A Rab20-dependent membrane trafficking pathway controls M. tuberculosis replication by regulating phagosome spaciousness and integrity
File(s)1-s2.0-S1931312817301506-main.pdf (7.16 MB)
Published version
Author(s)
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
The intracellular pathogen Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) lives within phagosomes and also disrupts these organelles to access the cytosol. The host pathways and mechanisms that contribute to maintaining Mtb phagosome integrity have not been investigated. Here, we examined the spatiotemporal dynamics of Mtb-containing phagosomes and identified an interferon-gamma-stimulated and Rab20-dependent membrane trafficking pathway in macrophages that maintains Mtb in spacious proteolytic phagolysosomes. This pathway functions to promote endosomal membrane influx in infected macrophages, and is required to preserve Mtb phagosome integrity and control Mtb replication. Rab20 is specifically and significantly upregulated in the sputum of human patients with active tuberculosis. Altogether, we uncover an immune-regulated cellular pathway of defense that promotes maintenance of Mtb within intact membrane-bound compartments for efficient elimination.
Date Issued
2017-05-10
Date Acceptance
2017-04-20
Citation
Cell Host and Microbe, 2017, 21 (5), pp.619-628.e5
ISSN
1931-3128
Publisher
Elsevier (Cell Press)
Start Page
619
End Page
628.e5
Journal / Book Title
Cell Host and Microbe
Volume
21
Issue
5
Copyright Statement
This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
License URL
Sponsor
Wellcome Trust
Grant Number
104803/Z/14/Z
Subjects
Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Microbiology
Parasitology
Virology
MYCOBACTERIUM-TUBERCULOSIS
DENDRITIC CELLS
IN-VIVO
AUTOPHAGY
MACROPHAGES
MATURATION
INFECTION
INNATE
DEGRADATION
VIRULENCE
Publication Status
Published
Date Publish Online
2017-05-10