Reduction of host cell mitochondrial activity as Mycobacterium leprae's strategy to evade host innate immunity

Oliveira, Marcus Fernandes; Medeiros, Rychelle Clayde Affonso; Mietto, Bruno Siqueira; Calvo, Thyago Leal; Mendonca, Ana Paula Miranda; Rosa, Thabatta Leal Silveira Andrezo; Silva, Debora Santos da; Vasconcelos, Karina Girardi do Carmo de; Pereira, Antonio Marcos Rodrigues; de Macedo, Cristiana Santos; Pereira, Geraldo Moura Batista; Moreira, Marcia de Berredo Pinho; Pessolani, Maria Cristina Vidal; Moraes, Milton Ozorio; Alves Lara, Flavio

Abstract

Leprosy is a much-feared incapacitating infectious disease caused by Mycobacterium leprae or M lepromatosis, annually affecting roughly 200,000 people worldwide. During host-pathogen interaction, M leprae subverts the immune response, leading to development of disease. Throughout the last few decades, the impact of energy metabolism on the control of intracellular pathogens and leukocytic differentiation has become more evident. Mitochondria play a key role in regulating newly-discovered immune signaling pathways by controlling redox metabolism and the flow of energy besides activating inflammasome, xenophagy, and apoptosis. Likewise, this organelle, whose origin is probably an alphaproteobacterium, directly controls the intracellular pathogens attempting to invade its niche, a feature conquered at the expense of billions of years of coevolution. In the present review, we discuss the role of reduced host cell mitochondrial activity during M leprae infection and the consequential fates of M leprae and host innate immunity. Conceivably, inhibition of mitochondrial energy metabolism emerges as an overlooked and novel mechanism developed by M leprae to evade xenophagy and the host immune response.

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Título según WOS: ID WOS:000645065900001 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: IMMUNOLOGICAL REVIEWS
Volumen: 301
Número: 1
Editorial: Wiley
Fecha de publicación: 2021
Página de inicio: 193
Página final: 208
DOI:

10.1111/imr.12962

Notas: ISI