Wnt5a regulates autophagy in Bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG)-Infected pulmonary epithelial cells
Chen Q, Zheng X, Li Y, Ma B, Nie X, Li M, Liu Y, Xu J, et al. (9 authors)
Microbial pathogenesis · 2022-10
Abstract
Autophagy functions as a critical process that can suppress the proliferation of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) within infected host cells. Wnt5a is a secreted protein that plays a range of physiological functions, activating several signaling pathways and thereby controlling cellular responses to particular stimuli. The importance of Wnt5a as a regulator of protection against Mtb infection, however, has yet to be fully characterized. Here, changes in murine pulmonary epithelial-like TC-1 cell morphology, autophagy, the Wnt/Ca 2+ signaling pathway, and the mTOR autophagy pathway were analyzed following infection with the Mtb model pathogen Bacille Calmette-Guerin (BCG) in order to understand the regulatory role of Wnt5a in this context. These experiments revealed that Wnt5a was upregulated and autophagy was enhanced in TC-1 cells infected with BCG, and Wnt5a overexpression was found to drive BCG-induced autophagy in these cells upon infection, whereas the inhibition or knockdown of Wnt5a yielded the opposite effect. At the mechanistic level, Wnt5a was found to mediate non-canonical Wnt/Ca 2+ signaling and thereby inhibit mTOR-dependent pathway activation, promoting autophagic induction within BCG-infected TC-1 cells. These data offer new insight regarding how Wnt5a influences Mtb-induced autophagy within pulmonary epithelial cells, providing a foundation for further research exploring the immunological control of this infection through the modulation of autophagy.
MeSH terms
- Epithelial Cells
- Animals
- Mice
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Tuberculosis
- BCG Vaccine
- Autophagy
- TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases
- Wnt Signaling Pathway
- Wnt-5a Protein