Septins and K63 ubiquitin chains are present in separate bacterial microdomains during autophagy of entrapped Shigella

Author:

Lobato-Márquez Damián1ORCID,Conesa José Javier2,López-Jiménez Ana Teresa1ORCID,Divine Michael E.3,Pruneda Jonathan N.3ORCID,Mostowy Serge1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine 1 Department of Infection Biology , , Keppel Street, London WC1E 7HT , UK

2. MISTRAL beamline, ALBA Synchrotron Light Source 2 , Cerdanyola del Vallès, 08290 Barcelona , Spain

3. Oregon Health & Science University 3 Department of Molecular Microbiology & Immunology , , Portland, OR 97239 , USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT During host cell invasion, Shigella escapes to the cytosol and polymerizes actin for cell-to-cell spread. To restrict cell-to-cell spread, host cells employ cell-autonomous immune responses including antibacterial autophagy and septin cage entrapment. How septins interact with the autophagy process to target Shigella for destruction is poorly understood. Here, we employed a correlative light and cryo-soft X-ray tomography (cryo-SXT) pipeline to study Shigella septin cage entrapment in its near-native state. Quantitative cryo-SXT showed that Shigella fragments mitochondria and enabled visualization of X-ray-dense structures (∼30 nm resolution) surrounding Shigella entrapped in septin cages. Using Airyscan confocal microscopy, we observed lysine 63 (K63)-linked ubiquitin chains decorating septin-cage-entrapped Shigella. Remarkably, septins and K63 chains are present in separate bacterial microdomains, indicating they are recruited separately during antibacterial autophagy. Cryo-SXT and live-cell imaging revealed an interaction between septins and LC3B-positive membranes during autophagy of Shigella. Together, these findings demonstrate how septin-caged Shigella are targeted for autophagy and provide fundamental insights into autophagy–cytoskeleton interactions.

Funder

Horizon 2020 Framework Programme

Marie Skłodowska-Curie

Swiss National Science Foundation

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

European Research Council

Wellcome Trust

Lister Institute of Preventive Medicine

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Cell Biology

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