Diverting intracellular trafficking of Salmonella to the lysosome through activation of the late endocytic Rab7 by intracellular delivery of muramyl dipeptide

Mukherjee, Konark ; Parashuraman, Seetharaman ; Krishnamurthy, Ganga ; Majumdar, Jolly ; Yadav, Ashok ; Kumar, Ravi ; Basu, Sandip K. ; Mukhopadhyay, Amitabha (2002) Diverting intracellular trafficking of Salmonella to the lysosome through activation of the late endocytic Rab7 by intracellular delivery of muramyl dipeptide Journal of Cell Science, 115 (Pt18). pp. 3693-3701. ISSN 0021-9533

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Official URL: http://jcs.biologists.org/cgi/content/abstract/115...

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/jcs.00034

Abstract

Previously, we showed that live Salmonella-containing phagosomes (LSP) recruit early acting Rab5 and promote fusion with early endosomes, thus avoiding transport to the lysosomes. Therefore, live Salmonella survive in a specialized compartment. Here we show that scavenger-receptor-mediated intracellular delivery of muramyl dipeptide (MDP) to macrophages leads to efficient killing of Salmonella both in vitro and in vivo. To understand the intracellular trafficking modulation of Salmonella by delivery of MDP, we investigated the levels of endocytic Rab proteins, which are the major regulators of vesicular transport. Western blot analysis reveals reduced Rab5 and enhanced Rab7 content in the maleylated bovine serum albumin-MDP (MBSA-MDP)-treated cells. The reduced content of Rab5 in the treated cells and on phagosomes inhibits the fusion of Salmonella-containing phagosomes with early endosomes, and the enhanced Rab7 content in these cells facilitated targeting of LSP to lysosomes, which contain cathepsin D and vacuolar ATPase, for killing. In vitro reconstitution of lysosomal transport demonstrated that a reduced content of Rab5 and an enhanced level of Rab7 in MBSA-MDP-treated cells is primarily responsible for targeting Salmonella to lysosomes. Intracellular delivery of MDP thus offers a general strategy against macrophage-associated infections caused by intracellular pathogens that survive in the host cell by resisting transport to lysosomes.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Company of Biologists Ltd.
Keywords:Endocytosis; Phagocytosis; Salmonella; Rab GTPases; Fusion; Lysosomes
ID Code:1800
Deposited On:08 Oct 2010 12:28
Last Modified:16 May 2016 12:51

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