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How M. tuberculosis alters host cell death mechanisms to facilitate infection

Bacterial effector reprograming host cell death modalities identified to facilitate infection
Proposed model showing the mechanism by which Mtb Mce3C hijacks CTSB to remodel host cell death programs. Credit: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2025). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2406715122

Mammalian hosts coordinate various cell death pathways as part of the immune defense system against pathogens including Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), which causes tuberculosis featuring lung inflammation and necrosis.

However, how Mtb manipulates host molecular switches of cell death pathways to reprogram cell death modalities and drive tuberculosis pathogenesis remains poorly understood.

In a study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Prof. Liu Cuihua's group at the Institute of Microbiology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences revealed a pathogenic mechanism by which Mtb manipulates host lysosomal protease activity-dependent plasticity between cell death pathways to promote its infection.

Researchers identified a Mtb effector protein, mammalian cell entry 3C (Mce3C), which promotes host cell necroptosis while inhibiting apoptosis.

Mechanistically, Mtb Mce3C can bind host cathepsin B (CTSB), a lysosome-derived non-caspase protease that determines cell modalities. This binding inhibits CTSB's protease activity towards BH3-interacting domain death agonist (BID) and receptor-interacting protein kinase 1 (RIPK1). Consequently, the production of pro-apoptotic truncated BID (tBID) is suppressed while the abundance of pro-necroptotic RIPK1 is maintained simultaneously.

Using mouse infection models, researchers demonstrated that disrupting the Mce3C-CTSB interface promotes host apoptosis while suppressing necroptosis, leading to attenuated Mtb survival and mitigated lung immunopathology.

This study identifies the key pathogenic effector protein that regulates the crosstalk between modalities during Mtb infection and provides a potential anti-tuberculosis strategy by targeting the Mce3C-CTSB interface to reduce the pathogenicity of Mtb.

More information: Zhe Lu et al, A bacterial effector manipulates host lysosomal protease activity–dependent plasticity in cell death modalities to facilitate infection, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2025).

Citation: How M. tuberculosis alters host cell death mechanisms to facilitate infection (2025, February 19) retrieved 15 June 2025 from /news/2025-02-tuberculosis-host-cell-death-mechanisms.html
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