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1.
《Autophagy》2013,9(2):117-125
Autophagy has been recently proposed to be a component of the innate cellular immune response against several types of intracellular microorganisms. However, other intracellular bacteria including Listeria monocytogenes have been thought to evade the autophagic cellular surveillance. Here, we show that cellular infection by L. monocytogenes induces an autophagic response, which inhibits the growth of both the wild-type and a delta actA mutant strain, the latter being impaired in cell-to-cell spreading. The onset of early intracellular growth is accelerated in autophagy-deficient cells, but the growth rate once bacteria begin to multiply in the cytosol does not change. Moreover, a significant fraction of the intracellular bacteria co-localize with autophagosomes at the early time-points after infection. Thus, autophagy targets L. monocytogenes during primary infection by limiting the onset of early bacterial growth. The bacterial expression of listeriolysin O but not phospholipases is necessary for the induction of autophagy, suggesting a possible role for permeabilization of the vacuole in the induction of autophagy. Interestingly, the growth of a delta plcA/B L. monocytogenes strain deficient for bacterial phospholipases is impaired in wild-type cells, but restored in the absence of autophagy, suggesting that bacterial phospholipases may facilitate the escape of bacteria from autophagic degradation. We conclude that L. monocytogenes are targeted for degradation by autophagy during the primary infection, in the early phase of the intracellular cycle, following listeriolysin O-dependent vacuole perforation but preceding active multiplication in the cytosol, and that expression of bacterial phospholipases is necessary for the evasion of autophagy.  相似文献   

2.
Autophagy restricts the growth of a variety of intracellular pathogens. However, cytosol-adapted pathogens have evolved ways to evade restriction by this innate immune mechanism. Listeria monocytogenes is a Gram-positive bacterial pathogen that utilizes a cholesterol-dependent pore-forming toxin, listeriolysin O (LLO), to escape from the phagosome. Autophagy targets L. monocytogenes in LLO-damaged phagosomes and also in the cytosol under some experimental conditions. However, this bacterium has evolved multiple mechanisms to evade restriction by autophagy, including actin-based motility in the cytosol and an as yet undefined mechanism mediated by bacterial phospholipases C (PLCs). A population of L. monocytogenes with inefficient LLO activity forms Spacious Listeria-containing Phagosomes (SLAPs), which are autophagosome-like compartments that do not mature, allowing slow bacterial growth within enlarged vesicles. SLAPs may represent a stalemate between bacterial LLO action and the host autophagy system, resulting in persistent infection.  相似文献   

3.
Dortet L  Mostowy S  Cossart P 《Autophagy》2012,8(1):132-134
Autophagy is a cell-autonomous mechanism of innate immunity that protects the cytosol against bacterial infection. Invasive bacteria, including Listeria monocytogenes, have thus evolved strategies to counteract a process that limits their intracellular growth. ActA is a surface protein produced by L. monocytogenes to polymerize actin and mediate intra- and intercellular movements, which plays a critical role in autophagy escape. We have recently investigated the role of another L. monocytogenes surface protein, the internalin InlK, in the infection process. We showed that in the cytosol of infected cells, InlK interacts with the Major Vault Protein (MVP), the main component of cytoplasmic ribonucleoprotein particles named vaults. Although MVP has been implicated in a variety of key cellular process, its role remains elusive. We demonstrated that L. monocytogenes is able, via InlK, to decorate its surface with MVP in order to escape autophagic recognition. Strikingly, this new strategy used by L. monocytogenes to avoid autophagy is independent of ActA, suggesting that InlK-MVP interactions and actin polymerization are two processes that favor in the same manner the infection process. Understanding the role of MVP may provide new insights into bacterial infection and autophagy.  相似文献   

4.
Listeria monocytogenes is an intracellular pathogen that is able to colonize the cytosol of macrophages. Here we examined the interaction of this pathogen with autophagy, a host cytosolic degradative pathway that constitutes an important component of innate immunity towards microbial invaders. L. monocytogenes infection induced activation of the autophagy system in macrophages. At 1 h post infection (p.i.), a population of intracellular bacteria ( approximately 37%) colocalized with the autophagy marker LC3. These bacteria were within vacuoles and were targeted by autophagy in an LLO-dependent manner. At later stages in infection (by 4 h p.i.), the majority of L. monocytogenes escaped into the cytosol and rapidly replicated. At these times, less than 10% of intracellular bacteria colocalized with LC3. We found that ActA expression was sufficient to prevent autophagy of bacteria in the cytosol of macrophages. Surprisingly, ActA expression was not strictly necessary, indicating that other virulence factors were involved. Accordingly, we also found a role for the bacterial phospholipases, PI-PLC and PC-PLC, in autophagy evasion, as bacteria lacking phospholipase expression were targeted by autophagy at later times in infection. Together, our results demonstrate that L. monocytogenes utilizes multiple mechanisms to avoid destruction by the autophagy system during colonization of macrophages.  相似文献   

5.
Autophagy is responsible for the degradation of cytosolic components within eukaryotic cells. Interestingly, autophagy also appears to play a role in recognizing invading intracellular pathogens. Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium) is an intracellular pathogen that normally resides and replicates within the Salmonella-containing vacuole (SCV). However, during in vitro infection a population of S. Typhimurium damage and escape from the SCV to enter the cytosol. We have observed that some intracellular S. Typhimurium are recognized by autophagy under in vitro infection conditions. Immunofluorescence studies revealed that autophagy recognizes the population of S. Typhimurium within damaged SCVs early after infection. The consequences of autophagic recognition of S. Typhimurium are still being elucidated, though a restrictive effect on intracellular bacterial replication has been demonstrated. Results of our in vitro infection studies are consistent with autophagy playing a role in cellular defense against S. Typhimurium that become exposed to the cytosol.  相似文献   

6.
《Autophagy》2013,9(3):156-158
Autophagy is responsible for the degradation of cytosolic components within eukaryotic cells. Interestingly, autophagy also appears to play a role in recognizing invading intracellular pathogens. Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium) is an intracellular pathogen that normally resides and replicates within the Salmonella-containing vacuole (SCV). However, during in vitro infection a population of S. Typhimurium damage and escape from the SCV to enter the cytosol. We have observed that some intracellular S. Typhimurium are recognized by autophagy under in vitro infection conditions. Immunofluorescence studies revealed that autophagy recognizes the population of S.Typhimurium within damaged SCVs early after infection. The consequences of autophagic recognition of S. Typhimurium are still being elucidated, though a restrictive effect on intracellular bacterial replication has been demonstrated. Results of our in vitro infection studies are consistent with autophagy playing a role in cellular defense against S. Typhimurium that become exposed to the cytosol.  相似文献   

7.
Murine listeriosis is a paradigm to understand host pathogen interactions. Airway infections with Listeria monocytogenes, although representing a serious problem in early onset neonatal listeriosis, has not been investigated in detail in animal models so far. Here, the susceptibility of BALB/c, DBA/2 and C57BL/6 mice towards an intratracheal (i.t.) infection with virulent L. monocytogenes EGDe and the attenuated variant L. monocytogenes EGD hlyW491A(pERL3-CMVGFP) is reported. The course of infection was characterized by determination of bacterial numbers in the organs and assessment of the health condition of the mice. The distribution and cellular localization of Listeria in the airways was assessed by immunocytochemistry and confocal and electron microscopy. The differential susceptibility of inbred mouse strains to airway infections with L. monocytogenes could be assigned to the major virulence factor listeriolysin O. Resistant C57BL/6 mice were not affected by the two listerial strains. In contrast, BALB/c and DBA/2 mice showed differential susceptibility towards L. monocytogenes EGDe and attenuated bacteria, with all the mice being killed by the wild-type bacteria but rarely by the variant that secretes a listeriolysin of only 10% activity of that of the wild-type toxin. Thus, listeriolysin is a decisive factor for differential susceptibility against Listeria. After i.t. application, bacteria were predominantly localized in the peribronchiolar space and invaded alveolar macrophages but rarely lung epithelial cells. Dissemination from the lung into the deep organs started almost immediately after application, although a pulmonary bacterial reservoir remained during the first 4 days.  相似文献   

8.
Listeria monocytogenes grows in the host cytosol and uses the surface protein ActA to promote actin polymerisation and mediate actin‐based motility. ActA, along with two secreted bacterial phospholipases C, also mediates avoidance from autophagy, a degradative process that targets intracellular microbes. Although it is known that ActA prevents autophagic recognition of L. monocytogenes in epithelial cells by masking the bacterial surface with host factors, the relative roles of actin polymerisation and actin‐based motility in autophagy avoidance are unclear in macrophages. Using pharmacological inhibition of actin polymerisation and a collection of actA mutants, we found that actin polymerisation prevented the colocalisation of L. monocytogenes with polyubiquitin, the autophagy receptor p62, and the autophagy protein LC3 during macrophage infection. In addition, the ability of L. monocytogenes to stimulate actin polymerisation promoted autophagy avoidance and growth in macrophages in the absence of phospholipases C. Time‐lapse microscopy using green fluorescent protein‐LC3 macrophages and a probe for filamentous actin showed that bacteria undergoing actin‐based motility moved away from LC3‐positive membranes. Collectively, these results suggested that although actin polymerisation protects the bacterial surface from autophagic recognition, actin‐based motility allows escape of L. monocytogenes from autophagic membranes in the macrophage cytosol.  相似文献   

9.
Listeria monocytogenes is a bacterial pathogen that grows within the cytosol of infected host cells. Entry into the cytosol is largely mediated by a secreted bacterial cytolysin, listeriolysin O (LLO). In order to prevent host cell damage, the pore-forming activity of LLO is restricted to the phagosome. Compartmentalization of LLO requires a PEST-like sequence; PEST sequences can direct eukaryotic proteins for proteasomal degradation. Here we test the hypothesis that LLO's PEST-like sequence compartmentalizes pore-forming activity by targeting this bacterial protein for degradation in the host cytosol. We show that intracellular LLO was degraded in a proteasome-dependent manner, and that, prior to degradation, LLO was ubiquitinated and was phosphorylated within the PEST-like sequence. However, wild-type LLO and PEST region mutants had similarly short intracellular half-lives and both the wild-type and mutant proteins were stabilized by inhibitors of host proteasomes. Additionally, blocking host proteasomes did not cause toxicity in a wild-type infection, but enhanced the cytotoxicity of PEST region mutants. Together with the observation that PEST region mutants exhibit higher intracellular LLO levels than wild-type bacteria, these data suggest that LLO's PEST-like region does not mediate proteasomal degradation by the host, but controls LLO production in the cytosol.  相似文献   

10.
We investigated the role of listeriolysin O (LLO) and the bacterial phospholipases PI-PLC and PC-PLC in cell-to-cell spread of Listeria monocytogenes. We showed that LLO is essential for cell-to-cell spread in primary murine macrophages. Electron micrographs revealed that in the absence of continued LLO expression, bacteria remain trapped in secondary spreading vacuoles having either a double or single membrane. In bacteria lacking PI-PLC and PC-PLC, cessation of LLO expression after initiation of infection resulted in a significant increase in the proportion of bacteria trapped in double-membrane compartments. We propose that the bacterial phospholipases are involved in the dissolution of the inner membrane of the spreading vacuole, yet are not sufficient for disruption of the outer membrane. As a consequence, we identified LLO as a key factor in the disruption of the outer membrane. This model is consistent with the observation that LLO is dispensable for cell-to-cell spread from human macrophages into a cell type in which LLO is not required for vacuolar escape. These data suggest that during human infection, spreading of L. monocytogenes to distant organs is likely to occur even in the absence of LLO expression, and that the bacterial phospholipases may be sufficient to mediate continued cell-to-cell spread.  相似文献   

11.
Listeria monocytogenes is a bacterial pathogen that replicates within the cytosol of infected host cells. The ability to rapidly escape the phagocytic vacuole is essential for efficient intracellular replication. In the murine model of infection, the pore-forming cytolysin listeriolysin O (LLO) is absolutely required for vacuolar dissolution, as LLO-deficient (ΔLLO) mutants remain trapped within vacuoles. In contrast, in many human cell types ΔLLO L. monocytogenes are capable of vacuolar escape at moderate to high frequencies. To better characterize the mechanism of LLO-independent vacuolar escape in human cells, we conducted an RNA interference screen to identify vesicular trafficking factors that play a role in altering vacuolar escape efficiency of ΔLLO L. monocytogenes . RNA interference knockdown of 18 vesicular trafficking factors resulted in increased LLO-independent vacuolar escape. Our results suggest that knockdown of one factor, RABEP1 (rabaptin-5), decreased the maturation of vacuoles containing ΔLLO L. monocytogenes . Thus, we provide evidence that increased vacuolar escape of ΔLLO L. monocytogenes in human cells correlates with slower vacuolar maturation. We also determined that increased LLO-independent dissolution of vacuoles during RABEP1 knockdown required the bacterial broad-range phospholipase C (PC-PLC). We hypothesize that slowing the kinetics of vacuolar maturation generates an environment conducive for vacuolar escape mediated by the bacterial phospholipases.  相似文献   

12.
The intracellular bacterial pathogen Listeria monocytogenes produces phospholipases C (PI-PLC and PC-PLC) and the pore-forming cytolysin listeriolysin O (LLO) to escape the phagosome and replicate within the host cytosol. We found that PLCs can also activate the phagocyte NADPH oxidase during L.?monocytogenes infection, a response that would adversely affect pathogen survival. However, secretion of LLO inhibits the NADPH oxidase by preventing its localization to phagosomes. LLO-deficient bacteria can be complemented by perfringolysin O,?a related cytolysin, suggesting that other pathogens may also use pore-forming cytolysins to inhibit the NADPH oxidase. Our studies demonstrate that while the PLCs induce antimicrobial NADPH oxidase activity, this effect is alleviated by the pore-forming activity of LLO. Therefore, the combined activities of PLCs and LLO on membrane lysis and the inhibitory effects of LLO on NADPH oxidase activity allow L.?monocytogenes to efficiently escape the phagosome while avoiding the microbicidal respiratory burst.  相似文献   

13.
Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium) is a facultative intracellular pathogen that causes disease in a variety of hosts. S. Typhimurium actively invade host cells and typically reside within a membrane-bound compartment called the Salmonella-containing vacuole (SCV). The bacteria modify the fate of the SCV using two independent type III secretion systems (TTSS). TTSS are known to damage eukaryotic cell membranes and S. Typhimurium has been suggested to damage the SCV using its Salmonella pathogenicity island (SPI)-1 encoded TTSS. Here we show that this damage gives rise to an intracellular bacterial population targeted by the autophagy system during in vitro infection. Approximately 20% of intracellular S. Typhimurium colocalized with the autophagy marker GFP-LC3 at 1 h postinfection. Autophagy of S. Typhimurium was dependent upon the SPI-1 TTSS and bacterial protein synthesis. Bacteria targeted by the autophagy system were often associated with ubiquitinated proteins, indicating their exposure to the cytosol. Surprisingly, these bacteria also colocalized with SCV markers. Autophagy-deficient (atg5-/-) cells were more permissive for intracellular growth by S. Typhimurium than normal cells, allowing increased bacterial growth in the cytosol. We propose a model in which the host autophagy system targets bacteria in SCVs damaged by the SPI-1 TTSS. This serves to retain intracellular S. Typhimurium within vacuoles early after infection to protect the cytosol from bacterial colonization. Our findings support a role for autophagy in innate immunity and demonstrate that Salmonella infection is a powerful model to study the autophagy process.  相似文献   

14.
15.
《Autophagy》2013,9(5):442-451
Listeria monocytogenes is an intracellular pathogen that is able to colonize the cytosol of macrophages. Here we examined the interaction of this pathogen with autophagy, a host cytosolicdegradative pathway that constitutes an important component of innate immunity towards microbial invaders. L. monocytogenes infection induced activation of the autophagy system in macrophages. At 1 h post infection (p.i.), a population of intracellular bacteria (~37%) colocalized with the autophagy marker LC3. These bacteria were within vacuoles and were targeted by autophagy in an LLO-dependent manner. At later stages in infection (by 4 h p.i.), the majority of L. monocytogenes escaped into the cytosol and rapidly replicated. At these times, less than 10% of intracellular bacteria colocalized with LC3. We found that ActA expression was sufficient to prevent autophagy of bacteria in the cytosol of macrophages. Surprisingly, ActA expression was not strictly necessary, indicating that other virulence factors were involved. Accordingly, we also found a role for the bacterial phospholipases, PI-PLC and PC-PLC, in autophagy evasion, as bacteria lacking phospholipase expression were targeted by autophagy at later times in infection. Together, our results demonstratethat L. monocytogenes utilizes multiple mechanisms to avoid destruction by the autophagy system during colonization of macrophages.  相似文献   

16.
Ogawa M  Sasakawa C 《Autophagy》2006,2(3):171-174
Bacterial invasion of eukaryotic cells, and host recognition and elimination of the invading bacteria, determines the fate of bacterial infection. Once inside mammalian cells, many pathogenic bacteria enter the host cytosol to escape from the lytic compartment and gain a replicative niche. Recent studies indicate that autophagy also recognizes intracellular bacteria. Although autophagy is a conserved membrane trafficking pathway in eukaryotic cells that sequesters undesirable or recyclable cytoplasmic components or organelles and delivers them to lysosomes, autophagy has recently been described as playing a pivotal role as an intracellular surveillance system for recognition and eradication of the pathogens that have invaded the cytoplasm. Indeed, unless they are able to circumvent entrapping by autophagosomes, bacteria ultimately undergo degradation by delivery into autolysosomes. In this review we discuss recent discoveries regarding Shigella strategies for infecting mammalian cells, and then focus on recent studies of an elegant bacterial survival strategy against autophagic degradation.  相似文献   

17.
We have constructed a lac repressor/operator-based system to tightly regulate expression of bacterial genes during intracellular infection by Listeria monocytogenes. An L. monocytogenes strain was constructed in which expression of listeriolysin O was placed under the inducible control of an isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG)-dependent promoter. Listeriolysin O (LLO) is a pore-forming cytolysin that mediates lysis of L. monocytogenes-containing phagosomes. Using hemolytic-activity assays and Western blot analysis, we demonstrated dose-dependent IPTG induction of LLO during growth in broth culture. Moreover, intracellular growth of the inducible-LLO (iLLO) strain in the macrophage-like cell line J774 was strictly dependent upon IPTG. We have further shown that iLLO bacteria trapped within primary phagocytic vacuoles can be induced to escape into the cytosol following addition of IPTG to the cell culture medium, thus yielding the ability to control bacterial escape from the phagosome and the initiation of intracellular growth. Using the iLLO strain in plaque-forming assays, we demonstrated an additional requirement for LLO in facilitating cell-to-cell spread in L2 fibroblasts, a nonprofessional phagocytic cell line. Furthermore, the efficiency of cell-to-cell spread of iLLO bacteria in L2 cells was IPTG dose dependent. The potential use of this system for determining the temporal requirements of additional virulence determinants of intracellular pathogenesis is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Intracellular bacteria in mammalian host cells can either live in a membrane-bound vacuole modified to support bacterial growth, or escape from the primary phagosome into the host cell cytoplasm. Phagosomal escape is best studied in Listeria monocytogenes in which a pore-forming cytolysin and two phospholipases are involved in the lysis of the phagosomal membrane. The mechanisms of and requirements for cytoplasmic growth are less clear but there is growing evidence that proficient replication of bacteria in the cytoplasmic compartment requires specific bacterial and cellular preconditions.  相似文献   

19.
Dendritic cells (DC) are required for the immune response against Listeria monocytogenes and are permissive for infection in vivo and in vitro. However, it is unclear if DC provide a desirable intracellular niche for bacterial growth. To address this issue, we have compared the behaviour of L. monocytogenes in murine bone marrow-derived DC and macrophages (BMM). Similar to BMM, bacteria escaped to the cytosol in DC, replicated, and spread to adjacent cells. However, DC infection was less robust in terms of intracellular doubling time and total increase in bacterial numbers. Immunofluorescence analysis using a strain of L. monocytogenes that expresses green fluorescent protein upon bacterial entry into the cytosol suggested that a subpopulation of DC restricted bacteria to vacuoles, a finding that was confirmed by electron microscopy. In unstimulated DC cultures, L. monocytogenes replicated preferentially in phenotypically immature cells. Furthermore, DC that were induced to mature prior to infection were poor hosts for bacterial growth. We conclude that DC provide a suboptimal niche for L. monocytogenes growth, and this is at least in part a function of the DC maturation state. Therefore, the generation of an effective T cell response may be a net effect of both productive and non-productive infection of DC.  相似文献   

20.
Cytoplasmic bacteria can be targets for autophagy   总被引:7,自引:2,他引:5  
Autophagy is an important constitutive cellular process involved in size regulation, protein turnover and the removal of malformed or superfluous subcellular components. The process involves the sequestration of cytoplasm and organelles into double-membrane autophagic vacuoles for subsequent breakdown within lysosomes. In this work, we demonstrate that the intracellular pathogen Listeria monocytogenes can also be a target for autophagy. If infected macrophages are treated with chloramphenicol after phagosome lysis, the bacteria are internalized from the cell cytoplasm into autophagic vacuoles. The autophagic vacuoles appear to form by fusion of small cytoplasmic vesicles around the bacteria. These vesicular structures immunolabel with antibodies to protein disulphide isomerase, a marker for the rough ER. Internalization of metabolically arrested cytoplasmic L. monocytogenes represents an autophagic process as the vacuoles have double membranes and the process can be inhibited by the autophagy inhibitors 3-methyladenine and wortmannin. Additionally, the rate of internalization can be accelerated under starvation conditions and the vacuoles fuse with the endocytic pathway. Metabolic inhibition of cytoplasmic bacteria prevents them from adapting to the intracellular niche and reveals a host mechanism utilizing the autophagic pathway as a defence against invading pathogens by providing a route for their removal from the cytoplasm and subsequent delivery to the endocytic pathway for degradation.  相似文献   

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