A human apolipoprotein L with detergent-like activity kills intracellular pathogens

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Abstract

Activation of cell-autonomous defense by the immune cytokine interferon-g (IFN-g) is critical to the control of life-threatening infections in humans. IFN-g induces the expression of hundreds of host proteins in all nucleated cells and tissues, yet many of these proteins remain uncharacterized. We screened 19,050 human genes by CRISPR-Cas9 mutagenesis and identified IFN-g–induced apolipoprotein L3 (APOL3) as a potent bactericidal agent protecting multiple non–immune barrier cell types against infection. Canonical apolipoproteins typically solubilize mammalian lipids for extracellular transport; APOL3 instead targeted cytosol-invasive bacteria to dissolve their anionic membranes into human-bacterial lipoprotein nanodiscs detected by native mass spectrometry and visualized by single-particle cryo–electron microscopy. Thus, humans have harnessed the detergent-like properties of extracellular apolipoproteins to fashion an intracellular lysin, thereby endowing resident nonimmune cells with a mechanism to achieve sterilizing immunity.

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Gaudet, R. G., Zhu, S., Halder, A., Kim, B. H., Bradfield, C. J., Huang, S., … MacMicking, J. D. (2021). A human apolipoprotein L with detergent-like activity kills intracellular pathogens. Science, 373(6552). https://doi.org/10.1126/science.abf8113

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