Sanger J M, Mittal B, Southwick F S, Sanger J W
Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia 19104-6058, USA.
Cell Motil Cytoskeleton. 1995;30(1):38-49. doi: 10.1002/cm.970300106.
Infection of host cells by Listeria monocytogenes results in the recruitment of cytoplasmic actin into a tail-like appendage that projects from one end of the bacterium. Each filamentous actin tail progressively lengthens, providing the force which drives the bacterium in a forward direction through the cytoplasm and later results in Listeria cell-to-cell spread. Host cell actin monomers are incorporated into the filamentous actin tail at a discrete site, the bacterial-actin tail interface. We have studied the consequences of microinjecting three different actin monomer-binding proteins on the actin tail assembly and Listeria intracellular movement. Introduction of high concentrations of profilin (estimated injected intracellular concentration 11-22 microM) into infected PtK2 cells causes a marked slowing of actin tail elongation and bacterial migration. Lower intracellular concentrations of two other injected higher affinity monomer-sequestering proteins, Vitamin D-binding protein (DBP; 1-2 microM) and DNase I (6-7 microM) completely block bacterial-induced actin assembly and bacterial migration. The onset of inhibition by each protein is gradual (10-20 min) indicating that the mechanisms by which these proteins interfere with Listeria-induced actin assembly are likely to be complex. To exclude the possibility that Listeria recruits preformed actin filaments to generate the tails and that these monomer-binding proteins act by depolymerizing such performed actin filaments, living infected cells have been injected with fluorescently labeled phalloidin (3 microM). Although the stress fibers are labeled, no fluorescent phalloidin is found in the tails of the moving bacteria. These results demonstrate that Listeria-induced actin assembly in PtK2 cells is the result of assembly of actin monomers into new filaments and that Listeria's ability to recruit polymerization competent monomeric actin is very sensitive to the introduction of exogenous actin monomer-binding proteins.
单核细胞增生李斯特菌感染宿主细胞会导致细胞质肌动蛋白募集到从细菌一端伸出的尾状附属物中。每条丝状肌动蛋白尾巴会逐渐延长,产生推动细菌在细胞质中向前移动的力,随后导致李斯特菌在细胞间传播。宿主细胞肌动蛋白单体在一个离散位点,即细菌 - 肌动蛋白尾巴界面,被整合到丝状肌动蛋白尾巴中。我们研究了显微注射三种不同的肌动蛋白单体结合蛋白对肌动蛋白尾巴组装和李斯特菌细胞内运动的影响。将高浓度的胸腺素β4(估计注射到细胞内的浓度为11 - 22微摩尔)引入感染的PtK2细胞会导致肌动蛋白尾巴伸长和细菌迁移明显减慢。另外两种注射的高亲和力单体隔离蛋白,维生素D结合蛋白(DBP;1 - 2微摩尔)和脱氧核糖核酸酶I(6 - 7微摩尔)在较低的细胞内浓度下会完全阻断细菌诱导的肌动蛋白组装和细菌迁移。每种蛋白质的抑制作用开始是渐进的(10 - 20分钟),这表明这些蛋白质干扰李斯特菌诱导的肌动蛋白组装的机制可能很复杂。为了排除李斯特菌募集预先形成的肌动蛋白丝来产生尾巴以及这些单体结合蛋白通过解聚这种预先形成的肌动蛋白丝起作用的可能性,已将荧光标记的鬼笔环肽(3微摩尔)注射到活的感染细胞中。尽管应力纤维被标记,但在移动细菌的尾巴中未发现荧光鬼笔环肽。这些结果表明,PtK2细胞中李斯特菌诱导的肌动蛋白组装是肌动蛋白单体组装成新丝的结果,并且李斯特菌募集具有聚合能力的单体肌动蛋白的能力对外源肌动蛋白单体结合蛋白的引入非常敏感。