A Secreted Ankyrin-Repeat Protein from Clinical Stenotrophomonas maltophilia Isolates Disrupts Actin Cytoskeletal Structure
Publication/Presentation Date
1-8-2016
Abstract
Stenotrophomonas maltophilia is an emerging, multidrug-resistant pathogen of increasing importance for the immunocompromised, including cystic fibrosis patients. Despite its significance as an emerging pathogen, relatively little is known regarding the specific factors and mechanisms that contribute to its pathogenicity. We identify and characterize a putative ankyrin-repeat protein (Smlt3054) unique to clinical S. maltophilia isolates that binds F-actin in vitro and co-localizes with actin in transfected HEK293a cells. Smlt3054 is endogenously expressed and secreted from clinical S. maltophilia isolates, but not an environmental isolate (R551-3). The in vitro binding of Smlt3054 to F-actin resulted in a thickening of the filaments as observed by TEM. Ectopic expression of Smlt3054–GFP exhibits strong co-localization with F-actin, with distinct, retrograde F-actin waves specifically associated with Smlt3054 in individual cells as well as formation of dense, internal inclusions at the expense of retrograde F-actin waves. Collectively, our results point to an interaction between Smlt3054 and F-actin. Furthermore, as a potentially secreted protein unique to clinical S. maltophilia isolates, Smlt3054 may serve as a starting point for understanding the mechanisms by which S. maltophilia has become an emergent pathogen.
Volume
2
Issue
1
First Page
62
Last Page
70
Published In/Presented At
Logan C. MacDonald, Sean O’Keefe, Mei-Fan Parnes, Hanlon MacDonald, Lindsey Stretz, Suzanne J. Templer, Emily L. Wong, & Bryan W. Berger. (2016). A Secreted Ankyrin-Repeat Protein from Clinical Stenotrophomonas maltophilia Isolates Disrupts Actin Cytoskeletal Structure. ACS Infectious Diseases. 2 (1), 62-70 DOI: 10.1021/acsinfecdis.5b00103.
Disciplines
Infectious Disease | Medical Sciences | Medical Specialties | Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
27622948
Department(s)
Department of Medicine, Department of Medicine Faculty
Document Type
Article