Proximity Labeling To Map Host-Pathogen Interactions at the Membrane of a Bacterium-Containing Vacuole in Chlamydia trachomatis-Infected Human Cells

Many intracellular bacteria, including the obligate intracellular pathogen , grow within a membrane-bound bacterium-containing vacuole (BCV). Secreted cytosolic effectors modulate host activity, but an understanding of the host-pathogen interactions that occur at the BCV membrane is limited by the d...

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Veröffentlicht in:Infection and immunity 2019-11, Vol.87 (11)
Hauptverfasser: Olson, Macy G, Widner, Ray E, Jorgenson, Lisa M, Lawrence, Alyssa, Lagundzin, Dragana, Woods, Nicholas T, Ouellette, Scot P, Rucks, Elizabeth A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Many intracellular bacteria, including the obligate intracellular pathogen , grow within a membrane-bound bacterium-containing vacuole (BCV). Secreted cytosolic effectors modulate host activity, but an understanding of the host-pathogen interactions that occur at the BCV membrane is limited by the difficulty in purifying membrane fractions from infected host cells. We used the ascorbate peroxidase (APEX2) proximity labeling system, which labels proximal proteins with biotin , to study the protein-protein interactions that occur at the chlamydial vacuolar, or inclusion, membrane. An understanding of the secreted chlamydial inclusion membrane protein (Inc) interactions (e.g., Inc-Inc and Inc-eukaryotic protein) and how these contribute to overall host-chlamydia interactions at this unique membrane is lacking. We hypothesize some Incs organize the inclusion membrane, whereas other Incs bind eukaryotic proteins to promote chlamydia-host interactions. To study this, Incs fused to APEX2 were expressed in L2. Affinity purification-mass spectrometry (AP-MS) identified biotinylated proteins, which were analyzed for statistical significance using ignificance nalysis of the eractome (SAINT). Broadly supporting both Inc-Inc and Inc-host interactions, our Inc-APEX2 constructs labeled Incs as well as known and previously unreported eukaryotic proteins localizing to the inclusion. We demonstrate, using bacterial two-hybrid and coimmunoprecipitation assays, that endogenous LRRFIP1 (LRRF1) is recruited to the inclusion by the Inc CT226. We further demonstrate interactions between CT226 and the Incs used in our study to reveal a model for inclusion membrane organization. Combined, our data highlight the utility of APEX2 to capture the complex protein-protein interactions at the chlamydial inclusion.
ISSN:0019-9567
1098-5522
DOI:10.1128/IAI.00537-19