Increased talin-vinculin spatial proximities in livers in response to spotted fever group rickettsial and Ebola virus infections

斑疹伤寒组立克次体和埃博拉病毒感染后,肝脏中肌动蛋白-黏着斑蛋白的空间邻近性增加。

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作者:Yakun Liu #,Jie Xiao #,Ben Zhang,Thomas R Shelite,Zhengchen Su,Qing Chang,Barbara Judy,Xiang Li,Aleksandra Drelich,Jiani Bei,Yixuan Zhou,Junying Zheng,Yang Jin,Shannan L Rossi,Shao-Jun Tang,Maki Wakamiya,Tais Saito,Thomas Ksiazek,Bhupendra Kaphalia,Bin Gong

Abstract

Talin and vinculin, both actin-cytoskeleton-related proteins, have been documented to participate in establishing bacterial infections, respectively, as the adapter protein to mediate cytoskeleton-driven dynamics of the plasma membrane. However, little is known regarding the potential role of the talin-vinculin complex during spotted fever group rickettsial and Ebola virus infections, two dreadful infectious diseases in humans. Many functional properties of proteins are determined by their participation in protein-protein complexes, in a temporal and/or spatial manner. To resolve the limitation of application in using mouse primary antibodies on archival, multiple formalin-fixed mouse tissue samples, which were collected from experiments requiring high biocontainment, we developed a practical strategic proximity ligation assay (PLA) capable of employing one primary antibody raised in mouse to probe talin-vinculin spatial proximal complex in mouse tissue. We observed an increase of talin-vinculin spatial proximities in the livers of spotted fever Rickettsia australis or Ebola virus-infected mice when compared with mock mice. Furthermore, using EPAC1-knockout mice, we found that deletion of EPAC1 could suppress the formation of spatial proximal complex of talin-vinculin in rickettsial infections. In addition, we observed increased colocalization between spatial proximity of talin-vinculin and filamentous actin-specific phalloidin staining in single survival mouse from an ordinarily lethal dose of rickettsial or Ebola virus infection. These findings may help to delineate a fresh insight into the mechanisms underlying liver specific pathogenesis during infection with spotted fever rickettsia or Ebola virus in the mouse model.

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