Partial impairment of late-stage autophagic flux in murine splenocytes leads to sqstm1/p62 mediated nrf2-keap1 antioxidant pathway activation and induced proteasome-mediated degradation in malaria.

Microbial Pathogenesis
Anirban SenguptaArindam Bhattacharyya

Abstract

Splenomegaly, a major symptom in Plasmodium infection, is extensively studied for its immunopathological role in mice malaria model infected with Plasmodium berghei ANKA. The status of autophagic regulation in hosts in malaria pathogenesis remains unreported till date. This study demonstrated the autophagy, proteasomal degradation and NRF2-KEAP1 antioxidant pathway status in the host during Plasmodium infection taking murine spleen as our organ of interest. Initial staining and autophagic gene expression indicate a possibility of autophagic pathway activation. Although the conversion of LC3A to LC3B and lysosome-autophagosome fusion increases, the final degradation step remains incomplete. Resultant upregulation of p62 and its altered phosphorylated status enhances its binding to keap1 causing NRF2 translocation to the nucleus. NRF2 act as transcription factor upregulating p62 level itself leading to an autoinduction loop of p62 expression. Interestingly, enhancement of P62 interaction with proteasome subunit RPT1 indicates a possible role in transporting ubiquitinated cargo to proteasome complex. Ubiquitination level increased with subsequent upregulation of all three modes of proteasomal degradation i.e trypsin-like, caspase-...Continue Reading

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