Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology
2. Program in Microbial Pathogenesis and Host Defense, University of California, San Francisco, California 94143
Abstract
ABSTRACT
After phagocytosis, the intracellular pathogen
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
arrests the progression of the nascent phagosome into a phagolysosome, allowing for replication in a compartment that resembles early endosomes. To better understand the molecular mechanisms that govern phagosome maturation arrest, we performed a visual screen on a set of
M. tuberculosis
mutants specifically attenuated for growth in mice to identify strains that failed to arrest phagosome maturation and trafficked to late phagosomal compartments. We identified 10 such mutants that could be partitioned into two classes based on the kinetics of trafficking. Importantly, four of these mutants harbor mutations in genes that encode components of the ESX-1 secretion system, a pathway critical for
M. tuberculosis
virulence. Although ESX-1 is required, the known ESX-1 secreted proteins are dispensable for phagosome maturation arrest, suggesting that a novel effector required for phagosome maturation arrest is secreted by ESX-1. Other mutants identified in this screen had mutations in genes involved in lipid synthesis and secretion and in molybdopterin biosynthesis, as well as in genes with unknown functions. Most of these trafficking mutants exhibited a corresponding growth defect during macrophage infection, but two mutants grew like wild-type
M. tuberculosis
during macrophage infection. Our results support the emerging consensus that multiple factors from
M. tuberculosis
, including the ESX-1 secretion system, are involved in modulating trafficking within the host.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
163 articles.
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