Anthrax lethal factor cleaves MKK3 in macrophages and inhibits the LPS/IFNγ‐induced release of NO and TNFα

Abstract
The lethal toxin of Bacillus anthracis consists of two proteins, PA and LF, which together induce lethal effects in animals and cause macrophage lysis. LF is a zinc-endopeptidase which cleaves two mitogen-activated proten kinase kinases (MAPKKs), Mek1 and Mek2, within the cytosol. Here, we show that also MKK3, another dual-specificity kinase that phosphorylates and activates p38 MAP kinase, is cleaved by LF in macrophages. No direct correlation between LF-induced cell death and cleavage of these MAPKKs was found in macrophage cell lines and primary peritoneal cells exhibiting different sensitivity to LF. However, we present the first evidence that sublytic doses of LF cleave Meks and cause a substantial reduction in the production of NO and tumour necrosis factor-α induced by lipopolysaccharide/interferonγ. We suggest that this effect of LF is relevant during the first stages of B. anthracis infection, when a reduction of the inflammatory response would permit growth and diffusion of the bacterium.