Litcius/Paper detail

Exosomes transfer miRNAs from cell-to-cell to inhibit autophagy during infection with Crohn’s disease-associated adherent-invasive <i>E. coli</i>

Anaïs Larabi, Guillaume Dalmasso, Julien Delmas, Nicolas Barnich, Hang Thi Thu Nguyen

2020Gut Microbes49 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

exosomes to recipient cells, in which they targeted and inhibited ATG5 and ATG16L1 expression and thereby autophagy response, thus favoring AIEC intracellular replication. Inhibition of these miRNAs in exosome-donor cells infected with AIEC LF82 abolished the increase in miR-30c and miR-130a levels in the released Exo-LF82 and in Exo-LF82-receiving cells, thus suppressing the inhibitory effect of Exo-LF82 on ATG5 and ATG16L1 expression and on autophagy-mediated AIEC clearance in Exo-LF82-receiving cells. Our study shows that upon AIEC infection, IECs secrete exosomes that can transfer specific miRNAs to recipient IECs, inhibiting autophagy-mediated clearance of intracellular AIEC.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyATG5AutophagyMicrovesiclesMicrobiologyATG16L1ExosomeSecretionCell culturemicroRNAVirologyGeneApoptosisBiochemistryGeneticsExtracellular vesicles in diseaseMicroRNA in disease regulation
Exosomes transfer miRNAs from cell-to-cell to inhibit autophagy during infection with Crohn’s disease-associated adherent-invasive <i>E. coli</i> | Litcius