Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-0620
2. Institut Medizinische Mikrobiologie und Hygiene, Medical Faculty TU Dresden, D-01307 Dresden, Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
When cultured in broth to the transmissive phase,
Legionella pneumophila
infects macrophages by inhibiting phagosome maturation, whereas replicative-phase cells are transported to the lysosomes. Here we report that the ability of
L. pneumophila
to inhibit phagosome-lysosome fusion correlated with developmentally regulated modifications of the pathogen's surface, as judged by its lipopolysaccharide profile and by its binding to a sialic acid-specific lectin and to the hydrocarbon hexadecane. Likewise, the composition of membrane vesicles shed by
L. pneumophila
was developmentally regulated, based on binding to the lectin and to the lipopolysaccharide-specific monoclonal antibody 3/1. Membrane vesicles were sufficient to inhibit phagosome-lysosome fusion by a mechanism independent of type IV secretion, since only ∼25% of beads suspended with or coated by vesicles from transmissive phase wild type or
dotA
secretion mutants colocalized with lysosomal probes, whereas ∼75% of beads were lysosomal when untreated or presented with vesicles from the
L. pneumophila letA
regulatory mutant or
E. coli
. As observed previously for
L. pneumophila
infection of mouse macrophages, vesicles inhibited phagosome-lysosome fusion only temporarily; by 10 h after treatment with vesicles, macrophages delivered ∼72% of ingested beads to lysosomes. Accordingly, in the context of the epidemiology of the pneumonia Legionnaires' disease and virulence mechanisms of
Leishmania
and
Mycobacteria
, we discuss a model here in which
L. pneumophila
developmentally regulates its surface composition and releases vesicles into phagosomes that inhibit their fusion with lysosomes.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
100 articles.
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