Coxiella burnetii Sterol-Modifying Protein Stmp1 Regulates Cholesterol in the Intracellular Niche
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Abstract
Coxiella burnetii replicates in a phagolysosome-like vacuole called the Coxiella-containing vacuole (CCV). While host cholesterol readily traffics to the CCV, cholesterol accumulation leads to CCV acidification and bacterial death. Thus, bacterial regulation of CCV cholesterol content is essential for Coxiella pathogenesis. Coxiella expresses a sterol-modifying protein, Stmp1, that may function to lower CCV cholesterol through enzymatic modification. Using an Stmp1 knockout (Δstmp1), we determined that Stmp1 is not essential for axenic growth. Inside host cells, however, Δstmp1 mutant bacteria form smaller CCVs which accumulate cholesterol, preferentially fuse with lysosomes, and become more acidic, correlating with a significant growth defect. However, in cholesterol-free cells, Δstmp1 mutant bacteria grow similarly to wild-type bacteria but are hypersensitive to cholesterol supplementation. To better understand the underlying mechanism behind the Δstmp1 mutant phenotype, we performed sterol profiling. Surprisingly, we found that Δstmp1 mutant-infected macrophages accumulated the potent cholesterol homeostasis regulator 25-hydroxycholesterol (25-HC). We next determined whether dysregulated 25-HC alters Coxiella infection by treating wild-type Coxiella-infected cells with 25-HC. Similar to the Δstmp1 mutant phenotype, 25-HC increased CCV proteolytic activity and inhibited bacterial growth. Collectively, these data indicate that Stmp1 alters host cholesterol metabolism and is essential to establish a mature CCV which supports Coxiella growth.