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Featured researches published by Hai Xia Xie.


Infection and Immunity | 2010

EseG, an Effector of the Type III Secretion System of Edwardsiella tarda, Triggers Microtubule Destabilization

Hai Xia Xie; Hong Bing Yu; Jun Zheng; Pin Nie; Leonard J. Foster; Yu-Keung Mok; B. Brett Finlay; Ka Yin Leung

ABSTRACT Edwardsiella tarda is a Gram-negative enteric pathogen that causes hemorrhagic septicemia in fish and both gastrointestinal and extraintestinal infections in humans. A type III secretion system (T3SS) was recently shown to contribute to pathogenesis, since deletions of various T3SS genes increased the 50% lethal dose (LD50) by about 1 log unit in the blue gourami infection model. In this study, we report EseG as the first identified effector protein of T3SS. EseG shares partial homology with two Salmonella T3SS effectors (SseG and SseF) over a conserved domain (amino acid residues 142 to 192). The secretion of EseG is dependent on a functional T3SS and, in particular, requires the chaperone EscB. Experiments using TEM-1 β-lactamase as a fluorescence-based reporter showed that EseG was translocated into HeLa cells at 35°C. Fractionation of infected HeLa cells demonstrated that EseG was localized to the host membrane fraction after translocation. EseG is able to disassemble microtubule structures when overexpressed in mammalian cells. This phenotype may require a conserved motif of EseG (EseG142-192), since truncated versions of EseG devoid of this motif lose their ability to cause microtubule destabilization. By demonstrating the function of EseG, our study contributes to the understanding of E. tarda pathogenesis. Moreover, the approach established in this study to identify type III effectors can be used to identify and characterize more type III and possible type VI effectors in Edwardsiella.


Infection and Immunity | 2015

Identification and Functional Characterization of the Novel Edwardsiella tarda Effector EseJ

Hai Xia Xie; Jin-Fang Lu; Ying Zhou; Jia Yi; Xiu-Jun Yu; Ka Yin Leung; Pin Nie

ABSTRACT Edwardsiella tarda is a Gram-negative enteric pathogen that causes hemorrhagic septicemia in fish and gastro- and extraintestinal infections in humans. The type III secretion system (T3SS) of E. tarda has been identified as a key virulence factor that contributes to pathogenesis in fish. However, little is known about the associated effectors translocated by this T3SS. In this study, by comparing the profile of secreted proteins of the wild-type PPD130/91 and its T3SS ATPase ΔesaN mutant, we identified a new effector by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization–time of flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry. This effector consists of 1,359 amino acids, sharing high sequence similarity with Orf29/30 of E. tarda strain EIB202, and is renamed EseJ. The secretion and translocation of EseJ depend on the T3SS. A ΔeseJ mutant strain adheres to epithelioma papillosum of carp (EPC) cells 3 to 5 times more extensively than the wild-type strain does. EseJ inhibits bacterial adhesion to EPC cells from within bacterial cells. Importantly, the ΔeseJ mutant strain does not replicate efficiently in EPC cells and fails to replicate in J774A.1 macrophages. In infected J774A.1 macrophages, the ΔeseJ mutant elicits higher production of reactive oxygen species than wild-type E. tarda. The replication defect is consistent with the attenuation of the ΔeseJ mutant in the blue gourami fish model: the 50% lethal dose (LD50) of the ΔeseJ mutant is 2.34 times greater than that of the wild type, and the ΔeseJ mutant is less competitive than the wild type in mixed infection. Thus, EseJ represents a novel effector that contributes to virulence by reducing bacterial adhesion to EPC cells and facilitating intracellular bacterial replication.


Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology | 2009

Ontogeny of IgM-producing cells in the mandarin fish Siniperca chuatsi identified by in situ hybridisation

Jie Tian; Hai Xia Xie; Ya-Peng Zhang; Zhiguo Xu; W. J. Yao; Pin Nie

The ontogeny of IgM-producing cells was studied in juvenile mandarin fish Siniperca chuatsi, an important fish in Chinas aquaculture sector. The IgM-producing cells were localised through in situ hybridisation with a probe complementary to the Ig mu-chain in lymphoid-related tissues, including head kidney, spleen, thymus, intestine and gills. In head kidney, transcripts of Ig mu were first detected at 20days post-hatching (dph) with a few positive signals, and the number of IgM-producing cells increased obviously from 39dph onwards. At 136dph, a large amount of positive cells were observed in the entire organ with clusters of these cells located around the blood vessels. In spleen, IgM-producing cells were found from 26dph onwards, followed by an increase until 67dph; clusters of positive cells were also detected around blood vessels at 102dph. In thymus, IgM-producing cells were first observed at 39dph; thereafter, no obvious increase was detected until 78dph. The positive cells in thymus were distributed mainly in the outer zone of thymus. A few IgM-producing cells were still observed in thymus of 1-year-old mandarin fish. IgM-producing cells were not detected in the intestine until 87dph, with several discrete positively stained cells distributed in the lamina propria. IgM-producing cells, scattered mainly in primary gill filaments around blood vessels, were detected in gills from 90dph. As in other teleosts, these results indicated that the head kidney appears to be the primary organ for IgM production in mandarin fish, and IgM-producing cells exist in all organs examined in the present study, implying their lymphoid role in fish. In addition, it is suggested that vaccination after 20dph may be much more effective in mandarin fish.


Infection and Immunity | 2014

Edwardsiella tarda-Induced Cytotoxicity Depends on Its Type III Secretion System and Flagellin

Hai Xia Xie; Jin-Fang Lu; Nathalie Rolhion; David W. Holden; Pin Nie; Ying Zhou; Xiu-Jun Yu

ABSTRACT Many Gram-negative bacteria utilize a type III secretion system (T3SS) to translocate virulence proteins into host cells to cause diseases. In responding to infection, macrophages detect some of the translocated proteins to activate caspase-1-mediated cell death, called pyroptosis, and secretion of proinflammatory cytokines to control the infection. Edwardsiella tarda is a Gram-negative enteric pathogen that causes hemorrhagic septicemia in fish and both gastrointestinal and extraintestinal infections in humans. In this study, we report that the T3SS of E. tarda facilitates its survival and replication in murine bone marrow-derived macrophages, and E. tarda infection triggers pyroptosis of infected macrophages from mice and fish and increased secretion of the cytokine interleukin 1β in a T3SS-dependent manner. Deletion of the flagellin gene fliC of E. tarda results in decreased cytotoxicity for infected macrophages and does not attenuate its virulence in a fish model of infection, whereas upregulated expression of FliC in the fliC mutant strain reduces its virulence. We propose that the host controls E. tarda infection partially by detecting FliC translocated by the T3SS, whereas the bacteria downregulate the expression of FliC to evade innate immunity.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2015

Gene Deletion Strategy To Examine the Involvement of the Two Chondroitin Lyases in Flavobacterium columnare Virulence

Nan Li; Ting Qin; Xiao Lin Zhang; Bei Huang; Zhixin Liu; Hai Xia Xie; Jin Zhang; Mark J. McBride; Pin Nie

ABSTRACT Flavobacterium columnare is an important bacterial pathogen of freshwater fish that causes high mortality of infected fish and heavy economic losses in aquaculture. The pathogenesis of this bacterium is poorly understood, in part due to the lack of efficient methods for genetic manipulation. In this study, a gene deletion strategy was developed and used to determine the relationship between the production of chondroitin lyases and virulence. The F. johnsoniae ompA promoter (PompA) was fused to sacB to construct a counterselectable marker for F. columnare. F. columnare carrying PompA-sacB failed to grow on media containing 10% sucrose. A suicide vector carrying PompA-sacB was constructed, and a gene deletion strategy was developed. Using this approach, the chondroitin lyase-encoding genes, cslA and cslB, were deleted. The ΔcslA and ΔcslB mutants were both partially deficient in digestion of chondroitin sulfate A, whereas a double mutant (ΔcslA ΔcslB) was completely deficient in chondroitin lyase activity. Cells of F. columnare wild-type strain G4 and of the chondroitin lyase-deficient ΔcslA ΔcslB mutant exhibited similar levels of virulence toward grass carp in single-strain infections. Coinfections, however, revealed a competitive advantage for the wild type over the chondroitin lyase mutant. The results indicate that chondroitin lyases are not essential virulence factors of F. columnare but may contribute to the ability of the pathogen to compete and cause disease in natural infections. The gene deletion method developed in this study may be employed to investigate the virulence factors of this bacterium and may have wide application in many other members of the phylum Bacteroidetes.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2015

Type III Secretion System Translocon Component EseB Forms Filaments on and Mediates Autoaggregation of and Biofilm Formation by Edwardsiella tarda.

Zhi Peng Gao; Pin Nie; Jin Fang Lu; Lu Yi Liu; Tiao Yi Xiao; Wei Liu; Jia Shou Liu; Hai Xia Xie

ABSTRACT The type III secretion system (T3SS) of Edwardsiella tarda plays an important role in infection by translocating effector proteins into host cells. EseB, a component required for effector translocation, is reported to mediate autoaggregation of E. tarda. In this study, we demonstrate that EseB forms filamentous appendages on the surface of E. tarda and is required for biofilm formation by E. tarda in Dulbeccos modified Eagles medium (DMEM). Biofilm formation by E. tarda in DMEM does not require FlhB, an essential component for assembling flagella. Dynamic analysis of EseB filament formation, autoaggregation, and biofilm formation shows that the formation of EseB filaments occurs prior to autoaggregation and biofilm formation. The addition of an EseB antibody to E. tarda cultures before bacterial autoaggregation prevents autoaggregation and biofilm formation in a dose-dependent manner, whereas the addition of the EseB antibody to E. tarda cultures in which biofilm is already formed does not destroy the biofilm. Therefore, EseB filament-mediated bacterial cell-cell interaction is a prerequisite for autoaggregation and biofilm formation.


Infection and Immunity | 2016

Edwardsiella tarda EscE (Orf13 Protein) Is a Type III Secretion System-Secreted Protein That Is Required for the Injection of Effectors, Secretion of Translocators, and Pathogenesis in Fish

Jin Fang Lu; Wei Na Wang; Gai Ling Wang; He Zhang; Ying Zhou; Zhi Peng Gao; Pin Nie; Hai Xia Xie

ABSTRACT The type III secretion system (T3SS) of Edwardsiella tarda is crucial for its intracellular survival and pathogenesis in fish. The orf13 gene (escE) of E. tarda is located 84 nucleotides (nt) upstream of esrC in the T3SS gene cluster. We found that EscE is secreted and translocated in a T3SS-dependent manner and that amino acids 2 to 15 in the N terminus were required for a completely functional T3SS in E. tarda. Deletion of escE abolished the secretion of T3SS translocators, as well as the secretion and translocation of T3SS effectors, but did not influence their intracellular protein levels in E. tarda. Complementation of the escE mutant with a secretion-incompetent EscE derivative restored the secretion of translocators and effectors. Interestingly, the effectors that were secreted and translocated were positively correlated with the EscE protein level in E. tarda. The escE mutant was attenuated in the blue gourami fish infection model, as its 50% lethal dose (LD50) increased to 4 times that of the wild type. The survival rate of the escE mutant-strain-infected fish was 69%, which was much higher than that of the fish infected with the wild-type bacteria (6%). Overall, EscE represents a secreted T3SS regulator that controls effector injection and translocator secretion, thus contributing to E. tarda pathogenesis in fish. The homology of EscE within the T3SSs of other bacterial species suggests that the mechanism of secretion and translocation control used by E. tarda may be commonly used by other bacterial pathogens.


Immunogenetics | 2005

Characterization of two genes encoding leucine-rich repeat-containing proteins in grass carp Ctenopharyngodon idellus.

M.X. Chang; Pin Nie; Hai Xia Xie; Bo-guang Sun; Q. Gao

The cDNAs and genes of two different types of leucine-rich repeat-containing proteins from grass carp (Ctenopharyngodon idellus) were cloned. Homology search revealed that the two genes, designated as GC-GARP and GC-LRG, have 37% and 32% deduced amino-acid sequence similarities with human glycoprotein A repetitions predominant precursor (GARP) and leucine-rich α2-glycoprotein (LRG), respectively. The cDNAs of GC-GARP and GC-LRG encoded 664 and 339 amino acid residues, respectively. GC-GARP and GC-LRG contain many distinct structural and/or functional motifs of the leucine-rich repeat (LRR) subfamily, such as multiple conserved 11-residue segments with the consensus sequence LxxLxLxxN/CxL (x can be any amino acid). The genes GC-GARP and GC-LRG consist of two exons, with 4,782 bp and 2,119 bp in total length, respectively. The first exon of each gene contains a small 5′-untranslated region and partial open reading frame. The putative promoter region of GC-GARP was found to contain transcription factor binding sites for GATA-1, IRF4, Oct-1, IRF-7, IRF-1, AP1, GATA-box and NFAT, and the promoter region of GC-LRG for MYC-MAX, MEIS1, ISRE, IK3, HOXA9 and C/EBP alpha. Phylogenetic analysis showed that GC-GARP and mammalian GARPs were clustered into one branch, while GC-LRG and mammalian LRGs were in another branch. The GC-GARP gene was only detected in head kidney, and GC-LRG in the liver, spleen and heart in the copepod (Sinergasilus major)-infected grass carp, indicating the induction of gene expression by the parasite infection. The results obtained in the present study provide insight into the structure of fish LRR genes, and further study should be carried out to understand the importance of LRR proteins in host–pathogen interactions.


Infection and Immunity | 2016

EseE of Edwardsiella tarda Augments Secretion of Translocon Protein EseC and Expression of the escC-eseE Operon

Jia Yi; Shui Bing Xiao; Zhi Xiong Zeng; Jin Fang Lu; Lu Yi Liu; Zubair Ahmed Laghari; Pin Nie; Hong Bing Yu; Hai Xia Xie

ABSTRACT Edwardsiella tarda is an important Gram-negative pathogen that employs a type III secretion system (T3SS) to deliver effectors into host cells to facilitate bacterial survival and replication. These effectors are translocated into host cells through a translocon complex composed of three secreted proteins, namely, EseB, EseC, and EseD. The secretion of EseB and EseD requires a chaperone protein called EscC, whereas the secretion of EseC requires the chaperone EscA. In this study, we identified a novel protein (EseE) that also regulates the secretion of EseC. An eseE deletion mutant secreted much less EseC into supernatants, accompanied by increased EseC levels within bacterial cells. We also demonstrated that EseE interacted directly with EseC in a pulldown assay. Interestingly, EseC, EseE, and EscA were able to form a ternary complex, as revealed by pulldown and gel filtration assays. Of particular importance, the deletion of eseE resulted in decreased levels of EseB and EseD proteins in both the bacterial pellet and supernatant fraction. Furthermore, real-time PCR assays showed that EseE positively regulated the transcription of the translocon operon escC-eseE, comprising escC, eseB, escA, eseC, eseD, and eseE. These effects of EseE on the translocon components/operon appeared to have a functional consequence, since the ΔeseE strain was outcompeted by wild-type E. tarda in a mixed infection in blue gourami fish. Collectively, our results demonstrate that EseE not only functions as a chaperone for EseC but also acts as a positive regulator controlling the expression of the translocon operon escC-eseE, thus contributing to the pathogenesis of E. tarda in fish.


Fish & Shellfish Immunology | 2018

Identification, expression analysis, and antibacterial activity of NK-lysin from common carp Cyprinus carpio

Gai Ling Wang; Ming Cheng Wang; Ying Li Liu; Qian Zhang; Chuanfeng Li; Pan Ting Liu; En Zhong Li; Pin Nie; Hai Xia Xie

ABSTRACT Natural killer lysin (NK‐lysin), produced by cytotoxic T lymphocytes and natural killer cells, is a cationic antimicrobial peptide that has a broad antimicrobial spectrum, including bacteria, viruses, and parasites. Nevertheless, the implication of NK‐lysin in the protection against bacterial infection is not aware in common carp. In this study, six different NK‐lysin genes (nkl1, nkl2, nkl3, nkl4, nkl5 and nkl6) were identified in the common carp genome. Each of the mature peptides of common carp NK‐lysin has six well‐conserved cysteine residues, and shares a Saposin B domain, characteristic of saposin‐like protein (SALIP) family. The gene nkl1 contains 5 extrons and 4 introns, and nkl2, nkl3, nkl4 or nkl5 contains 4 extrons and 3 introns, however, the nkl6 has 3 extrons and 2 introns. By quantitative real‐time PCR, nkl2 transcripts were predominantly expressed in spleen of healthy common carp, while elevated mainly in gill and spleen upon Aeromonas hydrophila infection. The recombinant NK‐lysin‐2 purified from Pichia pastoris shows antibacterial activity against Staphylococcus aureus (Gram‐positive), and Escherichia coli M15, Aeromonas hydrophila, as well as Edwardsiella tarda (Gram‐negative), the latter two are important pathogens of aquaculture. Our results indicate that NK‐lysin in common carp might play an important role in fish immune response by enhancing antibacterial defense against bacterial pathogens. HIGHLIGHTSSix NK‐lysin genes (nkl1, nkl2, nkl3, nkl4, nkl5 and nkl6) were identified from common carp.The nkl1 contains five exons and four introns, nkl2–5 contain four exons and three introns respectively, while nkl6 contains three exons and two introns.The nkl2 is predominantly transcripted in spleen in healthy fish, while elevated mainly in gill and spleen upon Aeromonas hydrophila infection.Recombinant NK‐lysin‐2 purified from Pichia pastoris shows antibacterial activity in vitro.

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Pin Nie

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jin Fang Lu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Lu Yi Liu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Ying Zhou

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Bo-guang Sun

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Gai Ling Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Hong Bing Yu

National University of Singapore

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Jia Yi

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jin Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jin-Fang Lu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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