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Leishmania major drives host phagocyte death and cell-to-cell transfer depending on intracellular pathogen proliferation rate.

Authors :
Baars I
Jaedtka M
Dewitz LA
Fu Y
Franz T
Mohr J
Gintschel P
Berlin H
Degen A
Freier S
Rygol S
Schraven B
Kahlfuß S
van Zandbergen G
Müller AJ
Source :
JCI insight [JCI Insight] 2023 Jul 24; Vol. 8 (14). Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Jul 24.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The virulence of intracellular pathogens relies largely on the ability to survive and replicate within phagocytes but also on release and transfer into new host cells. Such cell-to-cell transfer could represent a target for counteracting microbial pathogenesis. However, our understanding of the underlying cellular and molecular processes remains woefully insufficient. Using intravital 2-photon microscopy of caspase-3 activation in the Leishmania major-infected (L. major-infected) live skin, we showed increased apoptosis in cells infected by the parasite. Also, transfer of the parasite to new host cells occurred directly without a detectable extracellular state and was associated with concomitant uptake of cellular material from the original host cell. These in vivo findings were fully recapitulated in infections of isolated human phagocytes. Furthermore, we observed that high pathogen proliferation increased cell death in infected cells, and long-term residency within an infected host cell was only possible for slowly proliferating parasites. Our results therefore suggest that L. major drives its own dissemination to new phagocytes by inducing host cell death in a proliferation-dependent manner.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2379-3708
Volume :
8
Issue :
14
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
JCI insight
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37310793
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.169020