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Enteropathogenic E. coli-mediated Fast and Coordinated Calcium responses regulate NF-kappaB activation

GUO, F.; GUEVARA, R. O.; OUSSAEDINE, L.; DUPONT, G.; COMBETTES, L.; Tran Van Nhieu, G.

2026-04-08 microbiology
10.64898/2026.04.08.717141 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) is a major bacterial enteropathogen causing infectious diarrhea among children in developing countries. Here, we found that EPEC induced isolated Ca2+ responses in epithelial cells, triggered by extracellular ATP (eATP). These responses were dependent on type III secretion (T3S) and down-regulated by the bacterial secreted protease EspC, consistent with eATP released by the T3S translocon pore-forming activity in host membranes. By performing high speed Ca2+ imaging, we uncovered that at the onset of infection, low eATP levels triggered Ca2+-responses involving the whole cell but showing the small amplitude and fast kinetics usually associated with local Ca2+ responses. The findings, supported by theoretical modeling, evocate a conceptual shift whereby low amounts of inositol 1, 4, 5-trisphosphate (IP3) induced by low eATP levels and subsequent moderate Ca2+ release enable the fast coordination of IP3 receptor cluster activation throughout the cell. Importantly, these yet undescribed coordinated fast responses occurred over prolonged time periods and defined a cell state with dampened activation of the pro-inflammatory transcriptional activator NF-kB associated with a decrease in its Ca2+-dependent O-linked {beta}-N-acetylglucosamine modification.

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