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1.
Methods Mol Biol ; 2814: 45-53, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38954196

RESUMO

Eukaryotic cells have been constantly challenged throughout their evolution by pathogens, mechanical stresses, or toxic compounds that induce plasma membrane (PM) or endolysosomal membrane damage. The survival of the wounded cells depends on damage detection and repair machineries that are evolutionary conserved between protozoan, plants, and animals. We use the social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum as a model system to study bacteria, mechanical or sterile membrane damage that allows us to identify and monitor factors involved in PM, endolysosomal damage response (ELDR), and endolysosomal homeostasis. Importantly, the sterile damage techniques presented here homogenously affect cell populations, which allows to phenotype mutant strains and quantify various aspects of cell fitness using live cell microscopy. This is instrumental to functionally assess genes involved in the repair of damaged plasma membrane or intracellular compartments and the degradation of extensively damaged compartments. Here, we describe how to inflict sterile PM or endolysosomal membrane damage, how to monitor the cell-intrinsic response to damage, and how to proxy proton leakage from damaged acidic compartments and quantify cell viability.


Assuntos
Membrana Celular , Dictyostelium , Lisossomos , Dictyostelium/genética , Dictyostelium/metabolismo , Membrana Celular/metabolismo , Lisossomos/metabolismo , Sobrevivência Celular
2.
Elife ; 122023 04 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37070811

RESUMO

Cells are perpetually challenged by pathogens, protein aggregates or chemicals, that induce plasma membrane or endolysosomal compartments damage. This severe stress is recognised and controlled by the endosomal sorting complex required for transport (ESCRT) and the autophagy machineries, which are recruited to damaged membranes to either repair or to remove membrane remnants. Yet, insight is limited about how damage is sensed and which effectors lead to extensive tagging of the damaged organelles with signals, such as K63-polyubiquitin, required for the recruitment of membrane repair or removal machineries. To explore the key factors responsible for detection and marking of damaged compartments, we use the professional phagocyte Dictyostelium discoideum. We found an evolutionary conserved E3-ligase, TrafE, that is robustly recruited to intracellular compartments disrupted after infection with Mycobacterium marinum or after sterile damage caused by chemical compounds. TrafE acts at the intersection of ESCRT and autophagy pathways and plays a key role in functional recruitment of the ESCRT subunits ALIX, Vps32 and Vps4 to damage sites. Importantly, we show that the absence of TrafE severely compromises the xenophagy restriction of mycobacteria as well as ESCRT-mediated and autophagy-mediated endolysosomal membrane damage repair, resulting in early cell death.


Assuntos
Dictyostelium , Mycobacterium marinum , Mycobacterium marinum/metabolismo , Complexos Endossomais de Distribuição Requeridos para Transporte/metabolismo , Dictyostelium/metabolismo , Endossomos/metabolismo , Autofagia/fisiologia
3.
Front Immunol ; 8: 1906, 2017.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29354124

RESUMO

The soil-dwelling social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum feeds on bacteria. Each meal is a potential infection because some bacteria have evolved mechanisms to resist predation. To survive such a hostile environment, D. discoideum has in turn evolved efficient antimicrobial responses that are intertwined with phagocytosis and autophagy, its nutrient acquisition pathways. The core machinery and antimicrobial functions of these pathways are conserved in the mononuclear phagocytes of mammals, which mediate the initial, innate-immune response to infection. In this review, we discuss the advantages and relevance of D. discoideum as a model phagocyte to study cell-autonomous defenses. We cover the antimicrobial functions of phagocytosis and autophagy and describe the processes that create a microbicidal phagosome: acidification and delivery of lytic enzymes, generation of reactive oxygen species, and the regulation of Zn2+, Cu2+, and Fe2+ availability. High concentrations of metals poison microbes while metal sequestration inhibits their metabolic activity. We also describe microbial interference with these defenses and highlight observations made first in D. discoideum. Finally, we discuss galectins, TNF receptor-associated factors, tripartite motif-containing proteins, and signal transducers and activators of transcription, microbial restriction factors initially characterized in mammalian phagocytes that have either homologs or functional analogs in D. discoideum.

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