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Cytotoxic Cells Kill Intracellular Bacteria through Granulysin-Mediated Delivery of Granzymes
Author(s) -
Michael Walch,
Farokh Dotiwala,
Sachin Mulik,
Jérôme Thiery,
Tomas Kirchhausen,
Carol Clayberger,
Alan M. Krensky,
Denis Martinvalet,
Judy Lieberman
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2014.03.062
Subject(s) - granulysin , granzyme , biology , cytotoxic t cell , perforin , intracellular parasite , microbiology and biotechnology , intracellular , biochemistry , in vitro
When killer lymphocytes recognize infected cells, perforin delivers cytotoxic proteases (granzymes) into the target cell to trigger apoptosis. What happens to intracellular bacteria during this process is unclear. Human, but not rodent, cytotoxic granules also contain granulysin, an antimicrobial peptide. Here, we show that granulysin delivers granzymes into bacteria to kill diverse bacterial strains. In Escherichia coli, granzymes cleave electron transport chain complex I and oxidative stress defense proteins, generating reactive oxygen species (ROS) that rapidly kill bacteria. ROS scavengers and bacterial antioxidant protein overexpression inhibit bacterial death. Bacteria overexpressing a GzmB-uncleavable mutant of the complex I subunit nuoF or strains that lack complex I still die, but more slowly, suggesting that granzymes disrupt multiple vital bacterial pathways. Mice expressing transgenic granulysin are better able to clear Listeria monocytogenes. Thus killer cells play an unexpected role in bacterial defense.

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