Publication date: 11 October 2017
Source:Cell Host & Microbe, Volume 22, Issue 4
Author(s): Michal P. Wandel, Claudio Pathe, Emma I. Werner, Cara J. Ellison, Keith B. Boyle, Alexander von der Malsburg, John Rohde, Felix Randow
Interferon exposure boosts cell-autonomous immunity for more efficient pathogen control. But how interferon-enhanced immunity protects the cytosol against bacteria and how professionally cytosol-dwelling bacteria avoid clearance are insufficiently understood. Here we demonstrate that the interferon-induced GTPase family of guanylate-binding proteins (GBPs) coats Shigella flexneri in a hierarchical manner reliant on GBP1. GBPs inhibit actin-dependent motility and cell-to-cell spread of bacteria but are antagonized by IpaH9.8, a bacterial ubiquitin ligase secreted into the host cytosol. IpaH9.8 ubiquitylates GBP1, GBP2, and GBP4 to cause the proteasome-dependent destruction of existing GBP coats. This ubiquitin coating of Shigella favors the pathogen as it liberates bacteria from GBP encapsulation to resume actin-mediated motility and cell-to-cell spread. We conclude that an important function of GBP recruitment to S. flexneri is to prevent the spread of infection to neighboring cells while IpaH9.8 helps bacterial propagation by counteracting GBP-dependent cell-autonomous immunity.
Graphical abstract
Teaser
How interferon-enhanced immunity protects cells against bacteria and how cytosol-dwelling bacteria, such as Shigella, avoid clearance remain poorly understood. Wandel, Pathe et al. demonstrate that interferon-induced guanylate-binding proteins (GBPs) coat Shigella in a GBP1-dependent manner and inhibit actin-dependent cell-to-cell spread of bacteria unless degraded through the bacterial ubiquitin ligase IpaH9.8.http://ift.tt/2i7MPzX
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