PubMed 23280470
Referenced in: none
Automatically associated channels: ClIC3
Title: CRIg signals induce anti-intracellular bacterial phagosome activity in a chloride intracellular channel 3-dependent manner.
Authors: Kwang H Kim, Beom K Choi, Keoung M Song, Ki W Cha, Young H Kim, Ho Lee, In-Seob Han, Byoung S Kwon
Journal, date & volume: Eur. J. Immunol., 2013 Mar , 43, 667-78
PubMed link: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23280470
Abstract
Macrophages provide a first line of defense against bacterial infection by engulfing and killing invading bacteria, but intracellular bacteria such as Listeria monocytogenes (LM) can survive in macrophages by various mechanisms of evasion. Complement receptor of the immunoglobulin (CRIg), a C3b receptor, binds to C3b on opsonized bacteria and facilitates clearance of the bacteria by promoting their uptake. We found that CRIg signaling induced by agonistic anti-CRIg mAb enhanced the killing of intracellular LM by macrophages, and that this occurred in LM-containing phagosomes. Chloride intra-cellular channel 3 CLIC3, an intracellular chloride channel protein, was essential for CRIg-mediated LM killing by directly interacting with the cytoplasmic domain of CRIg, and the two proteins colocalized on the membranes of LM-containing vacuoles. CLIC3(-/-) mice were as susceptible to LM as CRIg(-/-) mice. These findings identify a mechanism embedded in the process by which macrophages take up opsonized bacteria that prevents the bacteria from evading cell-mediated killing.