Jim Sun
University of British Columbia
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011
Dennis Wong; Horacio Bach; Jim Sun; Zakaria Hmama; Yossef Av-Gay
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) pathogenicity depends on its ability to inhibit phagosome acidification and maturation processes after engulfment by macrophages. Here, we show that the secreted Mtb protein tyrosine phosphatase (PtpA) binds to subunit H of the macrophage vacuolar-H+-ATPase (V-ATPase) machinery, a multisubunit protein complex in the phagosome membrane that drives luminal acidification. Furthermore, we show that the macrophage class C vacuolar protein sorting complex, a key regulator of endosomal membrane fusion, associates with V-ATPase in phagosome maturation, suggesting a unique role for V-ATPase in coordinating phagosome–lysosome fusion. PtpA interaction with host V-ATPase is required for the previously reported dephosphorylation of VPS33B and subsequent exclusion of V-ATPase from the phagosome during Mtb infection. These findings show that inhibition of phagosome acidification in the mycobacterial phagosome is directly attributed to PtpA, a key protein needed for Mtb survival and pathogenicity within host macrophages.
PLOS ONE | 2010
Jim Sun; Xuetao Wang; Alice Lau; Ting-Yu Angela Liao; Cecilia Bucci; Zakaria Hmama
Background Microorganisms capable of surviving within macrophages are rare, but represent very successful pathogens. One of them is Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) whose resistance to early mechanisms of macrophage killing and failure of its phagosomes to fuse with lysosomes causes tuberculosis (TB) disease in humans. Thus, defining the mechanisms of phagosome maturation arrest and identifying mycobacterial factors responsible for it are key to rational design of novel drugs for the treatment of TB. Previous studies have shown that Mtb and the related vaccine strain, M. bovis bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG), disrupt the normal function of host Rab5 and Rab7, two small GTPases that are instrumental in the control of phagosome fusion with early endosomes and late endosomes/lysosomes respectively. Methodology/Principal Findings Here we show that recombinant Mtb nucleoside diphosphate kinase (Ndk) exhibits GTPase activating protein (GAP) activity towards Rab5 and Rab7. Then, using a model of latex bead phagosomes, we demonstrated that Ndk inhibits phagosome maturation and fusion with lysosomes in murine RAW 264.7 macrophages. Maturation arrest of phagosomes containing Ndk-beads was associated with the inactivation of both Rab5 and Rab7 as evidenced by the lack of recruitment of their respective effectors EEA1 (early endosome antigen 1) and RILP (Rab7-interacting lysosomal protein). Consistent with these findings, macrophage infection with an Ndk knocked-down BCG strain resulted in increased fusion of its phagosome with lysosomes along with decreased survival of the mutant. Conclusion Our findings provide evidence in support of the hypothesis that mycobacterial Ndk is a putative virulence factor that inhibits phagosome maturation and promotes survival of mycobacteria within the macrophage.
Journal of Leukocyte Biology | 2007
Jim Sun; Ala-Eddine Deghmane; Hafid Soualhine; Thomas Hong; Cecilia Bucci; Anna Solodkin; Zakaria Hmama
Phagosomes containing M. tuberculosis and M. bovis BCG interact normally with early endosomes but fail to fuse with late endosomes and lysosomes. Whereas many early events of mycobacterial phagosomes have been elucidated, the exact mechanism of the inhibition of fusion with lysosomes is still unclear. Several Rab GTPase proteins were shown to be involved in membrane fusion and vesicular transport. In particular, Rab7 associates with the phagosomal membrane and regulates the fusion between late endosomes and lysosomes. This function of Rab7 was shown to be mediated in epithelial cell models by the Rab7 effector RILP (Rab7‐interacting lysosomal protein). However, the relevance of Rab7‐RILP interaction to phagosome biogenesis in macrophage infected with mycobacteria is still unknown. In this study, cotransfection of RAW 264.7 cells with Rab7 and RILP revealed that Rab7‐RILP interaction occurs in macrophages ingesting latex beads. Thereafter, this cell system model was used to demonstrate that infection with live but not killed M. bovis BCG inhibited RILP recruitment despite Rab7 acquisition by the phagosome. Further investigation using immobilized RILP to pull down active Rab7 (GTP‐bound form) from macrophage lysates demonstrated that inactive Rab7 (GDP‐bound form) predominates in cells infected with live BCG. In addition, cell‐free system experiments demonstrated that BCG culture supernatant contains a factor that catalyzes the GTP/GDP switch on recombinant Rab7 molecules. Such a factor was shown to diffuse beyond BCG phagosomes and target other Rab7‐positive compartments. These findings suggest that live mycobacteria express within the macrophage a Rab7 deactivating factor leading to abortion of RILP‐mediated fusion with lysosomes.
Journal of Immunology | 2007
Hafid Soualhine; Ala-Eddine Deghmane; Jim Sun; Karen Mak; Amina Talal; Yossef Av-Gay; Zakaria Hmama
A successful Th cell response to bacterial infections is induced by mature MHC class II molecules presenting specific Ag peptides on the surface of macrophages. In recent studies, we demonstrated that infection with the conventional vaccine Mycobacterium bovis bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) specifically blocks the surface export of mature class II molecules in human macrophages by a mechanism dependent on inhibition of cathepsin S (Cat S) expression. The present study examined class II expression in macrophages infected with a rBCG strain engineered to express and secrete biologically active human Cat S (rBCG-hcs). Cat S activity was completely restored in cells ingesting rBCG-hcs, which secreted substantial levels of Cat S intracellularly. Thus, infection with rBCG-hcs, but not parental BCG, restored surface expression of mature MHC class II molecules in response to IFN-γ, presumably as result of MHC class II invariant chain degradation dependent on active Cat S secreted by the bacterium. These events correlated with increased class II-directed presentation of mycobacterial Ag85B to a specific CD4+ T cell hybridoma by rBCG-hcs-infected macrophages. Consistent with these findings, rBCG-hcs was found to accelerate the fusion of its phagosome with lysosomes, a process that optimizes Ag processing in infected macrophages. These data demonstrated that intracellular restoration of Cat S activity improves the capacity of BCG-infected macrophages to stimulate CD4+ Th cells. Given that Th cells play a major role in protection against tuberculosis, rBCG-hcs would be a valuable tuberculosis vaccine candidate.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014
Olga Danilchanka; Jim Sun; Mikhail Pavlenok; Christian Maueröder; Alexander Speer; Axel Siroy; Joeli Marrero; Carolina Trujillo; David L. Mayhew; Kathryn S. Doornbos; Luis E. Munoz; Martin Herrmann; Sabine Ehrt; Christian Berens; Michael Niederweis
Significance The mechanisms that enable Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative agent of tuberculosis, to resist drug treatment and survive the immune response are poorly understood. In this study we discovered that M. tuberculosis produces the protein channel protein with necrosis-inducing toxin (CpnT), which forms a channel in the outer membrane and releases a toxic domain into the extracellular milieu. This toxin has no similarity to known bacterial toxins and kills eukaryotic cells by necrosis, suggesting that it is required for escape of M. tuberculosis from macrophages and for dissemination. The channel domain of CpnT is used for uptake of nutrients across the outer membrane. Taken together, CpnT is a protein with functions in two fundamental processes in M. tuberculosis physiology: nutrient acquisition and control of host cell death. The ability to control the timing and mode of host cell death plays a pivotal role in microbial infections. Many bacteria use toxins to kill host cells and evade immune responses. Such toxins are unknown in Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Virulent M. tuberculosis strains induce necrotic cell death in macrophages by an obscure molecular mechanism. Here we show that the M. tuberculosis protein Rv3903c (channel protein with necrosis-inducing toxin, CpnT) consists of an N-terminal channel domain that is used for uptake of nutrients across the outer membrane and a secreted toxic C-terminal domain. Infection experiments revealed that CpnT is required for survival and cytotoxicity of M. tuberculosis in macrophages. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the C-terminal domain of CpnT causes necrotic cell death in eukaryotic cells. Thus, CpnT has a dual function in uptake of nutrients and induction of host cell death by M. tuberculosis.
PLOS Pathogens | 2013
Jim Sun; Vijender Singh; Alice Lau; Richard W. Stokes; Andrés Obregón-Henao; Ian M. Orme; Dennis Wong; Yossef Av-Gay; Zakaria Hmama
Defining the mechanisms of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) persistence in the host macrophage and identifying mycobacterial factors responsible for it are keys to better understand tuberculosis pathogenesis. The emerging picture from ongoing studies of macrophage deactivation by Mtb suggests that ingested bacilli secrete various virulence determinants that alter phagosome biogenesis, leading to arrest of Mtb vacuole interaction with late endosomes and lysosomes. While most studies focused on Mtb interference with various regulators of the endosomal compartment, little attention was paid to mechanisms by which Mtb neutralizes early macrophage responses such as the NADPH oxidase (NOX2) dependent oxidative burst. Here we applied an antisense strategy to knock down Mtb nucleoside diphosphate kinase (Ndk) and obtained a stable mutant (Mtb Ndk-AS) that displayed attenuated intracellular survival along with reduced persistence in the lungs of infected mice. At the molecular level, pull-down experiments showed that Ndk binds to and inactivates the small GTPase Rac1 in the macrophage. This resulted in the exclusion of the Rac1 binding partner p67phox from phagosomes containing Mtb or Ndk-coated latex beads. Exclusion of p67phox was associated with a defect of both NOX2 assembly and production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in response to wild type Mtb. In contrast, Mtb Ndk-AS, which lost the capacity to disrupt Rac1-p67phox interaction, induced a strong ROS production. Given the established link between NOX2 activation and apoptosis, the proportion of Annexin V positive cells and levels of intracellular active caspase 3 were significantly higher in cells infected with Mtb Ndk-AS compared to wild type Mtb. Thus, knock down of Ndk converted Mtb into a pro-apoptotic mutant strain that has a phenotype of increased susceptibility to intracellular killing and reduced virulence in vivo. Taken together, our in vitro and in vivo data revealed that Ndk contributes significantly to Mtb virulence via attenuation of NADPH oxidase-mediated host innate immunity.
Infection and Immunity | 2006
Horacio Bach; Jim Sun; Zakaria Hmama; Yossef Av-Gay
ABSTRACT Adaptive gene expression in prokaryotes is mediated by protein kinases and phosphatases. These regulatory proteins mediate phosphorylation of histidine or aspartate in two-component systems and serine/threonine or tyrosine in eukaryotic and eukaryote-like protein kinase systems. The genome sequence of Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis, the causative agent of Johnes disease, does not possess a defined tyrosine kinase. Nevertheless, it encodes for protein tyrosine phosphatases. Here, we report that Map1985, is a functional low-molecular tyrosine phosphatase that is secreted intracellularly upon macrophage infection. This finding suggests that Map1985 might contribute to the pathogenesis of Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis by dephosphorylating essential macrophage signaling and/or adaptor molecules.
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2015
Jim Sun; Axel Siroy; Ravi K. Lokareddy; Alexander Speer; Kathryn S. Doornbos; Gino Cingolani; Michael Niederweis
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) induces necrosis of infected cells to evade immune responses. Recently, we found that Mtb uses the protein CpnT to kill human macrophages by secreting its C-terminal domain, named tuberculosis necrotizing toxin (TNT), which induces necrosis by an unknown mechanism. Here we show that TNT gains access to the cytosol of Mtb-infected macrophages, where it hydrolyzes the essential coenzyme NAD+. Expression or injection of a noncatalytic TNT mutant showed no cytotoxicity in macrophages or in zebrafish zygotes, respectively, thus demonstrating that the NAD+ glycohydrolase activity is required for TNT-induced cell death. To prevent self-poisoning, Mtb produces an immunity factor for TNT (IFT) that binds TNT and inhibits its activity. The crystal structure of the TNT–IFT complex revealed a new NAD+ glycohydrolase fold of TNT, the founding member of a toxin family widespread in pathogenic microorganisms.
Molecular Microbiology | 2015
Alexander Speer; Jim Sun; Olga Danilchanka; Virginia Meikle; Jennifer L. Rowland; Kerstin Walter; Bradford R. Buck; Mikhail Pavlenok; Christoph Hölscher; Sabine Ehrt; Michael Niederweis
Sphingomyelinases secreted by pathogenic bacteria play important roles in host–pathogen interactions ranging from interfering with phagocytosis and oxidative burst to iron acquisition. This study shows that the Mtb protein Rv0888 possesses potent sphingomyelinase activity cleaving sphingomyelin, a major lipid in eukaryotic cells, into ceramide and phosphocholine, which are then utilized by Mtb as carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus sources, respectively. An Mtb rv0888 deletion mutant did not grow on sphingomyelin as a sole carbon source anymore and replicated poorly in macrophages indicating that Mtb utilizes sphingomyelin during infection. Rv0888 is an unusual membrane protein with a surface‐exposed C‐terminal sphingomyelinase domain and a putative N‐terminal channel domain that mediated glucose and phosphocholine uptake across the outer membrane in an M. smegmatis porin mutant. Hence, we propose to name Rv0888 as SpmT (sphingomyelinase of Mycobacterium tuberculosis). Erythrocyte membranes contain up to 27% sphingomyelin. The finding that Rv0888 accounts for half of Mtbs hemolytic activity is consistent with its sphingomyelinase activity and the observation that Rv0888 levels are increased in the presence of erythrocytes and sphingomyelin by 5‐ and 100‐fold, respectively. Thus, Rv0888 is a novel outer membrane protein that enables Mtb to utilize sphingomyelin as a source of several essential nutrients during intracellular growth.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2016
Santosh Shah; Alex G. Dalecki; Aruni P. Malalasekera; Cameron L. Crawford; Suzanne M. Michalek; Olaf Kutsch; Jim Sun; Stefan H. Bossmann; Frank Wolschendorf
ABSTRACT Copper (Cu) ions are likely the most important immunological metal-related toxin utilized in controlling bacterial infections. Impairment of bacterial Cu resistance reduces viability within the host. Thus, pharmacological enhancement of Cu-mediated antibacterial toxicity may lead to novel strategies in drug discovery and development. Screening for Cu toxicity-enhancing antibacterial molecules identified 8-hydroxyquinoline (8HQ) to be a potent Cu-dependent bactericidal inhibitor of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The MIC of 8HQ in the presence of Cu was 0.16 μM for replicating and nonreplicating M. tuberculosis cells. We found 8HQs activity to be dependent on the presence of extracellular Cu and to be related to an increase in cell-associated labile Cu ions. Both findings are consistent with 8HQ acting as a Cu ionophore. Accordingly, we identified the 1:1 complex of 8HQ and Cu to be its active form, with Zn, Fe, or Mn neither enhancing nor reducing its Cu-specific action. This is remarkable, considering that the respective metal complexes have nearly identical structures and geometries. Finally, we found 8HQ to kill M. tuberculosis selectively within infected primary macrophages. Given the stark Cu-dependent nature of 8HQ activity, this is the first piece of evidence that Cu ions within macrophages may bestow antibacterial properties to a Cu-dependent inhibitor of M. tuberculosis. In conclusion, our findings highlight the metal-binding ability of the 8-hydroxyquinoline scaffold to be a potential focus for future medicinal chemistry and highlight the potential of innate immunity-inspired screening platforms to reveal molecules with novel modes of action against M. tuberculosis.