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When mitophagy dictates the outcome of cellular infection: the case of Brucella abortus

Journal

AUTOPHAGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15548627.2023.2246354

Keywords

BNIP3L; Brucella; HIF1A; intracellular trafficking; iron; mitophagy

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Mitochondria play a crucial role in various cellular functions and are targeted by invading pathogens to complete their infectious cycle by modulating mitochondrial metabolism and dynamics.
Mitochondria are at the basis of various cellular functions ranging from metabolism and redox homeostasis to inflammation and cell death regulation. Mitochondria therefore constitute an attractive target for invading pathogens to fulfil their infectious cycle. This involves the modulation to their advantage of mitochondrial metabolism and dynamics, including the controlled degradation of mitochondria through mitophagy. Mitophagy might for instance be beneficial for bacterial survival as it can clear bactericidal mitochondrial ROS produced by damaged organelle fragments from the intracellular niche. In the case of the bacterial pathogen Brucella abortus, mitophagy induction has another role in the intracellular lifecycle of the bacteria. Indeed, in our study, we showed that B. abortus triggers an iron-dependent BNIP3L-mediated mitophagy response required for proper bacterial egress and infection of neighboring cells. These results highlight the diversity of mitophagy processes that might be crucial for several stages of cellular infection.

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