Bacteria deliver a microtubule-binding protein into mammalian cells to promote colonization
Summary
Pathogenic Bordetella bacteria use protein adhesins to infect the ciliated respiratory epithelia of vertebrate hosts. In this work, we show that the filamentous hemagglutinin FhaB adhesin of Bordetella carries a C-terminal microtubule-binding domain (FhaB-CT), which is translocated into host cells to promote colonization. FhaB-CT delivery is required to occupy a niche at the base of cilia in airway epithelia, and mutant bacteria lacking this domain are defective for nasal colonization. The
Content
# Bacteria deliver a microtubule-binding protein into mammalian cells to promote colonization
*Published: 2026 Feb 19*
Pathogenic Bordetella bacteria use protein adhesins to infect the ciliated
respiratory epithelia of vertebrate hosts. In this work, we show that the
filamentous hemagglutinin FhaB adhesin of Bordetella carries a C-terminal
microtubule-binding domain (FhaB-CT), which is translocated into host cells to
promote colonization. FhaB-CT delivery is required to occupy a niche at the base
of cilia in airway epithelia, and mutant bacteria lacking this domain are
defective for nasal colonization. These observations suggest that FhaB-CT is
transferred into motile respiratory cilia to interact with core axonemal
microtubules. We propose that Bordetella adheres initially to the tips of cilia
and then deploys multiple FhaB adhesins to migrate to the base of the cilia
forest, where the bacteria resist removal by the mucociliary "escalator" that
normally clears the respiratory tract of microbes.
DOI: 10.1126/science.adz2737