The N-terminus of the Chlamydia trachomatis effector Tarp engages the host Hippo pathway
George F. Aranjuez, Om Patel, Dev Patel, Travis J. Jewett

TL;DR
This study shows that the N-terminal region of the Chlamydia effector Tarp can manipulate the host Hippo pathway to promote cell survival during infection.
Contribution
The study identifies a novel function of the N-terminal region of Tarp in modulating the Hippo signaling pathway in vivo.
Findings
N-Tarp causes wing disc overgrowth and increased adult wing size in Drosophila, similar to Yorkie overexpression.
N-Tarp upregulates Hippo target genes and its effects can be rescued by reducing Yorkie or its targets.
The N-terminal region of Tarp alters Hippo signaling and acts upstream of Yorkie in Drosophila.
Abstract
Chlamydia trachomatis (Ct) is an obligate, intracellular Gram-negative bacteria and the leading bacterial sexually transmitted infection in the United States. Chlamydia manipulates the host cell biology using various secreted bacterial effectors during its intracellular development. The early effector translocated actin-recruiting phosphoprotein (Tarp), important for Chlamydia entry, has a well-characterized C-terminal region which can polymerize and bundle F-actin. In contrast, not much is known about the function of the N-terminus of Tarp (N-Tarp), though present in many Chlamydia spp. To address this, we use Drosophila melanogaster as an in vivo cell biology platform to study N-Tarp-host interactions. Transgenic expression of N-Tarp in Drosophila results in developmental phenotypes consistent with altered host Salvador-Warts-Hippo signaling, a conserved signaling cascade that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHippo pathway signaling and YAP/TAZ · Wnt/β-catenin signaling in development and cancer
