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CCT chaperonin complex is required for efficient delivery of anthrax toxin into the cytosol of host cells

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2013

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National Academy of Sciences
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Slater, L. H., E. C. Hett, A. E. Clatworthy, K. G. Mark, and D. T. Hung. 2013. “CCT Chaperonin Complex Is Required for Efficient Delivery of Anthrax Toxin into the Cytosol of Host Cells.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 110 (24): 9932–37. doi:10.1073/pnas.1302257110.

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Abstract

Bacterial toxins have evolved successful strategies for coopting host proteins to access the cytosol of host cells. Anthrax lethal factor (LF) enters the cytosol through pores in the endosomal membrane formed by anthrax protective antigen. Although in vitro models using planar lipid bilayers have shown that translocation can occur in the absence of cellular factors, recent studies using intact endosomes indicate that host factors are required for translocation in the cellular environment. In this study, we describe a high-throughput shRNA screen to identify host factors required for anthrax lethal toxin-induced cell death. The cytosolic chaperonin complex chaperonin containing t-complex protein 1 (CCT) was identified, and subsequent studies showed that CCT is required for efficient delivery of LF and related fusion proteins into the cytosol. We further show that knockdown of CCT inhibits the acid-induced delivery of LF and the fusion protein LFN-Bla (N terminal domain of LF fused to beta-lactamase) across the plasma membrane of intact cells. Together, these results suggest that CCT is required for efficient delivery of enzymatically active toxin to the cytosol and are consistent with a direct role for CCT in translocation of LF through the protective antigen pore.

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