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Mycobacterium tuberculosis Binds Human Serum Amyloid A, and the Interaction Modulates the Colonization of Human Macrophages and the Transcriptional Response of the Pathogen.


ABSTRACT: As a very successful pathogen with outstanding adaptive properties, Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) has developed a plethora of sophisticated mechanisms to subvert host defenses and effectively enter and replicate in the harmful environment inside professional phagocytes, namely, macrophages. Here, we demonstrated the binding interaction of Mtb with a major human acute phase protein, namely, serum amyloid A (SAA1), and identified AtpA (Rv1308), ABC (Rv2477c), EspB (Rv3881c), TB 18.6 (Rv2140c), and ThiC (Rv0423c) membrane proteins as mycobacterial effectors responsible for the pathogen-host protein interplay. SAA1-opsonization of Mtb prior to the infection of human macrophages favored bacterial entry into target phagocytes accompanied by a substantial increase in the load of intracellularly multiplying and surviving bacteria. Furthermore, binding of human SAA1 by Mtb resulted in the up- or downregulation of the transcriptional response of tubercle bacilli. The most substantial changes were related to the increased expression level of the genes of two operons encoding mycobacterial transporter systems, namely, mmpL5/mmpS5 (rv0676c), and rv1217c, rv1218c. Therefore, we postulate that during infection, Mtb-SAA1 binding promotes the infection of host macrophages by tubercle bacilli and modulates the functional response of the pathogen.

SUBMITTER: Kawka M 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC8160739 | biostudies-literature | 2021 May

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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<i>Mycobacterium tuberculosis</i> Binds Human Serum Amyloid A, and the Interaction Modulates the Colonization of Human Macrophages and the Transcriptional Response of the Pathogen.

Kawka Malwina M   Brzostek Anna A   Dzitko Katarzyna K   Kryczka Jakub J   Bednarek Radosław R   Płocińska Renata R   Płociński Przemysław P   Strapagiel Dominik D   Gatkowska Justyna J   Dziadek Jarosław J   Dziadek Bożena B  

Cells 20210520 5


As a very successful pathogen with outstanding adaptive properties, <i>Mycobacterium tuberculosis</i> (<i>Mtb</i>) has developed a plethora of sophisticated mechanisms to subvert host defenses and effectively enter and replicate in the harmful environment inside professional phagocytes, namely, macrophages. Here, we demonstrated the binding interaction of <i>Mtb</i> with a major human acute phase protein, namely, serum amyloid A (SAA1), and identified AtpA (Rv1308), ABC (Rv2477c), EspB (Rv3881c)  ...[more]

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