Publication | Open Access
Vaginolysin Drives Epithelial Ultrastructural Responses to Gardnerella vaginalis
37
Citations
34
References
2013
Year
Microbial PathogensVaginal MucosaImmunologyPathologyGynecologyInnate ImmunityBacterial PathogensCellular PhysiologyGardnerella VaginalisMedical MicrobiologyVulvar DiseasesVaginitisHuman VaginalMicrobial ToxinVirulence FactorMembrane BiologyImmune FunctionCell BiologyClinical MicrobiologyPhagocytePathogenesisMicrobiologyIntracellular TraffickingCellular BiochemistryMedicineEnvelope Stress Response
Gardnerella vaginalis, the bacterial species most frequently isolated from women with bacterial vaginosis (BV), produces a cholesterol-dependent cytolysin (CDC), vaginolysin (VLY). At sublytic concentrations, CDCs may initiate complex signaling cascades crucial to target cell survival. Using live-cell imaging, we observed the rapid formation of large membrane blebs in human vaginal and cervical epithelial cells (VK2 and HeLa cells) exposed to recombinant VLY toxin and to cell-free supernatants from growing liquid cultures of G. vaginalis. Binding of VLY to its human-specific receptor (hCD59) is required for bleb formation, as antibody inhibition of either toxin or hCD59 abrogates this response, and transfection of nonhuman cells (CHO-K1) with hCD59 renders them susceptible to toxin-induced membrane blebbing. Disruption of the pore formation process (by exposure to pore-deficient toxoids or pretreatment of cells with methyl-β-cyclodextrin) or osmotic protection of target cells inhibits VLY-induced membrane blebbing. These results indicate that the formation of functional pores drives the observed ultrastructural rearrangements. Rapid bleb formation may represent a conserved response of epithelial cells to sublytic quantities of pore-forming toxins, and VLY-induced epithelial cell membrane blebbing in the vaginal mucosa may play a role in the pathogenesis of BV.
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