4.4 Article

Legionella pneumophila Cas2 Promotes the Expression of Small Heat Shock Protein C2 That Is Required for Thermal Tolerance and Optimal Intracellular Infection

Journal

INFECTION AND IMMUNITY
Volume 90, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/iai.00369-22

Keywords

Legionella pneumophila; CRISPR-Cas; Cas2; small heat shock protein; thermal tolerance; intracellular infection

Funding

  1. NIH [R21 AI123462, R01 AI139054]
  2. NCI CCSG [P30 CA060553]
  3. NIH Office of Director [S10OD025194]
  4. [P41 GM108569]

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This study reveals that Cas2 protein in Legionella pneumophila promotes intracellular infection and thermal tolerance through regulating the expression of HspC2 protein. These findings provide new insights into the noncanonical functions of CRISPR-Cas proteins.
Previously, we demonstrated that Cas2 encoded within the CRISPR-Cas locus of Legionella pneumophila strain 130b promotes the ability of the Legionella pathogen to infect amoebal hosts. Given that L. pneumophila Cas2 has RNase activity, we posited that the cytoplasmic protein is regulating the expression of another Legionella gene(s) that fosters intracellular infection. Proteomics revealed 10 proteins at diminished levels in the cas2 mutant, and reverse transcription-quantitative (qRT-PCR) confirmed the reduced expression of a gene encoding putative small heat shock protein C2 (HspC2), among several others. As predicted, the gene was expressed more highly at 37 degrees C to 50 degrees C than that at 30 degrees C, and an hspC2 mutant, but not its complemented derivative, displayed --100-fold reduced CFU following heat shock at 55 degrees C. Compatible with the effect of Cas2 on hspC2 expression, strains lacking Cas2 also had impaired thermal tolerance. The hspC2 mutant, like the cas2 mutant before it, was greatly impaired for infection of Acanthamoeba castellanit a frequent host for legionellae in waters. HspC2 and Cas2 were not required for entry into these host cells but promoted the replicative phase of intracellular infection. Finally, the hspC2 mutant exhibited an additional defect during the infection of macrophages, which are the primary host for legionellae during lung infection. In summary, hspC2 is upregulated by the presence of Cas2, and HspC2 uniquely promotes both L pneumophila extracellular survival at high temperatures and infection of amoebal and human host cells. To our knowledge, these findings also represent the first genetic proof linking Cas2 to thermotolerance, expanding the repertoire of noncanonical functions associated with CRISPR-Cas proteins.

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