Zipper-like internalization of Dr-positive Escherichia coli by epithelial cells is preceded by an adhesin-induced mobilization of raft-associated molecules in the initial step of adhesion.
We undertook a study of the mechanism by which Dr-positive bacteria invade epithelial cells. Our findings show that Dr-positive bacteria enter via a zipper-like mechanism that is independent of the Dr-induced mobilization of F-actin and of the signaling molecules that control Dr-induced F-actin rearrangements. We also observed that Dr-positive IH11128 bacteria entered cells that were positive for the caveola marker VIP21/caveolin (HeLa and Caco-2/Cav-1 cells) to the same extent as those that were not (parental Caco-2 cells). Using fluorescence labeling and confocal laser scanning microscopy, we provide evidence that during the adhesion step, the alpha5beta1 integrin, which plays a pivotal role in Afa/Dr diffusely adhering Escherichia coli bacterial entry, is mobilized around adhering Dr-positive bacteria. We show that the receptor for Afa/Dr adhesins, glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored CD55; the raft marker, ganglioside GM1; and VIP21/caveolin are all recruited around adhering Dr-positive bacteria. We also observed that extracting membrane cholesterol with methyl-beta-cyclodextrin (MBCD) did not affect the recruitment of CD55, GM1, or beta1 integrin to adhering Dr-positive bacteria. In contrast, extracting or changing membrane-bound cholesterol by means of drugs that modify lipid rafts (MBCD, filipin III, or mevalonate plus lovastatin plus MBCD) inhibited the entry of Dr-positive IH11128 both into cells that expressed VIP21/caveolin (HeLa and Caco-2/Cav-1 cells) and into those that did not (parental Caco-2 cells). Finally, restoring cholesterol within the cell membrane of MBCD-treated cells restored Dr-positive IH11128 internalization.[1]References
- Zipper-like internalization of Dr-positive Escherichia coli by epithelial cells is preceded by an adhesin-induced mobilization of raft-associated molecules in the initial step of adhesion. Kansau, I., Berger, C., Hospital, M., Amsellem, R., Nicolas, V., Servin, A.L., Bernet-Camard, M.F. Infect. Immun. (2004) [Pubmed]
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