PLoS Pathogens (Mar 2020)

Interferon inducible GBPs restrict Burkholderia thailandensis motility induced cell-cell fusion.

  • David E Place,
  • Benoit Briard,
  • Parimal Samir,
  • Rajendra Karki,
  • Anannya Bhattacharya,
  • Clifford S Guy,
  • Jennifer L Peters,
  • Sharon Frase,
  • Peter Vogel,
  • Geoffrey Neale,
  • Masahiro Yamamoto,
  • Thirumala-Devi Kanneganti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1008364
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 3
p. e1008364

Abstract

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Innate immunity responds to pathogens by producing alarm signals and activating pathways that make host cells inhospitable for pathogen replication. The intracellular bacterium Burkholderia thailandensis invades the cytosol, hijacks host actin, and induces cell fusion to spread to adjacent cells, forming multinucleated giant cells (MNGCs) which promote bacterial replication. We show that type I interferon (IFN) restricts macrophage MNGC formation during B. thailandensis infection. Guanylate-binding proteins (GBPs) expressed downstream of type I IFN were required to restrict MNGC formation through inhibition of bacterial Arp2/3-dependent actin motility during infection. GTPase activity and the CAAX prenylation domain were required for GBP2 recruitment to B. thailandensis, which restricted bacterial actin polymerization required for MNGC formation. Consistent with the effects in in vitro macrophages, Gbp2-/-, Gbp5-/-, GbpChr3-KO mice were more susceptible to intranasal infection with B. thailandensis than wildtype mice. Our findings reveal that IFN and GBPs play a critical role in restricting cell-cell fusion and bacteria-induced pathology during infection.