| Literature DB >> 31632106 |
Qiuhong Xiong1, Min Yang1, Ping Li1, Changxin Wu1.
Abstract
Autophagy is a lysosomal degradation pathway to clear long-lived proteins, protein aggregates, and damaged organelles. Certain microorganisms can be eliminated by an autophagic degradation process termed xenophagy. However, many pathogens deploy highly evolved mechanisms to evade autophagic degradation. What is more, series of pathogens have developed different strategies to exploit autophagy to ensure their survival. These bacteria could induce autophagy and/or prevent autophagosomes fusion with lysosomes through secreted effector proteins or utilizing host components, thereby maintaining the localization of the bacteria within the autophagosomes where they replicate. Here, we review the current knowledge of the mechanisms developed by the bacteria to benefit from autophagy for their survival.Entities:
Keywords: autophagy; bacteria; benefit; exploit
Year: 2019 PMID: 31632106 PMCID: PMC6792943 DOI: 10.2147/IDR.S220376
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Drug Resist ISSN: 1178-6973 Impact factor: 4.003
Effectors And Host Targets Involve In Bacterial Exploitation Of Autophagy
| Bacteria | Effector | Host target | Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ats-1 | Beclin1 | Stimulates autophagy nucleation | ||
| – | CLTC | Facilitates the fusion of autophagosomes with CCVs | ||
| pORF5 | HMGB1 | Induces mitophagy and inhibits apoptosis to generate enough nutrients for bacterial survival | ||
| VacA | LRP1 | Prevents autophagosome-lysosome fusion | ||
| DrrA/SidM, LidA, RalF | – | Inhibit the immediate delivery to lysosomes | ||
| LLO | NLRX1 | Induce mitophagy and decrease the production of mtROS | ||
| SapM, PknG, PtpA | – | Prevents phagosomes fusion with lysosomes | ||
| – | Cholesterol | Inhibits phagosomes maturation and fusion with lysosomes | ||
| PG0717 | – | Induces autophagy | ||
| HopM1 | – | Activates proteaphagy | ||
| ShlA | – | Induces autophagy | ||
| – | TMEM59 | Facilitates recruitment of ATG16L1 and promotes LC3 labelling of | ||
| UPEC | – | Ferritin | Increased iron availability for UPEC | |
| _ | VAMP7 | Promotes LC3 recruitment to |
Figure 1Exploitation of autophagy pathway by bacterial pathogens. After the invasion of the host cell, vacuoles containing intracellular bacteria fuse with autophagosomes or recruit autophagy machinery to form autophagic vacuoles favor the bacteria replication. Several bacteria have evolved different effector proteins that induce autophagy to form autophagosomes or promote bacteria-containing vacuoles fuse with autophagosomes or facilitate the recruitment of autophagy machinery to bacteria-containing vacuoles (green), thereby promoting the replication of bacteria. Some bacteria secrete effector proteins that impair the functions of lysosomes or inhibit bacteria-containing autophagosomes fuse with lysosomes (red) to block the lysosomal degradation of the bacteria. Furthermore, cholesterol of host cells prevents M. avium-containing autophagosomes fusion with lysosomes (blue), CLTC promotes C. burnetii-containing vacuoles fusion with autophagosomes, HMGB1 and NLRX1 induce mitophagy thus promote survival of C. trachomatis and L. monocytogenes respectively, TMEM59 and VAMP7 facilitate the recruitment of autophagy proteins to the S. aureus and Y. pseudotuberculosis-containing vacuoles, respectively (violet), and UPEC benefits from ferritinophagy.