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P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 11:26 Annual Reviews AR110-17 Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000. 54:567–613 c 2000 by Annual Reviews. All rights reserved Copyright LEGIONELLA PNEUMOPHILA PATHOGENESIS: A Fateful Journey from Amoebae to Macrophages Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. M. S. Swanson and B. K. Hammer Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109; e-mail: [email protected], [email protected] Key Words stringent response, phagosome-lysosome fusion, virulence regulation, intracellular pathogen, opportunistic ■ Abstract Legionella pneumophila first commanded attention in 1976, when investigators from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention identified it as the culprit in a massive outbreak of pneumonia that struck individuals attending an American Legion convention (84). It is now clear that this gram-negative bacterium flourishes naturally in fresh water as a parasite of amoebae, but it can also replicate within alveolar macrophages. L. pneumophila pathogenesis is discussed using the following model as a framework. When ingested by phagocytes, stationary-phase L. pneumophila bacteria establish phagosomes which are completely isolated from the endosomal pathway but are surrounded by endoplasmic reticulum. Within this protected vacuole, L. pneumophila converts to a replicative form that is acid tolerant but no longer expresses several virulence traits, including factors that block membrane fusion. As a consequence, the pathogen vacuoles merge with lysosomes, which provide a nutrient-rich replication niche. Once the amino acid supply is depleted, progeny accumulate the second messenger guanosine 30 ,50 -bispyrophosphate (ppGpp), which coordinates entry into the stationary phase with expression of traits that promote transmission to a new phagocyte. A number of factors contribute to L. pneumophila virulence, including type II and type IV secretion systems, a pore-forming toxin, type IV pili, flagella, and numerous other factors currently under investigation. Because of its resemblance to certain aspects of Mycobacterium, Toxoplasma, Leishmania, and Coxiella pathogenesis, a detailed description of the mechanism used by L. pneumophila to manipulate and exploit phagocyte membrane traffic may suggest novel strategies for treating a variety of infectious diseases. Knowledge of L. pneumophila ecology may also inform efforts to combat the emergence of new opportunistic macrophage pathogens. CONTENTS LEGIONNAIRES’ DISEASE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Epidemiology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . An Airborne Respiratory Pathogen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Histology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Pontiac Fever . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0066-4227/00/1001-0567$14.00 568 568 569 569 570 567 P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. 568 11:26 SWANSON Annual Reviews ¥ AR110-17 HAMMER Cell-Mediated Immunity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . An Opportunistic Pathogen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Amoebae, a Reservoir for Macrophage Pathogens . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Contribution of Amoebae to Disease . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . REGULATION OF VIRULENCE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Temperature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Growth Phase . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Stringent Response Paradigm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . THE INTRACELLULAR PATHWAY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Nascent Phagosome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Association with Endoplasmic Reticulum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Maturation of the Replication Vacuole . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Transmission . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . LEGIONELLA PNEUMOPHILA VIRULENCE AS A PARADIGM FOR OPPORTUNISTIC PATHOGENS OF MACROPHAGES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 570 571 572 573 574 575 575 577 578 578 588 590 596 599 LEGIONNAIRES’ DISEASE Epidemiology Legionella pneumophila remains a significant cause of morbidity and mortality. Indeed, the worst recorded outbreak of legionellosis occurred in February 1999, at the Westfriese Flora Show in the Netherlands, where 231 people became ill and 21 died (236a). Legionellosis is usually acquired in the community, and it typically accounts for 2%–15% of all community-acquired pneumonias that require hospitalization (39, 154, 164). Outbreaks of legionellosis remain newsworthy, but usually <5% of the community-acquired Legionnaires’ Disease cases fit this description (154). The most common form of legionellosis is sporadic Legionnaires’ Disease, which often escapes diagnosis. In the United States, only ∼1000 cases are reported annually (175), although 20,000 cases of Legionnaires’ disease are estimated to occur (154). Nosocomial legionellosis is often more severe, and its incidence more dramatic. According to data from the passive surveillance system of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 23% of the legionellosis cases reported from 1980 to 1989 may have been nosocomial; of these, 37% were linked to outbreaks, often in community hospitals. In this situation, the consequences of legionellosis are grave; fatality rates can approach 50% (39, 154). Although 42 species of legionellae have been described, >90% of the isolates associated with Legionnaires’ disease are L. pneumophila (22, 154, 164). More specifically, from 1980 to 1989, L. pneumophila serogroup 1 was identified in 71.5% of the cases in which a legionellosis strain was isolated (154). In addition, a large number of Legionella-like amoebal pathogens have been described (191). Although the ecology and genetic composition of these Legionella-like strains are similar to the legionellae, they are rarely associated with disease (191). P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 11:26 Annual Reviews AR110-17 LEGIONELLA PNEUMOPHILA PATHOGENESIS 569 Consequently, laboratory studies of Legionella pathogenesis have focused primarily on L. pneumophila, as does this review. A comprehensive description of the genus Legionella is provided by Benson & Fields (22). Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. An Airborne Respiratory Pathogen People most often become infected with L. pneumophila after inhaling aerosols of contaminated water droplets (165). For example, when flooding damaged its main cooling system, a Memphis hospital was forced to activate emergency backup equipment. An outbreak of nosocomial Legionnaires’ disease ensued, and its duration correlated with the period when the secondary cooling system was in operation. Furthermore, analysis of the airflow patterns and the location of Legionnaires’ disease patients within the hospital was consistent with the hypothesis that a particular water-cooling tower was the source of aerosols contaminated with L. pneumophila (63). However, as is typical of many outbreaks, the strain of L. pneumophila isolated from the patients was also present in the hospital’s potable water supply. Indeed, it is now well established that legionellae are ubiquitous in both natural and engineered water supplies (79, 168, 230). As a result, it is difficult to establish unequivocally that cooling towers are the source of infectious aerosols in this and other outbreaks of legionellosis (165). In fact, a variety of equipment that disperses water has been implicated as the source of infection, including clinical respiratory devices, whirlpools, showers, and even the mist machines found in the produce sections of many grocery stores (16, 29, 130, 139, 165). Histology When inhaled into the lung, L. pneumophila can cause acute alveolitis and bronchiolitis. In patients with Legionnaires’ disease, the alveolar exudate typically consists of equal numbers of polymorphonuclear cells and macrophages, with fibrin, red blood cells, proteinaceous material, and significant amounts of cellular debris (99, 239). The many intact rod-shaped bacilli are predominantly intracellular, located within cytoplasmic vacuoles of cells that often cannot be identified with certainty. Some bacteria are located in phagolysosomes, many are lying free in the cytoplasm, and others reside within membrane-bounded structures resembling dilated endoplasmic reticulum (99). Histological studies of lung exudates obtained from a guinea pig infection model revealed that the fate of intracellular L. pneumophila depends on its phagocyte host. Within macrophages, >95% of the L. pneumophila bacilli were intact; clusters of ≥20 bacilli were seen within structures resembling endoplasmic reticulum. On the other hand, L. pneumophila within neutrophils most often appeared partially degraded, with their membranes disrupted (135). Consistent with these and numerous other histological reports, many investigators have demonstrated intracellular growth of L. pneumophila in cultured primary macrophages and a wide variety of cell lines, including some derived from monocytes, fibroblasts, and epithelial cells (77). P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 570 11:26 SWANSON Annual Reviews ¥ AR110-17 HAMMER Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. Pontiac Fever L. pneumophila causes another illness, Pontiac fever, which differs from Legionnaires’ disease in several respects (100, 136, 218). It is a self-limiting, flulike disease that has been recognized only when outbreaks occur. The attack rate is high, but the mortality rate is zero. After an incubation period of ∼36 h, patients suffer fever, chills, dry cough, myalgia, malaise, and headache, not pneumonia. It is interesting that, although Pontiac fever patients seroconvert to L. pneumophila, the microbe has never been isolated (164). Thus, Pontiac fever may be caused by a bacterial toxin or may represent the sequelae of a robust immune response to the pathogen. The pathogenesis of Pontiac fever will not be discussed further here. Cell-Mediated Immunity L. pneumophila is relatively resistant to innate and humoral immune responses. For example, although it readily binds complement component C3, L. pneumophila is resistant to complement-mediated killing, even when specific immunoglobulin is present (127). Moreover, L. pneumophila that have been treated with the opsonins complement and specific antibodies interact efficiently with polymorphonuclear cells, but are not killed. In one experiment, after a serum-resistant encapsulated Escherichia coli strain was incubated for 1 h with 10% fresh normal serum, L. pneumophila-specific antiserum, and polymorphonuclear cells, the number of colony-forming units (CFUs) decreased by 2.5 logs. In contrast, a similar treatment reduced L. pneumophila CFUs by only 0.5 log (127). In a similar manner, monocyte bactericidal activity is only modestly enhanced by complement and specific antibody (127). Under some conditions, L. pneumophila may directly impair the oxidative killing by phagocytic host cells; a toxin purified from culture supernatant inhibited polymorphonuclear cell killing of E. coli and reduced the oxidative capacity of the cells (86, 149, 197). After phagocytosis, it is important that bacteria that had been subjected to opsonization with specific immunoglobulin replicated intracellularly as efficiently as did L. pneumophila treated with normal serum (127). Together, data from these leukocyte models of infection indicate that complement, specific antibody, and polymorphonuclear cells are ineffective at clearing legionellosis. Instead, cell-mediated immunity controls lung infections of L. pneumophila (reviewed in 85). This type of host response was implicated initially by comparing the activity of peripheral blood mononuclear cells obtained from patients who had recovered from legionellosis to those of age- and sex-matched controls (121). The lymphoproliferation of patient cells stimulated with L. pneumophila antigen was consistently more robust than that of control cells, although mononuclear cells from both populations responded similarly to the nonspecific plant mitogen concanavalin A, as judged by incorporation of 3H-thymidine. Moreover, when compared to controls, supernatants obtained from cultured mononuclear cells of former patients that had been exposed to L. pneumophila antigen readily activated naı̈ve mononuclear cells to restrict L. pneumophila replication. P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 11:26 Annual Reviews AR110-17 Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. LEGIONELLA PNEUMOPHILA PATHOGENESIS 571 A critical role for interferon-γ (IFN-γ ) as the cytokine activator of macrophages was later demonstrated in experimental human monocyte models. Cultures of human peripheral blood monocytes or alveolar macrophages support L. pneumophila replication. After treatment with recombinant IFN-γ for 1 h, the activated phagocytes inhibit intracellular replication of L. pneumophila (25, 169). However, IFN-γ activation does not enhance bacterial killing, even in the presence of specific antibody, nor does it prevent formation of L. pneumophila replication vacuoles (25). Instead, activated macrophages restrict L. pneumophila growth by an irondependent mechanism. The capacity of IFN-γ -activated human peripheral blood monocytes to inhibit replication of L. pneumophila is reversed when the cultures are supplemented with iron transferrin (36). Thus, the size of the labile iron pool in activated monocytes may not be sufficient to support L. pneumophila replication. Indeed, human peripheral blood monocytes activated by IFN-γ expressed 73% fewer transferrin-binding sites than nonactivated control cells, as determined by Scatchard analysis of 125I-transferrin binding (37). In a similar manner, rat alveolar exudate macrophages that were activated in vivo by exposure to inhaled L. pneumophila expressed fewer transferrin receptors than did resident alveolar macrophages (207). The cellular pathway that delivers iron to the pathogen vacuole has yet to be defined. An Opportunistic Pathogen Epidemiological studies of Legionnaires’ disease also indicate that a robust immune response is sufficient to clear L. pneumophila infections (84, 108; reviewed in 217). For example, the hotel employees on duty during the 1976 Legionnaires’ convention generally were seropositive for L. pneumophila antibodies, but asymptomatic (84). Typically, those who become ill are of advanced age and have sustained damage to the host defenses that normally protect lungs from infection (154, 239). Some of the most common risk factors for legionellosis are cigarette smoking, emphysema or other chronic lung diseases, lung and hematologic malignancies, and clinical immunosuppression or cytotoxic chemotherapy (39, 154). Thus, L. pneumophila is a classic opportunistic pathogen. From the microbe’s perspective, infection of the human lung is invariably calamitous. Although more than 1000 cases of Legionnaires’ disease have been reported annually in the United States since 1987 (175), not a single instance of person-to-person transmission has been observed. Thus, unlike many other human respiratory pathogens such as Haemophilis influenzae, Bordetella pertussis, or Mycobacterium tuberculosis, L. pneumophila is not adapted to the human host. In the absence of transmission to a new host, genetic variants that survive the strong selective pressure exerted by activated alveolar macrophages cannot be maintained; mutations that promote survival and replication only in the human lung will not persist in the species’ genome. Instead, the capacity of L. pneumophila to establish infection within the lung is the consequence of selective pressure applied by a different class of professional phagocytes: amoebae. P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 572 11:26 SWANSON Annual Reviews ¥ AR110-17 HAMMER Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. Amoebae, a Reservoir for Macrophage Pathogens The evidence that amoebae have acted as an evolutionary incubator for the emergence of L. pneumophila as an opportunistic pathogen of alveolar macrophages was obtained by epidemiological and cell biological and genetic studies. Pioneering work by Rowbotham (189) demonstrated the pathogenicity of L. pneumophila for amoebae of the genera Acanthamoeba and Naegleria, common inhabitants of soil and water. L. pneumophila enjoys a wide host range: >13 species of amoebae and two species of ciliated protozoa can support its growth (reviewed in 77). It is important to note that protozoa, which are susceptible to L. pneumophila infection, frequently contaminate potable water supplies, especially heated reservoirs. For example, in a survey of water samples obtained from the plumbing and cooling towers of five hospitals in Paris, 71% were positive for amoebae, and 47% for legionellae (168). Furthermore, when these water samples were incubated, bacterial multiplication occurred, provided the samples also contained amoebae. Indeed, a number of epidemiological studies have linked water contaminated with both L. pneumophila and protozoan phagocytes to outbreaks of legionellosis (16, 29, 79). The capacity to replicate in protozoa also correlates with bacterial virulence. In a survey of 17 legionellae isolates, Fields et al (78) found that each strain that caused pathology in guinea pigs also replicated within the protozoan Tetrahymena pyriformis. Therefore, as its natural reservoir, protozoan phagocytes amplify the L. pneumophila population in fresh and potable water supplies. The life cycle of L. pneumophila in amoebae strongly resembles that observed in macrophages. As discussed below, in both protozoan and mammalian phagocytes, coiling phagosomes engulf L. pneumophila. These vacuoles neither acidify nor fuse with the lysosomal compartment. Instead, the membrane-bounded microbe associates with endoplasmic reticulum and replicates in high numbers. Thus, in both mammalian and protozoan phagocytes, L. pneumophila appears to interact with host organelles in the same striking manner. The similar cell biology also indicates that the virulence of L. pneumophila for alveolar macrophages is a consequence of its evolution as a parasite of amoebae. Many of the L. pneumophila factors that promote its survival and replication in macrophages are also required for growth in amoebae. For example, a peptidyl prolyl isomerase, the macrophage infectivity potentiator Mip, increases the efficiency at which L. pneumophila infects human macrophages, Hartmannella, and Tetrahymena (46, 47). Thirteen intracellular multiplication (icm) genes, identified by insertion mutations that conferred defective bacterial growth in monocytic U937 cells, are also required for replication within Acanthamoeba castellanii (201). Likewise, seven transposon mutants isolated as defective for flagellar production were avirulent in both Hartmanella spp. and in monocytic U937 cells (176). Finally, Gao et al (90) screened a large collection of transposon mutants for the capacity to kill U937 cells and A. polyphaga. The 89 protozoan and macrophage infectivity ( pmi) mutants they isolated were defective for replication in both protozoan and mammalian phagocytes, although virtually all of P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 11:26 Annual Reviews AR110-17 LEGIONELLA PNEUMOPHILA PATHOGENESIS 573 these mutants replicated in minimal medium. Together with the epidemiological and cell biological data, results of these genetic studies indicate that the L. pneumophila strategy that evolved to promote its growth in amoebae also works in human macrophages. Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. Contribution of Amoebae to Disease L. pneumophila isolated from amoebae express a variety of phenotypes that could increase both the incidence and complications of disease in humans. For example, the progeny that escape from lysed amoebae are highly motile (190), a trait that presumably facilitates transmission and also correlates with the expression of other virulence traits (38, 109, 176). Compared to bacteria cultured in broth, cells obtained from A. castellanii enter human peripheral blood monocytes and the monocytic RAW 264.7 and THP-1 cell lines more efficiently and by a pathway that is complement independent (48, 49). In addition, bacteria grown in phagocytes are more resistant both to chemical biocides important for maintaining a safe water supply and to antibiotics used to treat pneumonia (17, 19). For example, 71% of bacteria obtained from Acanthamoeba polyphaga survived a 24h exposure to 5-µg/ml rifampin, a dose that killed >99.9% of bacteria that had been cultured in broth. Therefore, replication in amoebae not only may increase bacterial numbers, but also virulence and resistance to antimicrobial agents. The hypothesis that amoebae exacerbate lung infections has been tested directly in experimental systems that integrate both the protozoan and mammalian hosts of legionellae. Brieland, Engleberg, and their colleagues (30) developed a murine model of legionellosis, a self-limiting infection that mimics closely key aspects of the human infection. After inoculation into the trachea of A/J mice, L. pneumophila replicate primarily within alveolar mononuclear phagocytes for ∼2 days, and the number of CFU typically increases 10-fold. During the next 5 days, the infection is gradually resolved by an IFN-γ and tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α)-dependent immune response marked by infiltration of the alveoli by polymorphonuclear cells and macrophages (30, 33). By 7 days, the architecture of the lung is essentially normal. Mice inoculated with a mixture of bacteria and amoebae develop more severe disease than those infected with either L. pneumophila or Hartmannella vermiformis alone (31, 48). In particular, measures of bacterial CFU, lung pathology, and animal mortality were significantly increased. Experimental evidence indicates that one way amoebae contribute to pathogenesis is as a host for bacterial replication. After intratracheal inoculation of mice with L. pneumophila-infected amoebae, the yield of bacteria in the lungs was nearly 100-fold higher than that obtained from mice similarly infected with either bacteria or amoebae alone (32, 48). However, a similar dramatic increase in the bacterial yield was not observed in parallel experiments performed with L. pneumophila mutants that were defective for growth in cultured H. vermiformis, but competent to replicate in the human monocytic U937 cell line (32). Thus, amoebae in the inoculum appear to function P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. 574 11:26 SWANSON Annual Reviews ¥ AR110-17 HAMMER as a site for bacterial replication, effectively amplifying the infectious dose. When amoebae are present in the inoculum, more TNF-α and IFN-γ is secreted in the lung, yet fewer lymphocytes and mononuclear phagocytes are recruited (31, 32). Accordingly, protozoa could worsen the lung damage caused by L. pneumophila infection by more than one mechanism. By amplifying the number of L. pneumophila, amoebae could increase the dose of bacterial cytotoxin(s) produced in the lung. Alternatively, amoebae may contribute to pathogenesis indirectly, by triggering a hyperactive, ineffective immune response. L. pneumophila pathogenesis clearly illustrates the capacity of amoebae to serve as a selective pressure and a natural reservoir for opportunistic pathogens of macrophages. Amoebae in the environment have also been found to harbor bacteria of several other pathogenic genera, including Mycobacterium, Sarcobium, Vibrio, Pseudomonas, Burkholderia, Listeria, and Franciscella, as well as rickettsialike endosymbionts (reviewed in 34, 238). As shown for L. pneumophila, the macrophage pathogen Mycobacterium avium can be cultured in A. castellanii and A. polyphaga (50, 213), and the amoebae-grown bacteria are more virulent in a mouse model of infection (50). Thus, amoebae species that flourish in natural and potable water supplies are likely to continue to be a source of emerging opportunistic pathogens (34, 238). REGULATION OF VIRULENCE To survive, bacteria must continually sense and adapt to environmental change. Indeed, many pathogens respond to extracellular signals by coordinately expressing multiple virulence proteins with varied functions (reviewed in 62, 157, 160). For example, to colonize humans, Salmonella typhi must survive ingestion and passage through the gastrointestinal tract, traverse specialized M cells of the intestinal epithelium, and survive within macrophages that populate the underlying lymphoid tissue. Salmonellae also survive and replicate outside a mammalian host, another indication of their versatility. By responding to different cues, including the supply of nutrients, O2, Mg2+, and iron, as well as pH and osmolarity (82, 227a, 211), Salmonella spp. sequentially express specific virulence factors at particular stages of the infection (reviewed in 104). Compared with Salmonella spp., L. pneumophila leads a simple life. Extracellular growth has not been documented. Moreover, although this bacterium can establish infections in the lungs of immunocompromised people, person-toperson transmission has not been documented (77). Instead, the life cycle of L. pneumophila revolves around single-celled, freshwater protozoa. Therefore, the selective pressures most likely to have determined the pattern of L. pneumophila gene expression are linked to its encounter with aquatic protozoa. By this reasoning, particular virulence regulons may be dedicated to safe entry, robust intracellular replication, survival in fresh water, and efficient transmission from one phagocyte to another. Below, we first summarize the evidence that growth P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 11:26 Annual Reviews AR110-17 LEGIONELLA PNEUMOPHILA PATHOGENESIS 575 conditions determine the phenotype of L. pneumophila. Second, we describe a model in which a stringent responselike mechanism induces virulence expression when the amino acid supply is depleted. Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. Temperature Temperature is one condition that affects the motility, piliation, and virulence of L. pneumophila cultured in bacteriological medium. Cells express more flagellin RNA and protein and assemble more flagella when incubated at 30◦ C than at 37◦ C (114, 171). Similarly, production of type IV pili and transcription of the pilBCD pilin locus occurs when bacteria are cultured at 30◦ C, but is minimal at 37◦ C (146). Adherence is also temperature dependent: twofold more L. pneumophila associate with guinea pig alveolar macrophages when the bacteria are incubated for 1 h prior to infection at 25◦ C, compared to incubation at 41◦ C (69). On the other hand, L pneumophila cultured at 24◦ C were less virulent than bacteria cultured at 37◦ C, as judged by measuring their 50% lethal dose (LD50) in a guinea pig model of infection (155). The finding that motility and adherence is optimal at temperatures less than 37◦ C is consistent with a dominant role for the aquatic environment on the evolution of L. pneumophila as an intracellular parasite. In nature, it is unlikely that L. pneumophila must adapt to temperatures as high as 37◦ C. Instead, temperature elevation may mimic an environmental stress to which L. pneumophila responds. Growth Phase Conditions within the phagocyte vacuole clearly influence the L. pneumophila phenotype (Figure 1). Compared to bacteria grown in microbiological medium, L. pneumophila released from eukaryotic cells are short, thick, and highly motile; they have a smooth, thick cell wall, a higher β-hydroxybutyrate content, different staining properties, and express a different array of proteins and genes (3, 5, 49, 70, 190). Also, compared to bacteria isolated from broth, A. polyphaga— grown cells have a different composition of membrane fatty acids, profile of lipopolysaccharide and outer membrane proteins, and susceptibility to proteinase K (18). After growth in phagocytes, L. pneumophila are also more resistant to biocides and antibiotics (17, 19), more invasive for mammalian cells, and more virulent in mouse models of infection (32, 48, 49). Finally, after replicating for 10–12 h within monocytic U937 cells, L. pneumophila begin to express stress proteins (3). By analogy to Salmonella, it is likely that multiple environmental signals determine the phenotype of intracellular L. pneumophila. The growth phase has a dramatic effect on the phenotype of L. pneumophila cultured in phagocytes and in broth (Figure 1). By microscopic observation of infected amoebae, Rowbotham (190) first noted that the intracellular life cycle of L. pneumophila consists of two distinguishable phases. After a period of replication, L. pneumophila enter an “active infective phase,” marked by their synchronous P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. 576 11:26 SWANSON Annual Reviews ¥ AR110-17 HAMMER Figure 1 Model for the Legionella pneumophila life cycle in amoebae. After a period of intracellular replication, L. pneumophila converts to a virulent form and expresses a number of traits that promote survival in the environment and transmission to a new host. If inhaled into the lung, Legionella pneumophila can replicate within alveolar macrophages. In the absence of a robust cell-mediated immune response, pneumonia ensues. conversion to highly motile short rods that were observed to escape lysed host cells and disperse in culture. Recently, this paradigm has been confirmed and bolstered by phenotypic and molecular studies of L. pneumophila cultured in broth and in macrophages (38, 109). Unlike replicating cells, bacteria obtained from postexponential phase cultures of L. pneumophila express a number of traits that have been correlated with virulence, including sodium-sensitivity, cytotoxicity, osmotic resistance, motility, and the capacity to evade phagosome-lysosome fusion. Similarly, during the replication period in macrophages, L. pneumophila are sodium resistant and do not express the flaA gene or produce flagella; concomitant with the macrophage lysis that ends the infection cycle, intracellular bacteria express flaA and become flagellated and sodium sensitive. Amino acid limitation appears to induce the virulent phenotype, because exponential phase cells convert to the virulent phenotype when incubated in postexponential phase culture supernatant, except when the supernatant is supplemented with amino acids. Accordingly, we have postulated that when nutrient levels and other conditions are favorable, L. pneumophila replicates within its specialized vacuole. When amino acids become scarce, intracellular bacteria coordinately express several traits that facilitate escape from the depleted cell and transmission to a new host (Figure 1; 38, 109). P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 11:26 Annual Reviews AR110-17 LEGIONELLA PNEUMOPHILA PATHOGENESIS 577 Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. Stringent Response Paradigm For E. coli, a limited amino acid supply triggers the stringent response, a developmental pathway that promotes long-term survival in adverse conditions (reviewed in 40). A rapid arrest of the growth and synthesis of proteins and stable RNA molecules is coordinated with the induction of the stationary-phase regulon by guanosine 30 ,50 -bispyrophosphate (ppGpp). Uncharged transfer RNAs (tRNAs) bound to the ribosome activate the ppGpp synthetase, RelA. The subsequent accumulation of ppGpp increases the amount of the stationary-phase σ factor RpoS (97), and stationary-phase genes are expressed. By this mechanism, E. coli alters its physiology to tolerate a nutrient-poor environment. In L. pneumophila, a similar stringent-response pathway appears to coordinate expression of virulence with entry into the stationary phase (109; Figure 2). Two key observations support this model. First, L. pneumophila accumulates the second messenger ppGpp when cultured in conditions that induce virulence expression; namely, in the postexponential phase and in response to amino acid starvation. Second, in response to the gratuitous expression of the E. coli relA gene, L. pneumophila accumulates ppGpp, and the bacteria then express a number of virulence traits, independent of the cell density or nutrient supply. Therefore, Figure 2 A stringent response model for Legionella pneumophila virulence regulation. When amino acids are limiting, uncharged tRNAs activate RelA, a guanosine 30 ,50 bispyrophosphate synthetase. Accumulation of ppGpp coordinates entry into the stationary phase with expression of virulence traits that promote transmission to a new host. Some effectors of virulence are predicted to be substrates for type II and type IV secretion systems. P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. 578 11:26 SWANSON Annual Reviews ¥ AR110-17 HAMMER L. pneumophila belongs to a class of environmental microbes that have co-opted the stringent-response signal transduction pathway to coordinate a survival strategy specific to its lifestyle. For Myxococcus xanthus, ppGpp accumulation initiates the formation of a multicellular fruiting body that subsequently differentiates into hardy myxospores (111). Bacillus subtilis that is starved for amino acids accumulates ppGpp, which induces expression of stress response proteins that may promote sporulation (235). In Streptomyces coelicolor, ppGpp accumulation plays a role in antibiotic production and the pigmentation characteristic of mature spores (42). For L. pneumophila, when nutrients are limited within its host cell, transmission to a new phagocyte is paramount. By analogy to E. coli, the stationary-phase σ factor RpoS may coordinate expression of the L. pneumophila virulence regulon. Indeed, RpoS is required for maximal virulence of several pathogens, including Salmonella (74), Shigella flexneri (208), toxigenic E. coli (231), and phytopathogenic Erwinia carotovora (166). Hales & Shuman (107) recently cloned the L. pneumophila rpoS gene and characterized an rpoS transposon insertion mutant strain. The mutant replicated as well as wild-type L. pneumophila within monocytic HL60 and THP-1 cells, but it was attenuated for virulence in A. castellanii cultures. According to the stringent-response paradigm, RpoS functions primarily to coordinate entry into stationary phase. Consequently, in L. pneumophila, RpoS may be dispensable for replication but important for efficient transmission to a new phagocyte or for survival in fresh water, traits that may be critical for efficient infection in amoebae experimental models. Consistent with this hypothesis, one intracellular growth mutant of L. pneumophila that is defective for expression of an entire panel of virulence traits harbors an in-frame deletion allele of rpoS (11, 109). Therefore, it is of interest to determine whether rpoS null mutants express postexponential phase activities implicated in L. pneumophila transmission, including cytotoxicity, osmotic resistance, motility, and evasion of phagosome-lysosome fusion. The stringent-response paradigm provides a conceptual framework for the extensive phenotypic variation that has been documented for L. pneumophila cultured under different conditions (Figure 1). THE INTRACELLULAR PATHWAY The Nascent Phagosome Coiling Phagosomes Macrophages and amoebae engulf L. pneumophila within coils of plasma membrane (27, 124). However, this unusual mode of entry does not appear to be necessary or sufficient for intracellular survival of L. pneumophila in professional phagocytes. Heat-killed, fixed, and avirulent L. pneumophila are also ingested within coiled phagosomes, but these particles are delivered to the endosomal compartment (27, 123, 125). Conversely, L. pneumophila that have been opsinized with specific antibody form conventional phagosomes, but evade lysosomes (124). P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 11:26 Annual Reviews AR110-17 Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. LEGIONELLA PNEUMOPHILA PATHOGENESIS 579 In addition, although L. pneumophila replicate in H. vermiformis, coiling phagosomes have not been detected in these cells (2). Coiling phagocytosis also was not observed for the virulent Knoxville 1 strain of L. pneumophila (183). Coiling phagocytosis has been observed for a number of other microbes, including Leishmania donovani, Borrelia burgdorferi, various spirochetes, trypanosomatids, and yeasts (43, 186, 187). Based on their detailed ultrastructural studies of coiled and conventional phagosomes, Rittig and colleagues (186) have proposed that coiling phagosomes are a direct consequence of a perturbation to conventional circumferential phagocytosis. According to this model, when the membranes of pseudopods which surround a particle fail to fuse, whorls of closely apposed plasma membrane form. Consistent with this hypothesis, some microbes that are engulfed within coiled phagosomes are also known to inhibit its subsequent fusion with lysosomes. For example, Leishmania promastigotes express on their surface an abundant negatively charged lipophosphoglycan that blocks phagolysosome maturation (57, 226). Similarly, live and formalin-fixed L. pneumophila form coiled phagosomes, and both particles delay phagosome maturation, presumably owing to an inhibitory factor on the bacterial surface (AD Joshi, S Sturgill-Koszycki, MS Swanson, unpublished observations). Whether the L. pneumophila surface molecules that interfere with phagosome maturation also affect phagosome architecture can be investigated directly once this class of virulence factors is identified. Isolation of the Nascent Phagosome The composition of L. pneumophila coiling phagosomes differs markedly from plasma membrane (Table 1). Newly formed L. pneumophila phagosomes contain the plasma membrane proteins 50 -nucleotidase and complement receptor CR3 (51); however, these vacuoles lack other protein residents of the plasma membrane, including MHC class I and class II molecules and alkaline phosphatase (51, 52). Moreover, as they age, L. pneumophila phagosomes lose some host proteins. The majority of the L. pneumophila phagosomes lack 50 -nucleotidase activity 1 h after formation and have reduced levels of CR3 (51). Accordingly, Clemens & Horwitz (52) postulated that during phagocytosis of L. pneumophila, membrane proteins are sorted rapidly in such a manner that the membranes that surround the bacterium are markedly different from the plasma membrane. Within minutes of formation, the coiling phagosome resolves to a vacuole with a single membrane. However, the morphology of the nascent vacuole in macrophages has an unusual feature: L. pneumophila phagosomes fixed 15 or 60 min after phagocytosis have numerous smooth vesicles attached to their cytoplasmic face (122). Based on kinetic studies of L. pneumophila phagosome maturation, described in detail below, this population of small vesicles does not deliver cargo from the endosomal compartment. Instead, vesicles could bud from the L. pneumophila vacuole, selectively removing host proteins critical for recognition or activation of the endocytic fusion machinery, thereby preventing phagolysosome maturation. Alternatively, the vacuoles attached to the L. pneumophila phagosome may represent aborted membrane fusion or fission reactions. P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 580 11:26 SWANSON Annual Reviews ¥ AR110-17 HAMMER TABLE 1 Maturation of the Legionella pneumophila phagosome Age Features <5 min Coils Contains Lacks 27, 124 51 CR3a 50 nucleotidasea Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. 5 min–2 h 1–6 h Attached vesicles Mitochondria Alkaline phosphatasea MHC class Ia MHC class IIa 51 51 51 122 50 nucleotidasea Transferrin receptora 51 133f MHC class Ia MHC class IIa 51 51 Rab7b LAMP-1b, c Cathepsin Dc Texas Red-ovalbumind Alexa Fluor-streptavidind CM-DiId 192 133f, 192 133f 133f 133f 133f pH 6.1 Transferrin receptora Acid phosphatasec CD63b, c Colloidsd LAMP-1b, c Texas Red-ovalbumind ∼4–12 h Ribosomes BiP e ER antigene LAMP-1b, c Cathepsin Dc Texas Red-ovalbumind Fluorescein-dextrand ∼12–24 h BiP e a Plasma membrane, early endosomes b c f Late endosomes Lysosomes d e Lysis Endocytic probe Endoplasmic reticulum AD Joshi, S Sturgill-Koszycki, MS Swanson, unpublished observations g S Sturgill-Koszycki & MS Swanson, unpublished observations 126 52 27, 123 52 24, 27, 52, 123 52, 222 222 122 2, 221 221 220g 220g 220g pH 5.5 LAMP-1b, c Cathepsin Dc Texas Red-ovalbumind Fluorescein-dextrand ∼24–28 h Reference(s) 2 P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 11:26 Annual Reviews AR110-17 Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. LEGIONELLA PNEUMOPHILA PATHOGENESIS 581 The vacuoles that harbor L. pneumophila differ from conventional phagosomes in two other important respects: they do not acidify or fuse with lysosomes (123, 126). Since the early studies of Horwitz, several laboratories, using a variety of methods, have established clearly that L. pneumophila phagosomes aged 5 min to 8 h do not acquire lysosomal markers (Table 1). Electron microscopic studies indicated that lysosomes labeled by acid phosphatase cytochemistry or electron-dense colloids do not fuse with L. pneumophila phagosomes (23, 52, 123). Cryosection immunogold localization of CD63, LAMP-1 (lysosome-associated membrane protein), LAMP-2, and cathepsin D demonstrated that bacterial phagosomes do not acquire these late endosomal and lysosomal proteins (52). Finally, fluorescence microscopic assays confirmed that L. pneumophila phagosomes do not contain LAMP-1 and demonstrated further that they do not acquire Texas Red-ovalbumin preloaded into lysosomes by pinocytosis (222). Similarly, after ingestion by A. castellanii, virulent L. pneumophila reside in vacuoles that do not acquire lysosomal characteristics, including host acid phosphatase and ferritin that had been delivered by endocytosis to the lysosomal compartment (27). Moreover, young vacuoles containing virulent L. pneumophila appear to be completely isolated from the endosomal compartment (Table 1). The majority of phagosomes that are aged 5–90 min lack LAMP-1 and Rab7, a monomeric GTPbinding protein that acts as a positive regulator of fusion between the early and late endosomal compartments (76, 192, 209, 222). Furthermore, vacuoles containing virulent L. pneumophila aged 5–60 min do not interact with the early endosomal compartment, as judged by the absence of transferrin receptors (52, AD Joshi, S Sturgill-Koszycki, MS Swanson, unpublished observations) and their failure to accumulate the endocytic tracers Texas Red-ovalbumin, the lipid dye CM-DiI, or Alexa Fluor-streptavidin, markers that were readily detected in phagosomes containing polystyrene beads or exponential phase L. pneumophila (AD Joshi, S Sturgill-Koszycki, MS Swanson, unpublished observations). Therefore, to survive in macrophages, L. pneumophila appears to employ a strategy similar to that of Toxoplasma gondii, which triggers formation of a vacuole that is completely separate from the endocytic network (162). Virulent L. pneumophila blocks maturation of its own phagosome with no apparent effect on phagolysosome formation elsewhere within the phagocyte. Vacuoles harboring L. pneumophila remain at a neutral pH, whereas neighboring erythrocyte-containing phagosomes acidify below pH 5 (126). Also, after infection with L. pneumophila, macrophages continue to deliver Saccharomyces cerevisiae to phagolysosomes (53). Therefore, the L. pneumophila virulence factors that prevent its delivery to lysosomes must act locally, most likely by altering the phagosomal membrane. Host and Bacterial Factors that Affect Entry The capacity of L. pneumophila to exploit both freshwater protozoa and a variety of mammalian cells as a replication niche suggests that numerous factors are likely P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 582 11:26 SWANSON Annual Reviews ¥ AR110-17 HAMMER Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. to mediate its adherence and entry. To date, >12 phagocytic and nonphagocytic mammalian cell lines have been shown to support growth of legionellae (77), and a number of bacterial and cellular factors that facilitate attachment and subsequent entry of this pathogen have been identified in particular infection models. Complement and Immunoglobulin Early studies by Horwitz & Silverstein (127) focused on phagocytosis of L. pneumophila by peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Opsonization of L. pneumophila with specific antibody and complement enhanced by threefold its attachment to human monocytes, compared to adherence in the presence of complement alone. The mechanism of binding does not appear to influence significantly the intracellular fate of L. pneumophila: bacteria that were phagocytosed in the presence of specific antibody and complement, or in the presence of complement alone, replicated with an efficiency similar to untreated bacteria (127). When monocytes are incubated with L. pneumophila in the presence of serum, phagocytosis occurs via CR1 and CR3, complement receptors that are present on the surface of macrophages and several other mammalian cell lines (172). Complement component C3 present in immune and nonimmune sera fixes primarily to the major outer membrane protein (MOMP), encoded by ompS (120), on the L. pneumophila surface (21). In fact, C3 opsonization of purified MOMP reconstituted in liposomes induced phagocytosis by monocytes, suggesting that a MOMP-C3 complex ligand is sufficient to mediate uptake of L. pneumophila via the macrophage CR1 and CR3 receptors. MOMP may also have a complementindependent function: this abundant outer membrane protein also enhances bacterial binding to U937 cells in the absence of serum, and it increased the virulence of L. pneumophila in chick embryo assays (144). Ultimately, the construction of an L. pneumophila ompS mutant and assessment of its virulence phenotype in phagocyte and animal models of infections will provide a more detailed understanding of the role of this dominant surface protein in L. pneumophila pathogenesis. Because complement levels in the human lung are normally low, it is likely that, at least early in infection, L. pneumophila attach to phagocytes by another mechanism (185). In fact, in the absence of antibody or complement, this pathogen still binds phorbol ester-treated U937 cells, monocytic cells that express Fc, CR1, and CR3 receptors (188). Moreover, preincubation of these phagocytes with monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) directed against CR1 and CR3 did not inhibit binding of L. pneumophila. Furthermore, L. pneumophila need not enter macrophages by a complement-mediated route to establish an intracellular replication niche: bacterial growth after complement-independent attachment has been observed in guinea pig alveolar macrophages, phorbol ester-treated U937 cells, and MRC5 cells (98, 188). A bacterial protein associated with lipids or carbohydrates may mediate binding to carbohydrates on the host plasma membrane, because bacterial attachment to U937 cells was inhibited after L. pneumophila was treated with several proteolytic enzymes, or after both the bacterial and host cells were treated with lipase and a carbohydrate oxidizing agent (98). P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 11:26 Annual Reviews AR110-17 Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. LEGIONELLA PNEUMOPHILA PATHOGENESIS 583 Complement-independent mechanisms must also promote phagocytosis of L. pneumophila by aquatic amoebae. Its attachment to and invasion of the protozoa H. vermiformis and A. polyphaga is mediated by a protozoan 170-kDa lectin that is inhibited by galactose/N-acetylgalactosamine (110, 227). It is interesting that Entamoeba histolytica also encode a 170-kDa lectin that mediates its attachment to mammalian epithelial cells. Inhibition studies demonstrated the functional similarity of these lectins: L. pneumophila attachment to and invasion of H. vermiformis was decreased in a dose-dependent manner by soluble galactose, N-acetyl-D-galactosamine, or two mAbs specific to the 170-kDa protein of Entamoeba histolytica (182). The bacterial ligand(s) responsible for lectin binding have yet to be identified. Type IV pili Type IV pili, which mediate host cell attachment by pathogenic Neisseria species (159), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (131), and other bacterial species (219), may also function as L. pneumophila adhesins. An insertional mutation in the putative L. pneumophila pilin structural gene, pilEL, reduced the bacterial adherence to A. polyphaga and the mammalian monocytic U937 and epithelial HeLa cell lines by ∼50%, although intracellular replication was not affected (215). Because adherence of the pilEL mutant was attenuated in both mammalian cells and amoebae, L. pneumophila pili may contribute to complement-independent binding, perhaps as the ligand for the protozoan lectin. Hsp60 The 60-kDa heat shock protein Hsp60 has also been implicated in attachment and entry of L. pneumophila to HeLa epithelial cells (96, 118, 119). Although bacterial heat shock proteins typically serve as cytoplasmic chaperones (71), L. pneumophila Hsp60 belongs to a large family of immunodominant protein antigens, termed “common antigens”, many of which share cross-reactive epitopes and appear to be extracellular (225). Several other pathogens, including Haemophilus ducreyi (88), Helicobacter pylori (66), Mycobacterium avium (180) and S. typhimurium (73), appear to release proteins homologous to Hsp60 that have been implicated in virulence. It remains to be determined whether the extracellular localization of Hsp60 proteins is a consequence of its release from cells in certain growth conditions, bona fide secretion, or, as hypothesized for the Hsp60 homolog in H. pylori, bacterial cell lysis (173). L. pneumophila Hsp60, encoded by htpB, is induced during growth in macrophages and in vitro in response to H2O2, heat, and osmotic shock (3, 96, 118, 119). In L. pneumophila cultured in broth, immunogold labeling of Hsp60 indicated both cytoplasmic and surface locations; heat-shock increased the amount of surfaceexposed Hsp60 epitopes modestly (95). In infected HeLa cells, extracellular Hsp60 protein can be detected lying free within replication vacuoles (96). Hsp60-specific antibody inhibits entry by wild-type, but not avirulent L. pneumophila, and purified Hsp60 protein stimulates uptake of latex beads by HeLa cells (96). Specific host receptors for this class of Hsp60 proteins have not been identified. Whether L. pneumophila requires Hsp60 to enter amoebae or macrophages or to P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 584 11:26 SWANSON Annual Reviews ¥ AR110-17 HAMMER establish its unique replication vacuole awaits phenotypic analysis of a defined htpB mutant. Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. Bacterial Factors that Establish the Isolated Vacuole Dot/Icm Type IV Secretion System L. pneumophila is one of a growing list of extracellular and intracellular bacterial pathogens that exploit type IV secretion systems for virulence. The phytopathogen Agrobacterium tumefaciens (44) and the animal pathogens Brucella suis (170), H. pylori (41), and B. pertussis (234) all encode type IV secretion loci. Unlike type III secretion systems, which have co-opted the flagellar assembly pathway, type IV systems are encoded by chromosomal loci homologous to operons dedicated to conjugal transfer of plasmid DNA (reviewed in 80). How these systems contribute to bacterial pathogenesis and the identity of their substrates is currently the focus of a great deal of research. Membership in the family of type IV transport systems was defined originally by the ability to transfer DNA to a recipient cell. For example, the plant pathogen A. tumefaciens transfers RSF1010 plasmids by a process that requires a functional type IV secretion apparatus (212). In like manner, L. pneumophila transfer of RSF1010 plasmids to bacterial recipients depends on a functional type IV secretion system (202, 229). The type IV secretion system of L. pneumophila is encoded by 24 genes located within two separate regions of the bacterial chromosome (Figure 3). Fourteen of these genes, termed dot (defective for organelle trafficking; 9, 23, 229) and icm (intracellular multiplication; 28, 177, 200, 202) share detectable homology to the tra/trb genes of col1b-P9 plasmid, a member of the IncI class of conjugal plasmids (Figure 3; 202, 229, 205). Whereas the majority of the dot/icm genes are predicted to encode membrane-associated proteins, DotA is an integral cytoplasmic membrane protein with eight membrane-spanning domains (193), and IcmW is a small, soluble protein that resides in the cytoplasm (249). Together, the Figure 3 Relationship between the Dot/Icm type IV secretion system loci and the transfer region of IncI conjugal plasmid col1b-P9. The tra/trb plasmid genes are shown compared with plasmid coordinates, and the homologous L. pneumophila genes are named underneath. On the bacterial chromosome, the dot/icm genes are located in two linkage groups, designated Region I and II. (Adapted from a figure kindly provided by Dr. Joseph Vogel, Washington University, St. Louis, MO.) P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 11:26 Annual Reviews AR110-17 Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. LEGIONELLA PNEUMOPHILA PATHOGENESIS 585 Dot/Icm proteins are postulated to assemble and activate a secretion system in the L. pneumophila membrane that exports plasmid and virulence factors. Recently, Segal et al (201) identified a second L. pneumophila secretion system related to type IV systems. Designated Lvh (for Legionella vir homologs), this locus is dispensable for intracellular growth but can cooperate with the Dot/Icm to transfer RSF1010 plasmids by conjugation. Insertions in several of the dot/icm genes completely abolish conjugation, indicating that the lvh locus itself cannot confer conjugation. However, components of the lvh system may be able to replace some Dot/Icm factors for conjugation, as judged by comparing the phenotype of particular single and double mutant strains. Deletion of the lvh locus in the wild-type JR32 strain modestly reduces conjugation efficiency, ∼10-fold. In like manner, dotB and icmE mutants donate plasmid at a somewhat reduced efficiency. On the other hand, double mutants carrying an lvh deletion and a dotB or an icmE mutation are completely defective for conjugation. Thus, components of the lvh system may substitute for dotB and icmE functions that are important for conjugation, but not virulence (201). The Dot/Icm type IV secretion system appears to act during phagocytosis to establish the L. pneumophila replication vacuole. Every mutant of the dot/icm family that has been examined is defective for evasion of the endocytic pathway (9, 24, 125, 153, 192, 202, 222, 229, 236, 249). Each of these mutants is mistargeted to the endosomal pathway within the earliest period examined, in some cases ≤5–30 min after infection (192, 236). For example, phagosomes containing dotA mutants acquire the late endosomal and lysosomal marker LAMP-1 within 5 min of uptake (192). Thus, to evade delivery to the lysosomes, L. pneumophila must alter its phagosome immediately. Once a protected vacuole is established, L. pneumophila does not appear to require the Dot/Icm machinery to maintain its replication niche. For example, by using an inducible promoter to control dotA transcription, Roy and coworkers (192) found that L. pneumophila which express DotA before contact with macrophages but not after still replicate during the primary infection cycle. Furthermore, when a dotA mutant resides within the same phagosome as a wild-type bacterium, it can replicate (53). The hypothesis that Dot/Icm function is dispensable during the replication period is consistent with the observation that virulence traits are not expressed by exponential-phase L. pneumophila (38, 109). The substrates of the Dot/Icm secretion complex that alter the fate of the L. pneumophila phagosome have not been identified. Although related to conjugal DNA transfer complexes, type IV secretion systems also export proteins that are effectors of virulence (237). For example, A. tumefaciens VirE2 protein accompanies T-DNA (tumor DNA) during transfer (237), and pertussis toxin is a protein substrate of the B. pertussis Ptl secretion system (234). In A. tumefaciens, RSF1010 plasmids appear to compete with T-DNA for secretion by the type IV apparatus, and they attenuate bacterial virulence (26). Similarly, L. pneumophila strains that encode a functional RSF1010 mobilization system replicate intracellularly and kill macrophages less efficiently than those that do not encode P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. 586 11:26 SWANSON Annual Reviews ¥ AR110-17 HAMMER this system (203), suggesting a competition between conjugal plasmids and the putative virulence factor substrates. By analogy to other type IV systems, the L. pneumophila Dot/Icm conjugation complex is postulated to deliver virulence proteins to phagocytes, to establish a protective-replication vacuole. As described above, the Dot/Icm complex must act during phagocytosis to divert phagosome maturation. Therefore, the putative effector molecule is not likely to be DNA. The Dot/Icm complex is required by L. pneumophila to insert pores into the host plasma membrane, a process that could perturb phagosome maturation (140). Many dot and icm mutants have been shown to reside in vacuoles that acquire endocytic markers; in addition, this class of mutants is noncytotoxic, and several mutants have been shown specifically to lack pore-forming activity. Accordingly, one model postulates that delivery of a small number of pores is sufficient to retard phagosome maturation (140). Alternatively, at a high level of infection, insertion of a large number of pores into the host plasma membrane causes rapid, contact-dependent lysis of the phagocyte. How pore formation affects phagosome maturation has been difficult to test directly, because neither the pore-forming toxin nor its gene(s) have been isolated. A related model postulates that the Dot/Icm-dependent pore serves as the conduit for the effector molecules that modify the nascent phagosomal membrane to alter its course (249). Accordingly, mutants lacking such effectors are predicted to retain cytotoxicity but fail to evade the endosomal compartment. By these criteria, IcmW was an attractive candidate effector. However, cellular fractionation experiments indicate that this small, soluble protein resides in the bacterial cytoplasm. Therefore, instead of acting as a substrate for type IV secretion, IcmW may regulate Dot/Icm activity, directly or indirectly (249). It is important to note that the icmW mutant phenotype indicates that although pore-formation may be required by L. pneumophila to establish an isolated phagosome, it is not sufficient. Dot-Independent Activity By modifying L. pneumophila genetically, biochemically, and physiologically, and then studying the consequences on phagosome maturation, our laboratory recently determined that Dot-independent factors also retard phagosome maturation (AD Joshi, S Sturgill-Koszycki, MS Swanson, unpublished observations). Consistent with previous reports, when macrophages were fed either postexponential phase dotA or dotB mutant cells, or wild-type bacteria that were first killed with formalin, each population of phagosomes rapidly acquired LAMP-1. However, <20% of these vacuoles acquired lysosomal cathepsin D; they also did not accumulate Texas Red-ovalbumin, CM-DiI, or Alexa Fluorstreptavidin, three fluorescent endocytic probes readily acquired by the majority of phagosomes that contained nonpathogenic particles, such as E. coli, polystyrene beads, or live or fixed exponential-phase L. pneumophila. Similarly, the capacity of L. pneumophila to evade lysosomal fusion in amoebae does not strictly depend on bacterial viability or correlate with virulence: Whereas 93% of phagosomes containing Proteus mirabilis, a nonpathogenic control strain, fused with lysosomes, as judged by colocalization with acid phosphatase, <40% of vacuoles P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 11:26 Annual Reviews AR110-17 LEGIONELLA PNEUMOPHILA PATHOGENESIS 587 Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. harboring avirulent bacteria or formalin- or UV-treated virulent bacteria did so, even ≤6 h after infection (27). Dot-dependent factors appear to isolate the L. pneumophila phagosome from a LAMP-1 containing compartment. However, because formalin-killed bacteria and viable dot mutant bacteria reside for ≤4 h in vacuoles that do not acquire lysosomal characteristics, L. pneumophila also produce a formalin-resistant, Dot-independent activity that retards its delivery to lysosomes. Mip The virulence factor Mip is a 24-kDa surface protein that has garnered much interest over the last decade (47, 72). In cultured macrophages, Mip appears to promote efficient establishment of infection rather than intracellular replication per se. During the initial infection period, ∼10-fold fewer viable mutant cells associate with human monocytic U937 cells and alveolar macrophages compared with wild-type bacteria; in contrast, their intracellular growth rate is identical to that of wild-type bacteria (47). A similar pattern was observed for infections of H. vermiformis and T. pyriformis (46). The requirement for Mip function appears to be more stringent in amoebae and animal models of infection. After infection of A. castellani, the yield of mip mutants is 50- to 100-fold lower than that of the wild type (241), and the mip gene is expressed by replicating L. pneumophila (143). In a guinea pig model of infection, mip null mutants are also less virulent than wild type, as determined by lower morbidity and mortality (45). Thus, judging by a variety of criteria, Mip contributes to L. pneumophila virulence. The Mip protein exhibits peptidyl-prolyl-cis/trans isomerase (PPIase) activity, as measured by cleavage of synthetic substrates, and this activity is inhibited by the immunosuppressant macrolide FK506 (81). Because peptidyl prolyl isomerases are characteristic of eukaryotes, Mip may target a host protein substrate, as documented for the Yersinia YopH virulence protein (103). However, Mip is not exclusive to virulent L. pneumophila. Mip-like proteins have been identified in both virulent and avirulent Legionella species (181), as well as in other intracellular pathogens, including Chlamydia trachomatis (150) and Trypanosoma cruzi (163). Mip PPIase activity does not appear to be required for intracellular survival, because a mip mutant can be complemented for intracellular replication by in trans expression of mip genes bearing mutations that significantly reduce this enzyme activity (241). As yet, no bacterial or host substrate for Mip has been identified, and the mode of action of this virulence factor remains to be determined. Phospholipases Bacterial phospholipases contribute to the virulence of a variety of bacterial pathogens (reviewed in 210). For example, Listeria monocytogenes encodes two phospholipases that cooperate with listeriolysin to lyse the phagosomal membrane and promote bacterial escape into the more hospitable cytosol (152). L. pneumophila also possesses phospholipase activity, as measured by release of p-nitrophenol from the synthetic substrate p-nitrophenylphosphorlycholine (13). Baine hypothesized that alteration of the nascent phagosomal membrane by phospholipase could aid in establishment of a replicative niche by inhibiting fusion of the phagosome with lysosomal compartments (14). Definition of the contribution P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. 588 11:26 SWANSON Annual Reviews ¥ AR110-17 HAMMER by phospholipase activity to L. pneumophila virulence awaits analysis of defined mutant strains. Factors that impede L. pneumophila phagosome maturation are likely to interact directly with the macrophage plasma membrane. For example, the multiacylated trehalose 2-sulfates of M. tuberculosis bind the macrophage plasma membrane and concentrate in lysosomes; these glycolipids inhibit phagolysosome formation when either coupled to heterologous particles or added in soluble form to cultured macrophages (102). Similarly, the promastigote form of Leishmania is covered with a thick glycocalyx, composed primarily of the negatively-charged molecule lipophosphoglycan, which inhibits phagosome maturation (226, 57). The surfaces on these pathogens may retard phagolysosome formation by steric hindrance of particular host receptors, altering transmembrane signaling molecules, or directly blocking components of the fusion machinery. Two other molecules are known to disrupt phagolysosome formation, although neither have been linked to pathogenesis. The tetravalent lectin concanavalin A, which can cross-link membrane glycoproteins, stimulates formation of endocytic vacuoles that do not fuse with lysosomes (68). The weak base ammonium chloride, which raises the pH of acidic organelles, including lysosomes, interferes with phagolysosome formation (101). Accordingly, L. pneumophila could block fusion with lysosomes by producing lectins or weak bases. Association with Endoplasmic Reticulum An unusual sequence of organelle associations follows establishment of the isolated L. pneumophila vacuole (Figure 4, Table 1). Approximately 1 h after formation, the cytoplasmic face of the L. pneumophila phagosome interacts with mitochondria; by 4 h, the vacuole is surrounded by endoplasmic reticulum (ER; 122, 221). Within amoebae, L. pneumophila also resides in vacuoles that associate transiently with mitochondria before being enveloped by endoplasmic reticulum (2, 78, 90). In macrophages, L. pneumophila replicates in the ribosome-studded vacuole for ∼20 h, then the macrophage lyses, and released bacteria begin a new round of infection. Mitochondria also associate with vacuoles containing T. gondii, and both T. gondii and B. abortus replicate in vacuoles decorated with rough ER (8, 58, 132). Genetic and kinetic studies of L. pneumophila have correlated ER association and intracellular replication (122, 221, 222). In none of these cases has a direct role for mitochondria or ER in pathogen survival or growth been demonstrated. Indeed, another pathogenic legionellae, L. micdadei, replicates within dilated vacuoles of macrophages that do not associate with endoplasmic reticulum (92, 134, 232). Autophagy Theoretically, pathogens could exploit one or more of the activities of the ER to obtain nutrients. In addition to its protein and phospholipid biosynthetic enzymes, protein-conducting channels, and TAP peptide pores, the ER participates in autophagy, a ubiquitous mechanism critical for cellular homeostasis (67). When P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 11:26 Annual Reviews AR110-17 Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. LEGIONELLA PNEUMOPHILA PATHOGENESIS 589 Figure 4 Model for the Legionella pneumophila pathway in macrophages. After being engulfed within coiled phagosomes, post-exponential-phase bacteria establish a vacuole that does not acidify or interact with the endosomal pathway, but is surrounded by endoplasmic reticulum. Within this protected vacuole, bacteria convert to an acid-tolerant, replicative form and no longer express virulence factors. Consequently, vacuoles merge with the lysosomal compartment, an acidic, nutrient-rich replication niche. Once the local amino acid supply is depleted, the progeny convert to the virulent form, expressing factors to escape the spent host, survive and disperse in the environment, and establish a protected replication niche in another phagocyte. stressed, such as by nutrient deprivation or elevated temperature, cells increase their rate of autophagy. Portions of the cytoplasm, including organelles, are sequestered within vacuoles derived from the ER, called autophagosomes. Next, these vacuoles merge with the lysosomal compartment, wherein the contents are degraded. By this process, a eukaryotic cell presumably reduces its metabolic load and liberates molecules needed for vital cellular activities. There is experimental evidence supporting an interaction between the autophagy pathway and vacuoles that harbor pathogens. The parasitophorous vacuoles of Leishmania mexicana appear to intersect with the autophagy pathway, as judged by a slow accumulation of cytosolic markers in the vacuole which was sensitive to 3-methyladenine (198). The ultrastructure of L. pneumophila replication vacuoles resembles that of autophagosomes, and elevated rates of autophagy facilitate replication vacuole formation and enhance bacterial growth (221). By stimulating autophagy, pathogens could increase the local supply of nutrients. Alternatively, autophagy of pathogenic vacuoles may represent a form of quality control by the host phagocyte. The infectious forms of L. pneumophila and Leishmania establish vacuoles that are isolated from the endocytic pathway. Later, P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 590 11:26 SWANSON Annual Reviews ¥ AR110-17 HAMMER Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. these nonfusigenic vacuoles are engulfed by endoplasmic reticulum in a process that resembles autophagy. Vacuoles bearing Leishmania eventually merge with the lysosomal compartment. As described below, recent data from our laboratory indicate that mature L. pneumophila replication vacuoles also acquire lysosomal characteristics. Therefore, it is reasonable to postulate that the autophagy machinery can recognize certain nonfusigenic vacuoles and deliver these organelles to lysosomes. Presumably, this class of vacuolar pathogens exploits the period when delivery to lysosomes is blocked to convert to a replicative form which not only tolerates, but thrives within the acidic and hydrolytic lysosomal compartment. Maturation of the Replication Vacuole Although many studies have analyzed the macrophage compartment where L. pneumophila initially reside (Table 1), little is known about the vacuoles that harbor actively replicating bacteria. Although some macrophage pathogens, such as Mycobacterium (10, 56), Toxoplasma (132), and Chlamydia (87) species, replicate within compartments which remain separate from the lysosomes, Leishmania does not. Similar to L. pneumophila, the growth phase of Leishmania determines its competence to inhibit phagosome-lysosome fusion (57, 226). Motivated by its similarity to Leishmania development, the resemblance of its replication vacuole to autophagosomes, and the dearth of information regarding its mature replication vacuole, we investigated whether L. pneumophila eventually reside within an endocytic compartment. Acquisition of Lysosomal Characteristics Indeed, during the time period when the yield of L. pneumophila colony forming units typically increases 10-fold, a significant proportion of the bacterial vacuoles acquire lysosomal characteristics (Table 1; S Sturgill-Koszycki & MS Swanson, unpublished observations). In particular, by 18 h post-infection, 70% of the vacuoles contain LAMP-1, a late endosomal and lysosomal membrane glycoprotein, and 50% contain the lysosomal enzyme cathepsin D, as judged by fluorescence microscopic assays. Additionally, 50% of the replication vacuoles accumulate the fluorescent endocytic probes Texas Red ovalbumin and fluoresceindextran. Finally, whereas nascent L. pneumophila phagosomes remain a neutral pH, by 16 to 20 h after infection, replication vacuoles are acidic, averaging pH 5.5 (S Sturgill-Koszycki & MS Swanson, unpublished observations). Thus, as they mature, L. pneumophila replication vacuoles appear to merge with the lysosomal compartment. Four lines of evidence indicate that fusion of the replication vacuole with the lysosomal compartment promotes, rather than inhibits, L. pneumophila growth (S Sturgill-Koszycki & MS Swanson, unpublished observations). First, acquisition of lysosomal proteins correlates with bacterial replication: Virtually every vacuole that contains greater than five bacteria also contains LAMP-1. Second, bacteria within endocytic vacuoles are metabolically active, as judged by their capacity P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 11:26 Annual Reviews AR110-17 Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. LEGIONELLA PNEUMOPHILA PATHOGENESIS 591 to respond to IPTG by expressing from a Ptac promoter a gene encoding Green Fluorescent Protein. Third, blocking acidification and maturation of the replication vacuole by treating infected macrophages with the proton ATPase inhibitor bafilomycin A1 also arrests bacterial replication. Fourth, unlike exponential phase broth cultures, replicating L. pneumophila obtained from macrophages 18 h after infection are acid tolerant: Less than 0.01% of broth-grown bacteria survive a 4-h treatment at pH 5.0, whereas ∼15% of macrophage-grown cells do so. Therefore, in macrophages, L. pneumophila appear to reside and replicate within a lysosomal compartment (S Sturgill-Koszycki & MS Swanson, unpublished observations). Four previous observations are consistent with the interpretation that L. pneumophila replicates within phagolysosomes. First, the growth of L. pneumophila in amoebae does not always correlate with a capacity to evade phagosome-lysosome fusion: one environmental isolate evaded lysosomes poorly, yet replicated within amoebae as well as the virulent control strain (27). Second, by 20 h after infection, virulent L. pneumophila reside in H. vermiformis vacuoles that no longer have ribosomes and the ER protein BiP (2). Third, by 24 hours after infection, L. pneumophila vacuoles frequently contain granular and membranous material (2, 138, 245) consistent with an endocytic identity. Fourth, a pathogen closely related to the legionellae, Coxiella burnetii (233), replicates within acidic phagolysosomes (6, 113, 156, 199). Similarity to Leishmania For both L. pneumophila and L. donovani, the relationship between the pathogen vacuole and the macrophage endocytic pathway changes dramatically during the course of infection. Initially, an infectious, stationary phase cell expresses factors which isolate the phagosome from the endocytic pathway; Leishmania promastigotes are coated with lipophosphoglycan (57), whereas L. pneumophila express Dot/Icm-dependent and -independent factors of unknown identity (AD Joshi, S Sturgill-Koszycki, MS Swanson, unpublished observations). Once the intracellular microbes convert to the replicative form, the inhibitory factors are no longer expressed, and the vacuoles merge with the lysosomal compartment, wherein the parasites replicate (226, 38; S Sturgill-Koszycki & MS Swanson, unpublished observations). Thus, L. pneumophila and L. donovani manipulate the macrophage endocytic pathway first to survive, but later to exploit the lysosomes as a replication niche. Similarity to Coxiella Species Coxiella burnetti, the etiological agent of Q Fever, is closely related phylogenetically to L. pneumophila (233). Although C. burnetti is an obligate intracellular pathogen, recent studies of L. pneumophila have revealed a number of striking similarities between the two microbes. Both pathogens replicate within human alveolar macrophages, where they undergo a marked developmental switch (38, 112). In particular, C. burnetti converts between a replicative, large cell variant P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 592 11:26 SWANSON Annual Reviews ¥ AR110-17 HAMMER Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. form and the stationary phase, small cell variant form. Moreover, C. burnetti encodes homologs of icmT, icmS, and icmK, three genes required by L. pneumophila for intracellular growth (205). Finally, it is now apparent that both C. burnetti and L. pneumophila replicate within the acidic, degradative environment of macrophage phagolysosomes (6, 113, 156, 199; S Sturgill-Koszycki & MS Swanson, unpublished observations). Given their genetic similarity and comparable life styles, L. pneumophila may function as a powerful experimental tool to analyze C. burnetti pathogenesis, an effort hampered by an inability to culture this infectious agent. Model for Replication Vacuole Biogenesis Taken together, current knowledge of L. pneumophila virulence regulation and replication vacuole biogenesis support the following multistage model for the L. pneumophila life cycle (Figure 4). When ingested by amoebae or macrophages, L. pneumophila exports factors via the Dot/Icm secretion system to modify the nascent phagosome and separate it completely from the endosomal pathway. Next, endoplasmic reticulum engulfs the isolated phagosome, forming an autophagosomal vacuole. Within this protected niche, L. pneumophila converts to a replicative form that is acid tolerant, does not require Dot/Icm function, and does not express several virulence traits, including those factors which block fusion with the lysosomal compartment. Consequently, the autophagy machinery delivers the pathogen to the lysosomal compartment, a harsh but nutrient-rich environment where bacterial replication occurs. Once the bacterial progeny have depleted the local amino acid supply, the intracellular second messenger ppGpp accumulates, triggering expression of traits important for transmission of L. pneumophila to a new phagocyte. In particular, a cytotoxin promotes escape from the spent host, osmotic resistance increases survival in the extracellular environment, motility facilitates dispersal and contact with a new host cell, and the capacity to evade phagosome-lysosome fusion promotes survival within the next phagocyte, where the cycle repeats. The apparent complexity of its intracellular pathway motivates speculation on the evolution of L. pneumophila virulence. Presumably, ancestral legionellae were ingested and efficiently digested within amoebae phagolysosomes. In response to this considerable selective pressure, endosymbionts may have emerged by virtue of their expression of a formalin-resistant surface component that retards phagolysosome maturation and promotes survival. Later, acquisition by horizontal transmission of the genetically linked dot/icm loci may have permitted the emergence of pathogenic L. pneumophila. Now endowed with the capacity to avoid the endocytic pathway completely for hours, L. pneumophila has a window of time sufficient to alter its physiology. By activating regulons that confer acid tolerance and other activities, the bacteria can exploit the highly dynamic and nutrient rich lysosomal compartment as a replication niche. Thus, the complex intracellular life cycle of L. pneumophila is the product of a relentless competition with the aquatic amoebae with which it evolves. P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 11:26 Annual Reviews AR110-17 LEGIONELLA PNEUMOPHILA PATHOGENESIS 593 Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. Bacterial Factors that Promote Intracellular Replication Iron Acquisition Once established in the replication vacuole, iron acquisition and assimilation appears to be critical for intracellular growth of L. pneumophila. Interfering with the supply of intracellular iron, either by addition of chelators or by γ -interferon activation of macrophages, inhibits intracellular bacterial replication (36, 174). Consistent with these observations, an L. pneumophila iraAB mutant, identified originally in a screen for strains defective for intracellular iron acquisition and assimilation, replicates poorly in U937 cells following a prolonged lag phase (174). Moreover, a defined iraAB::tn(kan) mutant is also defective for replication in a guinea pig model of lung infection (228). A nonclassical siderophore, legiobactin, which has measurable iron-binding activity in a chemically defined medium has been described (145). Finally, L. pneumophila encodes a homolog of Fur, an E. coli transcription factor which represses expression of iron acquisition genes when ferrous iron is present (116, 12). A defined mutant in the L. pneumophila Fur-regulated gene frgA was impaired for replication in U937 cells by 80-fold (117). Therefore, this intracellular pathogen likely responds to iron limitation in part by altering its pattern of gene expression. Protection from Stress During the exponential growth phase, L. pneumophila expresses a cytoplasmic catalase:peroxidase, encoded by katB, which may be important for its intracellular lifestyle (15). In E. coli, the homologous catalase: peroxidase, KatG, which is induced by H2O2, mitigates the intracellular H2O2 generated by respiration during the exponential growth phase. Following phagocytosis by macrophage-like THP1 cells, katB mutants display an apparent lag before replicating at a wild-type rate (15). Likewise, in primary macrophages derived from the bone marrow of A/J mice, katB mutant cells exhibit a similar lag, but also a modest replication defect, indicating a more stringent requirement for catalase-peroxidase activity in this phagocyte model (B Byrne, MS Swanson, P Bandyopadhyay & HM Steinman, unpublished data). Perhaps the lag which precedes replication indicates that intracellular L. pneumophila induce a compensatory activity that enables the bacteria to replicate in the absence of KatB. L. pneumophila katB expression is not induced by H2O2 in vitro, suggesting that other conditions within the phagosome may trigger katB expression. L. pneumophila, like Salmonella (35) and Yersinia (244) species, express a 19-kDa GroEL-like General Stress Protein (GspA) after entry into macrophages (3). GspA is dispensable for bacterial survival and growth in macrophage infection models (4); whether it is required for transmission or for extracellular survival in the environment is difficult to assess. This class of chaperone proteins is known to be expressed by bacteria cultured in vitro in response to stress (3), suggesting that the pathogen vacuole may be a stressful environment. Type II Secretion System Type II secretion systems enable animal pathogens, such as Vibrio cholerae and P. aeruginosa, to secrete toxins and proteases, and P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. 594 11:26 SWANSON Annual Reviews ¥ AR110-17 HAMMER plant pathogens, like Erwinia chrysanthemi and Xanthomonas campestris, to secrete cellulases and pectinases (reviewed in 194). Proteins exported by type II systems contain an amino terminal signal sequence that directs their delivery into the periplasm by the Sec secretion machinery. Subsequent transport through the outer membrane requires the general secretion pathway, a complex of 14 additional proteins (194). L. pneumophila is the first intracellular pathogen found to carry a chromosomal locus encoding a type II secretion system (146, 147). A role for type II secretion in L. pneumophila pathogenesis was demonstrated by analysis of a bacterial strain defective for expression of a type IV pilin biosynthesis gene. The PilD prepilin peptidase, an enzyme required for IV pilus biogenesis, processes proteins destined for secretion by the type II system. An L. pneumophila pilin locus encodes homologs of Pseudomonas aeruginosa PilD, as well as PilB and PilC (146). A nonpolar pilD:kanR insertion mutant was nonpiliated and defective for secretion of at least three proteins, one of which is the zinc-metalloprotease known as the major secreted protein (Msp). In broth, the pilD mutant grew as well as wild type, but it was defective for growth within monocytic U937 cells, Hartmannella vermiformis, and guinea pigs (147). Since msp and pilus mutants replicate efficiently in macrophages (223, 215), additional type II secreted proteins are predicted to contribute to L. pneumophila intracellular growth. Lipopolysaccharide L. pneumophila produces an unusually hydrophobic lipopolysaccharide (LPS) which may facilitate its intracellular lifestyle (142). A phase-variant mutant of L. pneumophila serogroup 1, designated 811, was isolated after repeat passage on the basis of its failure to bind the mAb2625, which is specific for LPS of the virulent, wild-type strain (151). Unlike the wild type and an mAb2625-positive revertant of mutant 811, mutant 811 was impaired for growth within HL60 cells, although all strains entered HL60 cell with a similar efficiency. Although virulent revertants of mutant 811 were obtained, suggesting a single mutation confers the phenotype of interest, it remains possible that factors other than LPS were altered as a consequence of repeated passage. Nevertheless, it is curious that a phase variation, or switching between the mutant and the wildtype LPS phenotype, was promoted by growth in a guinea pig infection model. Perhaps a developmental-phase variation of LPS contributes to L. pneumophila pathogenesis. Intracellular Growth Mutants Virulence factors have also been sought by a combination of genetic and cell biological assays. For example, after screening for mutants that are defective for growth in phagocytes, the fate of each mutant in phagocytes can be determined by fluorescence or electron microscopic assays (23, 222, 236). Alternatively, candidate genes are selected based on their position within a chromosomal region known to be required for virulence; strains lacking the candidate gene are constructed, and their fate in phagocytes is assessed. By these approaches, many loci, termed dot (9, 23, 229), icm (28, 153, 200, 202), mak (195), mil (91), and pmi (90), have been identified as important for intracellular P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 11:26 Annual Reviews AR110-17 LEGIONELLA PNEUMOPHILA PATHOGENESIS 595 Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. growth. As yet, there are no virulence genes for which both the biochemical activity and the mechanism of action in pathogenesis have been established unequivocally. It is interesting that there is a paucity of avirulent mutants that evade endosomal fusion but are defective for replication within the isolated vacuole (236). Perhaps the factors required for replication within a modified phagosome are also required for efficient growth in microbiological media. If so, phenotypic screening of a collection of transposon mutants is unlikely to identify this class of virulence genes. Strategies to Identify Factors Expressed or Required During Infection Another strategy to identify L. pneumophila virulence factors is to isolate genes whose expression is induced, or required, specifically during infection. This class of factors has been sought by a number of molecular and genetic schemes, including two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (3), a promoter-trap genetic-screen and genetic-enrichment protocol (179), differential-display polymerase chain reaction (5), and signature-tagged transposon mutagenesis (70). By these techniques, many factors that appear to be important for intracellular growth have been identified. As predicted, a number of genes shown previously to be required for intracellular growth were also identified by these strategies. For example, using signaturetagged mutagenesis, Edelstein and colleagues identified 16 transposon mutants that were defective for growth in the lungs and spleens of guinea pigs; 12 of these also failed to replicate in alveolar macrophages (70). Among the loci identified by these mutations were proA, which encodes Msp, and five dot and icm genes. Thus, additional molecular and genetic analysis of this class of factors is likely to provide insight to the mechanisms of L. pneumophila pathogenesis. Amoebae Versus Macrophages A number of L. pneumophila factors appear to be critical for pathogenesis in one species of professional phagocytes, but not the other. For example, when cultured with A. castellanii, rpoS mutants are avirulent; yet, in the monocytic HL60 and THP-1 cell lines, the mutant replicated within and killed host cells as efficiently as wild-type L. pneumophila (107). A similar pattern was observed for the type II general secretion pathway: a null mutation in the lspGH locus (Legionella secretion pathway) attenuated bacterial replication in A. castellanii, but did not affect bacterial killing of monocytic HL60 cells (106). Likewise, the growth defect of icmG, icmN, icmS, and tphF mutants was more severe in cultures of A. castellanii than in mammalian HL60 cells (204). In addition, Brieland and colleagues identified, among a library of transposon mutants, two strains that were avirulent in their H. vermiformis model, yet replicated as efficiently as the wild type in monocytic U937 cells (32). Conversely, Fields et al described legionellae isolates that replicated in T. pyriformis, but were attenuated for pathogenesis of guinea pigs, as judged by bacterial survival after inoculation into the peritoneal cavity (78). And Gao et al identified among a large collection of transposon mutants a number of strains, termed mil mutants (macrophage-specific infectivity loci), that were defective for replication in a monocyte cell line, but not P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 596 11:26 SWANSON Annual Reviews ¥ AR110-17 HAMMER amoebae (91). It is not surprising that L. pneumophila is sensitive to physiological differences between infection models that remain undefined by experimentalists. Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. Transmission As secondary cases of Legionnaires’ disease have not been documented, it is clear that L. pneumophila lacks virulence factors that promote transmission from one person to another. Instead, the selective pressures of aquatic habits have determined the L. pneumophila phenotype. Although monolayers of professional phagocytes are proven tools to identify the host and bacterial determinants of intracellular replication, analysis of transmission either within its natural reservoir or to human phagocytes will require the development of experimental systems that more closely mimic the complex ecology of L. pneumophila. Based on the observation that amino acid starvation induces cytotoxicity, osmotic resistance, motility, and the capacity to evade phagosome-lysosome, we have postulated that these traits facilitate transmission in the environment (38, 109). Here we discuss these and other activities that are likely to promote bacterial escape from phagocytes, extracellular survival, and dispersal in the environment. Cytotoxins To escape from a nutrient-poor vacuole, L. pneumophila may produce toxins that lyse host membranes. Since 1977, when L. pneumophila was verified as the causative agent of Legionnaires’ disease, numerous studies have described bacterial factors that are cytotoxic to a variety of types of mammalian cells. Two L. pneumophila cytotoxins exhibit hemolytic activity on blood agar plates. A 39-kDa protein, termed legiolysin (encoded by lly), confers hemolytic activity to recombinant E. coli K-12 (242). Yet, an L. pneumophila lly mutant remains hemolytic, as judged by its colony phenotype on blood agar plates, and it replicates as efficiently as wild-type in both monocytic U937 cells and protozoan A. castellanii (240), suggesting production of other toxins that are functionally redundant. The 38-kDa Msp, encoded by proA or mspA, is a zinc metalloprotease (65, 178, 223). Several activities have been attributed to this enzyme, including proteolysis on skim milk medium, hemolysis on canine erythrocyte medium, and cytotoxicity for CHO cells (137, 178). Purified Msp also inhibits neutrophil and monocyte killing of Listeria monocytogenes and neutrophil chemotaxis (184), and it can induce the lung pathology typical of legionellosis (54). Although msp mutants had no apparent defect for growth within or killing of macrophages (161, 223), their virulence was attenuated in a guinea pig model (161). Taken together, these observations suggest that cytotoxic activities may contribute to L. pneumophila transmission, perhaps mediating escape from the spent amoebae. In the lung, this activity may be manifested as tissue damage. L. pneumophila also exhibit a contact-dependent cytotoxicity. Husman & Johnson determined that bacteria can kill guinea pig peritoneal macrophages and J774.2 cells within 2–4 h of infection by a process that requires close contact, but not entry or replication (129). More detailed studies by Kirby and colleagues P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 11:26 Annual Reviews AR110-17 LEGIONELLA PNEUMOPHILA PATHOGENESIS 597 Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. reported that a contact-dependent cytotoxicity induces a necrotic cell death which is marked by osmotic lysis (141). More specifically, L. pneumophila bacteria appear to insert, into the target cell membrane pores, with approximate diameters of 1.5 nm, as calculated from the Einstein-Stokes molecular diffusion radius of polyethylene glycols, which provide osmotic protection (141). Moreover, pore formation requires Dot/Icm function and correlates with the capacity to evade phagosome-lysosome fusion, as discussed above. As yet, neither the toxin nor its respective gene has been isolated. Apoptosis Programmed cell death, or apoptosis, has also been postulated to play a role in L. pneumophila pathogenesis. At 24 h after infection with L. pneumophila at a multiplicity of 10:1, monocytic HL-60 cells exhibited apoptotic nuclear morphology and internucleosomal DNA cleavage (167). Neither the Msp zinc metalloprotease nor the Mip peptidyl prolyl isomerase was required for the apoptotic response (167). Under conditions in which bacterial replication and necrotic cell death were minimal, L. pneumophila also induced apoptosis of HL60 cells, as judged by annexin V binding to cells that were impermeable to propidium iodide (105). Abu Kwaik and colleagues have demonstrated that this pathogen can kill the monocytic U937 cell line by a replication-independent and host protease-dependent mechanism that is characterized by three hallmarks of apoptosis: fragmentation of host DNA, cleavage of host poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase, and exposure of phosphatidylserine, a phospholipid that is normally located on the cytoplasmic face of the plasma membrane of healthy mammalian cells (89). Furthermore, when cells were infected in the presence of Z-DEVD-FMK, a compound that inhibits caspase-3 and several other cysteine proteases that mediate apoptosis (94), neither host DNA nor poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase was degraded. Induction of programmed cell death does correlate genetically with virulence. Bacterial mutants that lack a functional Dot/Icm transport complex fail to evade fusion with the endocytic pathway, replicate in macrophages and amoebae, or express a pore-forming cytotoxin; they also fail to activate caspase 3 and to degrade DNA (89). A role for apoptosis in legionellosis was also postulated based on genetic studies of mice, a species naturally resistant to L. pneumophila infections. The A/J strain of mice is permissive for L. pneumophila replication owing to a recessive genomic mutation, lgn1, which has been mapped to a ∼350-kb region of chromosome 13 (60, 246, 248). Encoded in this region are six copies of the murine homolog of the gene encoding neuronal apoptosis inhibitory protein [NAIP (128, 247)]. This protein is expressed by macrophages and other tissues and has been shown to inhibit apoptosis in neurons and other types of mammalian cells (61, 148, 243). It is interesting that A/J mice tissues contain less NAIP RNA and protein than do resistant, Lgn+ mouse strains (61). The level of NAIP also correlates with phagocytic activity: Lgn+ macrophages that have phagocytosed latex beads or avirulent L. pneumophila contain more NAIP protein than macrophages that have not been fed. Diez et al speculate that, to replicate in macrophages, L. pneumophila must induce apoptosis. By this model, A/J mice cells readily P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. 598 11:26 SWANSON Annual Reviews ¥ AR110-17 HAMMER undergo programmed cell death caused by abnormally low levels of NAIP; hence, the A/J naip allele confers permissiveness for L. pneumophila infection (61). By inducing apoptosis during growth in alveolar macrophages, L. pneumophila may increase the likelihood of safe passage to a second phagocyte while being protected from antimicrobial molecules that are abundant in the lungs (167). Many questions remain about the role of apoptosis in L. pneumophila pathogenesis. Because apoptotic death of amoebae infected with L. pneumophila has not been observed (105), the selective pressure that would maintain this putative virulence trait is not obvious. Whether L. pneumophila must induce apoptosis to replicate in macrophages remains to be established. Also, it has been difficult to separate apoptosis from necrosis, because the high multiplicity of infections, which are optimal for apoptosis induction by L. pneumophila, also induce substantial necrosis (89). Further complicating the interpretation of these experiments is the likelihood that host cell permeabilization by the pore-forming toxin will also expose phosphatidylserine and induce DNA damage (64). Mutants specifically defective for inducing apoptotic cell death or for production of the pore-forming cytotoxin would allow a direct test of the hypothesis that induction of apoptosis is required for survival or replication in macrophages. Motility Motility likely facilitates bacterial transmission to a new host phagocyte. Consistent with a role in transmission, L. pneumophila become motile in the stationary phase in broth and within late-stage replication vacuoles of amoebae and macrophages (38, 115, 190). Insertional mutants that are defective for expression of flagella multiply at wild-type rates in U937 cultures (158, 176). However, flaA mutants have a reduced capacity to invade cells, and after an intracellular replication cycle, the progeny are defective for lysing its host (59). Genetic studies indicate that flagellar synthesis and virulence are regulated coordinately (38, 109, 176). Antioxidants L. pneumophila encodes several antioxidants that may be important during transmission from one phagocyte to another. This class of enzymes can catalyze the decomposition of reactive oxygen species that are either generated by bacterial metabolism or are present in the environment. In animal models, superoxide dismutases contribute to the virulence of a number of bacterial pathogens including S. typhimurium (74, 75), B. abortus (224), Shigella flexneri (83), and Nocardia asteroides (20). L. pneumophila produces a cytoplasmic iron superoxide dismutase [FeSOD, encoded by sodB (196)], a periplasmic copper-zinc superoxide dismutase [CuZnSOD, encoded by sodC ) (214)], and a periplasmic catalase:peroxidase [KatA encoded by katA (7)]. Similar to the RpoS-dependent expression of antioxidants in E. coli, KatA is expressed maximally during the postexponential phase (15), consistent with a role in transmission. The CuZnSOD enzyme appears to be important for persistence, not replication; sodC mutants survive poorly in the stationary phase, yet the sodC mutant replicated at wild-type rates in phagocytic cells (214). L. pneumophila sodB is an essential gene, because sodB-null mutants P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 11:26 Annual Reviews AR110-17 LEGIONELLA PNEUMOPHILA PATHOGENESIS 599 Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. cannot be recovered in the absence of a plasmid-borne copy of wild-type sodB (196); hence, its role in virulence is difficult to access. A specific role for these enzymes in transmission has not been evaluated directly. In the environment, L. pneumophila likely resides in complex communities with a variety of bacterial and protozoan species that may persist either as planktonic cells or within surface-adherent biofilms (34). Recent advances in understanding the molecular mechanisms of biofilm formation (55) will likely provide a framework for studies to elucidate the molecular determinants of persistence and transmission of L. pneumophila in the environment. LEGIONELLA PNEUMOPHILA VIRULENCE AS A PARADIGM FOR OPPORTUNISTIC PATHOGENS OF MACROPHAGES As illustrated by the body of literature discussed, L. pneumophila is an excellent experimental tool to investigate how vacuolar pathogens thrive within macrophages. L. pneumophila replicates with a doubling time of ∼2 h both in cultured macrophages and in bacteriological medium. Avirulent mutants can be isolated by either chemical- or transposon-mediated mutagenesis followed by simple genetic enrichment or screening procedures. The intracellular growth phenotype of L. pneumophila strains can be assessed by either visual or quantitative assays, and the fate of intracellular bacteria can be determined by a series of fluorescence microscopic assays. Cloned DNA can be transferred efficiently into L. pneumophila by electroporation, conjugation, or natural competence (216). Relatively high rates of homologous recombination facilitate precise genetic engineering; alternatively, stable replicating plasmids are available. Finally, A/J mice and guinea pigs provide animal models of Legionnaires’ disease for in vivo analysis of putative virulence factors. Although macrophages efficiently internalize and degrade most microorganisms, L. pneumophila is one of a number of pathogens that exploit this host defense pathway. Post-exponential–phase L. pneumophila resemble M. tuberculosis (10, 56), Chlamydia psittaci (87), T. gondii (132, 206), and L. donovani promastigotes (57); each pathogen can establish vacuoles within macrophages that do not mature into phagolysosomes. During the intracellular-replication phase, L. pneumophila is similar to L. donovani and C. burnetti, parasites that thrive in acidic phagolysosomes. Although many biochemical and cell biological features of the vacuoles harboring these pathogens have been identified, the mechanisms that they use to evade fusion remain obscure. Thus, a biochemical description of the mechanism used by L. pneumophila to evade phagosome-lysosome fusion and later to replicate within phagolysosomes may suggest novel strategies for treating infections by a variety of intracellular pathogens. In addition, the L. pneumophila factor(s) that interfere with lysosomal fusion may be valuable reagent(s) for more detailed analyses of membrane traffic in mammalian cells. Because macrophages are central effector cells in both humoral P1: FRK/FGP P2: FQP August 4, 2000 600 11:26 SWANSON Annual Reviews ¥ AR110-17 HAMMER and cell-mediated immunity, detailed knowledge of macrophage membrane traffic is likely to provide a myriad of opportunities for improving human health. Finally, understanding the ecology of L. pneumophila in the natural and potable water supply may inform the design of preventative measures to combat the emergence of new opportunistic macrophage pathogens. Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We thank members of our laboratory for their contributions to the ideas and data presented here and Dr. Joseph Vogel for numerous stimulating discussions over the years and for a schematic that was the basis for Figure 3. We are also grateful for the rich intellectual environment provided by the members of the Department of Microbiology and Immunology at the University of Michigan. Our research is supported by grants R29AI40694-01BM and R01 AI44212-01 from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases of the National Institutes of Health. Visit the Annual Reviews home page at www.AnnualReviews.org LITERATURE CITED 1. Deleted in proof. 2. Abu Kwaik Y. 1996. The phagosome containing Legionella pneumophila within the protozoan Hartmonella vermiformis is surrounded by the rough endoplasmic reticulum. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 62:2022–28 3. Abu Kwaik Y, Eisenstein BI, Engleberg NC. 1993. Phenotypic modulation by L. pneumophila upon infection of macrophages. 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Pore-forming activity is not sufficient for Legionella pneumophila phagosome trafficking and intracellular growth. Mol. Microbiol. 32:990–1001 Annual Review of Microbiology Volume 54, 2000 Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. CONTENTS THE LIFE AND TIMES OF A CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGIST, Albert Balows ROLE OF CYTOTOXIC T LYMPHOCYTES IN EPSTEIN-BARR VIRUS-ASSOCIATED DISEASES, Rajiv Khanna, Scott R. Burrows BIOFILM FORMATION AS MICROBIAL DEVELOPMENT, George O'Toole, Heidi B. Kaplan, Roberto Kolter MICROBIOLOGICAL SAFETY OF DRINKING WATER, U. Szewzyk, R. Szewzyk, W. Manz, K.-H. Schleifer THE ADAPTATIVE MECHANISMS OF TRYPANOSOMA BRUCEI FOR STEROL HOMEOSTASIS IN ITS DIFFERENT LIFE-CYCLE ENVIRONMENTS, I. Coppens, P. J. Courtoy THE DEVELOPMENT OF GENETIC TOOLS FOR DISSECTING THE BIOLOGY OF MALARIA PARASITES, Tania F. de Koning-Ward, Chris J. Janse, Andrew P. Waters NUCLEIC ACID TRANSPORT IN PLANT-MICROBE INTERACTIONS: The Molecules That Walk Through the Walls, Tzvi Tzfira, Yoon Rhee, Min-Huei Chen, Talya Kunik, Vitaly Citovsky PHYTOPLASMA: Phytopathogenic Mollicutes, Ing-Ming Lee, Robert E. Davis, Dawn E. Gundersen-Rindal ROOT NODULATION AND INFECTION FACTORS PRODUCED BY RHIZOBIAL BACTERIA, Herman P. Spaink ALGINATE LYASE: Review of Major Sources and Enzyme Characteristics, Structure-Function Analysis, Biological Roles, and Applications, Thiang Yian Wong, Lori A. Preston, Neal L. Schiller INTERIM REPORT ON GENOMICS OF ESCHERICHIA COLI, M. Riley, M. H. Serres ORAL MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES: Biofilms, Interactions, and Genetic Systems, Paul E. Kolenbrander ROLES OF THE GLUTATHIONE- AND THIOREDOXINDEPENDENT REDUCTION SYSTEMS IN THE ESCHERICHIA COLI AND SACCHAROMYCES CEREVISIAE RESPONSES TO OXIDATIVE STRESS, Orna Carmel-Harel, Gisela Storz RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN MOLECULAR GENETICS OF CANDIDA ALBICANS, Marianne D. De Backer, Paul T. Magee, Jesus Pla FUNCTIONAL MODULATION OF ESCHERICHIA COLI RNA POLYMERASE, Akira Ishihama BACTERIAL VIRULENCE GENE REGULATION: An Evolutionary Perspective, Peggy A. Cotter, Victor J. DiRita LEGIONELLA PNEUMOPHILA PATHOGENESIS: A Fateful Journey from Amoebae to Macrophages, M. S. Swanson, B. K. Hammer THE DISEASE SPECTRUM OF HELICOBACTER PYLORI : The Immunopathogenesis of Gastroduodenal Ulcer and Gastric Cancer, Peter B. Ernst, Benjamin D. Gold PATHOGENICITY ISLANDS AND THE EVOLUTION OF MICROBES, Jörg Hacker, James B. Kaper DNA SEGREGATION IN BACTERIA, Gideon Scott Gordon, Andrew Wright 1 19 49 81 129 157 187 221 257 289 341 413 439 463 499 519 567 615 641 681 POLYPHOSPHATE AND PHOSPHATE PUMP, I. Kulaev, T. Kulakovskaya ASSEMBLY AND FUNCTION OF TYPE III SECRETORY SYSTEMS, Guy R. Cornelis, Frédérique Van Gijsegem PROTEINS SHARED BY THE TRANSCRIPTION AND TRANSLATION MACHINES, Catherine L. Squires, Dmitry Zaporojets Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 2000.54:567-613. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by b-on: Biblioteca do Conhecimento Online (Hospitals) on 10/24/08. For personal use only. HOLINS: The Protein Clocks of Bacteriophage Infections, Ing-Nang Wang, David L. Smith, Ry Young OXYGEN RESPIRATION BY DESULFOVIBRIO SPECIES, Heribert Cypionka REGULATION OF CARBON CATABOLISM IN BACILLUS SPECIES, J. Stülke, W. Hillen IRON METABOLISM IN PATHOGENIC BACTERIA, Colin Ratledge, Lynn G Dover 709 735 775 799 827 849 881