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Plasma Membrane Profiling Reveals Upregulation of ABCA1 by Infected Macrophages Leading to Restriction of Mycobacterial Growth

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2016

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Frontiers Media S.A.
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Long, Jing, Robindra Basu Roy, Yanjia J. Zhang, Robin Antrobus, Yuxian Du, Duncan L. Smith, Michael P. Weekes, and Babak Javid. 2016. “Plasma Membrane Profiling Reveals Upregulation of ABCA1 by Infected Macrophages Leading to Restriction of Mycobacterial Growth.” Frontiers in Microbiology 7 (1): 1086. doi:10.3389/fmicb.2016.01086. http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2016.01086.

Abstract

The plasma membrane represents a critical interface between the internal and extracellular environments, and harbors multiple proteins key receptors and transporters that play important roles in restriction of intracellular infection. We applied plasma membrane profiling, a technique that combines quantitative mass spectrometry with selective cell surface aminooxy-biotinylation, to Bacille Calmette–Guérin (BCG)-infected THP-1 macrophages. We quantified 559 PM proteins in BCG-infected THP-1 cells. One significantly upregulated cell-surface protein was the cholesterol transporter ABCA1. We showed that ABCA1 was upregulated on the macrophage cell-surface following infection with pathogenic mycobacteria and knockdown of ABCA1 resulted in increased mycobacterial survival within macrophages, suggesting that it may be a novel mycobacterial host-restriction factor.

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plasma membrane profiling, , ABCA1, cholesterol, SILAC

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