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Publication : Paneth cells secrete lysozyme via secretory autophagy during bacterial infection of the intestine.

First Author  Bel S Year  2017
Journal  Science Volume  357
Issue  6355 Pages  1047-1052
PubMed ID  28751470 Mgi Jnum  J:244328
Mgi Id  MGI:5913107 Doi  10.1126/science.aal4677
Citation  Bel S, et al. (2017) Paneth cells secrete lysozyme via secretory autophagy during bacterial infection of the intestine. Science 357(6355):1047-1052
abstractText  Intestinal Paneth cells limit bacterial invasion by secreting antimicrobial proteins, including lysozyme. However, invasive pathogens can disrupt the Golgi apparatus, interfering with secretion and compromising intestinal antimicrobial defense. Here we show that during bacterial infection, lysozyme is rerouted via secretory autophagy, an autophagy-based alternative secretion pathway. Secretory autophagy was triggered in Paneth cells by bacteria-induced endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, required extrinsic signals from innate lymphoid cells, and limited bacterial dissemination. Secretory autophagy was disrupted in Paneth cells of mice harboring a mutation in autophagy gene Atg16L1 that confers increased risk for Crohn's disease in humans. Our findings identify a role for secretory autophagy in intestinal defense and suggest why Crohn's disease is associated with genetic mutations that affect both the ER stress response and autophagy.
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