Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023241 (Legionella)
6,990 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The natural hosts of the bacterial pathogen Legionella pneumophila are amoebae and protozoa. In these hosts, as in human macrophages, the pathogen enters the cell through phagocytosis, then rapidly modifies the phagosome to create a compartment that supports its replication. We have examined L. pneumophila entry and behaviour during early stages of the infection of Dictyostelium discoideum amoebae. Bacteria were labelled with a red fluorescent marker, and selected proteins and organelles in the host were labelled with GFP, allowing the dynamics and interactions of L. pneumophila -containing phagosomes to be tracked in living cells. These studies demonstrated that entry of L. pneumophila is an actin-mediated process, that the actin-binding protein coronin surrounds the nascent phagosome but dissociates immediately after internalization, that ER membrane is not incorporated into a phagosome during uptake, that the newly internalized phagosome is rapidly transported about the cell on microtubules, that association of ER markers with the phagosome occurs in two steps that correlate with distinct changes in phagosome movement, and that the vacuolar H(+)-ATPase does not associate with mature replication vacuoles. These studies have clarified certain aspects of the infection process and provided new insights into the dynamic interactions between the pathogen and its host.
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PMID:Dynamic properties of Legionella-containing phagosomes in Dictyostelium amoebae. 1595 31

Legionella pneumophila, the causative agent of Legionnaires' disease, is a human pathogen that multiplies within alveolar macrophages. L. pneumophila establishes specialized phagosomes in which it evades the host defense through largely unknown mechanisms. Here we analyzed the role of an actin-binding protein, p57/coronin-1, a member of the coronin protein family, during Legionella infection. On fluorescence microscopy, p57/coronin-1 and F-actin were found to be co-localized at the sites on the plasma membrane where L. pneumophila adhered to U937 human macrophage-like cells. The localization of p57/coronin-1 at the sites of bacterial adherence was inhibited by treatment with cytochalasin D (an inhibitor of actin polymerization), suggesting that p57/coronin-1 is involved in the actin-dependent uptake of L. pneumophila into U937 cells. In addition, we showed that p57/coronin-1 was excluded from phagosomes containing live L. pneumophila throughout the infection, whereas transient accumulation of p57/coronin-1 was observed on phagosomes containing Texas-Red-labeled opsonized zymosan (TROpZ) or heat-killed L. pneumophila at an early stage of phagocytosis. The exclusion of p57/coronin-1 from phagosomes containing live another Legionella species Legionella gratiana at an early stage of infection was also observed. Taken together, these results suggest that the endocytic pathways of live Legionella species are distinct from general phagocytic pathways, which lead to lysosomal degradation.
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PMID:Exclusion of actin-binding protein p57/coronin-1 from bacteria-containing phagosomes in macrophages infected with Legionella. 1845 8