Significance The elderly exhibit susceptibility to many infectious agents, including S. pneumoniae. A robust acute inflammatory response to S. pneumoniae is associated with severe disease. S. pneumoniae triggers canonical autophagy… Click to show full abstract
Significance The elderly exhibit susceptibility to many infectious agents, including S. pneumoniae. A robust acute inflammatory response to S. pneumoniae is associated with severe disease. S. pneumoniae triggers canonical autophagy in nonprofessional phagocytes, but its role in macrophages is largely unexplored. We found that BMDMs utilize LAP, rather than canonical autophagy, to both eliminate S. pneumoniae and modulate inflammation. Notably, compared to young BMDMs, aged BMDMs were deficient in LAP, resulting in compromised bacterial killing and enhanced proinflammatory responses. Thus, S. pneumoniae triggers LAP in BMDMs, a process that controls both microbial numbers and tissue-damaging inflammation. Importantly, LAP diminishes with age and may contribute to the observed susceptibility of the elderly to many infectious diseases. Streptococcus pneumoniae is a leading cause of pneumonia and invasive disease, particularly, in the elderly. S. pneumoniae lung infection of aged mice is associated with high bacterial burdens and detrimental inflammatory responses. Macrophages can clear microorganisms and modulate inflammation through two distinct lysosomal trafficking pathways that involve 1A/1B-light chain 3 (LC3)-marked organelles, canonical autophagy, and LC3-associated phagocytosis (LAP). The S. pneumoniae pore-forming toxin pneumolysin (PLY) triggers an autophagic response in nonphagocytic cells, but the role of LAP in macrophage defense against S. pneumoniae or in age-related susceptibility to infection is unexplored. We found that infection of murine bone-marrow-derived macrophages (BMDMs) by PLY-producing S. pneumoniae triggered Atg5- and Atg7-dependent recruitment of LC3 to S. pneumoniae-containing vesicles. The association of LC3 with S. pneumoniae-containing phagosomes required components specific for LAP, such as Rubicon and the NADPH oxidase, but not factors, such as Ulk1, FIP200, or Atg14, required specifically for canonical autophagy. In addition, S. pneumoniae was sequestered within single-membrane compartments indicative of LAP. Importantly, compared to BMDMs from young (2-mo-old) mice, BMDMs from aged (20- to 22-mo-old) mice infected with S. pneumoniae were not only deficient in LAP and bacterial killing, but also produced higher levels of proinflammatory cytokines. Inhibition of LAP enhanced S. pneumoniae survival and cytokine responses in BMDMs from young but not aged mice. Thus, LAP is an important innate immune defense employed by BMDMs to control S. pneumoniae infection and concomitant inflammation, one that diminishes with age and may contribute to age-related susceptibility to this important pathogen.
               
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