Mycobacterium tuberculosis modulates phosphorylation of host ATP6V1E1 to promote intracellular survival.
Jianxia Chen, Fen Tang, Lianhua Qin, Weijun Fang, Liru Guan, Xiangyang Wu, Haohao Li, Yongjia Duan, et al. (23 authors)
Nature communications · 2026-02
Abstract
Intracellular pathogens such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) can promote their survival within infected cells by preventing lysosomal acidification. Here, we report that Mtb secretes a protein (Rv1184, or acyltransferase Chp2) that inhibits lysosomal acidification by targeting the host vacuolar ATPase (V-ATPase). We show that phosphorylation of the V-ATPase E1 subunit (ATP6V1E1) at Tyr56/57 suppresses lysosomal acidification through inhibition of V-ATPase assembly. Further investigation reveals that tyrosine kinase BMX promotes phosphorylation of ATP6V1E1. Strikingly, Chp2 increases BMX-dependent phosphorylation of ATP6V1E1, apparently by directly binding ATP6V1E1 and facilitating its interaction with BMX. Furthermore, inhibition of BMX impairs Mtb growth within macrophages and in mice. Thus, our work reveals a mechanism for the regulation of lysosomal acidification and suggests lysosomal acidification modulation as a potential approach for host-directed therapy against Mtb.
MeSH terms
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Phosphorylation
- Animals
- Vacuolar Proton-Translocating ATPases
- Lysosomes
- Mice
- Macrophages
- Humans
- Bacterial Proteins
- Acyltransferases
- Tuberculosis
- Host-Pathogen Interactions
- Mice, Inbred C57BL
- Female
- Hydrogen-Ion Concentration