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© 2017 Public Library of Science. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited: Silva BJdA, Barbosa MGdM, Andrade PR, Ferreira H, Nery JAdC, Côrte-Real S, et al. (2017) Autophagy Is an Innate Mechanism Associated with Leprosy Polarization. PLoS Pathog 13(1): e1006103. doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1006103

Abstract

Leprosy is a chronic infectious disease that may present different clinical forms according to the immune response of the host. Levels of IFN-[gamma] are significantly raised in paucibacillary tuberculoid (T-lep) when compared with multibacillary lepromatous (L-lep) patients. IFN-[gamma] primes macrophages for inflammatory activation and induces the autophagy antimicrobial mechanism. The involvement of autophagy in the immune response against Mycobacterium leprae remains unexplored. Here, we demonstrated by different autophagic assays that LC3-positive autophagosomes were predominantly observed in T-lep when compared with L-lep lesions and skin-derived macrophages. Accumulation of the autophagic receptors SQSTM1/p62 and NBR1, expression of lysosomal antimicrobial peptides and colocalization analysis of autolysosomes revealed an impairment of the autophagic flux in L-lep cells, which was restored by IFN-[gamma] or rapamycin treatment. Autophagy PCR array gene-expression analysis revealed a significantly upregulation of autophagy genes (BECN1, GPSM3, ATG14, APOL1, and TPR) in T-lep cells. Furthermore, an upregulation of autophagy genes (TPR, GFI1B and GNAI3) as well as LC3 levels was observed in cells of L-lep patients that developed type 1 reaction (T1R) episodes, an acute inflammatory condition associated with increased IFN-[gamma] levels. Finally, we observed increased BCL2 expression in L-lep cells that could be responsible for the blockage of BECN1-mediated autophagy. In addition, in vitro studies demonstrated that dead, but not live M. leprae can induce autophagy in primary and lineage human monocytes, and that live mycobacteria can reduce the autophagy activation triggered by dead mycobacteria, suggesting that M. leprae may hamper the autophagic machinery as an immune escape mechanism. Together, these results indicate that autophagy is an important innate mechanism associated with the M. leprae control in skin macrophages.

Details

Title
Autophagy Is an Innate Mechanism Associated with Leprosy Polarization
Author
Silva, Jorge deAndrade; Barbosa, Garcia deMattos; Andrade, Priscila Ribeiro; Ferreira, Helen; Nery, Augusto daCosta; Côrte-Real, Suzana; Silva, Marcelo Sperandioda; Rosa, Patricia Sammarco; Fabri, Mario; Sarno, Euzenir Nunes; Pinheiro, Roberta Olmo
Section
Research Article
Publication year
2017
Publication date
Jan 2017
Publisher
Public Library of Science
ISSN
15537366
e-ISSN
15537374
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1869528315
Copyright
© 2017 Public Library of Science. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited: Silva BJdA, Barbosa MGdM, Andrade PR, Ferreira H, Nery JAdC, Côrte-Real S, et al. (2017) Autophagy Is an Innate Mechanism Associated with Leprosy Polarization. PLoS Pathog 13(1): e1006103. doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1006103