An Arginine Deprivation Response Pathway Is Induced in Leishmania during Macrophage Invasion
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BORIS DOI
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
27043018
Description
Amino acid sensing is an intracellular function that supports nutrient homeostasis, largely through controlled release of amino acids from lysosomal pools. The intracellular pathogen Leishmania resides and proliferates within human macrophage phagolysosomes. Here we describe a new pathway in Leishmania that specifically senses the extracellular levels of arginine, an amino acid that is essential for the parasite. During infection, the macrophage arginine pool is depleted due to its use to produce metabolites (NO and polyamines) that constitute part of the host defense response and its suppression, respectively. We found that parasites respond to this shortage of arginine by up-regulating expression and activity of the Leishmania arginine transporter (LdAAP3), as well as several other transporters. Our analysis indicates the parasite monitors arginine levels in the environment rather than the intracellular pools. Phosphoproteomics and genetic analysis indicates that the arginine-deprivation response is mediated through a mitogen-activated protein kinase-2-dependent signaling cascade.
Date of Publication
2016-04-04
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Goldman-Pinkovich, Adele | |
Balno, Caitlin | |
Strasser, Rona | |
Zeituni-Molad, Michal | |
Bendelak, Keren | |
Ephros, Moshe | |
Wiese, Martin | |
Jardim, Armando | |
Myler, Peter J. | |
Zilberstein, Dan |
Additional Credits
Series
PLoS pathogens
Publisher
Public Library of Science
ISSN
1553-7366
Access(Rights)
open.access