A mitochondrial quality control mechanism reverses the phagosome maturation arrest caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis .
Surbhi VermaMrinmoy DasRaman D SharmaVikas YadavShweta ThakurPriya SharmaMardiana MarzukiShihui FooGiulia M PipernoMehak Z KhanBabu MathewMeenu BajpaiJaswinder Singh MarasShanshan HowlandSovan SarkarFederica BenvenutiAmit SinghVinay NandicooriAmit SinghalDhiraj KumarPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
Phagosome maturation arrest (PMA) imposed by Mycobacterium tuberculosis ( Mtb ) is a classic tool that helps Mtb evade macrophage anti-bacterial responses. The exclusion of RAB7, a small GTPase, from Mtb -phagosomes underscores PMA. Here we report an unexpected mechanism that triggers crosstalk between the mitochondrial quality control (MQC) and the phagosome maturation pathways that reverses the PMA. CRISPR-mediated p62/SQSTM1 depletion ( p62 KD ) blocks mitophagy flux without impacting mitochondrial quality. In p62 KD cells, Mtb growth and survival are diminished, mainly through witnessing an increasingly oxidative environment and increased lysosomal targeting. The lysosomal targeting of Mtb is facilitated by enhanced TOM20 + mitochondria-derived vesicles (MDVs) biogenesis, a key MQC mechanism. In p62 KD cells, TOM20 + -MDVs biogenesis is MIRO1/MIRO2-dependent and delivered to lysosomes for degradation in a RAB7-dependent manner. Upon infection in p62 KD cells, TOM20 + -MDVs get extensively targeted to Mtb -phagosomes, inadvertently facilitating RAB7 recruitment, PMA reversal and lysosomal targeting of Mtb . Triggering MQC collapse in p62 KD cells further diminishes Mtb survival signifying cooperation between redox- and lysosome-mediated mechanisms. The MQC-anti-bacterial pathway crosstalk could be exploited for host-directed anti-tuberculosis therapies.
Keyphrases
- mycobacterium tuberculosis
- pulmonary tuberculosis
- induced apoptosis
- quality control
- cell cycle arrest
- oxidative stress
- cancer therapy
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell death
- drug delivery
- signaling pathway
- crispr cas
- adipose tissue
- emergency department
- gene expression
- cell cycle
- genome wide
- free survival
- nlrp inflammasome
- living cells