4.4 Article

Orientia tsutsugamushi OtDUB Is Expressed and Interacts with Adaptor Protein Complexes during Infection

Journal

INFECTION AND IMMUNITY
Volume 90, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/iai.00469-22

Keywords

scrub typhus; Orientia; effector; clathrin; adaptor protein complexes; endocytosis; Golgi; membrane trafficking; obligate intracellular bacteria

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health-National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [1R01 AI123346, 2R56 AI123346, 1R01 AI167857, R21 AI152513, GM136325]
  2. American Heart Association [20PRE35210610]
  3. NIH [S10 (SIG) OD018034]
  4. NIH-NCI Cancer Center [P30 CA016059]

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This study reveals the expression, localization, and interactome of OtDUB during O. tsutsugamushi infection and establishes a strong link between OtDUB and the host endocytic pathway. OtDUB peripherally associates with the O. tsutsugamushi cell wall and interacts with adapter protein complex 2 and other endosomal membrane traffic regulators.
Orientia tsutsugamushi is an etiologic agent of scrub typhus, a globally emerging rickettsiosis that can be fatal. The bacterium's obligate intracellular lifestyle requires its interaction with host eukaryotic cellular pathways. The proteins it employs to do so and their functions during infection are understudied. Recombinant versions of the recently characterized O. tsutsugamushi deubiquitylase (OtDUB) exhibit high-affinity ubiquitin binding, mediate guanine nucleotide exchange to activate Rho GTPases, bind clathrin adaptor protein complexes 1 and 2, and bind the phospholipid phosphatidylserine. Whether OtDUB is expressed and its function during O. tsutsugamushi infection have yet to be explored. Here, OtDUB expression, location, and interactome during infection were examined. O. tsutsugamushi transcriptionally and translationally expresses OtDUB throughout infection of epithelial, monocytic, and endothelial cells. Results from structured illumination microscopy, surface trypsinization of intact bacteria, and acetic acid extraction of non-integral membrane proteins indicate that OtDUB peripherally associates with the O. tsutsugamushi cell wall and is at least partially present on the bacterial surface. Analyses of the proteins with which OtDUB associates during infection revealed several known O. tsutsugamushi cell wall proteins and others. It also forms an interactome with adapter protein complex 2 and other endosomal membrane traffic regulators. This study documents the first interactors of OtDUB during O. tsutsugamushi infection and establishes a strong link between OtDUB and the host endocytic pathway.

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