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Publication : Targeted extracellular signal-regulated kinase activation mediated by Leishmania amazonensis requires MP1 scaffold.

First Author  Boggiatto PM Year  2014
Journal  Microbes Infect Volume  16
Issue  4 Pages  328-36
PubMed ID  24463270 Mgi Jnum  J:331285
Mgi Id  MGI:6862413 Doi  10.1016/j.micinf.2013.12.006
Citation  Boggiatto PM, et al. (2014) Targeted extracellular signal-regulated kinase activation mediated by Leishmania amazonensis requires MP1 scaffold. Microbes Infect 16(4):328-36
abstractText  Leishmania amazonensis infection promotes alteration of host cellular signaling and intracellular parasite survival, but specific mechanisms are poorly understood. We previously demonstrated that L. amazonensis infection of dendritic cells (DC) activated extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK), an MAP-kinase kinase kinase, leading to altered DC maturation and non-healing cutaneous leishmaniasis. Studies using growth factors and cell lines have shown that targeted, robust, intracellular phosphorylation of ERK1/2 from phagolysosomes required recruitment and association with scaffolding proteins, including p14/MP1 and MORG1, on the surface of late endosomes. Based on the intracellular localization of L. amazonensis within a parasitophorous vacuole with late endosome characteristics, we speculated that scaffolding proteins would be important for intracellular parasite-mediated ERK signaling. Our findings demonstrate that MP1, MORG1, and ERK all co-localized on the surface of parasite-containing LAMP2-positive phagolysosomes. Infection of MEK1 mutant fibroblasts unable to bind MP1 demonstrated dramatically reduced ERK1/2 phosphorylation following L. amazonensis infection but not following positive control EGF treatment. This novel mechanism for localization of intracellular L. amazonensis-mediated ERK1/2 phosphorylation required the endosomal scaffold protein MP1 and localized to L. amazonensis parasitophorous vacuoles. Understanding how L. amazonensis parasites hijack host cell scaffold proteins to modulate signaling cascades provides targets for antiprotozoal drug development.
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