Clostridium difficile toxin A stimulates intracellular calcium release and chemotactic response in human granulocytes

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Abstract

Clostridium difficile, a common enteric pathogen, mediates tissue damage and intestinal fluid secretion by release of two protein exotoxins: toxin A, an enterotoxin, and toxin B, a cytotoxin. Because toxin A elicits an intense inflammatory reaction in vivo, we studied the effects of highly purified C. difficile toxins on activation of human granulocytes. Toxin A at concentrations of 10-7 to 10-6 M, but not toxin B, elicited a significant chemotactic and chemokinetic response by granulocytes that was comparable with that induced by the chemotactic factor N-FMLP (10-7 M). Neither toxin stimulated release of superoxide anion from granulocytes. Toxin A produced a rapid, transient rise in cytosolic [Ca2+)(i), as measured by quin 2 fluorescence. Pertussis toxin and depletion of intra- and extracellular calcium blocked the toxin A effect on cytosolic [Ca2+](i). These findings suggest that the inflammatory effects of C. difficile toxin A in the intestine may be related to its ability to mobilize intracellular Ca2+ and elicit a chemotactic response by granulocytes.

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Pothoulakis, C., Sullivan, R., Melnick, D. A., Triadafilopoulos, G., Gadenne, A. S., Meshulam, T., & LaMont, J. T. (1988). Clostridium difficile toxin A stimulates intracellular calcium release and chemotactic response in human granulocytes. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 81(6), 1741–1745. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI113514

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