Litcius/Paper detail

<i>Orientia tsutsugamushi</i> Nucleomodulin Ank13 Exploits the RaDAR Nuclear Import Pathway To Modulate Host Cell Transcription

Haley E. Adcox, Amanda L. Hatke, Shelby E. Andersen, Sarika Gupta, Nathan B. Otto, Mary M. Weber, Richard T. Marconi, Jason A. Carlyon

2021mBio28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Nucleomodulins are recently defined effectors used by diverse intracellular bacteria to manipulate eukaryotic gene expression and convert host cells into hospitable niches. How nucleomodulins enter the nucleus, their functional domains, and the genes that they modulate are incompletely characterized. Orientia tsutsugamushi is an intracellular bacterial pathogen that causes scrub typhus, which can be fatal. O. tsutsugamushi Ank13 is the first example of a microbial protein that coopts eukaryotic RaDAR (RanGDP-ankyrin repeats) nuclear import. It dysregulates expression of a multitude of host genes with those involved in transcriptional control and the inflammatory response being among the most prominent. Ank13 does so via mechanisms that are dependent and independent of both its nucleotropism and eukaryotic-like F-box domain that interfaces with ubiquitin ligase machinery. Nearly all the genes most strongly downregulated by ectopically expressed Ank13 are repressed in O. tsutsugamushi-infected cells, implicating its importance for intracellular colonization and scrub typhus molecular pathogenesis.

Topics & Concepts

Ankyrin repeatEffectorBiologyOrientia tsutsugamushiCell biologyGeneTranscription (linguistics)GeneticsTranscription factorScrub typhusPhilosophyLinguisticsVector-borne infectious diseasesFungal and yeast genetics researchToxin Mechanisms and Immunotoxins