Relative and Quantitative
Phosphoproteome Analysis
of Macrophages in Response to Infection by Virulent and Avirulent Mycobacteria Reveals a Distinct Role of the Cytosolic RNA
Sensor RIG‑I in Mycobacterium tuberculosis Pathogenesis
posted on 2020-05-14, 17:11authored byEira Choudhary, C. Korin Bullen, Renu Goel, Alok Kumar Singh, Monali Praharaj, Preeti Thakur, Rohan Dhiman, William R. Bishai, Nisheeth Agarwal
Comparative phosphoproteomics
of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb)-
and Mycobacterium bovis BCG
(BCG)-infected macrophages could be instrumental in understanding
the characteristic post-translational modifications of host proteins
and their subsequent involvement in determining Mtb pathogenesis.
To identify proteins acquiring a distinct phosphorylation status,
herein, we compared the phosphorylation profile of macrophages upon
exposure to Mtb and BCG. We observed a significant dephosphorylation
of proteins following Mtb infection relative to those with uninfected
or BCG-infected cells. A comprehensive tandem mass tag mass spectrometry
(MS) approach detected ∼10% phosphosites on a variety of host
proteins that are modulated in response to infection. Interestingly,
the innate immune-enhancing interferon (IFN)-stimulated genes were
identified as a class of proteins differentially phosphorylated during
infection, including the cytosolic RNA sensor RIG-I, which has been
implicated in the immune response to bacterial infection. We show
that Mtb infection results in the activation of RIG-I in primary human
macrophages. Studies using RIG-I knockout macrophages reveal that
the Mtb-mediated activation of RIG-I promotes IFN-β, IL-1α,
and IL-1β levels, dampens autophagy, and facilitates intracellular
Mtb survival. To our knowledge, this is the first study providing
exhaustive information on relative and quantitative changes in the
global phosphoproteome profile of host macrophages that can be further
explored in designing novel anti-TB drug targets. The peptide identification
and MS/MS spectra have been deposited to the ProteomeXchange Consortium via the PRIDE partner repository with the dataset identifier
PXD013171.