Quantitative insights into actin rearrangements and bacterial target site selection from Salmonella Typhimurium infection of micropatterned cells

Vonaesch P, Cardini S, Sellin ME, Goud B, Hardt WD, Schauer K

Cell Microbiol - (-) n/a-n/a [2013-06-00; online 2013-05-30]

Reorganization of the host cell actin cytoskeleton is crucial during pathogen invasion. We established micropatterned cells as a standardized infection model for cell invasion to quantitatively study actin rearrangements triggered by Salmonella Typhimurium (S. Tm). Micropatterns of extracellular matrix proteins force cells to adopt a reproducible shape avoiding strong cell-to-cell variations, a major limitation in classical cell culture conditions. S. Tm induced F-actin-rich ruffles and invaded micropatterned cells similar to unconstrained cells. Yet, standardized conditions allowed fast and unbiased comparison of cellular changes triggered by the SipA and SopE bacterial effector proteins. Intensity measurements in defined regions revealed that the content of pre-existing F-actin remained unchanged during infection, suggesting that newly polymerized F-actin in bacteria-triggered ruffles originates from the G-actin pool. Analysing bacterial target sites, we found that bacteria did not show any preferences for the local actin cytoskeleton specificities. Rather, invasion was constrained to a specific 'cell height', due to flagella-mediated near-surface swimming. We found that invasion sites were similar to bacterial binding sites, indicating that S. Tm can induce a permissive invasion site wherever it binds. As micropatterned cells can be infected by many different pathogens they represent a valuable new tool for quantitative analysis of host-pathogen interactions.

Mikael Sellin

SciLifeLab Fellow

PubMed 23648178

DOI 10.1111/cmi.12154

Crossref 10.1111/cmi.12154


Publications 9.5.0