Mycobacterium tuberculosis Eis Regulates Autophagy, Inflammation, and Cell Death through Redox-dependent Signaling

Dong Min Shin(Chungnam National University), Bo‐Young Jeon(Yonsei University), Hye‐Mi Lee(Chungnam National University), Hyo Sun Jin(Chungnam National University), Jae–Min Yuk(Chungnam National University), Chang‐Hwa Song(Chungnam National University), Sang Hee Lee(Chungnam National University), Zee-Won Lee(Korea Basic Science Institute), Sang-Nae Cho(Yonsei University), Jin‐Man Kim(Chungnam National University), Richard L. Friedman(University of Arizona), Eun‐Kyeong Jo(Chungnam National University)
PLoS Pathogens
December 16, 2010
Cited by 328Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The "enhanced intracellular survival" (eis) gene of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) is involved in the intracellular survival of M. smegmatis. However, its exact effects on host cell function remain elusive. We herein report that Mtb Eis plays essential roles in modulating macrophage autophagy, inflammatory responses, and cell death via a reactive oxygen species (ROS)-dependent pathway. Macrophages infected with an Mtb eis-deletion mutant H37Rv (Mtb-Δeis) displayed markedly increased accumulation of massive autophagic vacuoles and formation of autophagosomes in vitro and in vivo. Infection of macrophages with Mtb-Δeis increased the production of tumor necrosis factor-α and interleukin-6 over the levels produced by infection with wild-type or complemented strains. Elevated ROS generation in macrophages infected with Mtb-Δeis (for which NADPH oxidase and mitochondria were largely responsible) rendered the cells highly sensitive to autophagy activation and cytokine production. Despite considerable activation of autophagy and proinflammatory responses, macrophages infected with Mtb-Δeis underwent caspase-independent cell death. This cell death was significantly inhibited by blockade of autophagy and c-Jun N-terminal kinase-ROS signaling, suggesting that excessive autophagy and oxidative stress are detrimental to cell survival. Finally, artificial over-expression of Eis or pretreatment with recombinant Eis abrogated production of both ROS and proinflammatory cytokines, which depends on the N-acetyltransferase domain of the Eis protein. Collectively, these data indicate that Mtb Eis suppresses host innate immune defenses by modulating autophagy, inflammation, and cell death in a redox-dependent manner.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis