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 intracellular bacterial pathogen Legionella pneumophila provokes strong host responses and has proven to be a valuable model for the discovery of novel immunosurveillance pathways. Our previous work revealed that an environmental isolate of L. pneumophila induces a noncanonical form of cell death, leading to restriction of bacterial replication in primary mouse macrophages. Here we show that such restriction also occurs in infections with wild type clinical isolates. Importantly, we found that a lysine to arginine mutation at residue 88 (K88R) in the ribosome protein RpsL that not only confers bacterial resistance to streptomycin, but more importantly, severely attenuated the induction of host cell death and enabled L. pneumophila to replicate in primary mouse macrophages. Although conferring similar resistance to streptomycin, a K43N mutation in RpsL does not allow productive intracellular bacterial replication. Further analysis indicated that RpsL is capable of effectively inducing macrophage death via a pathway involved in lysosomal membrane permeabilization; the K88R mutant elicits similar responses but is less potent. Moreover, cathepsin B, a lysosomal protease that causes cell death after being released into the cytosol upon the loss of membrane integrity, is required for efficient RpsL-induced macrophage death. Furthermore, despite the critical role of cathepsin B in delaying RpsL-induced cell death, macrophages lacking cathepsin B do not support productive intracellular replication of L. pneumophila harboring wild type RpsL. This suggests the involvement of other yet unidentified components in the restriction of bacterial replication. Our results identified RpsL as a regulator in the interactions between bacteria such as L. pneumophila and primary mouse macrophages by triggering unique cellular pathways that restrict intracellular bacterial replication.
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PMID:Sensing cytosolic RpsL by macrophages induces lysosomal cell death and termination of bacterial infection. 2573 62

Objective To investigate the effect of Legionella pneumophila (LP) on the autophagy flux of RAW264.7 macrophages and explore the molecular mechanism of the expression changes of autophagy-related factors. Methods Live LP and inactivated LP (MOI=10, 50, 100) were separately used to affect RAW264.7 for 1, 2 and 3 hours so as to screen the optimum condition of LP infection. The optimal condition for LP infection was MOI=50 and the infection time was 2 hours. After affected by rapamycin (RAPA) for 12 hours, RAW264.7 cells were then treated by live and inactivated LP for another 2 hours. Normal control group, RAPA group, live LP group, inactivated LP group, RAPA-treated live LP group, RAPA-treated inactivated LP group were designed. The pmCherry-C1-EGFP-LC3B double fluorescent labeling protein method was used to monitor the changes of autophagy flux. The relevant factor CLN3, histone deacetylase 6 (HDAC6), regulator of G protein signaling 19 (RGS19), tumor necrosis factor (TNF), cathepsin B (CTSB), GABA type A receptor associated protein like 2 (GABARAPL2), P62, microtubule-related protein 1 light chain 3 (LC3) were screened by gene array analysis. In order to validate the results of gene array, real-time quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR) was used to detect the mRNA levels of nuclear factor erythroid derived 2 like 2 (Nrf2), beclin1 and kelch like ECH associated protein 1 (Keap1); Western blot analysis was performed to measure the protein levels of Nrf2, beclin1 and Keap1. Results Both the live LP group and the inactivated LP group inhibited the autophagy flux compared with the normal control group and the RAPA group. Gene array analysis showed that in the live LP and inactivated LP groups, LC3 expression was down-regulated and P62 expression was up-regulated. The results of RT-qPCR and Western blot analysis were consistent with the gene array. The mRNA and protein levels of Keap1, beclin1, and Nrf2 significantly decreased, while the mRNA and protein levels of Nrf2 significantly increased. Conclusion LP can inhibit the autophagy of macrophage via activating Nrf2-Keap1 signaling pathway.
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PMID:[Legionella pneumophila activates Nrf2-Keap1 pathway to inhibit autophagy of mouse RAW264.7 macrophages]. 3181 63