is an obligate intracellular bacterium that infects mononuclear and endothelial cells to cause the emerging global health threat scrub typhus. The ability of to survive in monocytes facilitates bacterial dissemination to endothelial cells, which can subsequently lead to several potentially fatal sequelae. As a strict intracellular pathogen that lives in the cytoplasm of host cells, has evolved to counter adaptive immunity. How the pathogen does so and the outcome of this strategy in monocytes versus endothelial cells are poorly understood. This report demonstrates that reduces cellular levels of NOD-, LRR-, and CARD-containing 5 (NLRC5), a recently identified specific transactivator of major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) component gene expression, to inhibit MHC-I biosynthesis. Importantly, the efficacy of this approach varies with the host cell type infected. In nonprofessional antigen-presenting HeLa and primary human aortic endothelial cells, the -mediated reduction of NLRC5 results in lowered MHC-I component transcription and, consequently, lower total and/or surface MHC-I levels throughout 72 h of infection. However, in infected THP-1 monocytes, which are professional antigen-presenting cells, the reductions in NLRC5 and MHC-I observed during the first 24 h reverse thereafter. is the first example of a microbe that targets NLRC5 to modulate the MHC-I pathway. The differential ability of to modulate this pathway in nonprofessional versus professional antigen-presenting cells could influence morbidity and mortality from scrub typhus.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6386551 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/IAI.00876-18 | DOI Listing |
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