Identification of Autophagy-Inhibiting Factors of Mycobacterium tuberculosis by High-Throughput Loss-of-Function Screening
Emily Strong, Kristen L. Jurcic Smith, Neeraj K. Saini, Tony W. Ng, Steven A. Porcelli, Sunhee Lee
Infection and Immunity · 2020-10
Abstract
The interaction of host cells with mycobacteria is complex and can lead to multiple outcomes ranging from bacterial clearance to progressive or latent infection. Autophagy is recognized as one component of host cell responses that has an essential role in innate and adaptive immunity to intracellular bacteria. Many microbes, including Mycobacterium tuberculosis , have evolved to evade or exploit autophagy, but the precise mechanisms and virulence factors are mostly unknown. Through a loss-of-function screening of an M. tuberculosis transposon mutant library, we identified 16 genes that contribute to autophagy inhibition, six of which encoded the PE/PPE protein family.
MeSH terms
- Autophagy
- Biology
- Intracellular parasite
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Mycobacterium smegmatis
- Tuberculosis
- Microbiology
- Intracellular
- Innate immune system
- Phagosome
- Tumor necrosis factor alpha
- Virulence
- PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway
- Cell biology