Cellular cholesterol licenses Legionella pneumophila intracellular replication in macrophages
December 6, 2022
Host membranes are inherently critical for niche homeostasis of vacuolar pathogens such as Legionella. One membrane component that is often subverted by vacuolar bacteria is cholesterol. We provide experimental evidence that cellular cholesterol promotes L. pneumophila replication within a membrane bound organelle in infected macrophages.
Maintaining phagosome integrity during fungal infection: do or die?
December 3, 2020
This article refers to the paper "Lysosome Fusion Maintains Phagosome Integrity during Fungal Infection" by Westman et al. (Cell Host Microbe, 2020), which shows that macrophages respond to pathogen growth by expanding the phagosome membrane through a calcium-dependent mechanism involving lysosome insertion, maintaining membrane integrity and preventing rupture.
Metabolic reprogramming of Salmonella infected macrophages and its modulation by iron availability and the mTOR pathway
November 14, 2019
This article shows that iron plays a critical role in both the immune response and metabolic reprogramming of macrophages during infection, influencing the TCA cycle and mTOR pathway, with implications for the growth of intracellular bacteria like Salmonella.
Imbalance in gut microbes from babies born to obese mothers increases gut permeability and myeloid cell adaptations that provoke obesity and NAFLD
December 19, 2018
This article comments on work published by Soderborg et al. (Nat Commun, 2018), which demonstrates a causative role of early life microbiome dysbiosis in infants born to mothers with obesity in novel pathways that promote developmental programming of NAFLD.
Insights into the host-pathogen interaction: C. albicans manipulation of macrophage pyroptosis
November 12, 2018
In this article, the authors comment on the study "High-Throughput Screening Identifies Genes Required for Candida albicans Induction of Macrophage Pyroptosis" by O’Meara et al. (MBio, 2018) that provides a comprehensive analysis of the genetic circuitry in both Candida albicans and host macrophages that leads to pyroptosis, revealing the impact of altered pyroptosis on infection, the role of pyroptosis in facilitating neutrophil accumulation at the site of C. albicans infection, and the decoupling of inflammasome priming and activation in the response to C. albicans infection, thus shedding new light on the factors governing the outcomes of this interaction.
Helicobacter hepaticus polysaccharide induces an anti-inflammatory response in intestinal macrophages
March 22, 2018
In this article, the authors comment on the study "A Large Polysaccharide Produced by Helicobacter hepaticus Induces an Anti-inflammatory Gene Signature in Macrophages. " by Danne et al, (Cell Host Microbe 2017), discussing the interactions between H. hepaticus and intestinal macrophages that promote mutualism.
The tug-of-war over MTOR in Legionella infections
January 30, 2017
This article comments on work published by Abshire et al (PLoS Pathog, 2016), which uncovered that the host metabolic checkpoint kinase Mechanistic target of rapamycin (MTOR) is a central regulator of the pathogen niche expansion program.
Intracellular phase for an extracellular bacterial pathogen: MgtC shows the way
August 13, 2015
This article discusses the article "A macrophage subversion factor is shared by intracellular and extracellular pathogens" by Belon et al. (PLoS Pathogens 11(6): e1004969, 2015).