The multi-step mechanism and biological role of noncanonical autophagy targeting Streptococcus pneumoniae during the early stages of infection.

2020 
Multiple autophagic processes are triggered in response to bacterial infection as the host attempts to eliminate intracellular invaders. However, it is still unclear how the mechanisms contributing to canonical macroautophagy/autophagy, including xenophagy, coordinate with the more recently described features that are characteristic of noncanonical autophagy. Recently, we revealed that infection with Streptococcus pneumoniae can trigger the formation of RB1CC1/FIP200-independent LC3-associated phagosome-like vacuoles (PcLVs) that contain the pneumococci at an early stage of infection. We also found that interactions of SQSTM1/p62 with the ATG16L1 WD domain are essential for PcLV formation. Intriguingly, PcLVs were required for the subsequent generation of bactericidal autophagic vacuoles (PcAVs). Furthermore, we also identified LC3-delocalized SQSTM1-positive PcLVs as intracellular intermediates that link PcLVs and PcAVs. These findings reveal a novel multi-step mechanism that contributes to xenophagy of the critical S. pneumoniae respiratory pathogen.
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