Mammalian cells internalize bacteriophages and utilize them as a food source to enhance cellular growth and survival

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Abstract

There is a growing appreciation that the direct interaction between bacteriophages and the mammalian host can facilitate diverse and unexplored symbioses. Yet the impact these bacteriophages may have on mammalian cellular and immunological processes is poorly understood. Here we applied highly purified phage T4, free from bacterial by-products and endotoxins to mammalian cells and analyzed the cellular responses using luciferase reporter and antibody microarray assays. Phage preparations were applied in vitro to either A549 lung epithelial cells, MDCK-I kidney cells, or primary mouse bone marrow derived macrophages with the phage-free supernatant serving as a comparative control. Highly purified T4 phages were rapidly internalized by mammalian cells and accumulated within macropinosomes but did not activate the inflammatory DNA response TLR9 or cGAS-STING pathways. Following eight hours of incubation with T4 phage, whole cell lysates were analyzed via antibody microarray that detected expression and phosphorylation levels of human signaling proteins. T4 phage internalization led to the activation of AKT-dependent pathways, resulting in an increase in cell metabolism, survival, and actin reorganization, the last being critical for macropinocytosis and potentially regulating a positive feedback loop to drive further phage internalization. T4 phages additionally down-regulated CDK1 and its downstream effectors, leading to an inhibition of cell cycle progression and an increase in cellular growth through a prolonged G1 phase. These interactions demonstrate that highly purified T4 phages do not activate DNA-mediated inflammatory pathways but do trigger protein phosphorylation cascades that promote cellular growth and survival. We conclude that mammalian cells are internalizing bacteriophages as a food source to promote cellular growth and metabolism.

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  1. AKT is at the center of a multitude of different cellular processes ranging from the cell cycle, apoptosis, cell survival, glucose metabolism, and the immune system

    Phage T4 has a glucose-containing modified base - glucosyl-hydroxymethylcytosine (glc-HMC). I'm wondering if the extra glucose coming in on the DNA could be driving some of this signaling? There are mutants of phage T4 that don't have this mod that could be used for a control here. I was also generally curious as to how the DNA modification might impact recognition by intracellular DNA sensors.