Immunity
Volume 47, Issue 3, 19 September 2017, Pages 552-565.e4
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Article
Phenolic Glycolipid Facilitates Mycobacterial Escape from Microbicidal Tissue-Resident Macrophages

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.immuni.2017.08.003Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Microbicidal tissue-resident macrophages are first responders to mycobacteria

  • Mycobacterial phenolic glycolipid induces macrophage CCL2 through STING activation

  • CCL2 recruits mycobacterium-permissive monocytes to the tissue-resident macrophage

  • Mycobacteria transfer from tissue macrophage to monocyte through a cell fusion event

Summary

Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) enters the host in aerosol droplets deposited in lung alveoli, where the bacteria first encounter lung-resident alveolar macrophages. We studied the earliest mycobacterium-macrophage interactions in the optically transparent zebrafish. First-responding resident macrophages phagocytosed and eradicated infecting mycobacteria, suggesting that to establish a successful infection, mycobacteria must escape out of the initially infected resident macrophage into growth-permissive monocytes. We defined a critical role for mycobacterial membrane phenolic glycolipid (PGL) in engineering this transition. PGL activated the STING cytosolic sensing pathway in resident macrophages, inducing the production of the chemokine CCL2, which in turn recruited circulating CCR2+ monocytes toward infection. Transient fusion of infected macrophages with CCR2+ monocytes enabled bacterial transfer and subsequent dissemination, and interrupting this transfer so as to prolong mycobacterial sojourn in resident macrophages promoted clearing of infection. Human alveolar macrophages produced CCL2 in a PGL-dependent fashion following infection, arguing for the potential of PGL-blocking interventions or PGL-targeting vaccine strategies in the prevention of tuberculosis.

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