Clostridium difficile toxin CDT hijacks microtubule organization and reroutes vesicle traffic to increase pathogen adherence

Clostridium difficile causes antibiotic-associated diarrhea and pseudomembranous colitis by the actions of Rho-glucosylating toxins A and B. Recently identified hypervirulent strains, which are associated with increased morbidity and mortality, additionally produce the actin-ADP–ribosylating toxin C...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2014-02, Vol.111 (6), p.2313-2318
Hauptverfasser: Schwan, Carsten, Kruppke, Anna S., Nölke, Thilo, Schumacher, Lucas, Koch-Nolte, Friedrich, Kudryashev, Mikhail, Stahlberg, Henning, Aktories, Klaus
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Clostridium difficile causes antibiotic-associated diarrhea and pseudomembranous colitis by the actions of Rho-glucosylating toxins A and B. Recently identified hypervirulent strains, which are associated with increased morbidity and mortality, additionally produce the actin-ADP–ribosylating toxin C. difficile transferase (CDT). CDT depolymerizes actin, causes formation of microtubule-based protrusions, and increases pathogen adherence. Here we show that CDT-induced protrusions allow vesicle traffic and contain endoplasmic reticulum tubules, connected to microtubules via the calcium sensor Stim1. The toxin reroutes Rab11-positive vesicles containing fibronectin, which is involved in bacterial adherence, from basolateral to the apical membrane sides in a microtubule- and Stim1-dependent manner. The data yield a model of C. difficile adherence regulated by actin depolymerization, microtubule restructuring, subsequent Stim1-dependent Ca ²⁺ signaling, vesicle rerouting, and secretion of ECM proteins to increase bacterial adherence.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1311589111