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Infection and Immunity, November 2005, p. 7113-7125, Vol. 73, No. 11
0019-9567/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.73.11.7113-7125.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Research Institute, Hospital for Sick Children,1 Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology,2 Paediatrics,3 Biochemistry,4 the Institute of Medical Science, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada5
Received 26 January 2005/ Returned for modification 18 April 2005/ Accepted 8 July 2005
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-actinin mobilization. Quantitative bacterial adherence assays showed that EPEC adherence to HEp-2 cells was dramatically reduced following cholesterol depletion, whereas the adherence of EHEC remained high. Cytoskeletal rearrangements on skin fibroblasts obtained from children with Niemann-Pick type C disease were markedly reduced. These findings indicate that host membrane cholesterol contained in lipid rafts is necessary for the cytoskeletal rearrangements following infection with attaching-effacing Escherichia coli. Differences in initial adherence indicate divergent roles for host membrane cholesterol in the pathogenesis of EHEC and EPEC infections. |
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EHEC O157:H7 and the related diarrheal pathogen enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) serotype O127:H6 both colonize the host intestinal tract by initial binding events followed by the development of intimate adhesion through characteristic attaching and effacing lesions. To achieve the attaching-effacing lesion, these bacteria possess a homologous pathogenicity island termed the locus of enterocyte effacement (6, 34) that encodes a type III secretion system. This secretion system delivers a number of secreted effector proteins into the host cell, including EspE, EspB, EspD, EspF, and Map (5, 22, 23).
The eukaryotic plasma membrane is not a homogeneous phospholipid bilayer but contains specialized cholesterol and sphingolipid-rich microdomains, termed lipid rafts (28, 37). Functionally, lipid rafts serve as platforms for protein sorting and membrane trafficking, as well as containing many molecules important for signal transduction events involved in proliferation, apoptosis, cell migration, and adhesion (11). In addition, microorganisms and their secreted products utilize lipid rafts in order to exert their effects on host cells (6, 27, 29, 40). The distinct involvement of lipid rafts in signaling functions (10) led us to hypothesize a role for these cholesterol-enriched microdomains in the formation of E. coli-induced attaching-effacing lesions. In this study, the involvement of host cell lipid rafts in the formation of attaching-effacing lesions was determined using complementary approaches. The results demonstrate that host plasma membrane cholesterol is required for bacterial adherence and attaching-effacing cytoskeleton alterations in response to both EHEC O157:H7 and EPEC O127:H6 infections.
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Patients with Niemann-Pick type C (NPC) disease (Hospital for Sick Children) were defined using the cholesterol esterification assay as previously described (2). Fibroblasts were grown in at 37°C and 5% CO2 in
-minimal essential medium (Wisent Inc., Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Rouville, Canada) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (Life Technologies).
Bacterial growth and conditions of infection. EHEC serotype O157:H7, strain CL56, and EPEC serotype O127:H6, strain E2348/69, were held on 5% sheep blood agar plates at 4°C. Individual colonies were scraped into Penassay broth (Difco Laboratories, Detroit, Mich.) and grown for 18 h at 37°C before use in experimental infection, as previously described (4). For experimental infection, stationary-phase bacteria were added to tissue culture cells grown in Lab-Tek four-well chamber slides (Nalge Nunc International, Naperville, IL) or 10-cm-diameter tissue culture dishes (Starstedt Inc., Montreal, Canada) at a multiplicity of infection of 100 bacteria to 1 eukaryotic cell, for 3 to 6 h at 37°C in antibiotic-free tissue culture medium. The cells were then washed six times with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) to remove nonadherent bacteria and processed further as described below.
Cholesterol perturbation. Methyl-ß-cyclodextrin (MßCD; Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, MO) was employed to remove cholesterol from the plasma membrane and disrupt the function of lipid rafts in eukaryotic cells (24). Prior to bacterial infection, HEp-2 cells were incubated with 1, 3, or 10 mM MßCD in antibiotic-free medium for 1 h at 37°C. The medium was aspirated, and the cells were washed with PBS to remove solubilized cholesterol and remaining MßCD. To add cholesterol back into cholesterol-depleted HEp-2 cells, 20, 100, or 200 µg/ml soluble cholesterol (cholesterol complexes with MßCD; Sigma) in antibiotic-free medium was added to cells for 45 min at 37°C. Following depletion/repletion of cholesterol, the cells were washed with PBS before bacterial infection was continued. In another set of experiments, HEp-2 cells were treated with filipin complex (Sigma) in order to determine the effect of cholesterol sequestration on E. coli infection. HEp-2 cells were incubated with 0.1, 1, and 5 µg/ml filipin for 1 h at 37°C prior to infection and during infection with EHEC and EPEC.
Thin-layer chromatography. Confluent HEp-2 cells grown in 75-cm2 flasks (approximately 6 x 107 cells per flask) were either left untreated, depleted with MßCD, or replenished with cholesterol-MßCD complexes. The cells were then lifted from the flask surface with 0.05% trypsin (Life Technologies), pelleted, and washed twice with PBS. Cells were resuspended in 20-ml glass tubes, and cellular lipids were extracted by incubating them in a 2:1 (vol/vol) chloroform-methanol solution overnight at room temperature with gentle shaking. After being filtered to remove precipitated proteins, the cleared solution was subjected to Folch extraction (9). Briefly, distilled water was added to obtain a solution of chloroform-methanol-water (2:1:0.6 [vol/vol/vol]). The tubes were briefly agitated and then allowed to stand at room temperature overnight for phase separation. The lower organic phase, containing cellular lipids, was then aspirated and dried under nitrogen gas. Samples were resuspended in 0.1 ml 2:1 chloroform-methanol, and a 20-µl sample was dotted onto a thin-layer chromatogram plate. Free cholesterol (50 µg; Sigma) was employed as the reference standard. A 70:30:1 (vol/vol/vol) hexane-diethyl ether-acetic acid developing solution was used to separate the lipids, and the dried plates were stained with iodine vapor to visualize bands corresponding to cholesterol.
Cell viability. The LIVE/DEAD Viability/Cytotoxicity assay (Molecular Probes Inc., Eugene, OR) was used to determine the viability of adherent HEp-2 cells after treatment with MßCD. HEp-2 cells were seeded onto 22- by 22-mm glass coverslips (VWR Scientific Inc., Media, PA) in multiwell plates at a concentration of 105 cells/well and allowed to adhere overnight at 37°C in 5% CO2. The cells were then either left untreated or depleted of cholesterol, as described above. Coverslips were washed twice with PBS and, according to the manufacturer's instructions (Molecular Probes), incubated with 2 ml of 1 µM calcein AM and 2 µM ethidium homodimer 1 in PBS for 40 min at room temperature. The cells were visualized using a Leitz Dialux 22 microscope (Leica Canada, Willowdale, Ontario, Canada) at x100 magnification. Four random fields per coverslip were counted by direct visualization.
Immunofluorescence microscopy.
HEp-2 cells and human skin fibroblasts were seeded onto Lab-Tek four-well slides (Nalge Nunc) at an approximate density of 105 cells/well and allowed to adhere overnight in 5% CO2 at 37°C. The cells were then washed twice with PBS and transferred into serum-free medium. After infection for 3 to 4 h at 37°C and 5% CO2 and subsequent removal of nonadherent bacteria, the cells were fixed in 100% methanol for 10 min at 4°C. Labeling of the cell cytoskeleton and bacterial antigens by immunostaining was employed to clearly identify the colocalization of attaching-effacing lesions and bacteria. Cytoskeleton rearrangements were detected using anti-
-actinin mouse immunoglobulin M (IgM) (Sigma) and fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled donkey anti-mouse IgM (Jackson Immunoresearch Laboratories Inc., West Grove, PA) as described previously (19). In some experiments, cells were probed for the localization of caveolae with an anti-caveolin-1 antibody (Santa Cruz Biotechnology Inc., Santa Cruz, CA) and rhodamine-conjugated donkey anti-rabbit IgG (Jackson Immunoresearch). Adherent bacteria were visualized with anti- Escherichia coli O157:H7 polyclonal goat antibody (Kirkegaard & Perry Laboratories Inc., Gaithersberg, MD) and rhodamine-conjugated donkey anti-goat antibody (Jackson Immunoresearch).
Binding of EPEC to cells was detected using rabbit serum obtained from animals immunized with heat-killed EPEC O127:H6 suspended in Freund's complete adjuvant and rhodamine-conjugated donkey anti-rabbit IgG (Jackson Immunoresearch). Primary and secondary antibodies were both diluted 1:100 in sterile PBS and added separately for 1 h at 37°C or room temperature, respectively. The wells were washed six times with PBS between incubations. Vectashield (Vector Laboratories Inc., Burlingame, CA) mounting medium was then added, and slides were mounted with 22- by 50-mm glass coverslips (VWR) and sealed before being viewed. Samples were viewed under a Leitz Dialux 22 fluorescence microscope (Leica Canada) at x200 and x400 magnifications.
Electron microscopy. For scanning electron microscopy, HEp-2 cells were seeded onto 22- by 22-mm glass coverslips (VWR) in multiwell plates at 105 cells/well. The cells were allowed to adhere overnight, washed twice with PBS, and then transferred to antibiotic-free medium. The cells were either left untreated or depleted of cholesterol with 10 mM MßCD (1 h at 37°C and 5% CO2) and either left uninfected or infected with EHEC O157:H7 as described above. After infection, the wells were washed six times with PBS and fixed in universal fixative (4% paraformaldehyde, 1% glutaldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer) for at least 1 h. The coverslips were then removed from the multiwell plates and incubated in 2% osmium tetroxide for 1 h at room temperature. The cells were then dehydrated in a graded series of ethanol (50% to 100%), dried through a critical-point dryer, and sputter coated with gold. Samples were viewed with a JSM 820 (Joel USA Corp., Peabody, MA) scanning electron microscope.
For transmission electron microscopy, HEp-2 cells were grown in 6-cm-diameter tissue culture dishes (Becton Dickinson and Co., Franklin Lakes, NJ) until confluent. The cells were then left untreated or treated with MßCD (1 to 10 mM for 1 h at 37°C) and subsequently infected with EHEC, as described above. After being washed six times in PBS to remove nonadherent bacteria, the monolayers were fixed with 2.5% glutaldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.4, for 10 min. HEp-2 cells were scraped from the tissue culture dishes and pelleted at 600 rpm in the fixative buffer. The HEp-2 cell pellets were next postfixed in 2% aqueous osmium tetroxide for 1 h. Dehydration was then performed in graded acetone, followed by embedding in epoxy resin. Osmium fixation, dehydration, and embedding were conducted in a Pelco Biowave microwave oven (Pelco International, Redding, CA) similar to the procedure described by Giberson et al. (14). One-micrometer-thick sections were stained with toluidine blue, and ultrathin sections were stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate. Transmission electron microscopy examination was performed under a JEM 1230 (Joel USA Corp., Peabody, MA) transmission electron microscope.
Quantification of bacterial adherence. CFU counts were performed to determine the effect of cholesterol depletion on initial bacterial attachment to tissue culture cells. HEp-2 cells were grown in 10-cm-diameter tissue culture dishes (Starstedt) until confluent. The cells were then left untreated or treated with MßCD (1 to 10 mM for 1 h at 37°C) and subsequently infected with EHEC or EPEC, as described above. After being washed six times in PBS to remove nonadherent bacteria, HEp-2 cells with adherent bacteria were lysed in distilled water for 5 min at room temperature. Bacteria were then serially diluted in PBS and plated onto McConkey agar, and CFU counts were calculated after overnight growth at 37°C to determine the number of viable bacteria adherent to the tissue culture cells.
Semiquantification of bacterially induced cytoskeletal rearrangements.
Cytoskeletal-rearrangement events were quantified by visual counting from immunofluorescence photomicrographs. Greater than 100 cells in four random fields containing at least 25 HEp-2 cells stained for
-actinin were quantified per well. The results are expressed as the average number of
-actinin foci ± standard error per HEp-2 cell in four separate experiments.
Statistical analysis. Quantitative and semiquantitative results are expressed as means ± standard errors. Statistical significance was determined by analysis of variance (ANOVA), followed by the Tukey-Kramer multiple-comparison test.
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Cholesterol depletion of HEp-2 cells inhibits cytoskeletal rearrangements induced by both EHEC and EPEC.
As shown in Fig. 1a, in the absence of bacteria, the cytoskeletal protein
-actinin was distributed throughout the eukaryotic cells in a uniform manner. EHEC O157:H7 infection of HEp-2 cells caused characteristic cytoskeletal rearrangements visible as dense foci of
-actinin present directly underneath adherent bacteria (Fig. 1b). At sites of
-actinin mobilization, there was colocalization of bacteria and cytoskeletal components, as shown by the presence of both
-actinin and bacterial staining in the merged image (Fig. 1b). In contrast, HEp-2 cells depleted of cholesterol with MßCD (10 mM; 1 h) showed a reduced number of cytoskeletal-rearrangement events beneath sites of bacterial adhesion (Fig. 1c). The inhibitory effect was quantified by counting the number of dense
-actinin foci displayed by infected HEp-2 cells from photomicrographs. As shown in Fig. 1d, MßCD inhibited the ability of EHEC O157:H7 to induce host cell cytoskeletal rearrangements in a dose-dependent manner.
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FIG. 1. EHEC O157:H7-induced cytoskeletal rearrangements are disrupted by cholesterol depletion. Immunofluorescence micrographs (a to c) using an -actinin antibody (left column) and an EHEC O157:H7 antibody (middle column) and merged images (right column). (a) Uninfected cells show no cytoskeletal rearrangements and lack bacterial staining. (b) Cells infected with EHEC O157:H7 showed foci of bacterial adherence at sites of EHEC O157:H7-induced -actinin mobilization (arrows). (c) HEp-2 cells depleted of cholesterol (10 mM MßCD; 1 h) prior to EHEC O157:H7 infection did not demonstrate focal cytoskeletal rearrangements at sites of diffusely adherent bacteria. (d) Graphical representation of semiquantification of cytoskeletal rearrangements with increasing concentrations of MßCD. The findings show a dose-dependent decrease in the formation of EHEC O157:H7-induced -actinin foci (ANOVA, P < 0.001). The error bars indicate standard errors.
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-actinin rearrangements at sites of bacterial adherence (Fig. 2b). Formation of microcolonies and rearrangement of
-actinin (Fig. 2c) was reduced in cells depleted of cholesterol by MßCD in a dose-dependent manner (Fig. 2d).
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FIG. 2. EPEC-induced cytoskeletal rearrangements are disrupted by cholesterol depletion. Immunofluorescence micrographs (a to c) using an -actinin antibody (left column) and EPEC immune serum (middle column) and merged images (right column). (a) Uninfected cells show no cytoskeletal rearrangements and lack bacterial staining. (b) Cells infected with EPEC showed microcolony-type bacterial adherence at sites of EPEC-induced -actinin mobilization (arrows). (c) HEp-2 cells depleted of cholesterol (10 mM MßCD; 1 h) prior to EPEC infection show a reduced number of focal cytoskeletal rearrangements at the few sites of bacterial adherence. (d) Graphical representation of semiquantification of cytoskeleton rearrangements with increasing concentrations of MßCD. The findings show a dose-dependent decrease in the formation of EPEC-induced -actinin foci (ANOVA, P < 0.001). The error bars indicate standard errors.
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TABLE 1. Adhesion of EHEC and EPEC to HEp-2 cell monolayers after cholesterol depletion
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-actinin mobilization was attributable to cholesterol removal, cholesterol-depleted HEp-2 cells were replenished with exogenous cholesterol. Replenishing HEp-2 cells with 200 µg/ml soluble cholesterol prior to bacterial infection rescued the ability of these bacteria to recruit cytoskeletal components to sites of bacterial adhesion (Fig. 3) to levels comparable to those observed in the positive control.
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FIG. 3. The attaching-effacing phenotype is rescued by the addition of exogenous cholesterol to HEp-2 cells. Immunofluorescence micrographs using an -actinin antibody (left column) and EPEC immune serum (middle column) and merged images (right column). (a) Cells infected with EPEC show the adherence of microcolonies at sites of cytoskeletal rearrangement typical of EPEC-induced attaching-effacing lesions. (b) HEp-2 cells depleted of cholesterol prior to EPEC infection do not possess focal cytoskeletal rearrangements at the few sites of bacterial adherence. (c) HEp-2 cells depleted of cholesterol were replenished and display cytoskeletal rearrangements (arrows), as well as EPEC microcolony adherence patterns comparable to the untreated control. Comparable results were obtained with EHEC O157:H7-infected HEp-2 cells.
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-actinin recruitment. Furthermore, HEp-2 cells did not show caveolin 1 recruitment to sites of bacterial adhesion and
-actinin mobilization (Fig. 4c), suggesting that intact plasma membrane lipid rafts, and not caveolae, are necessary for EHEC- and EPEC-induced cytoskeleton perturbations.
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FIG. 4. Bacterially induced cytoskeleton mobilization events are caveola independent. (a and b) Immunofluorescence micrographs stained for -actinin, EHEC, or EPEC and merged images. HEp-2 cells were treated with 1 mg/ml filipin for 1 h prior to infection and during infection at 37°C. Filipin treatment did not prevent EHEC O157:H7-induced (a) or EPEC-induced (b) cytoskeletal rearrangements. (c) Immunofluorescence micrographs stained for -actinin and caveolin 1 and light microscopy photomicrographs show bacterial adherence to HEp-2 cells. EHEC O157:H7-induced cytoskeletal rearrangements (arrows) did not display recruitment of caveolin 1 (middle) to sites of bacterial adhesion (right). Comparable results were seen during EPEC infection.
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FIG. 5. EHEC O157:H7-induced HEp-2 cell surface effacement is prevented following cholesterol depletion. Scanning electron photomicrographs of uninfected (left column) and EHEC O157:H7-infected (right column) HEp-2 cells. (a) Untreated HEp-2 cells display appendages covering the surface of the cell, while EHEC O157:H7-infected cells (b) demonstrate a smooth cell surface. HEp-2 cells depleted of cholesterol possess shortened surface structures covering both (c) uninfected and (d) EHEC-infected cells. HEp-2 cells depleted of cholesterol using MßCD and then replenished with exogenous cholesterol (e) displayed structures approaching those of untreated cells, which are effaced following EHEC adhesion (f). Approximate magnification, x6,000.
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FIG. 6. EHEC O157:H7-induced actin pedestal formation is prevented following cholesterol depletion. Transmission electron photomicrographs of HEp-2 cells (a and b) untreated, (c and d) cholesterol depleted (10 mM MßCD; 1 h), and (e and f) replenished with exogenous cholesterol (200 mg/ml; 45 min). HEp-2 cells infected with EHEC O157:H7 (b) possess distinct actin-rich cup-like pedestals (arrows) underlying intimately adherent bacteria. By contrast, dense actin-rich cups are not present at the sites of EHEC adhesion to HEp-2 cells depleted of cholesterol (d). Replenishment of HEp-2 cells previously depleted of cholesterol rescues the ability of EHEC to recruit dense foci of actin (arrows). Bar, 500 nm.
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FIG. 7. Cytoskeletal rearrangements formed in response to EHEC and EPEC infections are reduced on Niemann-Pick type C primary human skin fibroblasts compared with wild-type fibroblasts. Immunofluorescence micrographs using an -actinin antibody (left column) and bacterial antiserum (middle column) and merged images (right column). Results using fibroblasts from an unaffected individual (cell line 4993) are shown in panels a to c. Results using fibroblasts derived from a patient with NPC (cell line 16934) are presented in panels d to f. (a) Uninfected cells show no cytoskeletal rearrangements and lack staining with primary antibodies against bacteria. (b) Cells infected with EHEC show bacterial adherence at sites of cytoskeletal rearrangement typical of EHEC-induced attaching-effacing lesions (arrows). (c) Cells infected with EPEC also demonstrated microcolonies adherent at sites of cytoskeletal rearrangement characteristic of EPEC-induced attaching-effacing lesions. (d) Uninfected NPC cells show no cytoskeletal rearrangements and lack bacterial staining. NPC fibroblasts infected with EHEC (e) or EPEC (f) do not possess foci of cytoskeleton proteins at sites of bacterial adhesion. Comparable results were observed using two additional skin fibroblast cell lines (wild-type 15215 and NPC cell line 15055).
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While removal of cholesterol by MßCD showed inhibitory effects, filipin did not prevent EHEC O157:H7-induced cytoskeleton rearrangements, nor was caveolin 1 recruited to these sites of bacterial adhesion. This demonstrates that the caveolar subclass of lipid rafts is not involved in attaching-effacing pathogenesis. Although lipid raft-associated components are reported to localize to sites of EPEC binding (16, 42), this is the first report demonstrating that removal of cholesterol, a required structural element of lipid rafts (41), from host cells inhibits attaching-effacing lesion formation. The necessity for cholesterol was confirmed using a naturally occurring mutant human cell with decreased lipid raft cholesterol (12). Taken together, these results indicate that intact sphingolipid/cholesterol-enriched microdomains are required for attaching-effacing lesion formation in response to both EHEC and EPEC infections.
In the present study, while the number of EHEC- and EPEC-induced
-actinin foci was reduced following cholesterol depletion of host cells, EPEC, but not EHEC, adhesion to HEp-2 cells was decreased. These findings indicate that while only intimate adherence of EHEC O157:H7 is regulated by cholesterol, cholesterol may function in the regulation of both initial binding and intimate adhesion of EPEC. Precisely how cholesterol mediates adhesion of EPEC is not known. While EPEC does not directly bind to cholesterol (1), manipulation of the cholesterol concentration in cells could indirectly affect lipid raft localization of an EPEC receptor. Such speculation is not without precedent, since studies of the oxytocin receptor have shown that binding of oxytocin is dependent on membrane interactions of the receptor with cholesterol in lipid rafts (15). Alternatively, cholesterol depletion could result in the efflux of other lipids, such as phosphatidylethanolamine, a lipid that has been shown to be a receptor of EPEC adherence (1) which is released after cholesterol depletion (33). On the other hand, EPEC forms characteristic microcolonies mediated by interbacterial binding of the bundle-forming pilus (21, 26). A decrease in EPEC microcolony formation on cholesterol-depleted HEp-2 cells could be responsible for the reduced adherence observed.
The cholesterol depletion agent MßCD has been used in other signal transduction-dependent systems to study the effects of cholesterol removal on lipid raft function, including epidermal growth factor receptor (18) and T-cell receptor signaling (31). It has recently been appreciated that lipid raft function is important for microbial pathogens, including human immunodeficiency virus infection of CD4+ T cells (38) and Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection of macrophages (13), as well as bacterial toxins, such as cholera toxin (29) and vacuolating cytotoxin A (34).
MßCD-mediated cholesterol efflux has been described as highly specific compared to other cyclodextrins (24), but it may also induce efflux of other membrane lipids, including glycosphingolipids, as well as induce cytotoxicity (33). Since previous studies have demonstrated variable effects on the viability of cells after depletion of cholesterol by MßCD, the viability of MßCD-treated HEp-2 cells was compared to that of untreated controls. As cholesterol depletion of epithelial cells was reversible by addition of exogenous cholesterol without inducing cytotoxicity, it is reasonable to conclude that the inhibitory effects on host cytoskeleton recruitment are specifically due to the removal of cholesterol.
Signal transduction responses and remodeling of the cytoskeleton in host epithelial cells are both required for formation of the attaching-effacing lesion. Dense foci of cytoskeletal proteins, including F-actin,
-actinin, talin, and ezrin, aggregate immediately beneath adherent EHEC and EPEC (16). Activation of signaling pathways is involved in reorganization of the cytoskeleton, including phosphatidylinositol 3' kinase and phospholipase C-gamma (19). Membrane-associated EHEC and EPEC effectors, such as EspE/Tir and EspB, may associate with lipid rafts, either directly or indirectly, to exert local effects at sites of bacterial adhesion. Pathogenic bacteria commonly inject type III secreted proteins into host cells to usurp or disrupt signaling pathways to induce cytoskeleton-dependent internalization of bacteria (3) or prevent phagocytosis by macrophages (20). Many of the signaling molecules affected, including small G proteins, such as Rac and Cdc42, and phosphatidylinositides, are lipid raft dependent (8). Salmonella enterica type III effectors, PipB and PipB2, are enriched in detergent-resistant microdomains (25).
As a complementary approach to depletion of cholesterol with MßCD, primary human skin fibroblasts from patients with NPC disease were infected with EHEC and EPEC and assessed for attaching-effacing lesion formation. NPC is a rare, heritable, and fatal neurodegenerative disorder affecting humans (35). Mutations of NPC1 or NPC2 lead to a dysfunction in intracellular cholesterol trafficking, resulting in high internal cholesterol levels retained within lysosomal compartments and decreased cholesterol in the trans-Golgi network (30). Although the total plasma membrane cholesterol contents in npc1/ cells are similar to those in wild-type cells, the cholesterol contents of lipid rafts isolated from npc1/ cells are markedly reduced (12). Thus, npc1/ cells are an effective tool to study lipid raft-dependent processes. Both EHEC and EPEC were attenuated in their ability to recruit foci of
-actinin to sites of bacterial adhesion on npc1/ fibroblasts in comparison with control cells. This observation also indicates that intact plasma membrane cholesterol-enriched microdomains are required for EHEC and EPEC intimate attachment.
In summary, this study has shown that perturbation of plasma membrane cholesterol in host cells reduces EHEC- and EPEC-induced cytoskeletal alterations. Since bacterial adherence and attaching-effacing lesion formation are important for eliciting human disease, this study highlights the role of cholesterol-enriched microdomains in the pathobiology of disease. Developing a more precise understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying EHEC and EPEC infections should aid in the development of novel intervention strategies.
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This work was supported by an operating grant from the Canadian Institute for Health Research. J.D.R. is supported through a studentship by the Ontario Student Opportunity Trust Fund-Hospital for Sick Children Foundation Student Scholarship Program and a University of Toronto Fellowship. P.M.S. is the recipient of a Canada Research Chair in Gastrointestinal Disease.
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