Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, Texas, USA.
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York, USA.
mBio. 2022 Jun 28;13(3):e0297421. doi: 10.1128/mbio.02974-21. Epub 2022 Apr 25.
Autophagy is an ubiquitous homeostatic pathway in mammalian cells and plays a significant role in host immunity. Substantial evidence indicates that the ability of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) to successfully evade immune responses is partially due to inhibition of autophagic pathways. Our previous screening of Mtb transposon mutants identified the PPE51 protein as an important autophagy-inhibiting effector. We found that expression of PPE51, either by infecting bacteria or by direct expression in host cells, suppressed responses to potent autophagy-inducing stimuli and interfered with bacterial phagocytosis. This phenotype was associated with reduced activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 (ERK1/2), a key component of signaling pathways that stimulate autophagy. Multiple lines of evidence demonstrated that the effects of PPE51 are attributable to signal blocking by Toll-like receptor 2 (TLR2), a receptor with known involvement of activation of ERK1/2 and autophagy. Consistent with these results, mice with intact TLR2 signaling showed striking virulence attenuation for an Mtb deletion mutant (Δ) compared to wild-type Mtb, whereas infection of TLR2-deficient mice showed no such attenuation. Mice infected with Δ also displayed increased T cell responses to Mtb antigens and increased autophagy in infected lung tissues. Together, these results suggest that TLR2 activates relevant host immune functions during mycobacterial infection, which Mtb then evades through suppression of TLR2 signaling by PPE51. In addition to its previously identified function transporting substrates across the bacterial cell wall, our results demonstrate a direct role of PPE51 for evasion of both innate and adaptive immunity to Mtb. Tuberculosis is a significant global infectious disease caused by infection of the lungs with Mycobacterium tuberculosis, which resides and replicates mainly within host phagocytic cells. During coevolution with humans, Mtb has acquired various mechanisms to inhibit host cellular processes, including autophagy. Autophagy is a complex host cellular process that helps control intracellular infections by enhancing innate and adaptive immune responses. We identified the Mtb protein PPE51 as a mycobacterial effector that inhibits autophagy. We discovered TLR2 and mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling as the axis by which PPE51 mediates this effect. Autophagy regulation by PPE51, along with suppression of other TLR2-activated host cell functions, leads to increased bacterial survival in phagocytic cells and tissues of infected mice. A better understanding of how Mtb regulates autophagy and other host immune effectors could facilitate the design of new therapeutics or vaccines against tuberculosis.
自噬是哺乳动物细胞中普遍存在的一种稳态途径,在宿主免疫中发挥着重要作用。大量证据表明,结核分枝杆菌(Mtb)成功逃避免疫反应的能力部分归因于抑制自噬途径。我们之前对 Mtb 转座子突变体的筛选发现 PPE51 蛋白是一种重要的自噬抑制效应因子。我们发现,无论是通过感染细菌还是直接在宿主细胞中表达,PPE51 的表达都抑制了对强效自噬诱导刺激的反应,并干扰了细菌的吞噬作用。这种表型与细胞外信号调节激酶 1/2(ERK1/2)的激活减少有关,ERK1/2 是刺激自噬的信号通路的关键组成部分。多条证据表明,PPE51 的作用归因于 Toll 样受体 2(TLR2)的信号阻断,TLR2 是一种已知参与 ERK1/2 和自噬激活的受体。与这些结果一致的是,具有完整 TLR2 信号的小鼠对 Mtb 缺失突变体(Δ)的毒力明显减弱,而野生型 Mtb 则没有这种减弱。感染 TLR2 缺陷型小鼠的 Mtb 也显示出对 Mtb 抗原的 T 细胞反应增加和感染肺部组织中的自噬增加。综上所述,这些结果表明,TLR2 在分枝杆菌感染期间激活相关的宿主免疫功能,而 Mtb 则通过 PPE51 抑制 TLR2 信号来逃避这种功能。除了其先前确定的在细菌细胞壁上运输底物的功能外,我们的结果还表明 PPE51 直接参与了 Mtb 对先天免疫和适应性免疫的逃避。结核病是一种由肺部感染结核分枝杆菌引起的重大全球传染病,该细菌主要存在于宿主吞噬细胞内并在其中复制。在与人类的共同进化过程中,Mtb 已经获得了各种抑制宿主细胞过程的机制,包括自噬。自噬是一种复杂的宿主细胞过程,通过增强先天和适应性免疫反应来帮助控制细胞内感染。我们鉴定出 Mtb 蛋白 PPE51 是一种抑制自噬的细菌效应因子。我们发现 TLR2 和丝裂原活化蛋白激酶信号转导是 PPE51 介导这种效应的轴。PPE51 通过调节自噬以及抑制其他 TLR2 激活的宿主细胞功能,导致吞噬细胞和感染小鼠组织中的细菌存活增加。更好地了解 Mtb 如何调节自噬和其他宿主免疫效应因子可能有助于设计针对结核病的新疗法或疫苗。