Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Monica Rolando is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Monica Rolando.


Nature Reviews Microbiology | 2016

Targeting of host organelles by pathogenic bacteria: a sophisticated subversion strategy

Pedro Escoll; Sonia Mondino; Monica Rolando; Carmen Buchrieser

Many bacterial pathogens have evolved the ability to subvert and exploit host functions in order to enter and replicate in eukaryotic cells. For example, bacteria have developed specific mechanisms to target eukaryotic organelles such as the nucleus, the mitochondria, the endoplasmic reticulum and the Golgi apparatus. In this Review, we highlight the most recent advances in our understanding of the mechanisms that bacterial pathogens use to target these organelles. We also discuss how these strategies allow bacteria to manipulate host functions and to ultimately enable bacterial infection.


Traffic | 2011

Escherichia coli Producing CNF1 Toxin Hijacks Tollip to Trigger Rac1-Dependent Cell Invasion

Orane Visvikis; Laurent Boyer; Stéphanie Torrino; Anne Doye; Marc Lemonnier; Patrick Lorès; Monica Rolando; Gilles Flatau; Amel Mettouchi; Daniel Bouvard; Esteban Veiga; Gérard Gacon; Pascale Cossart; Emmanuel Lemichez

Rho GTPases, which are master regulators of both the actin cytoskeleton and membrane trafficking, are often hijacked by pathogens to enable their invasion of host cells. Here we report that the cytotoxic necrotizing factor‐1 (CNF1) toxin of uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC) promotes Rac1‐dependent entry of bacteria into host cells. Our screen for proteins involved in Rac1‐dependent UPEC entry identifies the Toll‐interacting protein (Tollip) as a new interacting protein of Rac1 and its ubiquitinated forms. We show that knockdown of Tollip reduces CNF1‐induced Rac1‐dependent UPEC entry. Tollip depletion also reduces the Rac1‐dependent entry of Listeria monocytogenes expressing InlB invasion protein. Moreover, knockdown of Tollip, Tom1 and clathrin, decreases CNF1 and Rac1‐dependent internalization of UPEC. Finally, we show that Tollip, Tom1 and clathrin associate with Rac1 and localize at the site of bacterial entry. Collectively, these findings reveal a new link between Rac1 and Tollip, Tom1 and clathrin membrane trafficking components hijacked by pathogenic bacteria to allow their efficient invasion of host cells.


Infection and Immunity | 2009

Injection of Staphylococcus aureus EDIN by the Bacillus anthracis protective antigen machinery induces vascular permeability

Monica Rolando; Patrick Munro; Caroline Stefani; Patrick Auberger; Gilles Flatau; Emmanuel Lemichez

ABSTRACT Systemic injection of Bacillus anthracis lethal toxin (LT) produces vascular leakage and animal death. Recent studies suggest that LT triggers direct endothelial cell cytotoxicity that is responsible for the vascular leakage. LT is composed of heptamers of protective antigen (PA), which drives the endocytosis and translocation into host cells of the lethal factor (LF), a mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase protease. Here we investigated the consequences of injection of an endothelium-permeabilizing factor using LT as a “molecular syringe.” To this end, we generated the chimeric factor LE, corresponding to the PA-binding domain of LF (LF1-254) fused to EDIN exoenzyme. EDIN ADP ribosylates RhoA, leading to actin cable disruption and formation of transcellular tunnels in endothelial cells. We report that systemic injection of LET (LE plus PA) triggers a PA-dependent increase in the pulmonary endothelium permeability. We also report that native LT induces a progressive loss of endothelium barrier function. We established that there is a direct correlation between the extent of endothelium permeability induced by LT and the cytotoxic activity of LT. This suggests new ways to design therapeutic drugs against anthrax directed toward vascular permeability.


Cellular Microbiology | 2010

Transcriptome dysregulation by anthrax lethal toxin plays a key role in induction of human endothelial cell cytotoxicity

Monica Rolando; Caroline Stefani; Gilles Flatau; Patrick Auberger; Amel Mettouchi; Musa Mhlanga; Ulf R. Rapp; Antoine Galmiche; Emmanuel Lemichez

We have investigated how Bacillus anthracis lethal toxin (LT) triggers caspase‐3 activation and the formation of thick actin cables in human endothelial cells. By DNA array analysis we show that LT has a major impact on the cell transcriptome and we identify key host genes involved in LT cytotoxic effects. Indeed, upregulation of TRAIL and downregulation of XIAP both participate in LT‐induced caspase‐3 activation. LT induces a downregulation of the immediate early gene and master regulator of transcription egr1. Importantly, its re‐expression in LT‐intoxicated cells blocks caspase‐3 activation. In parallel, we found that the formation of actin cables induced by LT occurs in the absence of direct activation of RhoA/ROCK signalling. We show that knock‐down of cortactin and rhophilin‐2 under conditions of calponin‐1 expression defines the minimal set of genes regulated by LT for actin cable formation. Together our data establish that the modulation of the cell transcriptome by LT plays a key role in triggering human endothelial cell toxicity.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Isoform-specific Interaction of C-RAF with Mitochondria

Antoine Galmiche; Jochen Fueller; Ansgar Santel; Georg Krohne; Ilka Wittig; Anne Doye; Monica Rolando; Gilles Flatau; Emmanuel Lemichez; Ulf R. Rapp

The proteins of the RAF family (A-RAF, B-RAF, and C-RAF) are serine/threonine kinases that play important roles in development, mature cell regulation, and cancer. Although it is widely held that their localization on membranes is an important aspect of their function, there are few data that address this aspect of their mode of action. Here, we report that each member of the RAF family exhibits a specific distribution at the level of cellular membranes and that C-RAF is the only isoform that directly targets mitochondria. We found that the RAF kinases exhibit intrinsic differences in terms of mitochondrial affinity and that C-RAF is the only isoform that binds this organelle efficiently. This affinity is conferred by the C-RAF amino-terminal domain and does not depend on the presence of RAS GTPases on the surface of mitochondria. Finally, we analyzed the consequences of C-RAF activation on mitochondria and observed that this event dramatically changes their morphology and their subcellular distribution. Our observations indicate that: (i) RAF kinases exhibit different localizations at the level of cellular membranes; (ii) C-RAF is the only isoform that directly binds mitochondria; and (iii) through its functional coupling with MEK, C-RAF regulates the shape and the cellular distribution of mitochondria.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Cross-Reactivity of Anthrax and C2 Toxin: Protective Antigen Promotes the Uptake of Botulinum C2I Toxin into Human Endothelial Cells

Angelika Kronhardt; Monica Rolando; Christoph Beitzinger; Caroline Stefani; Michael Leuber; Gilles Flatau; Michel R. Popoff; Roland Benz; Emmanuel Lemichez

Binary toxins are among the most potent bacterial protein toxins performing a cooperative mode of translocation and exhibit fatal enzymatic activities in eukaryotic cells. Anthrax and C2 toxin are the most prominent examples for the AB7/8 type of toxins. The B subunits bind both host cell receptors and the enzymatic A polypeptides to trigger their internalization and translocation into the host cell cytosol. C2 toxin is composed of an actin ADP-ribosyltransferase (C2I) and C2II binding subunits. Anthrax toxin is composed of adenylate cyclase (EF) and MAPKK protease (LF) enzymatic components associated to protective antigen (PA) binding subunit. The binding and translocation components anthrax protective antigen (PA63) and C2II of C2 toxin share a sequence homology of about 35%, suggesting that they might substitute for each other. Here we show by conducting in vitro measurements that PA63 binds C2I and that C2II can bind both EF and LF. Anthrax edema factor (EF) and lethal factor (LF) have higher affinities to bind to channels formed by C2II than C2 toxins C2I binds to anthrax protective antigen (PA63). Furthermore, we could demonstrate that PA in high concentration has the ability to transport the enzymatic moiety C2I into target cells, causing actin modification and cell rounding. In contrast, C2II does not show significant capacity to promote cell intoxication by EF and LF. Together, our data unveiled the remarkable flexibility of PA in promoting C2I heterologous polypeptide translocation into cells.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Role of N-terminal His6-Tags in binding and efficient translocation of polypeptides into cells using anthrax protective antigen (PA).

Christoph Beitzinger; Caroline Stefani; Angelika Kronhardt; Monica Rolando; Gilles Flatau; Emmanuel Lemichez; Roland Benz

It is of interest to define bacterial toxin biochemical properties to use them as molecular-syringe devices in order to deliver enzymatic activities into host cells. Binary toxins of the AB7/8-type are among the most potent and specialized bacterial protein toxins. The B subunits oligomerize to form a pore that binds with high affinity host cell receptors and the enzymatic A subunit. This allows the endocytosis of the complex and subsequent injection of the A subunit into the cytosol of the host cells. Here we report that the addition of an N-terminal His6-tag to different proteins increased their binding affinity to the protective antigen (PA) PA63-channels, irrespective if they are related (C2I) or unrelated (gpJ, EDIN) to the AB7/8-family of toxins. His6-EDIN exhibited voltage-dependent increase of the stability constant for binding by a factor of about 25 when the trans-side corresponding to the cell interior was set to −70 mV. Surprisingly, the C. botulinum toxin C2II-channel did not share this feature of PA63. Cell-based experiments demonstrated that addition of an N-terminal His6-tag promoted also intoxication of endothelial cells by C2I or EDIN via PA63. Our results revealed that addition of His6-tags to several factors increase their binding properties to PA63 and enhance the property to intoxicate cells.


Autophagy | 2016

Legionella pneumophila restrains autophagy by modulating the host's sphingolipid metabolism

Monica Rolando; Pedro Escoll; Carmen Buchrieser

ABSTRACT Sphingolipids are bioactive molecules playing a key role as membrane components, but they are also central regulators of many intracellular processes including macroautophagy/autophagy. In particular, sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) is a critical mediator that controls the balance between sphingolipid-induced autophagy and cell death. S1P levels are adjusted via S1P synthesis, dephosphorylation or degradation, catalyzed by SGPL1 (sphingosine-1-phosphate lyase 1). Intracellular pathogens are able to modulate many different host cell pathways to allow their replication. We have found that infection of eukaryotic cells with the human pathogen Legionella pneumophila triggers a change in the host cell sphingolipid metabolism and specifically affects the levels of sphingosine. Indeed, L. pneumophila secretes a protein highly homologous to eukaryotic SGPL1 (named LpSPL). We solved the crystal structure of LpSPL and showed that it encodes lyase activity, targets the hosts sphingolipid metabolism, and plays a role in starvation-induced autophagy during L. pneumophila infection to promote intracellular survival.


Mbio | 2017

A Unique cis-Encoded Small Noncoding RNA Is Regulating Legionella pneumophila Hfq Expression in a Life Cycle-Dependent Manner

Giulia Oliva; Tobias Sahr; Monica Rolando; Maike Knoth; Carmen Buchrieser

ABSTRACT Legionella pneumophila is an environmental bacterium that parasitizes protozoa, but it may also infect humans, thereby causing a severe pneumonia called Legionnaires’ disease. To cycle between the environment and a eukaryotic host, L. pneumophila is regulating the expression of virulence factors in a life cycle-dependent manner: replicating bacteria do not express virulence factors, whereas transmissive bacteria are highly motile and infective. Here we show that Hfq is an important regulator in this network. Hfq is highly expressed in transmissive bacteria but is expressed at very low levels in replicating bacteria. A L. pneumophila hfq deletion mutant exhibits reduced abilities to infect and multiply in Acanthamoeba castellanii at environmental temperatures. The life cycle-dependent regulation of Hfq expression depends on a unique cis-encoded small RNA named Anti-hfq that is transcribed antisense of the hfq transcript and overlaps its 5′ untranslated region. The Anti-hfq sRNA is highly expressed only in replicating L. pneumophila where it regulates hfq expression through binding to the complementary regions of the hfq transcripts. This results in reduced Hfq protein levels in exponentially growing cells. Both the small noncoding RNA (sRNA) and hfq mRNA are bound and stabilized by the Hfq protein, likely leading to the cleavage of the RNA duplex by the endoribonuclease RNase III. In contrast, after the switch to transmissive bacteria, the sRNA is not expressed, allowing now an efficient expression of the hfq gene and consequently Hfq. Our results place Hfq and its newly identified sRNA anti-hfq in the center of the regulatory network governing L. pneumophila differentiation from nonvirulent to virulent bacteria. IMPORTANCE The abilities of L. pneumophila to replicate intracellularly and to cause disease depend on its capacity to adapt to different extra- and intracellular environmental conditions. Therefore, a timely and fine-tuned expression of virulence factors and adaptation traits is crucial. Yet, the regulatory circuits governing the life cycle of L. pneumophila from replicating to virulent bacteria are only partly uncovered. Here we show that the life cycle-dependent regulation of the RNA chaperone Hfq relies on a small regulatory RNA encoded antisense to the hfq-encoding gene through a base pairing mechanism. Furthermore, Hfq regulates its own expression in an autoregulatory loop. The discovery of this RNA regulatory mechanism in L. pneumophila is an important step forward in the understanding of how the switch from inoffensive, replicating to highly virulent, transmissive L. pneumophila is regulated. The abilities of L. pneumophila to replicate intracellularly and to cause disease depend on its capacity to adapt to different extra- and intracellular environmental conditions. Therefore, a timely and fine-tuned expression of virulence factors and adaptation traits is crucial. Yet, the regulatory circuits governing the life cycle of L. pneumophila from replicating to virulent bacteria are only partly uncovered. Here we show that the life cycle-dependent regulation of the RNA chaperone Hfq relies on a small regulatory RNA encoded antisense to the hfq-encoding gene through a base pairing mechanism. Furthermore, Hfq regulates its own expression in an autoregulatory loop. The discovery of this RNA regulatory mechanism in L. pneumophila is an important step forward in the understanding of how the switch from inoffensive, replicating to highly virulent, transmissive L. pneumophila is regulated.


Cytoskeleton | 2015

Contractile actin cables induced by Bacillus anthracis lethal toxin depend on the histone acetylation machinery.

Monica Rolando; Caroline Stefani; Anne Doye; Maria I. Acosta; Orane Visvikis; Hannah G. Yevick; Carmen Buchrieser; Amel Mettouchi; Patricia Bassereau; Emmanuel Lemichez

It remains a challenge to decode the molecular basis of the long‐term actin cytoskeleton rearrangements that are governed by the reprogramming of gene expression. Bacillus anthracis lethal toxin (LT) inhibits mitogen‐activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling, thereby modulating gene expression, with major consequences for actin cytoskeleton organization and the loss of endothelial barrier function. Using a laser ablation approach, we characterized the contractile and tensile mechanical properties of LT‐induced stress fibers. These actin cables resist pulling forces that are transmitted at cell–matrix interfaces and at cell–cell discontinuous adherens junctions. We report that treating the cells with trichostatin A (TSA), a broad range inhibitor of histone deacetylases (HDACs), or with MS‐275, which targets HDAC1, 2 and 3, induces stress fibers. LT decreased the cellular levels of HDAC1, 2 and 3 and reduced the global HDAC activity in the nucleus. Both the LT and TSA treatments induced Rnd3 expression, which is required for the LT‐mediated induction of actin stress fibers. Furthermore, we reveal that treating the LT‐intoxicated cells with garcinol, an inhibitor of histone acetyl‐transferases (HATs), disrupts the stress fibers and limits the monolayer barrier dysfunctions. These data demonstrate the importance of modulating the flux of protein acetylation in order to control actin cytoskeleton organization and the endothelial cell monolayer barrier.

Collaboration


Dive into the Monica Rolando's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Emmanuel Lemichez

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Caroline Stefani

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Roland Benz

Jacobs University Bremen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ulf R. Rapp

University of Würzburg

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Amel Mettouchi

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gilles Flatau

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Orane Visvikis

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge