4.8 Article

Listeria monocytogenes exploits efferocytosis to promote cell-to-cell spread

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NATURE
卷 509, 期 7499, 页码 230-+

出版社

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature13168

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资金

  1. Canadian Foundation for Innovation
  2. Ontario Innovation Trust
  3. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  4. Canadian Association of Gastroenterology
  5. Crohn's and Colitis Foundation of Canada
  6. Research Training Committee at the Hospital for Sick Children
  7. Arthritis Society of Canada [RG11/013]
  8. US Public Health Service grant from the National Institutes of Health [AI053669]

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Efferocytosis, the process by which dying or dead cells are removed by phagocytosis, has an important role in development, tissue homeostasis and innate immunity(1). Efferocytosis is mediated, in part, by receptors that bind to exofacial phosphatidylserine (PS) on cells or cellular debris after loss of plasma membrane asymmetry. Here we show that a bacterial pathogen, Listeria monocytogenes, can exploit efferocytosis to promote cell-to-cell spread during infection. These bacteria can escape the phagosome in host cells by using the poreforming toxin listeriolysin O (LLO) and two phospholipase C enzymes(2). Expression of the cell surface protein ActA allows L. monocytogenes to activate host actin regulatory factors and undergo actin-based motility in the cytosol, eventually leading to formation of actin-rich protrusions at the cell surface. Here we show that protrusion formation is associated with plasma membrane damage due to LLO's poreforming activity. LLO also promotes the release of bacteria-containing protrusions from the host cell, generating membrane-derived vesicles with exofacial PS. The PS-binding receptor TIM-4 (encoded by the Timd4 gene) contributes to efficient cell-to-cell spread by L. monocytogenes in macrophages in vitro and growth of these bacteria is impaired in Timd4(-/-) mice. Thus, L. monocytogenes promotes its dissemination in a host by exploiting efferocytosis. Our results indicate that PS-targeted therapeutics may be useful in the fight against infections by L. monocytogenes and other bacteria that use similar strategies of cell-to-cell spread during infection.

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