CLOSTRIDIUM-DIFFICILE TOXIN-B ACTIVATES CALCIUM INFLUX REQUIRED FOR ACTIN DISASSEMBLY DURING CYTOTOXICITY

被引:30
作者
GILBERT, RJ
POTHOULAKIS, C
LAMONT, JT
YAKUBOVICH, M
机构
[1] ST ELIZABETHS HOSP BOSTON, DIV GASTROENTEROL, BOSTON, MA 02315 USA
[2] ST ELIZABETHS HOSP BOSTON, DEPT BIOMED RES, BOSTON, MA 02315 USA
[3] TUFTS UNIV, SCH MED, BOSTON, MA 02315 USA
[4] BOSTON UNIV HOSP, DIV GASTROENTEROL, BOSTON, MA 02118 USA
[5] BOSTON UNIV, SCH MED, BOSTON, MA 02118 USA
来源
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-GASTROINTESTINAL AND LIVER PHYSIOLOGY | 1995年 / 268卷 / 03期
关键词
CALCIUM; CYTOTOXICITY; ACTIN;
D O I
10.1152/ajpgi.1995.268.3.G487
中图分类号
R57 [消化系及腹部疾病];
学科分类号
摘要
The principal cellular response to Clostridium difficile toxin B, a protein toxin associated with antibiotic-associated colitis, is the disassembly of actin microfilaments. Although receptor-activated signal transduction mechanisms have been proposed to mediate these effects, the intracellular events that precede actin breakdown are unknown. In NIH-3T3 fibroblasts, toxin B induced an elevation of intracellular calcium possessing either a slow (minutes) or fast (seconds) rise time, followed by a sustained elevation of calcium concentration. Subcellular analysis of steady-state calcium distribution after toxin B demonstrated that the increase of calcium was homogeneous throughout the cytosol and did not vary based on the kinetics of the initial calcium rise. Ah calcium responses were blocked by substitution with calcium-free buffer or buffer containing lanthanum chloride, indicating that the rise in calcium was attributable to calcium influx from the extracellular space. Quantitatively similar responses were observed in primary cultured gastric smooth muscle and AR42J pancreatic tumor cells, suggesting that toxin-induced calcium signal transduction was conserved between cell types. The morphological response to toxin B consisted of sequential dissociation of the actin cytoskeleton from membrane attachments, retraction of actin stress fibers from the periphery to the perinuclear region, loss of fiber alignment, and cell rounding. The actin reorganization associated with term B was blocked by incubation of cells in calcium-free media or the clamping of intracellular calcium with cell-permeant calcium chelating agents. These results demonstrate that the calcium influx activated by C. difficile toxin B is a necessary condition for the breakdown of filamentous actin associated with cytotoxicity.
引用
收藏
页码:G487 / G495
页数:9
相关论文
共 40 条
[1]   ANTIBIOTIC-ASSOCIATED PSEUDOMEMBRANOUS COLITIS DUE TO TOXIN-PRODUCING CLOSTRIDIA [J].
BARTLETT, JG ;
CHANG, TW ;
GURWITH, M ;
GORBACH, SL ;
ONDERDONK, AB .
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 1978, 298 (10) :531-534
[2]   INOSITOL TRISPHOSPHATE AND CALCIUM SIGNALING [J].
BERRIDGE, MJ .
NATURE, 1993, 361 (6410) :315-325
[3]  
CIESIELSKITRESKA J, 1989, EUR J CELL BIOL, V48, P191
[4]  
CIESIELSKITRESKA J, 1991, EUR J CELL BIOL, V56, P68
[5]   TOXIN-A FROM CLOSTRIDIUM-DIFFICILE BINDS TO RABBIT ERYTHROCYTE GLYCOLIPIDS WITH TERMINAL GAL-ALPHA-1-3GAL-BETA-1-4GLCNAC SEQUENCES [J].
CLARK, GF ;
KRIVAN, HC ;
WILKINS, TD ;
SMITH, DF .
ARCHIVES OF BIOCHEMISTRY AND BIOPHYSICS, 1987, 257 (01) :217-229
[6]  
CROELL DE, 1991, PHYSIOL REV, V71, P813
[7]   MOLECULAR CHARACTERIZATION OF THE CLOSTRIDIUM-DIFFICILE TOXIN-A GENE [J].
DOVE, CH ;
WANG, SZ ;
PRICE, SB ;
PHELPS, CJ ;
LYERLY, DM ;
WILKINS, TD ;
JOHNSON, JL .
INFECTION AND IMMUNITY, 1990, 58 (02) :480-488
[8]   CLOSTRIDIUM-DIFFICILE TOXIN-A ELICITS CA2+-INDEPENDENT CYTOTOXIC EFFECTS IN CULTURED NORMAL RAT INTESTINAL CRYPT CELLS [J].
FIORENTINI, C ;
DONELLI, G ;
NICOTERA, P ;
THELESTAM, M .
INFECTION AND IMMUNITY, 1993, 61 (09) :3988-3993
[9]   LOCALIZATION OF INOSITOL 1,4,5-TRISPHOSPHATE RECEPTOR-LIKE PROTEIN IN PLASMALEMMAL-CAVEOLAE [J].
FUJIMOTO, T ;
NAKADE, S ;
MIYAWAKI, A ;
MIKOSHIBA, K ;
OGAWA, K .
JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY, 1992, 119 (06) :1507-1513
[10]   ATP-DEPENDENT CONTROL OF STEADY-STATE CYTOSOLIC CALCIUM IN CULTURED GASTRIC SMOOTH-MUSCLE [J].
GILBERT, RJ ;
VALENTE, G ;
DEENEY, JT ;
CORKEY, BE .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY, 1991, 261 (04) :G634-G640