Molecular dissection of Salmonella-induced membrane ruffling versus invasion

  • Jan Hänisch
  • , Julia Ehinger
  • , Markus Ladwein
  • , Manfred Rohde
  • , Emmanuel Derivery
  • , Tanja Bosse
  • , Anika Steffen
  • , Dirk Bumann
  • , Benjamin Misselwitz
  • , Wolf Dietrich Hardt
  • , Alexis Gautreau
  • , Theresia E.B. Stradal
  • , Klemens Rottner

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Type III secretion system-mediated injection of a cocktail of bacterial proteins drives actin rearrangements, frequently adopting the shape of prominent protuberances of ruffling membrane, and culminating in host cell invasion of Gram-negative pathogens like Salmonella typhimurium. Different Salmonella effectors are able to bind actin and activate Rho-family GTPases, which have previously been implicated in mediating actin-dependent Salmonella entry by interacting with N-WASP or WAVE-complex, well-established activators of the actin nucleation machine Arp2/3-complex. Using genetic deletion and RNA interference studies, we show here that neither individual nor collective removal of these Arp2/3- complex activators affected host cell invasion as efficiently as Arp2/3-complex knock-down, although the latter was also not essential. However, interference with WAVE-complex function abrogated Salmonella-induced membrane ruffling without significantly affecting entry efficiency, actin or Arp2/3-complex accumulation. In addition, scanning electron microscopy images captured entry events in the absence of prominent membrane ruffles. Finally, localization and RNA interference studies indicated a relevant function in Salmonella entry for the novel Arp2/3-complex regulator WASH. These data establish for the first time that Salmonella invasion is separable from bacteria-induced membrane ruffling, and uncover an additional Arp2/3-complex activator as well as an Arp2/3-complex-independent actin assembly activity that contribute to Salmonella invasion.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)84-98
Number of pages15
JournalCellular Microbiology
Volume12
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Apr 2010
Externally publishedYes

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