Abstract

Most disease causing mycobacteria are intramacrophage pathogens which replicate within nonacidified phagosomes that can interact with the early endosomal network but fail to mature to a phagolysosome. The mycobacterial phagosome retain some proteins required for fusion with endocytic vesicles including Rab5 but lack others such as early endosomal autoantigen 1 (EEA1). As the membrane lipid phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate (PtdIns-3-P) is required for EEA1 membrane association and phagosome maturation, it may be a potential target of pathogenic mycobacteria. To test this hypothesis, macrophage cellular levels of PtdIns-3-P were altered by retroviral introduction of the type III Phosphoinositide 3-Kinase (VPS34) and the PtdIns-3-P phosphatase myotubularin 1 (MTM1). By utilizing the PtdIns-3-P-specific probes FYVE and PX coupled to EGFP (EGFP-2-FYVE and EGFP-PX, respectively), the expression of PtdIns-3-P on the mycobacterial phagosome was addressed. All phagosomes containing viable Mycobacterium avium stained positive for EGFP-2-FYVE and EGFP-PX despite obvious differences in PtdIns-3-P concentrations in cells expressing MTM1 or VPS34. Altering PtdIns-3-P cellular concentrations did not affect trafficking of live bacilli. However, a significant increase in the transport of killed bacilli to a late endosomal/lysosomal compartment was observed in VPS34-compared to MTM1-transduced macrophages. Therefore, although overexpression of PdtIns-3-P in macrophages can facilitate phagosome maturation, its effect on phagosomes containing viable M. avium was negligible.

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