4.4 Article

Differential Requirement for IRGM Proteins during Tuberculosis Infection in Mice

Journal

INFECTION AND IMMUNITY
Volume 91, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/iai.00510-22

Keywords

IRGM; host genetics; inflammation; tuberculosis

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This study investigates the role of immunity-related GTPase M (IRGM) proteins in Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) infection. The results show that Irgm1 gene plays a critical role in host protection against Mtb infection in mice, and Irgm2 and Irgm3 genes are functionally related to Irgm1. Additionally, the deletion of Irgm3 gene restores protective immunity in Irgm1-deficient mice infected with Mtb.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) is a bacterium that exclusively resides in human hosts and remains a dominant cause of morbidity and mortality among infectious diseases worldwide. Host protection against Mtb infection is dependent on the function of immunity-related GTPase clade M (IRGM) proteins. Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) is a bacterium that exclusively resides in human hosts and remains a dominant cause of morbidity and mortality among infectious diseases worldwide. Host protection against Mtb infection is dependent on the function of immunity-related GTPase clade M (IRGM) proteins. Polymorphisms in human IRGM associate with altered susceptibility to mycobacterial disease, and human IRGM promotes the delivery of Mtb into degradative autolysosomes. Among the three murine IRGM orthologs, Irgm1 has been singled out as essential for host protection during Mtb infections in cultured macrophages and in vivo. However, whether the paralogous murine Irgm genes, Irgm2 and Irgm3, play roles in host defense against Mtb or exhibit functional relationships with Irgm1 during Mtb infection remains undetermined. Here, we report that Irgm1(-/-) mice are indeed acutely susceptible to aerosol infection with Mtb, yet the additional deletion of the paralogous Irgm3 gene restores protective immunity to Mtb infections in Irgm1-deficient animals. Mice lacking all three Irgm genes (panIrgm(-/-)) are characterized by shifted lung cytokine profiles at 5 and 24 weeks postinfection, but control disease until the very late stages of the infection, when panIrgm(-/-) mice display increased mortality compared to wild-type mice. Collectively, our data demonstrate that disruptions in the balance between Irgm isoforms is more detrimental to the Mtb-infected host than total loss of Irgm-mediated host defense, a concept that also needs to be considered in the context of human Mtb susceptibility linked to IRGM polymorphisms.

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