Literature DB >> 11544319

ATP stimulates human macrophages to kill intracellular virulent Mycobacterium tuberculosis via calcium-dependent phagosome-lysosome fusion.

D J Kusner1, J A Barton.   

Abstract

Advances in therapy for tuberculosis will require greater understanding of the molecular mechanisms of pathogenesis and the human immune response in this disease. Exposure of Mycobacterium tuberculosis-infected human macrophages to extracellular ATP (ATP(e)) results in bacterial killing, but the molecular mechanisms remain incompletely characterized. In this study, we demonstrate that ATP(e)-induced bactericidal activity toward virulent M. tuberculosis requires an increase in cytosolic Ca(2+) in infected macrophages. Based on our previous work with primary infection of human macrophages, we hypothesized that the Ca(2+) dependence of ATP-induced killing of intracellular M. tuberculosis was linked to promotion of phagosome-lysosome fusion. Using confocal laser-scanning microscopy, we demonstrate that ATP(e) induces fusion of the M. tuberculosis-containing phagosome with lysosomes, defined by accumulation of three lysosomal proteins and an acidophilic dye. Stimulation of phagosome-lysosome fusion by ATP(e) exhibited distinct requirements for both Ca(2+) and phospholipase D and was highly correlated with killing of intracellular bacilli. Thus, key signal transduction pathways are conserved between two distinct models of human macrophage antituberculous activity: primary infection of naive macrophages and physiologic stimulation of macrophages stably infected with M. tuberculosis.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11544319     DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.167.6.3308

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Immunol        ISSN: 0022-1767            Impact factor:   5.422


  48 in total

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