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Bacterial pore‐forming toxin pneumolysin: Cell membrane structure and microvesicle shedding capacity determines differential survival of immune cell types
Author(s) -
Larpin Yu,
Besançon Hervé,
Iacovache MirceaIoan,
Babiychuk Victoriia S.,
Babiychuk Eduard B.,
Zuber Benoît,
Draeger Annette,
Köffel René
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the faseb journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.709
H-Index - 277
eISSN - 1530-6860
pISSN - 0892-6638
DOI - 10.1096/fj.201901737rr
Subject(s) - pneumolysin , jurkat cells , microvesicle , immune system , cytolysin , biology , u937 cell , microbiology and biotechnology , t cell , cell culture , microvesicles , streptococcus pneumoniae , immunology , microrna , biochemistry , genetics , virulence , gene , antibiotics
Bacterial infectious diseases can lead to death or to serious illnesses. These outcomes are partly the consequence of pore‐forming toxins, which are secreted by the pathogenic bacteria (eg, pneumolysin of Streptococcus pneumoniae ). Pneumolysin binds to cholesterol within the plasma membrane of host cells and assembles to form trans‐membrane pores, which can lead to Ca 2+ influx and cell death. Membrane repair mechanisms exist that limit the extent of damage. Immune cells which are essential to fight bacterial infections critically rely on survival mechanisms after detrimental pneumolysin attacks. This study investigated the susceptibility of different immune cell types to pneumolysin. As a model system, we used the lymphoid T‐cell line Jurkat, and myeloid cell lines U937 and THP‐1. We show that Jurkat T cells are highly susceptible to pneumolysin attack. In contrast, myeloid THP‐1 and U937 cells are less susceptible to pneumolysin. In line with these findings, human primary T cells are shown to be more susceptible to pneumolysin attack than monocytes. Differences in susceptibility to pneumolysin are due to (I) preferential binding of pneumolysin to Jurkat T cells and (II) cell type specific plasma membrane repair capacity. Myeloid cell survival is mostly dependent on Ca 2+ induced expelling of damaged plasma membrane areas as microvesicles. Thus, in myeloid cells, first‐line defense cells in bacterial infections, a potent cellular repair machinery ensures cell survival after pneumolysin attack. In lymphoid cells, which are important at later stages of infections, less efficient repair mechanisms and enhanced toxin binding renders the cells more sensitive to pneumolysin.

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