Bacterial inhibition of Fas-mediated killing promotes neuroinvasion and persistence

Archive ouverte

Maudet, Claire | Kheloufi, Marouane | Levallois, Sylvain | Gaillard, Julien | Huang, Lei | Gaultier, Charlotte | Tsai, Yu-Huan | Disson, Olivier | Lecuit, Marc

Edité par CCSD ; Nature Publishing Group -

International audience. Infections of the central nervous system are among the most serious infections1,2, but the mechanisms by which pathogens access the brain remain poorly understood. The model microorganism Listeria monocytogenes (Lm) is a major foodborne pathogen that causes neurolisteriosis, one of the deadliest infections of the central nervous system3,4. Although immunosuppression is a well-established host risk factor for neurolisteriosis3,5, little is known about the bacterial factors that underlie the neuroinvasion of Lm. Here we develop a clinically relevant experimental model of neurolisteriosis, using hypervirulent neuroinvasive strains6 inoculated in a humanized mouse model of infection7, and we show that the bacterial surface protein InlB protects infected monocytes from Fas-mediated cell death by CD8+ T cells in a manner that depends on c-Met, PI3 kinase and FLIP. This blockade of specific anti-Lm cellular immune killing lengthens the lifespan of infected monocytes, and thereby favours the transfer of Lm from infected monocytes to the brain. The intracellular niche that is created by InlB-mediated cell-autonomous immune resistance also promotes Lm faecal shedding, which accounts for the selection of InlB as a core virulence gene of Lm. We have uncovered a specific mechanism by which a bacterial pathogen confers an increased lifespan to the cells it infects by rendering them resistant to cell-mediated immunity. This promotes the persistence of Lm within the host, its dissemination to the central nervous system and its transmission.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Bacterial inhibition of CD8 + T-cells mediated cell death promotes neuroinvasion and within-host persistence

Archive ouverte | Maudet, Claire | CCSD

Posté sur BioRxiv le 20 novembre 2020. Abstract Central nervous system infections are amongst the most severe 1,2 , yet the mechanisms by which pathogens access the brain remain poorly understood. The model microorg...

Differential stress responsiveness determines intraspecies virulence heterogeneity and host adaptation in Listeria monocytogenes

Archive ouverte | Hafner, Lukas | CCSD

International audience. Microbial pathogenesis is mediated by the expression of virulence genes. However, as microbes with identical virulence gene content can differ in their pathogenic potential, other virulence d...

Uncovering Listeria monocytogenes hypervirulence by harnessing its biodiversity

Archive ouverte | Maury, Mylène, M | CCSD

Corrigendum: Uncovering Listeria monocytogenes hypervirulence by harnessing its biodiversity. [Nat Genet. 2017]Erratum: Uncovering Listeria monocytogenes hypervirulence by harnessing its biodiversity. [Nat Genet. 2017]Comment in ...

Chargement des enrichissements...