Brucella-driven host N-glycome remodeling controls infection
- PMID: 38531364
- DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2024.03.003
Brucella-driven host N-glycome remodeling controls infection
Erratum in
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Brucella-driven host N-glycome remodeling controls infection.Cell Host Microbe. 2025 Jul 9;33(7):1208. doi: 10.1016/j.chom.2025.05.023. Epub 2025 Jun 17. Cell Host Microbe. 2025. PMID: 40532706 No abstract available.
Abstract
Many powerful methods have been employed to elucidate the global transcriptomic, proteomic, or metabolic responses to pathogen-infected host cells. However, the host glycome responses to bacterial infection remain largely unexplored, and hence, our understanding of the molecular mechanisms by which bacterial pathogens manipulate the host glycome to favor infection remains incomplete. Here, we address this gap by performing a systematic analysis of the host glycome during infection by the bacterial pathogen Brucella spp. that cause brucellosis. We discover, surprisingly, that a Brucella effector protein (EP) Rhg1 induces global reprogramming of the host cell N-glycome by interacting with components of the oligosaccharide transferase complex that controls N-linked protein glycosylation, and Rhg1 regulates Brucella replication and tissue colonization in a mouse model of brucellosis, demonstrating that Brucella exploits the EP Rhg1 to reprogram the host N-glycome and promote bacterial intracellular parasitism, thereby providing a paradigm for bacterial control of host cell infection.
Keywords: Brucella melitensis; N-glycome and N-glycan; Rhg1; SEC61 translocon; effector protein; glycosylation; the oligosaccharide transferase complex; type IV secretion system; unfolded protein response.
Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of interests The authors declare no competing interests.
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