Legionellosis is mostly caused by Legionella pneumophila and is defined as a severe respiratory illness with a case fatality rate ranging from 5% to 80%. L. pneumophila is ubiquitous in natural and anthropogenic water systems. L. pneumophila is transmitted by inhalation of contaminated aerosols produced by a variety of devices. While L. pneumophila replicates within environmental protozoa, colonization and persistence in its natural environment are also mediated by biofilm formation and colonization within multispecies microbial communities. There is now evidence that some legionellosis outbreaks are correlated with the presence of biofilms. Thus, preventing biofilm formation appears as one of the strategies to reduce water system contamination. However, we lack information about the chemical and biophysical conditions, as well as the molecular mechanisms that allow the production of biofilms by L. pneumophila. Here, we discuss the molecular basis of biofilm formation by L. pneumophila and the roles of other microbial species in L. pneumophila biofilm colonization. In addition, we discuss the protective roles of biofilms against current L. pneumophila sanitation strategies along with the initial data available on the regulation of L. pneumophila biofilm formation.
In physiological settings, the complement protein C3 is deposited on all bacteria, including invasive pathogens. However, because experimental host-bacteria systems typically use decomplemented serum to avoid the lytic action of complement, the impact of C3 coating on epithelial cell responses to invasive bacteria remains unexplored. Here, we demonstrate that following invasion, intracellular C3-positive Listeria monocytogenes is targeted by autophagy through a direct C3/ATG16L1 interaction, resulting in autophagy-dependent bacterial growth restriction. In contrast, Shigella flexneri and Salmonella Typhimurium escape autophagy-mediated growth restriction in part through the action of bacterial outer membrane proteases that cleave bound C3. Upon oral infection with Listeria, C3-deficient mice displayed defective clearance at the intestinal mucosa. Together, these results demonstrate an intracellular role of complement in triggering antibacterial autophagy and immunity against intracellular pathogens. Since C3 indiscriminately associates with foreign surfaces, the C3-ATG16L1 interaction may provide a universal mechanism of xenophagy initiation.
Protein degradation pathways are critical for maintaining proper protein dynamics within the cell, and considerable efforts have been made toward the development of therapeutics targeting these catabolic processes. We report here that isoginkgetin, a naturally derived biflavonoid, sensitized cells undergoing nutrient starvation to apoptosis, induced lysosomal stress, and activated the lysosome biogenesis geneTFEB. Isoginkgetin treatment led to the accumulation of aggregates of polyubiquitinated proteins that colocalized strongly with the adaptor protein p62, the 20S proteasome, and the endoplasmic reticulum-associated degradation (ERAD) protein UFD1L. Isoginkgetin directly inhibited the chymotrypsin-like, trypsin-like, and caspase-like activities of the 20S proteasome and impaired NF-κB signaling, suggesting that the molecule may display its biological activity in part through proteasome inhibition. Importantly, isoginkgetin was effective at killing multiple myeloma (MM) cell linesin vitroand displayed a higher rate of cell death induction than the clinically approved proteasome inhibitor bortezomib. We propose that isoginkgetin disturbs protein homeostasis, leading to an excess of protein cargo that places a burden on the lysosomes/autophagic machinery, eventually leading to cancer cell death.
Activation of the innate immune receptor NLRP1B leads to the formation of an inflammasome, which induces autoproteolytic processing of pro-caspase-1, and ultimately to the release of inflammatory cytokines and to the execution of pyroptosis. One of the signals to which NLRP1B responds is metabolic stress that occurs in cells deprived of glucose or treated with metabolic inhibitors. NLRP1B might therefore sense microbial infection, as intracellular pathogens such as Listeria monocytogenes and Shigella flexneri cause metabolic stress as a result of nutrient scavenging and host cell damage. Here we addressed whether these pathogens activate the NLRP1B inflammasome. We found that Listeria infection activated the NLRP1B inflammasome in a reconstituted fibroblast model. Activation of NLRP1B by Listeria was diminished in an NLRP1B mutant shown previously to be defective at detecting energy stress and was dependent on the expression of listeriolysin O (LLO), a protein required for vacuolar escape. Infections of either Listeria or Shigella activated NLRP1B in the RAW264.7 murine macrophage line, which expresses endogenous NLRP1B. We conclude that NLRP1B senses cellular infection by distinct invasive pathogens.KEYWORDS Listeria monocytogenes, NLRP1B, Shigella, caspase-1, inflammasome N LRP1B is a pattern recognition receptor that forms a multiprotein complex termed an inflammasome after it detects an activating signal (1). The NLRP1B inflammasome complex consists of multiple copies of NLRP1B and pro-caspase-1. The assembly of the complex leads to autoproteolysis of pro-caspase-1 and, consequently, to processing of inflammatory cytokines interleukin-1 (IL-1) and IL-18 and to a type of cell death called pyroptosis (2, 3). NLRP1B has four domains (2) (Fig. 1A). The N-terminal NACHT domain (a domain present in NAIP, CIITA, HET-E, and TP-1) is a nucleotide-binding domain that selfassociates. The leucine-rich repeat (LRR) domain is involved in autoinhibition (4, 5), and the function to find domain (FIIND) undergoes autoproteolytic processing, which facilitates inflammasome assembly (6-8). The C-terminal caspase-activating and recruitment domain (CARD) binds the CARD of pro-caspase-1 (4).Anthrax lethal toxin is the only known direct activator of murine NLRP1B (1). The proteolytic component of the toxin cleaves NLRP1B near its N terminus; this cleavage is sufficient to relieve autoinhibition and allow oligomerization (9-11). Depletion of intracellular ATP is another activator of NLRP1B but one that probably triggers inflammasome assembly indirectly (12). The N-terminal region of NLRP1B is not cleaved after depletion of ATP, and the FIIND of NLRP1B facilitated the detection of this signal instead (5). Thus, activation of NLRP1B occurs through at least two distinct mechanisms.The intracellular parasite Toxoplasma gondii is also detected by NLRP1B (13,14), although the direct signal has not been determined. It is possible that Toxoplasma infection causes a reduction in cytosolic ATP. Notably, the parasite cannot synthesiz...
iAlthough only partially understood, multicellular behavior is relatively common in bacterial pathogens. Bacterial aggregates can resist various host defenses and colonize their environment more efficiently than planktonic cells. For the waterborne pathogen Legionella pneumophila, little is known about the roles of autoaggregation or the parameters which allow cell-cell interactions to occur. Here, we determined the endogenous and exogenous factors sufficient to allow autoaggregation to take place in L. pneumophila. We show that isolates from Legionella species which do not produce the Legionella collagen-like protein (Lcl) are deficient in autoaggregation. Targeted deletion of the Lcl-encoding gene (lpg2644) and the addition of Lcl ligands impair the autoaggregation of L. pneumophila. In addition, Lcl-induced autoaggregation requires divalent cations. Escherichia coli producing surface-exposed Lcl is able to autoaggregate and shows increased biofilm production. We also demonstrate that L. pneumophila infection of Acanthamoeba castellanii and Hartmanella vermiformis is potentiated under conditions which promote Lcl dependent autoaggregation. Overall, this study shows that L. pneumophila is capable of autoaggregating in a process that is mediated by Lcl in a divalent-cation-dependent manner. It also reveals that Lcl potentiates the ability of L. pneumophila to come in contact, attach, and infect amoebae.
Mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) is a central regulator of cellular metabolic homeostasis that is highly conserved in evolution. Recent evidence has revealed the existence of a complex interplay between mTOR signalling and immunity. We review here the emerging role of mTOR signalling in the regulation of Toll-like receptor-dependent innate responses and in the activation of T cells and antigen-presenting cells. We also highlight the importance of amino-acid starvation-driven mTOR inhibition in the control of autophagy and intracellular bacterial clearance.
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