4.5 Article

The Vibrio alginolyticus T3SS effectors, Val1686 and Val1680, induce cell rounding, apoptosis and lysis of fish epithelial cells

Journal

VIRULENCE
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages 318-330

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/21505594.2017.1414134

Keywords

Vibrio alginolyticus; T3SS; effector protein; apoptosis; fish disease

Funding

  1. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [2017B03814]
  2. Project of Science & Technology New Star of Zhujiang in Guangzhou city [2013J2200094]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province [BK20171431]
  4. Priority Academic Program Development of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions
  5. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41276163]
  6. Science & Technology Planning Project of Guangdong Province [2014B030301064]

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Vibrio alginolyticus is a Gram-negative bacterium that is an opportunistic pathogen of both marine animals and people. Its pathogenesis likely involves type III secretion system (T3SS) mediated induction of rapid apoptosis, cell rounding and osmotic lysis of infected eukaryotic cells. Herein, we report that effector proteins, Val1686 and Val1680 from V. alginolyticus, were responsible for T3SS-mediated death of fish cells. Val1686 is a Fic-domain containing protein that not only contributed to cell rounding by inhibiting Rho guanosine triphosphatases (GTPases), but was requisite for the induction of apoptosis because the deletion mutant (Delta val1686) was severely weakened in its ability to induce cell rounding and apoptosis in fish cells. In addition, Val1686 alone was sufficient to induce cell rounding and apoptosis as evidenced by the transfection of Val1686 into fish cells. Importantly, the Fic-domain essential for cell rounding activity was equally important to activation of apoptosis of fish cells, indicating that apoptosis is a downstream event of Val1686-dependent GTPase inhibition. V. alginolyticus infection likely activates JNK and ERK pathways with sequential activation of caspases (caspase-8/-10, -9 and -3) and subsequent apoptosis. Val1680 contributed to T3SS-dependent lysis of fish cells in V. alginolyticus, but did not induce autophagy as has been reported for its homologue (VopQ) in V. parahaemolyticus. Together, Val1686 and Val1680 work together to induce apoptosis, cell rounding and cell lysis of V. alginolyticus-infected fish cells. These findings provide new insights into the mechanism of cell death caused by T3SS of V. alginolyticus.

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