key: cord-0901023-eftwcysg authors: Orvedahl, A; Levine, B title: Eating the enemy within: autophagy in infectious diseases date: 2008-09-05 journal: Cell Death & Differentiation DOI: 10.1038/cdd.2008.130 sha: 278f9bc7cda220a1ca3bb3429b5229a412b8639a doc_id: 901023 cord_uid: eftwcysg Autophagy is emerging as a central component of antimicrobial host defense against diverse viral, bacterial, and parasitic infections. In addition to pathogen degradation, autophagy has other functions during infection such as innate and adaptive immune activation. As an important host defense pathway, microbes have also evolved mechanisms to evade, subvert, or exploit autophagy. Additionally, some fungal pathogens harness autophagy within their own cells to promote pathogenesis. This review will highlight our current understanding of autophagy in infection, focusing on the most recent advances in the field, and will discuss the potential implications of these studies in the design of anti-infective therapeutics. Autophagosomes containing intracellular microbes were first observed ultrastructurally in the 1980s, which originally led to the notion that intracellular microbes may be targeted by or subvert the autophagic pathway. However, it was only after the identification of autophagy (ATG) genes in the 1990s that the molecular tools have been available to dissect this pathway and its functions in infection and host immunity. The basic machinery of autophagy and the diverse biological processes in which it is involved are reviewed in the current issue and elsewhere. 1, 2 The host cell autophagic machinery can sequester both pathogens that have escaped endocytic or phagocytic vesicles and/ or the pathogen-containing vesicles themselves, as well as microbial proteins and genetic material. The autophagosome containing microbial proteins, nucleic acids, or intact organisms can fuse with other vesicles in the endolysosomal pathway to deliver microbial ligands for adaptive or innate immune activation, or with the lysosome for degradation. Many aspects of the autophagy pathway during infection may be unique, including the regulatory pathways (pattern recognition receptors (PRRs), pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs), and downstream signaling pathways), substrates for autophagosome sequestration (i.e., xenophagy of microbes and/or specific cellular contents), and potentially the events in autophagosome formation. For microbes that usurp autophagy-like pathways, it is possible that the cellular components involved are distinct from those of 'classical' autophagy and/or that they are modulated by pathogens in a unique manner. Furthermore, autophagy within the pathogen itself is a newly defined virulence strategy for eukaryotic microorganisms. This review will highlight key studies and recent advances in the field of autophagy during infection with bacteria, viruses, protozoa, and fungi and will discuss how the potentially unique aspects of autophagy during infection may be exploited in the treatment of infectious diseases. Autophagy functions as an innate immune barrier to infection by ridding the cytosol of microbes through lysosomal degradation (discussed below), as well as in other aspects of innate and adaptive immunity (reviewed by Schmid and Munz 3 and Levine and Deretic 4 ). Innate sensing and signaling pathways regulate autophagy induction, and an important effector function of autophagosomes may be to deliver ligands for innate and adaptive immune activation. One of the most active areas in autophagy research is the identification of immune signaling pathways that regulate autophagy (see Figure 1) . A front line of defense against invading pathogens is the well-conserved recognition of PAMPs by PRRs, including Toll-like receptors (TLRs), 5 and these essential innate immune receptors have recently been demonstrated to regulate autophagy ( Figure 1 ). The first study to describe a function of TLRs in autophagy induction found that a component of the Gram-negative bacterial cell wall, lipopolysaccharide (LPS), induces autophagy through its cognate receptor TLR4 in macrophages. 6 LPS-induced autophagy requires the TLR4 adaptor TRIF, but not MyD88, and the downstream components RIP1 and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK). Further, LPS stimulation increases the localization of Mycobacterium tuberculosis within autophagosomes suggesting a functional role of LPS signaling in autophagy-mediated pathogen control. Subsequently, Deretic and colleagues 7 extended the known repertoire of TLRs and their ligands that induce autophagy to include TLR3/Poly I:C and TLR7/imiquimod and ssRNA, and confirmed TLR4/LPS induction of autophagy. They also demonstrated that TLR7induced autophagy decreases M. tuberculosis var. bovis Bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) survival, and requires the TLR7 adaptor MyD88. An additional recent study suggested a novel function of autophagy in mediating TLR signaling in phagosome maturation. 8 Sanjuan et al. found that LPS induces autophagy as well as phagosome maturation (confirming the findings of Xu et al. 6 and Delgado et al. 7 ) but, in contrast to Delgado et al., found that autophagy is also stimulated with TLR2 agonists. It is possible that different cell types or agonist preparations may account for these differences, but further studies are needed to more clearly define the full spectrum of PAMPs and PRRs involved in autophagy regulation. Nonetheless, the studies described above convincingly link pathogen recognition, an essential component of innate immunity, with autophagy induction and also underscore the potential importance of autophagy as an innate immune effector in response to PAMPs. A recent study in Drosophila melanogaster 9 further underscores the importance of specific PRRs not only in autophagy induction, but also in mediating autophagic control of bacterial replication in vivo. The PRR molecule PGRP-LE (analogous to Nod-like receptor (NLR) signaling in mammals) was identified as a crucial component of the host antimicrobial autophagic response in Drosophila. 9 Yano et al. 9 demonstrated that PGRP-LE mutant flies or flies expressing hemocyte-specific RNAi for PGRP-LE or the autophagy gene Atg5 were hypersusceptible to lethal infection with Listeria monocytogenes. Signaling through the IMD and Toll pathways was dispensable for PGRP-LE-mediated autophagy and restriction of bacterial survival in primary hemocytes. 9 Additionally, autophagy induction in hemocytes treated with purified tracheal cytotoxin and diaminopimelic-containing peptidoglycan ligands, but not lysine-type peptidoglycan required PGRP-LE. 9 Thus, it will be interesting to determine the precise signaling pathways linking PGRP-LE to the autophagy machinery, and the identity of additional PRRs that are involved in autophagy induction in Drosophila. Beyond the recognition of PAMPs by PRRs, there is a complex interplay between other immune signals and autophagy regulation (Figure 1 ). For example, NF-kB may negatively regulate TNF-mediated autophagy, 10 whereas autophagy may negatively regulate NF-kB, in turn, through selective degradation of the upstream activators IkB kinase 11 and NF-kB inducing kinase. 12 Additionally, interferon (IFN)gmediated autophagy and BCG killing requires the p47 immunityrelated GTPase, IRGM1. 13 In contrast, TH2 cytokines (e.g., IL-4 and IL-13) negatively regulate IFNg-mediated autophagic killing of mycobacteria in a STAT6-dependent manner. 14 A recent report suggests that B-cell receptor signaling can recruit TLR9 to autophagosomes to promote synergistic signaling through p38 MAPK, and that formation of these compartments requires microtubules and phospholipase D activity. 15 Thus, autophagy can be positively and negatively regulated by different immune signaling pathways. Studies in animal models should help to dissect the relative physiological importance of these different Figure 1 Regulation of autophagy by immune signaling pathways. Examples of positive regulators include TLRs (3, 4, and 7/8), PKR, IFNg, and CD40. Pathways that negatively regulate autophagy include NF-kB and TH2 cytokines. The mechanisms by which all of these pathways intersect with the autophagy machinery remain unknown immune signaling pathways in the regulation of autophagy during different infectious diseases. Another emerging theme is that stress-sensing and innate immune sensing pathways may share common components in the induction of autophagy. One of the first immune signaling pathways shown to regulate autophagy was the cytosolic double-stranded viral RNA-sensing kinase PKR, which acts through phosphorylation of eIF2a. 16 PKR functions redundantly with the stress-induced kinase, Gcn2, in yeast to mediate starvation-induced autophagy 16 and the eIF2a kinase PERK is required for ER stress-induced autophagy. 17 The Drosophila homolog, ird1, of the VPS34 regulatory subunit VPS15, an essential component of the autophagy initiation machinery, is required for the IMD immune signaling pathway (similar to TRIF-dependent signaling in mammalian systems), for antimicrobial peptide production (AMP), and for resistance to bacterial infection, 18 although it is not yet clear if the autophagy functions of ird1 are responsible for this antimicrobial response or if the IMD or Toll pathways regulate autophagy in Drosophila. Similar to the eIF2a kinase signaling pathway, which functions in both innate immune sensing and general stress responses, Wu et al. 18 found that ird1 was required for starvation-induced AMP production. There are several important unanswered questions with respect to innate immune activation of autophagy. Very little is known about how downstream signaling molecules integrate with the autophagy machinery. The most distal signaling component identified in TLR-mediated autophagy induction is p38 MAPK in response to TLR4 signaling, 6 but it is unclear precisely how p38 MAPK results in autophagy induction. Additionally, Xu et al. found that TRIF, but not MyD88, was required for TLR4-mediated autophagy, whereas Delgado et al. demonstrated that TLR7 signaled through MyD88 to induce autophagy. Therefore, it will be important to identify the TRIFand MyD88-interacting partners that are involved in TLR4-and TLR7-mediated autophagy, respectively. Both TRIF and MyD88 signal through TRAF6, which was also found to mediate CD40-induced autophagy in response to Toxoplasm gondii infection of macrophages, in synergy with TNF-a. 19 Thus, it will be interesting to examine whether a common TRAF6 complex is involved in immune activation of autophagy by different receptors and if so, to identify the components of such a complex. Another important question is whether signaling through additional PRRs, including mammalian cytosolic NLRs, cytosolic DNA and RNA sensors, and/or lectins also regulates autophagy. At least in response to Shigella flexneri infection in macrophages, the NLR Ipaf negatively regulates autophagy through caspase-1 activation, in a Flagellin-independent manner, whereas genetic deletion of the NALP3 adaptor ASC has no effect. 20 Yet another question is whether the sites of signaling by immune receptors (pathogen-containing vesicles or cytosolic sensors in contact with pathogens) define targets for sequestration in autophagosomes by recruiting the autophagy machinery to these sites. Also, it remains to be determined if PRR signaling results in the recruitment of any as-of-yet identified molecules that may specify microbes for autophagic sequestration. The answers to these questions will have implications for the development of therapeutics aimed at modulating autophagy to enhance host immune defenses (discussed below). Autophagy functions in many aspects of innate and adaptive immunity, including immune activation, survival of infected cells, immune cell homeostasis, degradation of pathogens, and potentially in gut-commensal homeostasis ( Figure 2 ). Many of these functions have been extensively reviewed elsewhere, 3, 4 and this section will provide a brief summary of the functions of autophagy in immune activation, infected cell survival, and immune cell homeostasis. Not only do immune signals regulate autophagy (as discussed above), but autophagy also functions in innate and adaptive immune activation. Autophagy samples certain cytosolic antigens to present on class II MHC molecules for activation of the adaptive immune response. [21] [22] [23] [24] Further, specific strategies to target cytosolic antigens to autophagosomes may lead to enhanced vaccine efficacy, as an influenza virus antigen fused to the autophagosomal membrane protein, LC3, elicits higher levels of CD4 þ T-cell responses than the antigen alone. 24 Autophagy also functions to deliver cytosolic viral replication intermediates to TLR7containing endosomes to activate type I IFN production. 25 In light of the recent study by Delgado et al., 7 which demonstrated that TLR7 itself activates autophagy, it will be interesting to determine whether this represents a positive feedback loop and more broadly, whether IFN-stimulated genes also function to regulate autophagy. As a stress survival pathway, autophagy may have a protective function during infection by ensuring the survival of infected and/or uninfected cells in infected organisms. This has now been demonstrated in several different types of viral infections. Mouse brains infected with Sindbis virus overexpressing Beclin 1 26 or with a herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) mutant strain incapable of inhibiting autophagy 27 exhibit decreased neuronal cell death. Additionally, autophagy promotes the survival of B lymphocytes infected with parvovirus B19 in vitro. 28 In plants, autophagy gene silencing results in the unrestricted cell death of uninfected cells during the hypersensitive response to tobacco mosaic virus infection. 29 In contrast to these prosurvival effects of autophagy during viral infection, there is also evidence that autophagy may contribute to the death of uninfected bystander T lymphocytes during HIV infection. 30 The function of autophagy in cell survival during bacterial infections is less well studied. Autophagy may have a function in mediating the death of cells infected with Staphylococcus aureus, as atg5-deleted mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) showed increased survival following infection with a methicillin-resistant strain of S. aureus. 31 However, these effects may be S. aureus strain-specific, as Yoshimori and collegues 32 found that methicillin-sensitive S. aureus are targeted and degraded by autophagy in wild-type MEFs, but persist in atg5-deleted MEFs, while resistant strains can escape from autophagosomes. In addition, macrophages undergoing cell death in response to Salmonella infection exhibit increased autophagy, although it is unclear if autophagy is responsible for the observed death. 33 Further studies are needed to clarify the function of autophagy in life and death decisions of the cell during bacterial infection. Autophagy also functions in host immunity by promoting immune cell homeostasis, and potentially contributes to immune tolerance. Peripheral lymphocyte survival and proliferation in response to T-cell receptor (TCR) activation is decreased in atg5 À/À bone marrow chimera mice. 34 In addition, autophagy is induced by TCR activation in CD4 þ T cells, but promotes cell death after growth factor removal. 35 Autophagy is also involved in the proper development of specific lineages of B lymphocytes. 36 A recently identified function of autophagy in promoting the clearance of apoptotic cells suggests that autophagy may also have a function in preventing inflammation; in atg5 À/À embryonic mice, there is a defect in apoptotic corpse clearance which is associated with abnormal inflammation. 37 Eating the Enemy: Xenophagy By sequestering large portions of the cytoplasm in autophagosomes that are destined for lysosomal degradation, autophagy also protects against infection by limiting intracellular microbial survival, a process that has been termed 'xenophagy'. 38 As a recycling pathway to generate nutrients under stress conditions, it is also possible that autophagy targets cytosolic pathogens for degradation not only to rid the cell of the pathogen but also to reclaim metabolites that have been parasitized by microbes -without degrading their own essential components -and thereby promotes host cell survival. Specific mechanisms to selectively sequester microbes remain unidentified, but several characteristics of pathogen-containing autophagosomes suggest that this may occur. For example, bacteria often reside within autophagosomes devoid of other cellular contents, autophagosome membranes are closely opposed to sequestered bacteria, and these vesicles are often larger than typical autophagosomes containing cytoplasmic contents. The first genetic evidence that autophagy may function as an antimicrobial pathway that restricts intracellular pathogen replication was provided by studies with the neurotropic alphavirus Sindbis virus. Expression of Beclin 1, the mammalian ortholog of yeast Atg6, from a double-subgenomic viral promoter protected mice against fatal Sindbis virus encephalitis and decreased neuronal apoptosis and viral replication in infected mouse brains. 26 Studies with another neurotropic virus, the a-herpesvirus, HSV-1, further suggest that the endogenous host autophagy machinery is required for pathogen degradation and protection against CNS viral disease: HSV-1 is incapable of causing neurological disease if a mutation is made in its neurovirulence factor ICP34.5 that cripples its ability to block autophagy (discussed in detail below). 27 Xenophagic degradation of HSV-1 virions may contribute to the antiviral effects of autophagy, as ultrastructural and biochemical analyses of neurons infected with a mutant virus deleted of ICP34.5 reveals PKR-dependent degradation of HSV-1 virions in autophagosomes and PKR-dependent autophagic degradation of HSV-1 proteins, respectively. 39 The antiviral functions of autophagy are conserved from mammals to plants, since during tobacco mosaic virus infection of plants, the autophagy genes ATG6, ATG3, and ATG7 are required to reduce viral replication and prevent the spread of programmed cell death in uninfected tissues. 29 At present, it is unclear if intact virions or viral proteins are specifically targeted for degradation, and if so, what are the identities of putative selectivity determinants. Bacterial pathogens that invade into the cytoplasm or disrupt phagolysosomal fusion are also targeted by autophagy ( Table 1 ). The first nearly simultaneous findings demonstrating this function of autophagy were with the A Orvedahl and B Levine Gram-positive bacilli Listeria monocytogenes LLO-mediated escape from phagosomes induces autophagy, and atg5 deletion increases replication of phospholipase mutants. PGRP-LE recognition of peptidoglycan induces autophagy and protects against Listeria infection in Drosophila. Bacterial phospholipases and actinbased motility. Yano et al., 9 Py et al. 41 , Rich et al., 42 Birmingham et al. 43 Gram-negative bacilli Burkholderia pseudomallei Bacteria that escape endosomes are targeted to autophagosomes, and autophagy induction decreases bacterial survival. TTSS effector BopA mutants show increased targeting to autophagosomes and decreased survival. Cullinane et al. 44 Francisella tularensis Francisella that escape phagosomes are targeted to autophagosome-like compartments that also contain MHC class II. Checroun et al., 45 Hrstka et al. 46 Pseudomonas syringae pv tomato Disease caused by an avirulent strain DC3000 is increased in ATG6 RNAi plants. Toxoplasma gondii Targeted to autophagosomes, which decreases parasite survival. Andrade et al., 56 Ling et al. 57 Unknown Encodes orthologs of Atg8, but not Atg12 conjugation system; autophagy is upregulated during metacyclogenesis. Alvarez et al. 58 Autophagy in infectious diseases A Orvedahl and B Levine The biological significance of Francisella entry into autophagic compartments is unclear, but a recent study suggests that these compartments may also include MHC class II molecules. 46 The recent study by Yano et al. 9 of Listeria infection in Drosophila (discussed above) is an important first demonstration that the xenophagic targeting of bacteria can be an integral innate immune effector pathway in vivo. There is an urgent need for similar studies in mammalian hosts. An important question related to bacterial xenophagy is what stimuli lead to autophagy induction. It is possible that disruption of phagosome integrity acts as a signal to induce autophagy to sequester potential invading microorganisms. It is also possible that PRRs in phagosomes or in the cytosol (as demonstrated for PGRP-LE in Drosophila) 9 signal for autophagy induction, as discussed above. Additionally, many microbes utilize secretion systems or toxins to escape from phagosomes or invade through endosomes. It is possible that there are mechanisms by which the detection of these toxins or secreted products induces autophagy, or that autophagy is induced as a primary or secondary effect of these bacterial effectors. For example, during infection with Group A Streptococcus, bacteria lacking the toxin Streptolysin O do not escape from the endosome and are not targeted by autophagy; 40 it is not yet known whether the escape from the endosome per se or some other effector function of Streptolysin O is essential for autophagy induction. Autophagy induction during Shigella infection requires a type III secretion system (TTSS), presumably during entry into the cytoplasm, 20 but a TTSS effector IcsB masks the cell surface protein VirG to block Atg5 binding and potentially blocks recognition by autophagosomes. 49 Additionally, the TTSS effector BopA is important for evading autophagic targeting of B. pseudomallei. 44 Evidence also exists for induction of autophagy by a TTSS during infection of cells by the foodborne pathogen Vibrio parahaemolyticus, although the precise signals mediating this induction are not yet known. 51 Another recent study provides additional evidence for a protective function of autophagy during bacterial infection and in resistance to TTSS effectors; disease caused by avirulent Pseudomonas syringae pv tomato (Pst) DC3000 is increased in Arabidopsis plants transgenic for ATG6 RNAi, and there is increased spread of cell death in ATG6 RNAi transgenic plants when infected with a strain of DC3000 that expresses the TTSS effector AvrRpm1. 47 Autophagy induced by microbial toxins may exert a cytoprotective effect, perhaps by enabling the cells to more rapidly clear the toxin. Autophagy protects cells against an exotoxin from Vibrio cholerae; cells treated with V. cholerae cytolysin (VCC) show increased autophagy levels, colocalization of VCC with autophagosomes, and decreased survival in the setting of pharmacological (e.g., 3-MA) or genetic (e.g., atg5 deletion) autophagy inhibition. 50 Thus, the antibacterial effects of autophagy may relate both to the degradation of intracellular pathogens as well as to the degradation of toxins that such organisms produce. In addition to viruses and bacteria, protozoans may be targeted by autophagy. Toxoplasma gondii resides in parasitophorous vacuoles (PV) within macrophages and prevents their fusion with the lysosome. Two nearly simultaneous studies indicated that autophagy could function to overcome this block and restrict T. gondii survival. Andrade et al. 56 found that stimulation of the CD40 receptor on macrophages resulted in localization of parasites to GFP-LC3-positive vesicles, vesicle maturation, and decreased intracellular microbial survival. On the basis of ultrastructural studies and chemical autophagy inhibition studies, Ling et al. 57 proposed a model in which the PV and parasite membranes are stripped before autophagic sequestration and lysosomal degradation. It will be interesting to explore whether autophagy also protects against other apicomplexan parasites that reside intracellularly. On the basis of genetic linkage data, defects in host autophagy may contribute to Crohn's disease, an inflammatory bowel disease of the small intestine. In several genomewide scanning studies performed in large populations of patients in Europe and North America, polymorphisms in two autophagy genes, an autophagy-inducing signaling molecule, IRGM, and a component of the ubiquitin-like protein conjugation system involved in autophagosomal membrane expansion, ATG16L1, are strongly associated with the development of Crohn's disease. [81] [82] [83] [84] The pathogenic mechanisms of Crohn's disease are not completely understood, but are postulated to involve a dysregulated immune response to commensal bacteria, altered mucosal barrier function, and/or defects in bacterial clearance. Given the emerging functions of autophagy in immune cell homeostasis, immune cell activation, and bacterial clearance, it seems plausible that defects in autophagy could contribute to one or more of the potential pathogenic mechanisms of Crohn's disease. However, the precise functions of autophagy in degrading translocating bacteria and in immune regulation in the intestine are not yet known. Moreover, it is not yet known whether the polymorphism in Atg16L1 (T300A) alters autophagy function, as this mutation lies in a WD40 repeat domain that is not conserved in yeast Atg16. Further studies are needed to define the precise function of these autophagyrelated proteins in host-commensal microbial interactions. As an important antimicrobial pathway, it is not surprising that pathogens have evolved mechanisms to evade or subvert the host autophagy machinery (Table 1) . Bacterial pathogens can prevent autophagosome fusion with lysosomes to evade degradation or to utilize nutrients in these vesicles. Viruses from diverse classes inhibit autophagy-inducing signals and autophagy execution genes. Conversely, some RNA viruses usurp autophagosome membranes for virion production. Many bacteria have been implicated in the evasion or subversion of autophagy; however, until recently, evidence supporting this has been largely limited to colocalization with autophagy markers or chemical manipulation of the autophagy pathway. 85, 86 One of the first described examples is Listeria monocytogenes, a bacterium that can evade autophagy after escaping from the phagosome. 42 Recent studies indicate that bacterial virulence factors required for modulation of autophagy by L. monocytogenes include the bacterial pore-forming toxin listeriolysin O (LLO) (which induces autophagy) and bacterial phospholipases (which evade autophagy). 41, 43 Py et al. 41 demonstrated that wildtype Listeria activates autophagy in MEFs, and deletion of atg5 accelerates the kinetics of bacterial growth early during infection. The induction of autophagy, as measured by LC3 lipidation, requires LLO expression, which is also required for bacterial replication in both wild-type and atg5 À/À MEFs, whereas in contrast, the replication of phospholipase mutants is restored in atg5 À/À MEFs. 41 Birmingham et al. 43 confirmed LLO expression-dependent autophagy induction and localization of Listeria to GFP-LC3-positive vesicles early during infection in macrophages, and Yano et al. 9 confirmed that LLO-mediated entry of Listeria into the cytoplasm is required for autophagy induction in Drosophila. Deletion of the global virulence regulator prfA decreases replication in wild-type MEFs, and LLO expression is insufficient to rescue bacterial growth, whereas atg5 deletion restores Listeria replication, suggesting that additional prfA-regulated virulence factors are required to evade autophagy. 43 Additionally, phospholipase mutants colocalize with GFP-LC3 vesicles for a prolonged period, and atg5 deletion restores growth of a plcA mutant. 43 Together these studies suggest that LLO-mediated breach of phagosomes induces autophagy, and that additional virulence factors including phospholipases and actin-based motility are important for bacterial escape from cellular autophagy. Furthermore, a recent study suggests that Listeria can replicate slowly in spacious vacuoles that may arise through autophagic targeting of phagosomes that have been damaged by LLO. 87 As with studies on the antimicrobial effects of autophagy, animal models are greatly needed to assess the function of bacterial evasion or subversion of autophagy in disease. As obligate intracellular pathogens, viruses have also evolved mechanisms to evade or subvert host autophagy, and these have also been reviewed elsewhere. 85, 88, 89 With respect to autophagy evasion, there is now evidence that all families of herpesviruses possess mechanisms to block host autophagy. As discussed above, HSV-1, an a-herpesvirus, encodes an essential neurovirulence factor, ICP34.5, that antagonizes autophagy. It does this through two mechanisms, including reversal of PKR-mediated eIF2a phosphorylation and direct antagonism of Beclin 1. 16, 27 ICP34.5 antagonism of autophagy may be important to restrict xenophagic degradation of virions, 39 and is required for fatal HSV-1 encephalitis in mice. 27 Recently, cytomegalovirus, a member of the b-herpesvirus family, was shown to inhibit autophagy through an as-of-yet unidentified mechanism. 69 g-herpesviruses, including Kaposi's Sarcoma-associated herpesevirus (KSHV) and murine g-HV68 encode homologs of cellular Bcl-2 that inhibit autophagy through antagonism of Beclin 1. Although the function of autophagy inhibition in KSHV or g-HV68 disease remains unclear, 70,71 viral Bcl-2-like proteins seem to have evolved mechanisms to antagonize the autophagy function of Beclin 1 more effectively than their cellular counterparts; viral Bcl-2 proteins have a higher binding affinity than cellular Bcl-2 family members for Beclin 1, 90 and escape physiological regulation of binding to Beclin 1 by JNK1-mediated phosphorylation. 72 As Beclin 1 is a tumor suppressor gene, 91 it will be important to determine whether viral Bcl-2 antagonism of Beclin 1 function contributes to the oncogenic potential of the g-herpesviruses. In addition to viral evasion of autophagy, some viruses may have acquired mechanisms to subvert the autophagy pathway for their own benefit. The best-characterized example is poliovirus, a member of the non-enveloped single-stranded RNA picornavirus family. Poliovirus replication occurs on LC3positive double-membrane vesicles and is decreased by siRNA against components of the autophagic machinery. 60 Additionally, expression of poliovirus protein 2BC is sufficient to induce LC3-II conversion, although it is unclear if this is a direct effect of the viral protein on LC3 or perhaps a more indirect effect. 61 Autophagy also facilitates replication of another member of the picornavirus family, Coxsackievirus B3; pharmacological inhibition of autophagy with 3-MA or siRNA against atg7, beclin1, or VPS34 decreases viral replication, whereas autophagy stimulation with rapamycin treatment or starvation increases viral replication. 59 A recent study suggests that dengue virus 2, a member of the flavivirus family, also utilizes the autophagy machinery for replication. 64 A second flavivirus, hepatitis C virus (HCV), induces autophagy in immortalized hepatocytes, but the significance of autophagy in the HCV replication cycle is not yet known. 65 The replication of some other viruses seems not to be affected either positively or negatively by autophagy. In contrast to poliovirus and Coxsackievirus B3, studies with Drosophila C virus 62 and human rhinovirus 2 63 suggest that autophagy subversion may not be a universal requirement for picornavirus replication. Further, Atg5 and Beclin 1 are dispensable for the replication of vaccinia virus, a member of the poxvirus family, at least in MEFs and embryonic stem cells, respectively. 73 Mouse coronavirus replication does not require Atg5 in low passage MEFs or primary bone marrowderived macrophages. 66 Thus, the relative importance of autophagy and the nature of its function may vary considerably in different types of virus infections. Of note, increasing evidence suggests cross-talk between the HIV virus and the autophagy pathway. One recent report suggests that HIV can inhibit autophagy in macrophages. 67 More complex modulation through viral induction of autophagy and inhibition of autophagosome maturation has been suggested to enhance HIV infection. 92 In support of a positive function of autophagy in HIV infection (or at least the protein conjugation systems involved in autophagosomal membrane formation), a recent genome-wide siRNA screen identified several autophagy genes that function in this step of autophagy (e.g., ATG7, ATG8 (GABARAPL2), ATG12, and Atg16L2), as host factors required for HIV replication. 68 As noted above, autophagy also mediates cell death of bystander T cells in HIV infection through CXCR4 binding to HIV envelope proteins. 30 Thus far, studies performed on HIV infection and autophagy have been performed in vitro and primarily in non-native target cells; therefore, a high research priority will be to assess the functional significance of these diverse interactions in the regulation of HIV replication in primary CD4 þ T lymphocytes and macrophages and in the pathogenesis of HIV infection in vivo. As discussed above, for some viruses, autophagy may be an important antiviral pathway, other viruses may utilize components of the autophagy pathway to foster their own replication, or alternatively, may not intersect with autophagy pathway to any extent. One enigma is that an analysis of the types of viruses that evade, subvert, succumb to, or are not affected by autophagy does not reveal any obvious common characteristics that might provide insight into mechanisms responsible for each of these fates. For example, how do viruses that usurp autophagic machinery avoid the antiviral effects of autophagy? It is possible that viral commandeering of the autophagy machinery may prevent the formation of autophagosomes that would otherwise have antiviral effects. Conversely, it is unclear why some viruses are targeted by autophagy, while others are not. Further clarification of the exact mechanisms by which autophagy recognizes viruses or their components, by which autophagy exerts its antiviral effects (e.g., promoting cellular survival, xenophagic degradation of virions, immune activation, and/or unidentified functions), and by which viruses modulate or evade host autophagy should provide answers to these questions. Moreover, the identification of host factors that function in autophagy specifically in response to viral infection (versus other stress stimuli) may provide insight into the cellular determinants of the antiviral autophagic response. A largely unexplored area in autophagy and infectious diseases is the function of autophagy that occurs within pathogens that themselves are eukaryotes, such as protozoans, fungi, and helminths. The prosurvival function of autophagy during nutrient stress was originally described in the baker's yeast, S. cerevisaie, and autophagy in the roundworm, C. elegans, is essential for the development, lifespan extension, and stress adaptation. 93 These adaptive functions of autophagy in eukaryotic organisms are unlikely to be limited to model organisms studied in the laboratory. Such functions are also likely to be relevant to the pathogenesis of human diseases caused by eukaryotic microbes and indeed, some recent evidence suggests that protozoan and fungal autophagy may function as a virulence pathway during infection. The molecular machinery of autophagy was originally identified in genetic screens performed in the yeast, S. cerevisiae, and autophagy is also present in diseasecausing fungi (see Table 1 ). The first indication that autophagy was required for fungal disease was in a study of the rice blast fungus Magnaporthe grisea, where MgATG8 is required for conidial death and appresorium invasion during infection. 77 Furthermore, M. grisea homologs of ATG1, 78 and ATG2, ATG4, ATG5, ATG9 and ATG18 are involved in plant invasion. 94 In contrast, autophagy protects against cell death in the filamentous fungus Podospora anserine. 79, 80 Autophagy is also important in human fungal pathogens, including in the filamentous Aspergillus fumigatus, where AfATG1 has a function in metal ion homeostasis. 74 In contrast, Candida albicans does not require ATG9 for differentiation or infection of a mouse macrophage cell line. 75 Of potential medical relevance, a recent study provides strong evidence that autophagy in the dimorphic fungus Cryptococcus neoformans is important for virulence, as Class III PI3K/VPS34 deletion and ATG8 knockdown resulted in decreased replication and lethality in a mouse model of cryptococcosis. 76 These findings suggest that specific targeting of fungal, but not mammalian, autophagic machinery could be beneficial in the treatment of human cryptococcal disease. Protozoan parasites also undergo autophagy, and this response may be important for differentiation during the parasite life cycle and for infection. Autophagy is induced during differentiation of Trypansosoma cruzi, 58 although its function in trypanosomatid disease is unknown. Similarly, autophagy is upregulated during encystation in Entamoeba invadens and autophagy inhibition arrests growth and encystation. 53 Autophagy is also important for differentiation of Leishmania major 54 and Leishmania mexicana. 55 To Eat or not to Eat: Therapeutic Considerations Autophagy is emerging as an attractive therapeutic target for a number of diseases, including infectious diseases. 1,95 As mentioned, pharmacological or immunological activation of autophagy can enhance autophagy of microbes. However, the complex interplay between autophagy and various microbes (evasion, subversion, or susceptibility) raise unique issues in therapeutic intervention of infectious diseases (see Figure 3 ). For pathogens that are susceptible to autophagic degradation, or for which autophagy promotes cell survival, enhanced induction of autophagy may prove beneficial. Conversely, for pathogens that evade autophagy, enhancement may be sufficient to overcome microbial blockade, although more productive strategies may involve targeting the virulence factors that mediate autophagy evasion. Similarly, for pathogens that subvert autophagy to their own replicative advantage, the identification and inhibition of virulence factors involved in autophagy modulation may also provide benefit and promote antimicrobial effects of autophagy. A more complex situation is presented with protozoan and fungal infections, where host and microbial autophagy may benefit each organism respectively, so that therapeutic intervention in these cases may need to be species-specific. Some medically important bacteria and parasites have been shown to be susceptible to autophagy after chemical or immunological induction. Rapamycin, an inhibitor of mTOR and inducer of autophagy, enhances targeting of M. tuberculosis, 52 T. gondii, 56 and B. pseudomallei 44 for autophagolysosomal degradation. Conversely, the replication of some bacteria and viruses is enhanced after rapamycin treatment including Coxiella burnetii, 96 Anaplasma phagocytophilum, 97 poliovirus, 60 and Coxsackievirus B3. 59 An additional important consideration is that rapamycin has immunosuppressive effects in vivo, which may have adverse effects in anti-infective treatment, and mTOR inhibition may affect multiple downstream pathways. The identification of novel compounds that modulate autophagy independently of mTOR may therefore be useful in antimicrobial therapy, as has been demonstrated recently for mycobacterial killing in primary human macrophages. 98 Other novel approaches for antimicrobial therapy through autophagy modulation may include immune activation with agonists for autophagy through signaling pathways discussed above 7, 52 or enhancement of autophagy to promote microbial killing through autophagic generation of ubiquitin-derived peptides. 99 In addition, the efficacy of antigen-based vaccines may be enhanced by targeting such antigens to autophagic compartments by fusion with the autophagy protein, LC3. 24 As mentioned, some microbes possess mechanisms to evade autophagy, and others benefit from autophagy induction or utilize their own autophagy pathways to promote virulence. Therapeutic modulation of autophagy in these cases may require inhibition of specific microbial virulence factors; for example IcsB from Shigella, 49 BopA from B. pseudomallei, 44 or ICP34.5 from HSV-1. 16, 27 Further, inhibition of as-of-yet unidentified virulence factors for microbes that subvert autophagy may be beneficial. In addition, combined inhibition of virulence factors with agents that upregulate autophagy may yield synergistic antimicrobial effects. For eukaryotic parasites, strategies to inhibit autophagy specifically within the pathogen may be required to ensure that host autophagy remains functional; 100 detailed structural comparisons of pathogen and host autophagy proteins may aid in the design of such targeted therapies. In the past decade, autophagy has emerged as an important antimicrobial pathway. There is a broad range of immune signals that regulate autophagy, and autophagy has multiple effector functions in immunity and infection, including innate and adaptive immune activation, immune cell homeostasis, and microbial degradation. Despite the immense progress that has been made, our understanding of autophagy in infectious diseases is still quite primitive; most studies have been performed in vitro, which may or may not represent the function of autophagy in vivo, and many questions remain unanswered. An important next step will be to develop animal models for studying the function of autophagy in immunity and infection in vivo and to assess the effects of therapeutic modulation of autophagy on the outcomes of infectious diseases. At a more basic level, we need to better understand how immune signaling pathways intersect with the autophagy pathway, how host molecules identify and target intracellular pathogens to the autophagosome, and how host and microbial factors interact to utilize autophagy to the benefit of the microbe and/or the host. The answers to these questions may not only enhance our general understanding of the molecular mechanisms of autophagy, but may also enable us to translate our knowledge of autophagy as an antimicrobial pathway into new strategies for the treatment of infectious diseases. 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We apologize to authors whose work could not be included due to space restrictions. We thank Cindy Jozefiak for administrative support, and Angela Diehl for expert medical illustration. The work in the authors' laboratory was supported by NIH Grants R01 A10151367 (BL) and T32 A1007520 (AO), and an Ellison Medical Foundation Senior Scholars Award in Infectious Diseases (BL).