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1.
The current study focuses on the molecular mechanisms responsible for actin assembly on a defined membrane surface: the phagosome. Mature phagosomes were surrounded by filamentous actin in vivo in two different cell types. Fluorescence microscopy was used to study in vitro actin nucleation/polymerization (assembly) on the surface of phagosomes isolated from J774 mouse macrophages. In order to prevent non-specific actin polymerization during the assay, fluorescent G-actin was mixed with thymosin beta4. The cytoplasmic side of phagosomes induced de novo assembly and barbed end growth of actin filaments. This activity varied cyclically with the maturation state of phagosomes, both in vivo and in vitro. Peripheral membrane proteins are crucial components of this actin assembly machinery, and we demonstrate a role for ezrin and/or moesin in this process. We propose that this actin assembly process facilitates phagosome/endosome aggregation prior to membrane fusion.  相似文献   

2.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis persistence in human populations relies on its ability to inhibit phagosomal maturation. M. tuberculosis resides in a pathogen-friendly phagosome escaping lysosomal bactericidal mechanisms and efficient antigen presentation in the host phagocytic cell. M. tuberculosis phagosome maturation arrest includes the action of mycobacterial lipid products, which mimic mammalian phosphatidylinositols, targeting host cell membrane trafficking processes. These products interfere with membrane trafficking and organelle biogenesis processes initiated by Ca(2+) fluxes, and ending with host cell Rab GTP-binding proteins and their effectors. The block includes phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase and membrane tethering molecules that prepare phagosomes for fusion with other organelles. Understanding these processes could provide new targets for pharmacological intervention in tuberculosis.  相似文献   

3.
A key aspect of Mycobacterium tuberculosis pathogenesis is the ability of the bacteria to survive within the host macrophage. A phagosome containing an IgG-coated bead matures into a lysosomal compartment as evidenced by a decrease in pH and an increased acquisition of hydrolytic enzymes. In contrast, when M. tuberculosis is phagocytosed, the maturation of the bacteria-containing phagosome is arrested, and the bacterium resides within a vacuole that retains characteristics of early endosomal compartments. M. tuberculosis-containing phagosomes are delayed in the recruitment of the early endosome autoantigen EEA1. Acquisition of EEA1 is dependent on the presence of phosphatidylinositol-3-phosphate (PI-3-P) generated by the kinase Vps34. We tested the hypothesis that delayed recruitment of EEA1 was due to altered kinetics of PI-3-P accumulation at the phagosomal membrane. Biochemical analysis of the phosphatidylinositol phosphates on M. tuberculosis-containing phagosomes revealed that PI-3-P acquisition was markedly retarded and reduced in comparison to IgG bead-containing phagosomes. Given the role these lipids play in the regulation of phagosome maturation these findings have implications with respect to the mechanisms behind the arrest of phagosome maturation.  相似文献   

4.
Phagosome maturation is defined as the process by which phagosomes fuse sequentially with endosomes and lysosomes to acquire an acidic pH and hydrolases that degrade ingested particles. While the essential role of actin cytoskeleton remodeling during particle internalization is well established, its role during the later stages of phagosome maturation remains largely unknown. We have previously shown that purified mature phagosomes assemble F-actin at their membrane, and that the ezrin-radixin-moesin (ERM) proteins ezrin and moesin participate in this process. Moreover, we provided evidence that actin assembly on purified phagosomes stimulates their fusion with late endocytic compartments in vitro. In this study, we further investigated the role of ezrin in phagosome maturation. We engineered a structurally open form of ezrin and demonstrated that ezrin binds directly to the actin assembly promoting factor N-WASP (Neural Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome Protein) by its FERM domain. Using a cell-free system, we found that ezrin stimulates F-actin assembly on purified phagosomes by recruiting the N-WASP-Arp2/3 machinery. Accordingly, we showed that the down-regulation of ezrin activity in macrophages by a dominant-negative approach caused reduced F-actin accumulation on maturing phagosomes. Furthermore, using fluorescence and electron microscopy, we found that ezrin is required for the efficient fusion between phagosomes and lysosomes. Live-cell imaging analysis supported the notion that ezrin is necessary for the fusogenic process itself, promoting the transfer of the lysosome content into the phagosomal lumen.  相似文献   

5.
The growth of pathogenic mycobacteria in phagosomes of the host cell correlates with their ability to prevent phagosome maturation. The underlying molecular mechanism remains elusive. In a previous study, we have shown that Mycobacterium avium depletes the phagosome membrane of cell surface-derived glycoconjugates (de Chastellier and Thilo, Eur. J. Cell Biol. 81, 17-25, 2002). We now extended these quantitative observations to the major human pathogen, Mycobacterium tuberculosis (H37Rv). At increasing times after infection of mouse bone marrow-derived macrophages, cell-surface glycoconjugates were labelled enzymatically with [3H]galactose. Subsequent endocytic membrane traffic resulted in a redistribution of this label from the cell surface to endocytic membranes, including phagosomes. The steady-state distribution was measured by quantitative autoradiography at the electron microscope level. Relative to early endosomes, with which phagosomes continued to fuse and rapidly exchange membrane constituents, the phagosome membrane was depleted about 3-fold, starting during infection and in the course of 9 days thereafter. These results were in quantitative agreement with our previous observations for Mycobacterium avium. For the latter case, we now showed by cell fractionation that the depletion was selective, mainly involving glycoproteins in the 110-210 kDa range. Together, these results indicated that pathogenic mycobacteria induced and maintained a bulk change in phagosome membrane composition that could be of special relevance for survival of pathogenic mycobacteria within phagosomes.  相似文献   

6.
Pathogenic mycobacteria survive in macrophages of the host organism by residing in phagosomes which they prevent from undergoing maturation and fusion with lysosomes. Several molecular mechanisms have been associated with the phagosome maturation block. Here we show for Mycobacterium avium in mouse bone marrow-derived macrophages that the maturation block required an all-around close apposition between the mycobacterial surface and the phagosome membrane. When small (0.1 μm) latex beads were covalently attached to the mycobacterial surface to act as a spacer that interfered with a close apposition, phagosomes rapidly acquired lysosomal characteristics as indicators for maturation and fusion with lysosomes. As a result, several mycobacteria were delivered into single phagolysosomes. Detailed electron-microscope observations of phagosome morphology over a 7-day post-infection period showed a linear correlation between bead attachment and phagosome–lysosome fusion. After about 3 days post infection, conditions inside phagolysosomes caused a gradual release of beads. This allowed mycobacteria to re-establish a close apposition with the surrounding membrane and sequester themselves into individual, non-maturing phagosomes which had lost lysosomal characteristics. By rescuing themselves from phagolysosomes, mycobacteria remained fully viable and able to multiply at the normal rate. In order to unify the present observations and previously reported mechanisms for the maturation block, we discuss evidence that they may act synergistically to interfere with 'Phagosome Membrane Economics' by causing relative changes in incoming and outgoing endocytic membrane fluxes.  相似文献   

7.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tb) is an intracellular pathogen that can replicate within infected macrophages. The ability of M. tb to arrest phagosome maturation is believed to facilitate its intracellular multiplication. Rab GTPases regulate membrane trafficking, but details of how Rab GTPases regulate phagosome maturation and how M. tb modulates their localization during inhibiting phagolysosome biogenesis remain elusive. We compared the localization of 42 distinct Rab GTPases to phagosomes containing either Staphylococcus aureus or M. tb. The phagosomes containing S. aureus were associated with 22 Rab GTPases, but only 5 of these showed similar localization kinetics as the phagosomes containing M. tb. The Rab GTPases responsible for phagosome maturation, phagosomal acidification and recruitment of cathepsin D were examined in macrophages expressing the dominant-negative form of each Rab GTPase. LysoTracker staining and immunofluorescence microscopy revealed that Rab7, Rab20 and Rab39 regulated phagosomal acidification and Rab7, Rab20, Rab22b, Rab32, Rab34, Rab38 and Rab43 controlled the recruitment of cathepsin D to the phagosome. These results suggest that phagosome maturation is achieved by a series of interactions between Rab GTPases and phagosomes and that differential recruitment of these Rab GTPases, except for Rab22b and Rab43, to M. tb-containing phagosomes is involved in arresting phagosome maturation and inhibiting phagolysosome biogenesis.  相似文献   

8.
Pathogenic mycobacteria prevent maturation of the phagosomes in which they reside inside macrophages and this is thought to be a major strategy allowing them to survive and multiply within macrophages. The molecular basis for this inhibition is only now beginning to emerge with the molecular characterization of the phagosome membrane enclosing these pathogens. We have used here several electron microscopy approaches in combination with counts of bacterial viability to analyse how expression of Nramp1 at the phagosomal membrane may influence survival of Mycobacterium avium and affect its ability to modulate the fusogenic properties of the phagosome in which it resides. The experiments were carried out in bone marrow-derived macrophages from wild-type 129sv (Nramp1(G169)) mice and from isogenic 129sv carrying a null mutation at Nramp1 (Nramp(1-/-)) following infection with a virulent strain of M. avium. We show here that Nramp1 expression has a bacteriostatic effect and that abrogation of Nramp1 restores the bacteria's capacity to replicate within macrophages. The combined analyses of the acquisition of endocytic contents markers delivered to early endosomes and/or lysosomes either prior to or after phagocytic uptake showed that in Nramp1-positive macrophages, M. avium was unable to prevent phagosome maturation and fusion with lysosomes but that in Nramp1-negative macrophages this capacity was restored. Several hypotheses are proposed to explain how Nramp1 could affect survival of M. avium. We also propose how the present observations could relate to the model according to which mycobacteria can prevent phagosome maturation by establishing a tight interaction with constituents of the phagosome membrane. Furthermore, these results show the importance of the choice of macrophages used as a model to study intracellular survival strategies of pathogens.  相似文献   

9.
Most disease causing mycobacteria are intramacrophage pathogens which replicate within nonacidified phagosomes that can interact with the early endosomal network but fail to mature to a phagolysosome. The mycobacterial phagosome retain some proteins required for fusion with endocytic vesicles including Rab5 but lack others such as early endosomal autoantigen 1 (EEA1). As the membrane lipid phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate (PtdIns-3-P) is required for EEA1 membrane association and phagosome maturation, it may be a potential target of pathogenic mycobacteria. To test this hypothesis, macrophage cellular levels of PtdIns-3-P were altered by retroviral introduction of the type III Phosphoinositide 3-Kinase (VPS34) and the PtdIns-3-P phosphatase myotubularin 1 (MTM1). By utilizing the PtdIns-3-P-specific probes FYVE and PX coupled to EGFP (EGFP-2-FYVE and EGFP-PX, respectively), the expression of PtdIns-3-P on the mycobacterial phagosome was addressed. All phagosomes containing viable Mycobacterium avium stained positive for EGFP-2-FYVE and EGFP-PX despite obvious differences in PtdIns-3-P concentrations in cells expressing MTM1 or VPS34. Altering PtdIns-3-P cellular concentrations did not affect trafficking of live bacilli. However, a significant increase in the transport of killed bacilli to a late endosomal/lysosomal compartment was observed in VPS34-compared to MTM1-transduced macrophages. Therefore, although overexpression of PdtIns-3-P in macrophages can facilitate phagosome maturation, its effect on phagosomes containing viable M. avium was negligible.  相似文献   

10.
Many mycobacteria are intramacrophage pathogens that reside within nonacidified phagosomes that fuse with early endosomes but do not mature to phagolysosomes. The mechanism by which mycobacteria block this maturation process remains elusive. To gain insight into whether fusion with early endosomes is required for mycobacteria-mediated inhibition of phagosome maturation, we investigated how perturbing the GTPase cycles of Rab5 and Rab7, GTPases that regulate early and late endosome fusion, respectively, would affect phagosome maturation. Retroviral transduction of the constitutively activated forms of both GTPases into primary murine macrophages had no effect on Mycobacterium avium retention in an early endosomal compartment. Interestingly, expression of dominant negative Rab5, Rab5(S34N), but not dominant negative Rab7, resulted in a significant increase in colocalization of M. avium with markers of late endosomes/lysosomes and increased mycobacterial killing. This colocalization was specific to mycobacteria since Rab5(S34N) expressing cells showed diminished trafficking of endocytic tracers to lysosomes. We further demonstrated that maturation of M. avium phagosomes was halted in Rab5(S34N) expressing macrophages supplemented with exogenous iron. These findings suggest that fusion with early endosomes is required for mycobacterial retention in early phagosomal compartments and that an inadequate supply of iron is one factor in mycobacteria's inability to prevent the normal maturation process in Rab5(S34N)-expressing macrophages.  相似文献   

11.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb) is a leading cause of global infectious mortality. The pathogenesis of tuberculosis involves inhibition of phagosome maturation, leading to survival of M.tb within human macrophages. A key determinant is M.tb-induced inhibition of macrophage sphingosine kinase (SK) activity, which normally induces Ca2+ signaling and phagosome maturation. Our objective was to determine the spatial localization of SK during phagocytosis and its inhibition by M.tb. Stimulation of SK activity by killed M.tb, live Staphylococcus aureus, or latex beads was associated with translocation of cytosolic SK1 to the phagosome membrane. In contrast, SK1 did not associate with phagosomes containing live M.tb. To characterize the mechanism of phagosomal translocation, live cell confocal microscopy was used to compare the localization of wild-type SK1, catalytically inactive SK1G82D, and a phosphorylation-defective mutant that does not undergo plasma membrane translocation (SK1S225A). The magnitude and kinetics of translocation of SK1G82D and SK1S225A to latex bead phagosomes were indistinguishable from those of wild-type SK1, indicating that novel determinants regulate the association of SK1 with nascent phagosomes. These data are consistent with a model in which M.tb inhibits both the activation and phagosomal translocation of SK1 to block the localized Ca2+ transients required for phagosome maturation.  相似文献   

12.
The phagosomes containing viable pathogenic mycobacteria, such as Mycobacterium ( M .) tuberculosis and Mycobacterium avium ssp. avium ( M. avium ), are known to be limited in their ability to both acidify and fuse with late (but not early) endocytic organelles. Here, we analysed the pH and fusogenicity of phagosomes containing M. avium ssp. paratuberculosis ( M. ptb ), the causative agent of paratuberculosis in ruminants. Using the murine J774 macrophage cell line, we compared viable and heat-killed M. ptb and, in addition, viable or dead M. avium , as well as two non-pathogenic mycobacteria, Mycobacterium smegmatis and Mycobacterium gordonae . Electron microscopic analysis revealed that M. ptb persisted intracellularly in phagosomes for up to 15 days. The phagosomes containing live M. ptb and M. avium were significantly reduced in their ability to acquire some markers for the endocytic pathway, such as internalized calcein, BSA–gold or the membrane protein Lamp 2. However, they were almost completely accessible to 70 kDa fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)–dextran and Lamp 1. Overall, the phagosomes containing dead pathogenic mycobacteria behaved similarly to the ones containing live non-pathogenic mycobacteria in all experiments. Using FITC–dextran in a novel fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS)-based method, we could also show that the bulk of endocytic compartments, including phagosomes, were only very mildly acidified to ≈ pH 6.3 over at least 72 h in J774 cells infected with live M. ptb and M. avium . In contrast, J774 cells treated with heat-killed M. ptb or BSA-coated latex beads showed substantial acidification of the phagosome/endocytic compartments to a pH value of ≈ 5.2. After infection with M. smegmatis and M. gordonae , acidification was initially (1–5 h after infection) inhibited, but increased after longer infection to levels similar to those with dead mycobacteria.  相似文献   

13.
TB or not TB: calcium regulation in mycobacterial survival   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Trimble WS  Grinstein S 《Cell》2007,130(1):12-14
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb)-the bacterium that causes tuberculosis-resides in phagosomes inside macrophages. This bacterium evades destruction by preventing phagosome maturation, which involves the fusion of phagosomes with lysosomes. In this issue of Cell, Jayachandran et al. (2007) suggest that mycobacteria co-opt the actin-binding protein coronin 1 to activate the phosphatase calcineurin, thereby preventing phagosomal maturation.  相似文献   

14.
Phagocytic entry of mycobacteria into macrophages requires the presence of cholesterol in the plasma membrane. This suggests that pathogenic mycobacteria may require cholesterol for their subsequent intra-cellular survival in non-maturing phagosomes. Here we report on the effect of cholesterol depletion on pre-existing phagosomes in mouse bone marrow-derived macrophages infected with Mycobacterium avium. Cholesterol depletion with methyl-beta-cyclodextrin resulted in a loosening of the close apposition between the phagosome membrane and the mycobacterial surface, followed by fusion with lysosomes. The resulting phagolysosomes then autonomously executed autophagy, which did not involve the endoplasmic reticulum. After 5 h of depletion, intact mycobacteria had accumulated in large auto-phagolysosomes. Autophagy was specific for phagolysosomes that contained mycobacteria, as it did not involve latex bead-containing phagosomes in infected cells. Upon replenishment of cholesterol, mycobacteria became increasingly aligned to the lysosomal membrane, from where they were individually sequestered in phagosomes with an all-around closely apposed phagosome membrane and which no longer fused with lysosomes. These observations indicate that, cholesterol depletion (i) resulted in phagosome maturation and fusion with lysosomes and (ii) caused mycobacterium-containing phagolysosomes to autonomously undergo autophagy. Furthermore, (iii) mycobacteria were not killed in auto-phagolysosomes, and (iv) cholesterol replenishment enabled mycobacterium to rescue itself from autophagic phagolysosomes to again reside individually in phagosomes which no longer fused with lysosomes.  相似文献   

15.
Mycobacteria reside intracellularly in a vacuole that allows it to circumvent the antimicrobial environment of the host macrophage. Although the mycobacterial phagosome exhibits selective fusion with vesicles of the endosomal system, identification of host and bacterial factors associated with phagosome bio-genesis is limited. To identify these potential factors, mAbs were generated to a membrane preparation of mycobacterial phagosomes isolated from M. tuberculosis -infected macrophages. A mAb recognizing a 32–35 kDa macrophage protein associated with the phagosomal membrane of Mycobacterium was identified. N-terminal sequence analysis identified this protein as Mac-2 or galectin-3, a galactoside-binding protein of macrophages. Galectin-3 (gal-3) was shown to accumulate in Mycobacterium -containing phagosomes during the course of infection. This accumu-lation was specific for phagosomes containing live mycobacteria and occurred primarily at the cytosolic face of the phagosome membrane. In addition, bind-ing of gal-3 to mycobacterial phosphatidylinositol mannosides (PIMs) demonstrated a novel interaction between host carbohydrate-binding proteins and released mycobacterial glycolipids. Infection of macrophages from gal-3-deficient mice indicated that the protein did not play a role in infection in vitro . In contrast, infection of gal-3-deficient mice revealed a reduced capacity to clear late but not early infection.  相似文献   

16.
Mycobacterium avium and Mycobacterium tuberculosis are human pathogens that infect and replicate within macrophages. Both organisms live in phagosomes that fail to fuse with lysosomes and have adapted their lifestyle to accommodate the changing environment within the endosomal system. Among the many environmental factors that could influence expression of bacterial genes are the concentrations of single elements within the phagosomes. We used a novel hard x-ray microprobe with suboptical spatial resolution to analyze characteristic x-ray fluorescence of 10 single elements inside phagosomes of macrophages infected with M. tuberculosis and M. avium or with avirulent M. smegmatis. The iron concentration decreased over time in phagosomes of macrophages infected with Mycobacterium smegmatis but increased in those infected with pathogenic mycobacteria. Autoradiography of infected macrophages incubated with (59)Fe-loaded transferrin demonstrated that the bacteria could acquire iron delivered via the endocytic route, confirming the results obtained in the x-ray microscopy. In addition, the concentrations of chlorine, calcium, potassium, manganese, copper, and zinc were shown to differ between the vacuole of pathogenic mycobacteria and M. smegmatis. Differences in the concentration of several elements between M. avium and M. tuberculosis vacuoles were also observed. Activation of macrophages with recombinant IFN-gamma or TNF-alpha before infection altered the concentrations of elements in the phagosome, which was not observed in cells activated following infection. Siderophore knockout M. tuberculosis vacuoles exhibited retarded acquisition of iron compared with phagosomes with wild-type M. tuberculosis. This is a unique approach to define the environmental conditions within the pathogen-containing compartment.  相似文献   

17.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis survives in the infected host by parasitizing macrophages in which the bacillus resides in a specialized phagosome sequestered from the phagolysosomal degradative pathway. Here we report a role of the stress-induced p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (p38 MAPK) in the component of M. tuberculosis phagosome maturation arrest that has been linked previously to the reduced recruitment of the endosomal and phagosomal membrane-tethering molecule called early endosome autoantigen 1 (EEA1; Fratti, R. A., Backer, J. M., Gruenberg, J., Corvera, S., and Deretic, V. (2001) J. Cell Biol. 154, 631-644). A pharmacological inhibition of M. tuberculosis var. bovis Bacillus Calmette-Guérin-induced p38 MAPK activity caused a marked increase in EEA1 colocalization with mycobacterial phagosomes. Consistent with the increase in EEA1 association and its role in phagosomal maturation, the pharmacological block of p38 activity caused phagosomal acidification and enrichment of the late endocytic markers lysobisphosphatidic acid and CD63 (lysosomal integral membrane protein 1) on mycobacterial phagosomes. A negative regulatory role of p38 MAPK activation in phagosome maturation was further demonstrated by converse experiments with latex bead phagosomes. Artificial activation of p38 MAPK caused a decrease in EEA1 colocalization with model latex bead phagosomes, which normally acquire EEA1 and subsequently mature into the phagolysosome. These findings show that p38 MAPK activity contributes to the arrest of M. tuberculosis phagosome maturation and demonstrate a negative regulatory role of p38 in phagolysosome biogenesis.  相似文献   

18.
The phagosome is very important to host immunity and tissue homeostasis maintenance. The destiny of the phagosome is closely associated with the outcome of the pathogen within. Most pathogens are successfully delivered to the lysosome and destroyed via the fusion of the phagosome with the lysosome. Mycobacterium tuberculosis has evolved multiple tactics to deflect the normal fusion process, such as delaying the phagosome maturation and acidification, thereby evading the immune recognition and subsequent elimination. Identification of the specific constituents of M. tuberculosis phagosome and the underlying signaling pathways are pivotal to define the key molecular features of this process and better targets to control this recalcitrant pathogen. Proteomic profiling is a comprehensive approach to define the protein inventory. In this review, currently available mycobacteria-containing phagosome proteome data were compiled. Ten putative evolutionarily conserved phagosome proteins were summarized. Unique proteins of the M. tuberculosis-containing phagosome proteome were compiled via comparison with other phagosomes, especially the inert latex bead phagosome. Signaling events associated with these unique proteins, such as Rab GTPase and PI3P, were also found and discussed. The data will facilitate better characterization of the M. tuberculosis specific phagosome constituents and involved signaling, and host-derived targets for better tuberculosis control.  相似文献   

19.
Actin assembly on membrane surfaces is an elusive process in which several phosphoinositides (PIPs) have been implicated. We have reconstituted actin assembly using a defined membrane surface, the latex bead phagosome (LBP), and shown that the PI(4,5)P(2)-binding proteins ezrin and/or moesin were essential for this process (). Here, we provide several lines of evidence that both preexisting and newly synthesized PI(4,5)P(2), and probably PI(4)P, are essential for phagosomal actin assembly; only these PIPs were routinely synthesized from ATP during in vitro actin assembly. Treatment of LBP with phospholipase C or with adenosine, an inhibitor of type II PI 4-kinase, as well as preincubation with anti-PI(4)P or anti-PI(4,5)P(2) antibodies all inhibited this process. Incorporation of extra PI(4)P or PI(4,5)P(2) into the LBP membrane led to a fivefold increase in the number of phagosomes that assemble actin. An ezrin mutant mutated in the PI(4,5)P(2)-binding sites was less efficient in binding to LBPs and in reconstituting actin assembly than wild-type ezrin. Our data show that PI 4- and PI 5-kinase, and under some conditions also PI 3-kinase, activities are present on LBPs and can be activated by ATP, even in the absence of GTP or cytosolic components. However, PI 3-kinase activity is not required for actin assembly, because the process was not affected by PI 3-kinase inhibitors. We suggest that the ezrin-dependent actin assembly on the LBP membrane may require active turnover of D4 and D5 PIPs on the organelle membrane.  相似文献   

20.
We have studied the intracellular localization of annexins I,II, VI, VII, and XI in cells containing latex beads or Mycobacterium avium at different times after ingestion in order to establish whether a correlation existed between the association of annexins to phagosomes and phagolysosomal fusion, since the intracellular survival of mycobacteria is linked to an impairment of phagosome maturation. We demonstrate an important decrease in the levels of association of annexins I, VI, VII and XI, but not II to phagosomes containing either live or killed mycobacteria compared with phagosomes containing inert latex particles. The reduced association of annexins observed was detected only on M. avium-containing phagosomes and not in other cell membrane nor in cytosolic fractions from infected cells, and was apparent from 8 hours through to 4 days after phagocytosis. These findings add elements to the present knowledge of the phagosomal modifications that accompany the survival of intracellular pathogens, suggesting that annexins I, VI, VII, and XI play a secondary role in phagosomal fusion events while annexin II does not seem to be related to the mechanism of regulation of endolysosomal fusion.  相似文献   

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