Cell Host & Microbe
Volume 15, Issue 4, 9 April 2014, Pages 435-445
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Article
IcsA Is a Shigella flexneri Adhesin Regulated by the Type III Secretion System and Required for Pathogenesis

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Highlights

  • S. flexneri IcsA is necessary and sufficient for bacterial adhesion to host cells

  • IcsA-dependent adhesion is triggered by type III secretion system activity

  • The bile salt deoxycholate activates IcsA-dependent S. flexneri adhesion

  • IcsA-dependent adhesion is required for Shigella pathogenesis

Summary

Following contact with the epithelium, the enteric intracellular bacterial pathogen Shigella flexneri invades epithelial cells and escapes intracellular phagosomal destruction using its type III secretion system (T3SS). The bacterium replicates within the host cell cytosol and spreads between cells using actin-based motility, which is mediated by the virulence factor IcsA (VirG). Whereas S. flexneri invasion is well characterized, adhesion mechanisms of the bacterium remain elusive. We found that IcsA also functions as an adhesin that is both necessary and sufficient to promote contact with host cells. As adhesion can be beneficial or deleterious depending on the host cell type, S. flexneri regulates IcsA-dependent adhesion. Activation of the T3SS in response to the bile salt deoxycholate triggers IcsA-dependent adhesion and enhances pathogen invasion. IcsA-dependent adhesion contributes to virulence in a mouse model of shigellosis, underscoring the importance of this adhesin to S. flexneri pathogenesis.

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