
Helicobacter pylori vacuolating cytotoxin enters cells, localizes to the mitochondria, and induces mitochondrial membrane permeability changes correlated to toxin channel activity
Author(s) -
Willhite David C.,
Blanke Steven R.
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
cellular microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.542
H-Index - 138
eISSN - 1462-5822
pISSN - 1462-5814
DOI - 10.1046/j.1462-5822.2003.00347.x
Subject(s) - biology , toxin , helicobacter pylori , mitochondrion , microbial toxins , microbiology and biotechnology , anthrax toxin , membrane potential , bacterial outer membrane , biophysics , biochemistry , gene , escherichia coli , genetics , recombinant dna , fusion protein
Summary The Helicobacter pylori vacuolating cytotoxin (VacA) intoxicates mammalian cells resulting in reduction of mitochondrial transmembrane potential (ΔΨ m reduction) and cytochrome c release, two events consistent with the modulation of mitochondrial membrane permeability. We now demonstrate that the entry of VacA into cells and the capacity of VacA to form anion‐selective channels are both essential for ΔΨ m reduction and cytochrome c release. Subsequent to cell entry, a substantial fraction of VacA localizes to the mitochondria. Neither ΔΨ m reduction nor cytochrome c release within VacA‐intoxicated cells requires cellular caspase activity. Moreover, VacA cellular activity is not sensitive to cyclosporin A, suggesting that VacA does not induce the mitochondrial permeability transition as a mechanism for ΔΨ m reduction and cytochrome c release. Time‐course and dose‐response studies indicate that ΔΨ m reduction occurs substantially before and at lower concentrations of VacA than cytochrome c release. Collectively, these results support a model that VacA enters mammalian cells, localizes to the mitochondria, and modulates mitochondrial membrane permeability by a mechanism dependent on toxin channel activity ultimately resulting in cytochrome c release. This model represents a novel mechanism for regulation of a mitochondrial‐dependent apoptosis pathway by a bacterial toxin.