
Sweet host revenge: Galectins and GBPs join forces at broken membranes
Author(s) -
Coers Jörn
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
cellular microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.542
H-Index - 138
eISSN - 1462-5822
pISSN - 1462-5814
DOI - 10.1111/cmi.12793
Subject(s) - biology , galectin , secretion , vacuole , antimicrobial peptides , microbiology and biotechnology , host (biology) , intracellular , immune system , virulence , antimicrobial , biochemistry , immunology , cytoplasm , genetics , gene
Most bacterial pathogens enter and exit eukaryotic cells during their journey through the vertebrate host. In order to endure inside a eukaryotic cell, bacterial invaders commonly employ bacterial secretion systems to inject host cells with virulence factors that co‐opt the host's membrane trafficking systems and thereby establish specialised pathogen‐containing vacuoles (PVs) as intracellular niches permissive for microbial growth and survival. To defend against these microbial adversaries hiding inside PVs, host organisms including humans evolved an elaborate cell‐intrinsic armoury of antimicrobial weapons that include noxious gases, antimicrobial peptides, degradative enzymes, and pore‐forming proteins. This impressive defence machinery needs to be accurately delivered to PVs, in order to fight off vacuole‐dwelling pathogens. Here, I discuss recent evidence that the presence of bacterial secretion systems at PVs and the associated destabilisation of PV membranes attract such antimicrobial delivery systems consisting of sugar‐binding galectins as well as dynamin‐like guanylate‐binding proteins (GBPs). I will review recent advances in our understanding of intracellular immune recognition of PVs by galectins and GBPs, discuss how galectins and GBPs control host defence, and highlight important avenues of future research in this exciting area of cell‐autonomous immunity.