞内部署,特别关注肠道致病性细菌。特别是,肠出血性大肠杆菌(EHEC)普遍产生和分泌的 OMVs 似乎是一种高度先进的分泌机制,可同时协调和直接将细菌毒力因子输送到宿主细胞中。与 OMV 相关的毒力因子不仅通过与 OMV 的关联而稳定,而且通常还可以靶向以前未知的靶结构并发挥新的活性。毒素以其活性形式通过 OMVs 释放,并通过细胞分拣过程被运送到其特定的细胞区室,在那里它们可以发挥其有害作用。OMVs 可以被视为攻击宿主组织并帮助细菌病原体建立其生物栖息地(s)定植、损害宿主细胞功能和调节宿主防御的细菌“远程武器”。因此,OMVs 对病原菌的毒力有重要贡献。