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Apoptotic signaling clears engineered Salmonella in an organ-specific manner.

Authors :
Abele, Taylor J.
Billman, Zachary P.
Lupeng Li
Harvest, Carissa K.
Bryan, Alexia K.
Magalski, Gabrielle R.
Lopez, Joseph P.
Larson, Heather N.
Xiao-Ming Yin
Miao, Edward A.
Source :
eLife. 12/6/2023, p1-27. 27p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Pyroptosis and apoptosis are two forms of regulated cell death that can defend against intracellular infection. When a cell fails to complete pyroptosis, backup pathways will initiate apoptosis. Here, we investigated the utility of apoptosis compared to pyroptosis in defense against an intracellular bacterial infection. We previously engineered Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium to persistently express flagellin, and thereby activate NLRC4 during systemic infection in mice. The resulting pyroptosis clears this flagellin-engineered strain. We now show that infection of caspase-1 or gasdermin D deficient macrophages by this flagellin-engineered S. Typhimurium induces apoptosis in vitro. Additionally, we engineered S. Typhimurium to translocate the pro-apoptotic BH3 domain of BID, which also triggers apoptosis in macrophages in vitro. During mouse infection, the apoptotic pathway successfully cleared these engineered S. Typhimurium from the intestinal niche but failed to clear the bacteria from the myeloid niche in the spleen or lymph nodes. In contrast, the pyroptotic pathway was beneficial in defense of both niches. To clear an infection, cells may have specific tasks that they must complete before they die; different modes of cell death could initiate these 'bucket lists' in either convergent or divergent ways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2050084X
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
eLife
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
174192244
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.89210