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Conjugative DNA transfer into human cells by the VirB/VirD4 type IV secretion system of the bacterial pathogen Bartonella henselae
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 763035
Author(s) Schroeder, Gunnar; Schuelein, Ralf; Quebatte, Maxime; Dehio, Christoph
Author(s) at UniBasel Dehio, Christoph
Québatte, Maxime
Year 2011
Title Conjugative DNA transfer into human cells by the VirB/VirD4 type IV secretion system of the bacterial pathogen Bartonella henselae
Journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume 108
Number 35
Pages / Article-Number 14643-14648
Keywords bacterial conjugation, transformation, bacterial infection, relaxase, oriT
Abstract

Bacterial type IV secretion systems (T4SS) mediate interbacterial conjugative DNA transfer and transkingdom protein transfer into eukaryotic host cells in bacterial pathogenesis. The sole bacterium known to naturally transfer DNA into eukaryotic host cells via a T4SS is the plant pathogen Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Here we demonstrate T4SS-mediated DNA transfer from a human bacterial pathogen into human cells. We show that the zoonotic pathogen Bartonella henselae can transfer a cryptic plasmid occurring in the bartonellae into the human endothelial cell line EA.hy926 via its T4SS VirB/VirD4. DNA transfer into EA.hy926 cells was demonstrated by using a reporter derivative of this Bartonella-specific mobilizable plasmid generated by insertion of a eukaryotic egfp-expression cassette. Fusion of the C-terminal secretion signal of the endogenous VirB/VirD4 protein substrate BepD with the plasmid-encoded DNA-transport protein Mob resulted in a 100-fold increased DNA transfer rate. Expression of the delivered egfp gene in EA.hy926 cells required cell division, suggesting that nuclear envelope breakdown may facilitate passive entry of the transferred ssDNA into the nucleus as prerequisite for complementary strand synthesis and transcription of the egfp gene. Addition of an eukaryotic neomycin phosphotransferase expression cassette to the reporter plasmid facilitated selection of stable transgenic EA.hy926 cell lines that display chromosomal integration of the transferred plasmid DNA. Our data suggest that T4SS-dependent DNA transfer into host cells may occur naturally during human infection with Bartonella and that these chronically infecting pathogens have potential for the engineering of in vivo gene-delivery vectors with applications in DNA vaccination and therapeutic gene therapy.

Publisher National Academy of Sciences
ISSN/ISBN 0027-8424
edoc-URL http://edoc.unibas.ch/dok/A5844453
Full Text on edoc No
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1073/pnas.1019074108
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21844337
ISI-Number WOS:000294425900056
Document type (ISI) Journal Article
 
   

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