An Interplay Between Autophagy and Immunometabolism for Host Defense Against Mycobacterial Infection
Seungwha Paik, Eun‐Kyeong Jo
Frontiers in Immunology · 2020-11
Abstract
(Mtb), the pathogen that causes tuberculosis. Mtb can evade the autophagic defense and drive immunometabolic remodeling of host phagocytes. Co-regulation of the autophagic and metabolic pathways may play a pivotal role in shaping the innate immune defense and inflammation during Mtb infection. Two principal metabolic sensors, AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) and mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) kinase, function together to control the autophagy and immunometabolism that coordinate the anti-mycobacterial immune defense. Here, we discuss our current understanding of the interplay between autophagy and immunometabolism in terms of combating intracellular Mtb, and how AMPK-mTOR signaling regulates antibacterial autophagy in terms of Mtb infection. We describe several autophagy-targeting agents that promote host antimicrobial defenses by regulating the AMPK-mTOR axis. A better understanding of the crosstalk between immunometabolism and autophagy, both of which are involved in host defense, is crucial for the development of innovative targeted therapies for tuberculosis.
MeSH terms
- Autophagy
- PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway
- Biology
- Crosstalk
- AMPK
- Cell biology
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Intracellular parasite
- Immune system
- Innate immune system
- Mechanistic target of rapamycin
- Kinase
- Signal transduction
- Microbiology
- Intracellular
- Protein kinase A