We examined the bactericidal activity of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) against an invasive wild-type strain of Shigella flexneri (M90T) and a plasmid-cured noninvasive derivative (BS176). Both Shigella strains, as well as a rough strain of Escherichia coli, were killed with similar efficiencies by intact inflammatory PMN in room air and under N 2 (i.e., killing was O 2 independent). Bacterial killing by PMN extracts was substantially inhibited by antibodies to the bactericidal/permeability-increasing protein (BPI). Whereas wild-type Shigella escapes from the phagosome to the cytoplasm in epithelial cells and macrophages, wild-type Shigella was trapped in the phagolysosome of PMN as visualized by electron microscopy. The efficient killing of Shigella by PMN suggests that these inflammatory cells may not only contribute initially to the severe tissue damage characteristic of shigellosis but also ultimately participate in clearance and resolution of infection.
Shigellae are the most prevalent etiological agents of dysentery. A crucial step in shigella pathogenesis is the induction of macrophage apoptosis. The invasion plasmid antigen B (IpaB) is necessary and sufficient to induce macrophage programmed cell death. IpaB activates apoptosis by binding to interleukin-1 (IL-1)converting enzyme (ICE) or a highly homologous protease. Here, we show that IpaB is disseminated throughout the cytoplasm of shigella-infected macrophages as detected by both immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy. The cytoplasmic distribution of IpaB requires phagosome escape, and it is specific to IpaB, since lipopolysaccharide, used here as a bacterial marker, remains closely associated with the bacteria. In double-labeling experiments, we show that IpaB and ICE colocalize in the cytoplasm of the macrophage, suggesting that soon after secretion, IpaB binds to ICE to initiate apoptosis and to promote the cleavage of IL-1.
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