Active bacterial modification of the host environment through RNA Polymerase II inhibition

Ambite I, Filenko NA, Zaldastanishvili E, Butler DS, Tran TH, Chaudhuri A, Esmaeili P, Ahmadi S, Paul S, Wullt B, Putze J, Chen SL, Dobrindt U, Svanborg C

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Unlike pathogens, which attack the host, commensal bacteria create a state of friendly coexistence. Here, we identified a mechanism of bacterial adaptation to the host niche, where they reside. Asymptomatic carrier strains were shown to inhibit RNA polymerase II (Pol II) in host cells by targeting Ser2 phosphorylation, a step required for productive mRNA elongation. Assisted by a rare, spontaneous loss-of-function mutant from a human carrier, the bacterial NlpD protein was identified as a Pol II inhibitor. After internalization by host cells, NlpD was shown to target constituents of the Pol II phosphorylation complex (RPB1 and PAF1C), attenuating host gene expression. Therapeutic efficacy of a recombinant NlpD protein was demonstrated in a urinary tract infection model, by reduced tissue pathology, accelerated bacterial clearance, and attenuated Pol II-dependent gene expression. The findings suggest an intriguing, evolutionarily conserved mechanism for bacterial modulation of host gene expression, with a remarkable therapeutic potential.

Details about the publication

JournalJournal of Clinical Investigation (J Clin Invest)
Volume131
Issue4
Page rangee140333null
StatusPublished
Release year2020 (15/02/2021)
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1172/JCI140333
KeywordsImmunotherapy; Inflammation; Microbiology; Transcription

Authors from the University of Münster

Dobrindt, Ulrich
Institute of Hygiene
Putze, Johannes
Institute of Hygiene
Zaldastanishvili, Elisabed
Institute of Hygiene