Journal article
The Bacterial Virulence Factor NleA Inhibits Cellular Protein Secretion by Disrupting Mammalian COPII Function
J Kim, A Thanabalasuriar, T Chaworth-Musters, JC Fromme, EA Frey, PI Lario, P Metalnikov, K Rizg, NA Thomas, SF Lee, EL Hartland, PR Hardwidge, T Pawson, NC Strynadka, BB Finlay, R Schekman, S Gruenheid
Cell Host and Microbe | CELL PRESS | Published : 2007
Abstract
Enterohemorrhagic and enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EHEC and EPEC) maintain an extracellular lifestyle and use a type III secretion system to translocate effector proteins into the host cytosol. These effectors manipulate host pathways to favor bacterial replication and survival. NleA is an EHEC/EPEC- and related species-specific translocated effector protein that is essential for bacterial virulence. However, the mechanism by which NleA impacts virulence remains undetermined. Here we demonstrate that NleA compromises the Sec23/24 complex, a component of the mammalian COPII protein coat that shapes intracellular protein transport vesicles, by directly binding Sec24. Expression of an Nle..
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