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  • Multiple mechanisms of NADP...
    McCaffrey, Ramona L.; Schwartz, Justin T.; Lindemann, Stephen R.; Moreland, Jessica G.; Buchan, Blake W.; Jones, Bradley D.; Allen, Lee‐Ann H.

    Journal of leukocyte biology, October 2010, Letnik: 88, Številka: 4
    Journal Article

    Francisella tularensis uses both pre‐ and post‐assembly mechanisms to inhibit NADPH oxidase activity at its own phagosome and throughout infected human neutrophils. Ft is a facultative intracellular pathogen that infects many cell types, including neutrophils. In previous work, we demonstrated that the type B Ft strain LVS disrupts NADPH oxidase activity throughout human neutrophils, but how this is achieved is incompletely defined. Here, we used several type A and type B strains to demonstrate that Ft‐mediated NADPH oxidase inhibition is more complex than appreciated previously. We confirm that phagosomes containing Ft opsonized with AS exclude flavocytochrome b558 and extend previous results to show that soluble phox proteins were also affected, as indicated by diminished phosphorylation of p47phox and other PKC substrates. However, a different mechanism accounts for the ability of Ft to inhibit neutrophil activation by formyl peptides, Staphylococcus aureus, OpZ, and phorbol esters. In this case, enzyme targeting and assembly were normal, and impaired superoxide production was characterized by sustained membrane accumulation of dysfunctional NADPH oxidase complexes. A similar post‐assembly inhibition mechanism also diminished the ability of anti‐Ft IS to confer neutrophil activation and bacterial killing, consistent with the limited role for antibodies in host defense during tularemia. Studies of mutants that we generated in the type A Ft strain Schu S4 demonstrate that the regulatory factor fevR is essential for NADPH oxidase inhibition, whereas iglI and iglJ, candidate secretion system effectors, and the acid phosphatase acpA are not. As Ft uses multiple mechanisms to block neutrophil NADPH oxidase activity, our data strongly suggest that this is a central aspect of virulence.