Clifton D R, Goss R A, Sahni S K, van Antwerp D, Baggs R B, Marder V J, Silverman D J, Sporn L A
Department of Environmental Medicine, Department of Medicine and Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, NY 14642, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1998 Apr 14;95(8):4646-51. doi: 10.1073/pnas.95.8.4646.
The possibility that bacteria may have evolved strategies to overcome host cell apoptosis was explored by using Rickettsia rickettsii, an obligate intracellular Gram-negative bacteria that is the etiologic agent of Rocky Mountain spotted fever. The vascular endothelial cell, the primary target cell during in vivo infection, exhibits no evidence of apoptosis during natural infection and is maintained for a sufficient time to allow replication and cell-to-cell spread prior to eventual death due to necrotic damage. Prior work in our laboratory demonstrated that R. rickettsii infection activates the transcription factor NF-kappa B and alters expression of several genes under its control. However, when R. rickettsii-induced activation of NF-kappa B was inhibited, apoptosis of infected but not uninfected endothelial cells rapidly ensued. In addition, human embryonic fibroblasts stably transfected with a superrepressor mutant inhibitory subunit Ikappa B that rendered NF-kappa B inactivatable also underwent apoptosis when infected, whereas infected wild-type human embryonic fibroblasts survived. R. rickettsii, therefore, appeared to inhibit host cell apoptosis via a mechanism dependent on NF-kappa B activation. Apoptotic nuclear changes correlated with presence of intracellular organisms and thus this previously unrecognized proapoptotic signal, masked by concomitant NF-kappa B activation, likely required intracellular infection. Our studies demonstrate that a bacterial organism can exert an antiapoptotic effect, thus modulating the host cell's apoptotic response to its own advantage by potentially allowing the host cell to remain as a site of infection.
利用立氏立克次体探索了细菌可能进化出克服宿主细胞凋亡策略的可能性。立氏立克次体是一种专性细胞内革兰氏阴性菌,是落基山斑疹热的病原体。血管内皮细胞是体内感染期间的主要靶细胞,在自然感染期间未表现出凋亡迹象,并且在因坏死性损伤最终死亡之前能够维持足够长的时间以允许复制和细胞间传播。我们实验室之前的研究表明,立氏立克次体感染会激活转录因子NF-κB,并改变其控制下的几个基因的表达。然而,当立氏立克次体诱导的NF-κB激活受到抑制时,受感染但未受感染的内皮细胞会迅速发生凋亡。此外,稳定转染了使NF-κB失活的超阻遏突变抑制亚基IκB的人胚胎成纤维细胞在感染时也会发生凋亡,而感染的野生型人胚胎成纤维细胞则存活下来。因此,立氏立克次体似乎通过一种依赖于NF-κB激活的机制抑制宿主细胞凋亡。凋亡核变化与细胞内生物体的存在相关,因此这种先前未被认识的促凋亡信号被伴随的NF-κB激活所掩盖,可能需要细胞内感染。我们的研究表明,一种细菌生物体可以发挥抗凋亡作用,从而通过潜在地允许宿主细胞作为感染部位而以自身优势调节宿主细胞的凋亡反应。