The fat is in the lysosome: how Mycobacterium tuberculosis tricks macrophages into storing lipids
Yoann Rombouts, Olivier Neyrolles
Journal of Clinical Investigation · 2023-03
Abstract
Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative agent of tuberculosis (TB), infects primarily macrophages, causing them to differentiate into lipid-laden foamy macrophages that are a primary source of tissue destruction in patients with TB. In this issue of the JCI, Bedard et al. demonstrate that 1-tuberculosinyladenosine, a virulence factor produced by M. tuberculosis, caused lysosomal dysfunction associated with lipid storage in the phagolysosome of macrophages in a manner that mimicked lysosomal storage diseases. This work sheds light on how M. tuberculosis manipulates host lipid metabolism for its survival and opens avenues toward host-directed therapy against TB.
MeSH terms
- Phagolysosome
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Tuberculosis
- Macrophage
- Virulence
- Microbiology
- Lipid metabolism
- Lysosome
- Mycobacterium
- Immunology
- Virulence factor
- Phagosome
- Phagocytosis
- Biology
- Medicine