Abuaita Basel H, Burkholder Kristin M, Boles Blaise R, O'Riordan Mary X
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Michigan School of Medicine, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
Department of Biological Sciences, University of New England, Biddeford, Maine, USA.
mBio. 2015 Jul 14;6(4):e00705. doi: 10.1128/mBio.00705-15.
Bacterial infection can trigger cellular stress programs, such as the unfolded protein response (UPR), which occurs when misfolded proteins accumulate within the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Here, we used the human pathogen methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) as an infection model to probe how ER stress promotes antimicrobial function. MRSA infection activated the most highly conserved unfolded protein response sensor, inositol-requiring enzyme 1α (IRE1α), which was necessary for robust bacterial killing in vitro and in vivo. The macrophage IRE1-dependent bactericidal activity required reactive oxygen species (ROS). Viable MRSA cells excluded ROS from the nascent phagosome and strongly triggered IRE1 activation, leading to sustained generation of ROS that were largely Nox2 independent. In contrast, dead MRSA showed early colocalization with ROS but was a poor activator of IRE1 and did not trigger sustained ROS generation. The global ROS stimulated by IRE1 signaling was necessary, but not sufficient, for MRSA killing, which also required the ER resident SNARE Sec22B for accumulation of ROS in the phagosomal compartment. Taken together, these results suggest that IRE1-mediated persistent ROS generation might act as a fail-safe mechanism to kill bacterial pathogens that evade the initial macrophage oxidative burst.
Cellular stress programs have been implicated as important components of the innate immune response to infection. The role of the IRE1 pathway of the ER stress response in immune secretory functions, such as antibody production, is well established, but its contribution to innate immunity is less well defined. Here, we show that infection of macrophages with viable MRSA induces IRE1 activation, leading to bacterial killing. IRE1-dependent bactericidal activity required generation of reactive oxygen species in a sustained manner over hours of infection. The SNARE protein Sec22B, which was previously demonstrated to control ER-phagosome trafficking, was dispensable for IRE1-driven global ROS production but necessary for late ROS accumulation in bacteria-containing phagosomes. Our study highlights a key role for IRE1 in promoting macrophage bactericidal capacity and reveals a fail-safe mechanism that leads to the concentration of antimicrobial effector molecules in the macrophage phagosome.
细菌感染可触发细胞应激程序,如未折叠蛋白反应(UPR),当内质网(ER)内积累错误折叠的蛋白质时就会发生这种反应。在此,我们使用人类病原体耐甲氧西林金黄色葡萄球菌(MRSA)作为感染模型,以探究内质网应激如何促进抗菌功能。MRSA感染激活了最保守的未折叠蛋白反应传感器——肌醇需求酶1α(IRE1α),这对于体外和体内有效杀灭细菌是必需的。巨噬细胞中依赖IRE1的杀菌活性需要活性氧(ROS)。存活的MRSA细胞将ROS排除在新生吞噬体之外,并强烈触发IRE1激活,导致ROS持续产生,而这在很大程度上不依赖Nox2。相比之下,死亡的MRSA早期与ROS共定位,但对IRE1的激活作用较弱,且不会触发ROS的持续产生。IRE1信号刺激产生的全局ROS对于杀灭MRSA是必要的,但并不充分,杀灭MRSA还需要内质网驻留SNARE蛋白Sec22B,以便ROS在吞噬体区室中积累。综上所述,这些结果表明,IRE1介导的持续ROS产生可能作为一种故障安全机制,用于杀死逃避初始巨噬细胞氧化爆发的细菌病原体。
细胞应激程序已被认为是感染先天免疫反应的重要组成部分。内质网应激反应的IRE1途径在免疫分泌功能(如抗体产生)中的作用已得到充分证实,但其对先天免疫的贡献尚不太明确。在此,我们表明,用存活的MRSA感染巨噬细胞会诱导IRE1激活,从而导致细菌被杀灭。依赖IRE1的杀菌活性需要在数小时的感染过程中持续产生活性氧。SNARE蛋白Sec22B先前被证明可控制内质网-吞噬体运输,它对于IRE1驱动的全局ROS产生并非必需,但对于含细菌吞噬体中晚期ROS积累是必需的。我们的研究突出了IRE1在促进巨噬细胞杀菌能力方面的关键作用,并揭示了一种故障安全机制,该机制导致抗菌效应分子在巨噬细胞吞噬体中聚集。