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      Bartonella bacilliformis GroEL: effect on growth of human vascular endothelial cells in infected cocultures.

      1 ,
      Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          Bartonella are the only bacteria known to induce angioproliferative lesions of the human vasculature and liver during infection. Previous work from our lab suggests that GroEL participates in the mitogenic response observed in HUVEC cultures supplemented with the soluble fraction of Bartonella bacilliformis. Work in this study shows that exposure to high concentrations of the fraction is actually cytotoxic for HUVECs. To analyze this phenomenon, live B. bacilliformis-HUVEC cocultures were employed to study the effect of excess bacterial GroEL on the host cell during active infection. Four B. bacilliformis strains were generated to produce varying levels of GroEL. HUVEC cocultures with LSS100, a strain that synthesizes markedly greater quantities of GroEL relative to others, significantly accelerates apoptosis of the cocultured HUVECs relative to other strains. Acceleration of apoptosis can be inhibited by Z-VAD-FMK, a pan-caspase inhibitor. Time course data show that, at 18 h of infection, both LSS100 and control strains significantly inhibit spontaneous apoptosis of cocultured HUVECs, as previously reported for other Bartonella species. However, by 48 h, LSS100 significantly increases apoptosis of the host cell. We hypothesize that intracellular Bartonella GroEL functions as an Hsp60 analogue, a eukaryotic orthologue known to accelerate pro-caspase 3 activation by enhancing its vulnerability to upstream activator caspases. These data suggest another strategy whereby Bartonella may regulate host cell growth.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci.
          Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
          Wiley
          0077-8923
          0077-8923
          Dec 2005
          : 1063
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Division of Biological Sciences, University of Montana, Missoula, MT 59812-4824, USA.
          Article
          1063/1/286 NIHMS18560
          10.1196/annals.1355.046
          1817666
          16481529
          760c75b3-305a-46f0-82f8-5f9e0358c09c
          History

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