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Infection and Immunity, June 2004, p. 3646-3649, Vol. 72, No. 6
0019-9567/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.72.6.3646-3649.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Molecular Biology,1 Microscopy Unit, Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology, D-10117 Berlin,3 Department of Medical Microbiology, Otto von Guericke University, D-39120 Magdeburg, Germany2
Received 15 December 2003/ Returned for modification 12 January 2004/ Accepted 2 March 2004
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(4), (v) ZO-1 (1), and (vi) adaptor molecule Grb-2 (8). In many of the above-mentioned studies, induction of the hummingbird phenotype has been considered a single cag PAI- and CagA-dependent process, although the contribution of different binding factors and signaling pathways for this phenotype remains controversial. To test whether the induced motility and cellular elongation of AGS cells are triggered by the same signaling pathway, we used live cell imaging to monitor and quantitate the effect of wild-type H. pylori and the corresponding isogenic cag PAI mutants on the motility and elongation of AGS cells. For this purpose, AGS cells (ATCC CRL 1739) were grown in RPMI medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS) in glass-bottom petri dishes (3.5 cm; Mattek Corp, Ashland, Mass.) to reach monolayers of approximately 50% cell confluence. The AGS monolayers were serum starved for 12 h and then infected at a multiplicity of infection of 100 with H. pylori strain P12, which carries a functional cag PAI (2). All infections were synchronized by centrifugation for 5 min at 600 x g, and the infection process of individual AGS cell colonies was recorded over 4 h by using a Zeiss Axiovert 200 M inverted microscope (Jena, Germany). We observed two distinct stages of behavior of the infected cells. During the first phase (60 to 90 min postinfection), a pronounced motogenic response was observed (Fig. 1A). The migratory cells exhibited no signs of cell elongation. In contrast, during the second phase (120 to 240 min postinfection), we observed that the migrating cells started to elongate and adopt a spindle-like morphology (Fig. 1A). Thus, there are apparently two distinct host responses, namely, motility and elongation, which may be induced sequentially by H. pylori during the early stage of infection. It is noteworthy that while the cells showed a sustained migratory activity throughout infection, the appearance of spindles is a dynamic process. For example, cell number 4 shows elongation between 120 and 240 min of infection, and cell number 3 shows temporal elongation at the 120-min time point (Fig. 1A).
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FIG. 1. Infection of AGS cells with H. pylori results in two early cellular phenotypes: the stimulation of migratory behavior and dramatic elongation of the host cells. (A) Single AGS cell colonies were investigated in a time course during infection with wild-type strain P12 by time-lapse phase-contrast microscopy as indicated. Cells shown are numbered 1 to 4. Arrows indicate those cells with significant elongation. (B) Investigation of the migratory behavior and dramatic elongation of a single AGS cell infected with H. pylori strain P1. The AGS cell marked by the arrows expresses a transfected actin-enhanced green fluorescent protein construct to monitor actin cytoskeletal rearrangements over 650 min of infection.
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Next, we investigated the importance of the cag PAI for phenotypical outcome. To ensure a high degree of fitness of both wild-type and mutant H. pylori, bacteria were grown for 12 h at 37°C with agitation at 200 rpm in 10 ml of liquid brain heart infusion medium (Difco Laboratories, Sparks, Md.) until they reached an optical density at 600 nm of 0.6. The infection was followed over 4 h by live cell imaging as described above. Migration of AGS cells was considered to have occurred when the cells in a certain cluster had lost their cell-to-cell contact and moved by a distance of at least 30 µm (Fig. 1 and 2). We found that wild-type H. pylori was able to induce a motogenic response in about 45% of the infected AGS cells (Fig. 2B and 3A; Table 1). Surprisingly, isogenic mutants lacking either individual cag PAI genes or the entire cag PAI were still able to induce a substantial stimulatory effect in more than 30% of the infected AGS cells (Fig. 2A and 3A; Table 1). Interestingly, similar results were obtained with either the cagA deletion mutant or cagA mutants carrying phenylalanine substitutions in the proposed tyrosine phosphorylation sites (Y122F, Y899F, or Y918F) and the major phosphorylation site (Y972F), which showed only slightly reduced motility rates (ca. 35 to 40%) compared to that of wild-type bacteria (Fig. 3A; Table 1). Thus, although we cannot discount at this stage a minor contribution of the cag PAI or translocated CagA itself to host cell signaling leading to a migratory response, the results strongly suggest that the major determinant for the induction of AGS cell motility is likely to be encoded outside the cag PAI.
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FIG. 2. Stimulation of migratory behavior and dramatic elongation of AGS cells with H. pylori strain P12 cagPAI (A) and wild-type (wt) strain P12 (B). Single AGS cell colonies that were investigated in a time course by time-lapse phase-contrast microscopy are indicated. The cag PAI appears to be nonessential for induction of motility, whereas the elongation phenotype requires a functional cag PAI. (C) Noninfected AGS control cells showed none of the responses. PBS, phosphate-buffered saline.
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FIG. 3. Quantification of the motility (A) and elongation (B) phenotypes during infection of AGS cells with H. pylori wild type (wt) and cag PAI mutants. The infections were carried out with or without FBS as indicated. The Src kinase inhibitor PP2 was added 30 min prior to infection as indicated. A particular field of the coverslip was labeled and photographed before infection and at 4 h postinfection. One hundred cells were counted and evaluated from each photograph. The results are the means of three independent experiments. PBS, phosphate-buffered saline.
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TABLE 1. Induction of AGS motility and elongation in infections with H. pylori cag PAI mutantsa
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Further evidence for motility and elongation being two independent host cell responses came from two other observations. First, when the AGS cells were infected with H. pylori in the presence of FBS, we observed a drastic reduction in cellular motility (Fig. 3A) with minimal effect on elongation (Fig. 3B). This argues strongly that induction of a marked motility is not essential for the elongation phenotype. Second, the presence of pharmacological inhibitor PP2 (Merck, Schwalbach, Germany) at concentrations specific for Src family kinases (10, 12) blocked the elongation phenotype by inhibiting CagA phosphorylation on tyrosine 972 (Fig. 3B) (2), whereas it did not significantly affect the induction of motility (Fig. 3A; Table 1). Thus, different signaling seems to be essential for induction of cellular motility and elongation, respectively.
Taken together, our findings indicate that the induction of AGS motility and elongation are two independent events which often occur in parallel or shortly one after the other and are likely to be triggered by different signaling pathways. This conclusion is further supported by a recent study from our labs which reports on the characterization of clinical H. pylori isolates from 75 patients (3). Interestingly, we found three types of clinical isolates inducing the following phenotypes: (i) motility positive, elongation positive; (ii) motility positive, elongation negative; and (iii) motility negative, elongation negative. These findings strongly support the notion that the induction of motility and the induction of cellular elongation are two processes which can be triggered by different signaling pathways and bacterial factors. Our findings set the stage for a more precise definition of the hummingbird phenomenon with respect to cellular motility and cell elongation, a necessary basis for the better understanding of CagA signaling and the molecular mechanism involved in these cell responses.
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