INVESTIGADORES
UGALDE Juan Esteban
artículos
Título:
A Brucella Virulence Factor Targets Macrophages to Trigger B-cell Proliferation
Autor/es:
SPERA JM; HERRMANN CK; ROSET MS; COMERCI DJ; UGALDE JE
Revista:
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Editorial:
AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
Referencias:
Lugar: Bethesda, Maryland; Año: 2013 vol. 288 p. 20208 - 202016
ISSN:
0021-9258
Resumen:
Brucella spp. and Trypanosoma cruzi are two intracellular pathogens that have no evolutionary common origins but share a similar lifestyle as they establish chronic infections for which they have to circumvent the host immune response. Both pathogens have a virulence factor (prpA in Brucella and tcPrac in T. cruzi) that induces B-cell proliferation and promotes the establishment of the chronic phase of the infectious process. We show here that, even though PrpA promotes B-cell proliferation, it targets macrophages in vitro and is translocated to the cytoplasm during the intracellular replication phase. We observed that PrpA-treated macrophages induce the secretion of a soluble factor responsible for B-cell proliferation and identified nonmuscular myosin IIA (NMM-IIA) as a receptor required for binding and function of this virulence factor. Finally, we show that the Trypanosoma cruzi homologue of PrpA also targets macrophages to induce B-cell proliferation through the same receptor, indicating that this virulence strategy is conserved between a bacterial and a protozoan pathogen.