Lemon Jamie K, Weiser Jeffrey N
Department of Microbiology, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Department of Microbiology, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
mBio. 2015 Jan 20;6(1):e02110-14. doi: 10.1128/mBio.02110-14.
Streptococcus pneumoniae is a leading pathogen with an extracellular lifestyle; however, it is detected by cytosolic surveillance systems of macrophages. The innate immune response that follows cytosolic sensing of cell wall components results in recruitment of additional macrophages, which subsequently clear colonizing organisms from host airways. In this study, we monitored cytosolic access by following the transit of the abundant bacterial surface component capsular polysaccharide, which is linked to the cell wall. Confocal and electron microscopy visually characterized the location of cell wall components in murine macrophages outside membrane-bound organelles. Quantification of capsular polysaccharide through cellular fractionation demonstrated that cytosolic access of bacterial cell wall components is dependent on phagocytosis, bacterial sensitivity to the host's degradative enzyme lysozyme, and release of the pore-forming toxin pneumolysin. Activation of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling is important for limiting access to the cytosol; however, ultimately, these are catastrophic events for both the bacteria and the macrophage, which undergoes cell death. Our results show how expression of a pore-forming toxin ensures the death of phagocytes that take up the organism, although cytosolic sensing results in innate immune detection that eventually allows for successful host defense. These findings provide an example of how cytosolic access applies to an extracellular microbe and contributes to its pathogenesis.
Streptococcus pneumoniae (the pneumococcus) is a bacterial pathogen that is a leading cause of pneumonia. Pneumococcal disease is preceded by colonization of the nasopharynx, which lasts several weeks before being cleared by the host's immune system. Although S. pneumoniae is an extracellular microbe, intracellular detection of pneumococcal components is critical for bacterial clearance. In this study, we show that following bacterial uptake and degradation by phagocytes, pneumococcal products access the host cell cytosol via its pore-forming toxin. This phenomenon of cytosolic access results in phagocyte death and may serve to combat the host cells responsible for clearing the organism. Our results provide an example of how intracellular access and subsequent immune detection occurs during infection with an extracellular pathogen.
肺炎链球菌是一种主要的病原体,具有胞外生存方式;然而,它能被巨噬细胞的胞质监测系统检测到。对细胞壁成分进行胞质感知后引发的固有免疫反应会导致更多巨噬细胞的募集,随后这些巨噬细胞会清除宿主气道中的定殖微生物。在本研究中,我们通过追踪与细胞壁相连的丰富细菌表面成分荚膜多糖的转运来监测胞质进入情况。共聚焦显微镜和电子显微镜直观地描绘了细胞壁成分在鼠巨噬细胞中膜结合细胞器之外的位置。通过细胞分级分离对荚膜多糖进行定量分析表明,细菌细胞壁成分的胞质进入依赖于吞噬作用、细菌对宿主降解酶溶菌酶的敏感性以及成孔毒素肺炎溶血素的释放。p38丝裂原活化蛋白激酶(MAPK)信号通路的激活对于限制进入胞质很重要;然而,最终,这些对细菌和巨噬细胞来说都是灾难性事件,巨噬细胞会发生细胞死亡。我们的结果表明,尽管胞质感知会导致固有免疫检测,最终实现宿主的成功防御,但成孔毒素的表达如何确保摄取该微生物的吞噬细胞死亡。这些发现提供了一个胞质进入如何适用于胞外微生物并促成其发病机制的例子。
肺炎链球菌(肺炎球菌)是一种细菌性病原体,是肺炎的主要病因。肺炎球菌疾病之前会有鼻咽部定殖,在被宿主免疫系统清除之前会持续数周。尽管肺炎链球菌是一种胞外微生物,但对肺炎球菌成分的细胞内检测对于细菌清除至关重要。在本研究中,我们表明,在吞噬细胞摄取并降解细菌后,肺炎球菌产物通过其成孔毒素进入宿主细胞胞质。这种胞质进入现象会导致吞噬细胞死亡,可能有助于对抗负责清除该微生物的宿主细胞。我们的结果提供了一个胞外病原体感染期间细胞内进入及随后免疫检测如何发生的例子。