Modulation of Endocytosis in Nuclear Factor IL-6(−/−) Macrophages Is Responsible for a High Susceptibility to Intracellular Bacterial Infection — Javier Pizarro‐Cerdá (1999) | RDL Network
Modulation of Endocytosis in Nuclear Factor IL-6(−/−) Macrophages Is Responsible for a High Susceptibility to Intracellular Bacterial Infection
The Journal of Immunology 162(6): 3519-3526
Article 1999 English
Authors
JP
Javier Pizarro‐Cerdá
MD
Michel Desjardins
EM
Edgardo Moreno
Abstract
1 min read
Activated macrophages kill bacteria, a function known to depend on the expression of NF-IL-6. Here, it is demonstrated that the attenuated Brucella abortus vaccine strain 19 replicates much better in NF-IL-6-/- than in NF-IL-6(+/+) and NF-IL-6(+/+)-activated murine macrophages and at levels comparable to those observed in normal macrophages infected with the pathogenic strain 2308. The role of NF-IL-6 in the inhibition of intracellular bacterial replication is related to its control of endocytosis and membrane fusion between endosomes and Brucella-containing phagosomes. Addition of the granulocyte-CSF (G-CSF), whose induction is impaired in NF-IL-6(-/-) macrophages, restores both endocytosis and the morphology of endosomes, together with bactericidal activity. Regulation of membrane traffic in endocytosis by G-CSF whose expression is controlled by NF-IL-6 may explain how a host cell can control intracellular bacterial replication.
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