| Literature DB >> 26106587 |
Shaun Steele1, Jason Brunton1, Thomas Kawula1.
Abstract
Following entry into host cells intracellular pathogens must simultaneously evade innate host defense mechanisms and acquire energy and anabolic substrates from the nutrient-limited intracellular environment. Most of the potential intracellular nutrient sources are stored within complex macromolecules that are not immediately accessible by intracellular pathogens. To obtain nutrients for proliferation, intracellular pathogens must compete with the host cell for newly-imported simple nutrients or degrade host nutrient storage structures into their constituent components (fatty acids, carbohydrates, and amino acids). It is becoming increasingly evident that intracellular pathogens have evolved a wide variety of strategies to accomplish this task. One recurrent microbial strategy is to exploit host degradative processes that break down host macromolecules into simple nutrients that the microbe can use. Herein we focus on how a subset of bacterial, viral, and eukaryotic pathogens leverage the host process of autophagy to acquire nutrients that support their growth within infected cells.Entities:
Keywords: autophagy; immune evasion; intracellular pathogens; nutrient acquisition; xenophagy
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26106587 PMCID: PMC4460576 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2015.00051
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
A summary of the mechanisms employed by select pathogens to induce autophagy, evade destruction through xenophagy, and pro-microbial benefits of autophagy induction.
| Increases autophagy via the effector ATS-1 | Converts replication vacuole to modified autophagosome | Nutrient source | Niu et al., | |
| Likely induces via unfolded protein response (UPR) | Converts replication vacuole to modified autophagosome | Promotes subsequent infections | Guo et al., | |
| Increases LC3 puncta formed via the bacterial effector BPSS0180 | Deaminates Gln40 of ubiquitin, potentially blocks polyubiquitination | Proposed as a nutrient acquisition mechanism (not explicitly tested) | Cui et al., | |
| Bacterial protein synthesis enhances LC3 cleavage | Beatty, | |||
| LC3 lipidation increases, but not p62 turnover | Converts replication vacuole to modified autophagosome | Autophagy induction enhances replication | Beron et al., | |
| Increases ATG5-independent autophagy | O-antigen contributes to xenophagy evasion | Nutrient source | Barel et al., | |
| Group A | Infection increases xenophagy | SpeB degrades the autophagy adaptor molecules p62 and NRB1 | Nakagawa et al., | |
| Irreversably inactivates LC3 with the bacterial effector RavZ to inhibit autophagy | Inhibits autophagy | Wieland et al., | ||
| Llo enhances autophagy through rupture of phagosomal membrane | Camouflage via major vault protein, ARP2/3, and Ena/VASP | Birmingham et al., | ||
| Targets bacteria when ESX-1 permeabilizes the phagosome | Unknown, likely by remaining in a modified phagosome | Griffin et al., | ||
| Infection induces autophagy | Unknown, but requires live bacteria | Choi et al., | ||
| Increases autophagy when phagosome is damaged | - SseL deubiquitinates bacterial products | Mesquita et al., | ||
| Increases autophagy through amino acid starvation and mTOR inhibition | - IcsB through by blocking ATG5 from binding to virG | Ogawa et al., | ||
| Chikungunya virus | Increases autophagy through ER stress and unfolded protein response (UPR) | Promotes viral replication | Krejbich-Trotot et al., | |
| Coxsackievirus | Increases LC3 cleavage, but not p62 degradation | Limits autophagosome and lysosome fusion | Enhances viral replication | Wong et al., |
| Dengue Virus | Increases autophagy | Autophagy-derived lipids increases | Lee et al., | |
| Epstein barr virus (EBV) | Rta induces autophagy through extracellular signal regulated kinase (ERK) signaling | Blocks autophagosome-lysosome fusion | Autophagy enhances replication | Lee and Sugden, |
| Hantavirus | The glycoprotein Gn induces autophagy | Enhances replication | Hussein et al., | |
| Hepatitis B virus (HBV) | Small surface protein induces autophagy through the unfolded protein response, | Viral X protein impairs autophagosome maturation, leading to autophagosome accumulation | Autophagosome formation enhances viral replication | Tang et al., |
| Hepatitis C virus | NS5A induces autophagy | - Autophagosome maturation impaired | Enhances viral replication | Sir et al., |
| Herpes Simplex Virus (HSV) | ICP34.5 protein suppresses autophagy by binding to Beclin 1 | An AMPK/AKT/mTOR/Beclin 1 independent form of autophagy has been proposed to enhance cell viability | Orvedahl et al., | |
| Human Cytomegalovirus (HCMV) | Induces autophagy early independent of viral protein synthesis | Yu et al., | ||
| Human immunodeficieny virus (HIV) | Infection increases the number of autophagosomes by electron microscopy | - Nef inhibits autophagosome maturation through an interaction with Beclin 1 | Autophagy enhances the number of infectious virions | Zhou and Spector, |
| Human parvovirus | Infection increases LC3 cleavage | Increased infected cell survival | Nakashima et al., | |
| Influenza A virus | Infection increases LC3 cleavage | - Matrix 2 ion channel blocks autophagosome-lysosome fusion | Increases cell survival | Gannage et al., |
| Kaposis sarcoma herpesvirus (KSHV) | Timing dependent: | Autophagy enhances lytic reactivation | Pattingre et al., | |
| Rotavirus | NSP4 leads to increased cytoplasmic calcium levels, resulting in autophagy | Blocks autophagosome maturation | Enhances viral replication | Crawford et al., |
| Infection increases LC3 cleavage | Enhances parasite replication | Pinheiro et al., | ||
| Autophagy increase is calcium dependent but independent of mTOR | Enhances nutrient acquisition | Wang et al., | ||
| Increase in LC3 cleavage | Smeekens et al., | |||
| Autophagosomes fuse to | Enhances non-lytic exocytosis | Nicola et al., |
Bacterial, viral, and eukaryotic pathogens are listed in groups. This list may not be comprehensive for what is currently known about how each pathogen interacts with autophagy.