Using S. cerevisiae as a Model System to Investigate V. cholerae VopX-Host Cell Protein Interactions and Phenotypes
Christopher H. Seward, Alexander Manzella, Ashfaqul Alam, J. Scott Butler, Michelle Dziejman

TL;DR
This study uses yeast to investigate how a bacterial protein, VopX, disrupts host cell function and causes disease.
Contribution
The study introduces S. cerevisiae as a model to study VopX's effects on host cell pathways.
Findings
VopX expression in yeast causes a severe growth defect.
Deleting RLM1 or using sorbitol partially suppresses the defect.
VopX activates a reporter gene through Rlm1, but not in cells lacking upstream MAP kinases.
Abstract
Most pathogenic, non-O1/non-O139 serogroup Vibrio cholerae strains cause diarrheal disease in the absence of cholera toxin. Instead, many use Type 3 Secretion System (T3SS) mediated mechanisms to disrupt host cell homeostasis. We identified a T3SS effector protein, VopX, which is translocated into mammalian cells during in vitro co-culture. In a S. cerevisiae model system, we found that expression of VopX resulted in a severe growth defect that was partially suppressed by a deletion of RLM1, encoding the terminal transcriptional regulator of the Cell Wall Integrity MAP kinase (CWI) regulated pathway. Growth of yeast cells in the presence of sorbitol also suppressed the defect, supporting a role for VopX in destabilizing the cell wall. Expression of VopX activated expression of β-galactosidase from an RLM1-reponsive element reporter fusion, but failed to do so in cells lacking MAP…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVibrio bacteria research studies · Vibrio bacteria research studies · Bacterial Genetics and Biotechnology
