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Infect. Immun., May 1996, 1621-1630, Vol 64, No. 5
HU Grassme, RM Ireland and JP van Putten
Neisseria gonorrhoeae enters cultured human mucosal cells following binding
of a distinct gonococcal opacity (Opa) outer membrane protein to cell
surface proteoglycan receptors. We examined the route of internalization
that is activated by Opa-expressing gonococci (strain VP1). Microscopy of
infected Chang epithelial cells showed that gonococcal uptake was
insensitive to monodansylcadaverine (150 microM), which interferes with
clathrin-mediated endocytosis. Similarly, indirect immunofluorescence
staining for clathrin in infected cells showed distribution of cellular
clathrin unaltered from the distribution in noninfected cells. The
microtubule inhibitors colchicine (50 microM) and nocodazole (20 microM)
but not the microtubule-stabilizing agent taxol (10 microM) caused a
moderate (30 to 50%) reduction in gonococcal entry without affecting
bacterial adherence. The most dramatic effects were obtained with the
microfilament-disrupting agent cytochalasin D (3 microM), which totally
blocked bacterial entry into the cells. Double immunofluorescence staining
of gonococci and actin filaments in infected cells demonstrated
bacterium-associated accumulations of F-actin as an early signal of
bacterial entry. The recruitment of F-actin was transient and disappeared
once the bacteria were inside the cells. Cytochalasin D disrupted the actin
cytoskeleton architecture but did not prevent the recruitment of F-actin by
the bacteria. Adherent, noninvasive gonococcal Opa variants lacked the
ability to mobilize F-actin. Recombinant Escherichia coli expressing the
gonococcal invasion- promoting Opa of gonococcal strain MS11 (Opa50)
adhered to the epithelial cells in an Opa-dependent fashion but was not
internalized and did not recruit detectable amounts of F-actin. Coinfection
with the E. coli recombinant strain and gonococci resulted in specific
entry of the diplococci, despite the presence of large numbers of adherent
E. coli cells. Together, our results indicate that Opa-mediated gonococcal
entry into Chang cells resembles phagocytosis rather than macropinocytosis
reported for Salmonella spp. and sequentially involves gonococcal adherence
to the cell surface, Opa-dependent and cytochalasin-insensitive recruitment
of F-actin, and cytochalasin D- sensitive bacterial internalization.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Gonococcal opacity protein promotes bacterial entry-associated rearrangements of the epithelial cell actin cytoskeleton
Max-Planck-Institut fur Biologie, Abteilung Infektionsbiologie, Tubingen, Germany.
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