Salmonella Typhimurium reprograms macrophage metabolism via T3SS effector SopE2 to promote intracellular replication and virulence

Lingyan Jiang(Nankai University), Peisheng Wang(Nankai University), Xiaorui Song(Nankai University), Huan Zhang(Nankai University), Shuangshuang Ma(Nankai University), Jingting Wang(Nankai University), Wanwu Li(Nankai University), Runxia Lv(Nankai University), Xiaoqian Liu(Nankai University), Shuai Ma(Nankai University), Jiaqi Yan(Nankai University), Haiyan Zhou(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Di Huang(Nankai University), Zhihui Cheng(Nankai University), Chen Yang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Lu Feng(Nankai University), Lei Wang(Nankai University)
Nature Communications
February 9, 2021
Cited by 375Open Access
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Abstract

Salmonella Typhimurium establishes systemic infection by replicating in host macrophages. Here we show that macrophages infected with S. Typhimurium exhibit upregulated glycolysis and decreased serine synthesis, leading to accumulation of glycolytic intermediates. The effects on serine synthesis are mediated by bacterial protein SopE2, a type III secretion system (T3SS) effector encoded in pathogenicity island SPI-1. The changes in host metabolism promote intracellular replication of S. Typhimurium via two mechanisms: decreased glucose levels lead to upregulated bacterial uptake of 2- and 3-phosphoglycerate and phosphoenolpyruvate (carbon sources), while increased pyruvate and lactate levels induce upregulation of another pathogenicity island, SPI-2, known to encode virulence factors. Pharmacological or genetic inhibition of host glycolysis, activation of host serine synthesis, or deletion of either the bacterial transport or signal sensor systems for those host glycolytic intermediates impairs S. Typhimurium replication or virulence.


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