4.5 Article

Orientia tsutsugamushi Ank9 is a multifunctional effector that utilizes a novel GRIP-like Golgi localization domain for Golgi-to-endoplasmic reticulum trafficking and interacts with host COPB2

Journal

CELLULAR MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cmi.12727

Keywords

ankyrin repeat-containing proteins; bacterial effectors; Golgi localization domain; intracellular bacteria; retrograde trafficking; Rickettsia

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R03 AI101666, R21 AI103606, R56 AI123306, K12 GM093857]
  2. American Heart Association (AHA) [13GRNT16810009]
  3. AHA Predoctoral Fellowship [13PRE16840032]

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Orientia tsutsugamushi causes scrub typhus, a potentially fatal infection that afflicts 1million people annually. This obligate intracellular bacterium boasts one of the largest microbial arsenals of ankyrin repeat-containing protein (Ank) effectors, most of which target the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) by undefined mechanisms. Ank9 is the only one proven to function during infection. Here, we demonstrate that Ank9 bears a motif that mimics the GRIP domain of eukaryotic golgins and is necessary and sufficient for its Golgi localization. Ank9 reaches the ER exclusively by retrograde trafficking from the Golgi. Consistent with this observation, it binds COPB2, a host protein that mediates Golgi-to-ER transport. Ank9 destabilizes the Golgi and ER in a Golgi localization domain-dependent manner and induces the activating transcription factor 4-dependent unfolded protein response. The Golgi is also destabilized in cells infected with O.tsutsugamushi or treated with COPB2 small interfering RNA. COPB2 reduction and/or the cellular events that it invokes, such as Golgi destabilization, benefit Orientia replication. Thus, Ank9 or bacterial negative modulation of COPB2 might contribute to the bacterium's intracellular replication. This report identifies a novel microbial Golgi localization domain, links Ank9 to the ability of O.tsutsugamushi to perturb Golgi structure, and describes the first mechanism by which any Orientia effector targets the secretory pathway.

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