Abstract
Purified pili and porin from Neisseria quickly mobilize calcium (Ca2+) stores in monocytes and epithelial cells, ultimately influencing host cell viability as well as bacterial intracellular survival. Here, we examined the Ca2+ transients induced in human epithelial cells during infection by live, piliated N. gonorrhoeae. Porin induced an influx of Ca2+ from the extracellular medium less than 60 s post infection. The porin-induced transient is followed by a pilus-induced release of Ca2+ from intracellular stores. The timing of these events is similar to that observed using purified proteins. Interestingly, the porin-induced Ca2+ flux is required for the pilus-induced transient, indicating that the pilus-induced Ca2+ release is, itself, Ca2+ dependent. Several lines of evidence indicate that porin is present on pili. Moreover, pilus retraction strongly influences the porin- and pilus-induced Ca2+ fluxes. These and other results strongly suggest that the pilus and porin cooperate to modulate calcium signalling in epithelial cells, and propose a model to explain how N. gonorrhoeae triggers Ca2+ transients in the initial stages of pilus-mediated attachment. © 2005 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
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CITATION STYLE
Ayala, P., Wilbur, J. S., Wetzler, L. M., Tainer, J. A., Snyder, A., & So, M. (2005). The pilus and porin of Neisseria gonorrhoeae cooperatively induce Ca2+ transients in infected epithelial cells. Cellular Microbiology, 7(12), 1736–1748. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1462-5822.2005.00586.x
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