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Atg5-Independent Sequestration of Ubiquitinated Mycobacteria

Like several other intracellular pathogens, Mycobacterium marinum (Mm) escapes from phagosomes into the host cytosol where it can polymerize actin, leading to motility that promotes spread to neighboring cells. However, only ∼25% of internalized Mm form actin tails, and the fate of the remaining bac...

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Autores principales: Collins, Cathleen A., De Mazière, Ann, van Dijk, Suzanne, Carlsson, Fredric, Klumperman, Judith, Brown, Eric J.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2673685/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19436699
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1000430
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author Collins, Cathleen A.
De Mazière, Ann
van Dijk, Suzanne
Carlsson, Fredric
Klumperman, Judith
Brown, Eric J.
author_facet Collins, Cathleen A.
De Mazière, Ann
van Dijk, Suzanne
Carlsson, Fredric
Klumperman, Judith
Brown, Eric J.
author_sort Collins, Cathleen A.
collection PubMed
description Like several other intracellular pathogens, Mycobacterium marinum (Mm) escapes from phagosomes into the host cytosol where it can polymerize actin, leading to motility that promotes spread to neighboring cells. However, only ∼25% of internalized Mm form actin tails, and the fate of the remaining bacteria has been unknown. Here we show that cytosolic access results in a new and intricate host pathogen interaction: host macrophages ubiquitinate Mm, while Mm shed their ubiquitinated cell walls. Phagosomal escape and ubiquitination of Mm occured rapidly, prior to 3.5 hours post infection; at the same time, ubiquitinated Mm cell wall material mixed with host-derived dense membrane networks appeared in close proximity to cytosolic bacteria, suggesting cell wall shedding and association with remnants of the lysed phagosome. At 24 hours post-infection, Mm that polymerized actin were not ubiquitinated, whereas ubiquitinated Mm were found within LAMP-1–positive vacuoles resembling lysosomes. Though double membranes were observed which sequestered Mm away from the cytosol, targeting of Mm to the LAMP-1–positive vacuoles was independent of classical autophagy, as demonstrated by absence of LC3 association and by Atg5-independence of their formation. Further, ubiquitination and LAMP-1 association did not occur with mutant avirulent Mm lacking ESX-1 (type VII) secretion, which fail to escape the primary phagosome; apart from its function in phagosome escape, ESX-1 was not directly required for Mm ubiquitination in macrophages or in vitro. These data suggest that virulent Mm follow two distinct paths in the cytosol of infected host cells: bacterial ubiquitination is followed by sequestration into lysosome-like organelles via an autophagy-independent pathway, while cell wall shedding may allow escape from this fate to permit continued residence in the cytosol and formation of actin tails.
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spelling pubmed-26736852009-05-15 Atg5-Independent Sequestration of Ubiquitinated Mycobacteria Collins, Cathleen A. De Mazière, Ann van Dijk, Suzanne Carlsson, Fredric Klumperman, Judith Brown, Eric J. PLoS Pathog Research Article Like several other intracellular pathogens, Mycobacterium marinum (Mm) escapes from phagosomes into the host cytosol where it can polymerize actin, leading to motility that promotes spread to neighboring cells. However, only ∼25% of internalized Mm form actin tails, and the fate of the remaining bacteria has been unknown. Here we show that cytosolic access results in a new and intricate host pathogen interaction: host macrophages ubiquitinate Mm, while Mm shed their ubiquitinated cell walls. Phagosomal escape and ubiquitination of Mm occured rapidly, prior to 3.5 hours post infection; at the same time, ubiquitinated Mm cell wall material mixed with host-derived dense membrane networks appeared in close proximity to cytosolic bacteria, suggesting cell wall shedding and association with remnants of the lysed phagosome. At 24 hours post-infection, Mm that polymerized actin were not ubiquitinated, whereas ubiquitinated Mm were found within LAMP-1–positive vacuoles resembling lysosomes. Though double membranes were observed which sequestered Mm away from the cytosol, targeting of Mm to the LAMP-1–positive vacuoles was independent of classical autophagy, as demonstrated by absence of LC3 association and by Atg5-independence of their formation. Further, ubiquitination and LAMP-1 association did not occur with mutant avirulent Mm lacking ESX-1 (type VII) secretion, which fail to escape the primary phagosome; apart from its function in phagosome escape, ESX-1 was not directly required for Mm ubiquitination in macrophages or in vitro. These data suggest that virulent Mm follow two distinct paths in the cytosol of infected host cells: bacterial ubiquitination is followed by sequestration into lysosome-like organelles via an autophagy-independent pathway, while cell wall shedding may allow escape from this fate to permit continued residence in the cytosol and formation of actin tails. Public Library of Science 2009-05-15 /pmc/articles/PMC2673685/ /pubmed/19436699 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1000430 Text en Collins et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Collins, Cathleen A.
De Mazière, Ann
van Dijk, Suzanne
Carlsson, Fredric
Klumperman, Judith
Brown, Eric J.
Atg5-Independent Sequestration of Ubiquitinated Mycobacteria
title Atg5-Independent Sequestration of Ubiquitinated Mycobacteria
title_full Atg5-Independent Sequestration of Ubiquitinated Mycobacteria
title_fullStr Atg5-Independent Sequestration of Ubiquitinated Mycobacteria
title_full_unstemmed Atg5-Independent Sequestration of Ubiquitinated Mycobacteria
title_short Atg5-Independent Sequestration of Ubiquitinated Mycobacteria
title_sort atg5-independent sequestration of ubiquitinated mycobacteria
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2673685/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19436699
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1000430
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