Molecular characterization of the evolution of phagosomes

Abstract Amoeba use phagocytosis to internalize bacteria as a source of nutrients, whereas multicellular organisms utilize this process as a defense mechanism to kill microbes and, in vertebrates, initiate a sustained immune response. By using a large‐scale approach to identify and compare the prote...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jonathan Boulais, Matthias Trost, Christian R Landry, Régis Dieckmann, Emmanuel D Levy, Thierry Soldati, Stephen W Michnick, Pierre Thibault, Michel Desjardins
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer Nature 2010-10-01
Series:Molecular Systems Biology
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/msb.2010.80
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Summary:Abstract Amoeba use phagocytosis to internalize bacteria as a source of nutrients, whereas multicellular organisms utilize this process as a defense mechanism to kill microbes and, in vertebrates, initiate a sustained immune response. By using a large‐scale approach to identify and compare the proteome and phosphoproteome of phagosomes isolated from distant organisms, and by comparative analysis over 39 taxa, we identified an ‘ancient’ core of phagosomal proteins around which the immune functions of this organelle have likely organized. Our data indicate that a larger proportion of the phagosome proteome, compared with the whole cell proteome, has been acquired through gene duplication at a period coinciding with the emergence of innate and adaptive immunity. Our study also characterizes in detail the acquisition of novel proteins and the significant remodeling of the phagosome phosphoproteome that contributed to modify the core constituents of this organelle in evolution. Our work thus provides the first thorough analysis of the changes that enabled the transformation of the phagosome from a phagotrophic compartment into an organelle fully competent for antigen presentation.
ISSN:1744-4292