生物
细胞内寄生虫
脂质代谢
脂滴
吞噬体
巨噬细胞
细胞内
微生物学
病菌
结核分枝杆菌
免疫系统
毒力
泡沫电池
免疫
免疫学
肺结核
细胞生物学
生物化学
基因
体外
病理
医学
作者
Thomas Laval,Lise Chaumont,Caroline Demangel
摘要
Abstract While the existence of a special relationship between Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) and host lipids has long been known, it remains a challenging enigma. It was clearly established that Mtb requires host fatty acids (FAs) and cholesterol to produce energy, build its distinctive lipid‐rich cell wall, and produce lipid virulence factors. It was also observed that in infected hosts, Mtb constantly resides in a FA‐rich environment that the pathogen contributes to generate by inducing a lipid‐laden “foamy” phenotype in host macrophages. These observations and the proximity between lipid droplets and phagosomes containing bacteria within infected macrophages gave rise to the hypothesis that Mtb reprograms host cell lipid metabolism to ensure a continuous supply of essential nutrients and its long‐term persistence in vivo. However, recent studies question this principle by indicating that in Mtb‐infected macrophages, lipid droplet formation prevents bacterial acquisition of host FAs while supporting the production of FA‐derived protective lipid mediators. Further, in vivo investigations reveal discrete macrophage phenotypes linking the FA metabolisms of host cell and intracellular pathogen. Notably, FA storage within lipid droplets characterizes both macrophages controlling Mtb infection and dormant intracellular Mtb. In this review, we integrate findings from immunological and microbiological studies illustrating the new concept that cytoplasmic accumulation of FAs is a metabolic adaptation of macrophages to Mtb infection, which potentiates their antimycobacterial responses and forces the intracellular pathogen to shift into fat‐saving, survival mode.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI