Macrophages help defend the host against Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), the major cause of tuberculosis (TB). Once phagocytized, Mtb resists killing by macrophages, replicates inside them, and leads to their death, releasing Mtb that can infect other cells. We found that the death of Mtb-infected mouse macrophages in vitro does not appear to proceed by a currently known pathway. Through genome-wide CRISPR-Cas9 screening, we identified a critical role for autocrine or paracrine signaling by macrophage-derived type I IFNs in the death of Mtb-infected macrophages in vitro, and blockade of type I IFN signaling augmented the effect of rifampin, a first-line TB drug, in Mtb-infected mice. Further definition of the pathway of type I IFN–mediated macrophage death may allow for host-directed therapy of TB that is more selective than systemic blockade of type I IFN signaling.
Introduction
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), the causative agent of tuberculosis (TB), appears to have coevolved with humans over at least 70,000 yr and is estimated to latently infect about a quarter of the global population. Mtb causes clinically active TB in ∼10 million people each year and kills an average of three people a minute (World Health Organization, 2019). Along with recent advances to modernize an often toxic chemotherapeutic regimen that is losing ground to antimicrobial resistance (Conradie et al., 2020) and to improve on the existing vaccine (Darrah et al., 2020), attention has also been given to the possibility of adjunctive host-directed therapy (Frank et al., 2019; Tiberi et al., 2018). The goals of host-directed therapy would be to help shorten anti-mycobacterial regimens that now last 6–28 mo or more and to limit immunopathology. Inflammation at sites of TB disease continues even after clinical cure (Malherbe et al., 2016). Immunopathology compromises lung function and may contribute to the increased risk of developing TB again in people who have been cured of it (Verver et al., 2005). Better understanding of the host–pathogen interaction would help in devising host-directed therapies to shorten antimicrobial treatment and reduce tissue damage.
Type I IFNs are a large family of IFNs that are broadly implicated in host immune response to viral and bacterial infections. Type I IFN signaling is crucial mainly for host defense against viruses but also against some bacteria, such as group B streptococci, pneumococci, and Escherichia coli (Mancuso et al., 2007). However, type I IFNs promote infection by other bacteria, including Mtb (Manca et al., 2005; Mayer-Barber et al., 2014; Robinson et al., 2012; Stanley et al., 2007; Teles et al., 2013). A blood cell transcriptome indicative of response to type I IFNs is a signature of active TB (Berry et al., 2010). The signature can be evident 18 mo before TB diagnosis (Scriba et al., 2017), consistent with the possibility that type I IFN signaling may foster conversion of the disease from its latent to its active form. A genetic mutation in IFN-α and -β receptor subunit 1 (IFNAR1) that reduced binding of type I IFNs and was associated with increased susceptibility to viral hepatitis, suggesting its functional significance, was also associated with decreased susceptibility to TB (Zhang et al., 2018). Conversely, active TB has developed during administration of type I IFN to patients with hepatitis (Babudieri et al., 2012; Belkahla et al., 2010; Telesca et al., 2007) and multiple sclerosis (Sirbu et al., 2020).
Macrophages produce type I IFNs in vitro when infected with Mtb and in vivo in Mtb-infected hosts (Cheng and Schorey, 2018; Collins et al., 2015; Dey et al., 2015; Manca et al., 2005; Stanley et al., 2007; Wassermann et al., 2015; Watson et al., 2015). In mouse models of TB, host genetic background affects the impact of type I IFN signaling. Necrotic pulmonary lesions are prominent in mice bearing a hypomorphic allele of Sp140 in the “Super susceptibility to tuberculosis 1 (Sst1)” locus (Kramnik et al., 2000) that impairs the ability of Sp140 to suppress the type I IFN response during intracellular bacterial infections (Ji et al., 2020,Preprint). In C57BL/6 (B6) congenic mice carrying the “susceptible” allele of the Sst1 locus, heightened tissue damage has been related to increased production of IL-1 receptor antagonist (Ji et al., 2019). However, type I IFNs induce the expression of several hundred genes, and the mechanisms by which they impair host control of Mtb are likely to be multifactorial as well as related to host genetic background.
Mtb establishes chronic infection chiefly by parasitizing macrophages. After macrophages phagocytize the bacterium, Mtb inhibits maturation of the phagosome into acidified phagolysosomes (Sturgill-Koszycki et al., 1994), promoting the pathogen’s survival and replication. If no Mtb-active antibiotics are used during the preparation and infection of macrophages in vitro, virulent Mtb kills the macrophages. If the investigator uses a very low multiplicity of infection (MOI; e.g., 0.1) and an optimal combination of oxygen tension, plasma concentration, and macrophage-activating cytokines, death of macrophage cultures is only postponed by a few weeks (Vogt and Nathan, 2011). In the host as well, macrophages die and release bacteria that can infect other cells. Thus, Mtb-induced cell death is a key factor in TB pathogenesis (Behar et al., 2010; Behar et al., 2011) and possibly a point for therapeutic intervention. Death of macrophages infected with virulent Mtb reportedly involves phagosomal rupture, mitochondrial dysfunction, ROS generation, and breaks in the plasma membrane (Lee et al., 2011; Zhao et al., 2017) or mycobacterial degradation of the macrophages’ nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (Pajuelo et al., 2018). However, there has been no identification of an upstream point of control at which Mtb-infected macrophages instruct themselves to undertake their own death.
Along with a lack of certainty about its upstream control points and downstream mechanisms, it is uncertain how the death of Mtb-infected macrophages compares with forms of cell death characterized in other settings (Galluzzi et al., 2018). Apoptosis, the first clearly delineated mode of programmed cell death, plays an important role in development as well as immune defense against pathogens. Apoptosis was reported in macrophages infected with attenuated Mtb as well as virulent Mtb and was dependent on the autocrine or paracrine action of TNFα (Keane et al., 1997). Later studies concluded that virulent Mtb suppresses macrophage apoptosis (Behar et al., 2010; Keane et al., 2000). The role of necroptosis, a form of programmed necrotic cell death, remains controversial in TB (Pajuelo et al., 2018; Stutz et al., 2018a; Stutz et al., 2018b; Zhao et al., 2017). TNF-related cell necrosis was reported in Mycobacterium marinum–infected zebrafish in vivo and M. marinum–infected macrophage cell lines in vitro without conforming to the current model of necroptosis (Roca et al., 2019), but that study did not involve Mtb or primary mammalian macrophages. Pyroptosis, a form of programmed necrotic cell death mediated by gasdermin proteins (Kayagaki et al., 2015; Shi et al., 2017; Shi et al., 2015; Wang et al., 2017), usually involves inflammasome activation and the maturation and release of pro-inflammatory cytokines, including IL-1β. Infection of macrophages with Mtb was reported to activate the NLRP3 and/or AIM2 inflammasomes, for both of which the adaptor ASC is essential (Dorhoi et al., 2012; Koo et al., 2008; Kurenuma et al., 2009; Wassermann et al., 2015). However, Nlrp3−/− mice control TB similarly to WT mice (Dorhoi et al., 2012). Mice deficient in IL-1 receptor signaling are far more susceptible to TB than Casp1−/− (actually Casp1−/−Casp11−/−; Kayagaki et al., 2011; Kuida et al., 1995) and Asc−/− mice are, suggesting a role for caspase-1– and caspase-11–independent IL-1β production and arguing against the importance of pyroptosis in TB (Dorhoi et al., 2012; Mayer-Barber et al., 2010). Recently, it was proposed that ferroptosis characterizes the death of Mtb-infected macrophages (Amaral et al., 2019).
Here, we report an analysis of macrophage cell death upon Mtb infection that suggests that apoptosis, pyroptosis, necroptosis, parthanatos, ferroptosis, and autophagy-dependent cell death are not the dominant cell death modes under the conditions studied. Our genome-wide screen and subsequent genetic and immunological studies show that autocrine or paracrine type I IFN signaling plays a controlling role in fostering the death of Mtb-infected macrophages.
Our findings reveal the central role of type I IFN signaling in Mtb-induced macrophage cell death, reinforce the idea of blocking type I IFN signaling as a host-directed therapy against TB, and raise the possibility that blocking a specific downstream step in type I IFN signaling could protect macrophages from Mtb.
Results and discussion
Mtb-induced macrophage death is likely to involve a novel mechanism
Mtb infection of macrophages, including mouse bone marrow–derived macrophages (BMDMs), leads to death of the macrophages (Fig. 1, A and B), but the mechanism remains elusive. We first asked whether the cell death fell into any of the known death categories implicated in earlier studies.
TNFα is induced by mycobacterial infection in vitro and in vivo and plays a dual role, either protecting or harming the host (Bean et al., 1999; Botha and Ryffel, 2003; Tobin et al., 2010). TNFα plus cycloheximide (CHX) treatment in vitro triggered apoptosis in various types of cells (Wang et al., 2008), as marked by cleavage of caspase-8 and caspase-3, important contributors to apoptosis. In contrast, Mtb-infected BMDMs showed no signs of apoptotic activation (Fig. 1 C and Fig. S1 A), and death was not blocked by the pan-caspase inhibitor Q-VD-OPH (Fig. S1 B), consistent with the lack of membrane blebbing (Fig. 1 A). Instead, Mtb infection inhibited the cleavage of caspase-8 and caspase-3 triggered by TNFα + CHX (Fig. 1 C and Fig. S1 A). Inhibition of apoptosis correlated with a marked increase in the anti-apoptotic protein cellular FLICE (FADD-like IL-1β-converting enzyme)–inhibitory protein (c-FLIP) after Mtb infection (Fig. S1 C).
When TNFα signaling is combined with inhibition of the NF-κB pathway and inhibition of caspases, it can lead to necroptosis, as marked by the mechanistically relevant phosphorylation of receptor-interacting protein kinase 1 (RIPK1), RIPK3, and mixed-lineage kinase domain–like pseudokinase (MLKL; Holler et al., 2000; He et al., 2009; Sun et al., 2012; Wang et al., 2014). However, Mtb infection did not activate necroptosis, even though MLKL, the executioner of necroptosis, was greatly up-regulated by Mtb infection (Fig. 1 D). Consistent with this, necrostatin-1 (Nec-1), a well-known necroptosis inhibitor that targets RIPK1 (Degterev et al., 2008), and GSK′872 (Kaiser et al., 2013), a RIPK3 inhibitor, both failed to inhibit the death of Mtb-infected BMDMs (Fig. S1, B and D).
Recently, ferroptosis was reported to play an important role in Mtb-induced macrophage cell death (Amaral et al., 2019). However, we were unable to confirm protection of Mtb-infected macrophages by exposure to the ferroptosis inhibitor ferrostatin-1 (Fer-1; Fig. S1 D), even though the same stock of Fer-1 inhibited classic ferroptosis induced by Erastin and RSL3 (Fig. S1 E).
Inhibitors of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase 1, such as BMN 673, ABT-888, and rucaparib, are often used to inhibit parthanatos, a type of regulated cell death related to hyperactivation of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase 1, a component of DNA damage response machinery (Galluzzi et al., 2018). These three compounds failed to inhibit Mtb-induced macrophage cell death (Fig. S1 F), suggesting that parthanatos is unlikely to account for the death of the Mtb-infected macrophages studied here.
Autophagy can also contribute to cell demise in certain settings (Galluzzi et al., 2018). However, when we used the CRIPSR-Cas9 technique in WT BMDMs to knock down autophagy-related 16–like 1 (ATG16L1), an important player in autophagy, Mtb-induced cell death was undiminished (Fig. 1 H). Likewise, BMDMs from mice with a conditional knockout of ATG16L1 in macrophages were not protected from Mtb-induced cell death (Fig. S1 H), although the latter experiment could only be performed once because of a reduction in mouse inventory during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Pyroptosis requires the pore-forming activity of gasdermin proteins in response to cleavage by the inflammatory caspase-1 and -11/4/5 or by noninflammatory caspases (Kayagaki et al., 2015; Shi et al., 2017; Shi et al., 2015; Wang et al., 2017). Infection of macrophages with Mtb leads to activation of the NLRP3 and/or AIM2 inflammasomes (Dorhoi et al., 2012; Koo et al., 2008; Kurenuma et al., 2009; Wassermann et al., 2015), but caspase-1 and caspase-11 (the latter mentioned because of a spontaneous loss-of-function mutation in the 129S2/SvPas [129S2] strain used as donors of embryonic stem cells in the generation of Casp1−/− mice) were found not to be involved in Mtb-induced macrophage cell death (Lee et al., 2011). We excluded a role for pyroptosis by observing that the Mtb-induced death of macrophages was unimpeded by individual or combined genetic deficiency of Casp1 and Casp11 or deficiency of gasdermin D (Gsdmd; Fig. 1, E–G; and Fig. S1 G).
Moreover, we considered that blocking one type of cell death might cause Mtb-infected cells to switch to another cell death pathway. However, the pan-caspase inhibitor Q-VD-OPH did not prevent Mtb-induced macrophage death, nor did a combination of Q-VD-OPH with inhibitors of necroptosis and ferroptosis when all three agents were applied together to BMDMs that were genetically pyroptosis proficient or pyroptosis deficient (Casp1−/−Casp11−/−; Fig. S1 G). Based on these findings, Mtb-induced macrophage death under these conditions is likely to involve a novel mechanism.
Genome-wide CRISPR-Cas9 screen identifies type I IFN signaling as important for the death of Mtb-infected RAW264.7 cells
For an unbiased identification of host genes involved in the Mtb-induced death of macrophages, we performed a genome-wide CRISPR-Cas9 screen in Mtb-infected RAW264.7 cells, a mouse macrophage cell line widely used in Mtb studies. Among 19,150 mouse protein coding genes targeted by 87,897 guide RNAs (gRNAs), we identified 11 potential candidate genes whose deletion was protective (Fig. 2 A). Among these genes, only multiple components of the type I IFN signaling pathway, including Ifnar1, Ifnar2, Jak1, Stat1, Stat2, and possibly spleen-associated tyrosine kinase, are clustered together (Fig. 2 B), suggesting the importance of this pathway in mediating Mtb-induced macrophage death. Using a CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing tool, we generated Ifnar2−/− RAW264.7 cells (Fig. S2 A) and confirmed the essentiality of Ifnar2 for Mtb-induced death of these macrophages, without inhibiting the uptake or growth of Mtb, whether the macrophages were infected at a lower or higher MOI (Fig. 2, C–E).
Type I IFN signaling is important for the death of Mtb-infected primary macrophages
We then returned to the study of primary BMDMs, which provide a more physiological context than cell lines do. Death of BMDMs from Ifnar1−/− mice was greatly delayed but not completely abolished compared with WT BMDMs, without a detectable difference in Mtb uptake or growth at either a low or high MOI (Fig. 3, A–C; and Fig. S2 B). When IFN-γ was added to activate macrophages to restrict Mtb growth (Fig. 3 C), Ifnar1−/− cells survived dramatically better than any of the other Mtb-infected groups studied (Fig. 3, A and B). Deficiency of Stat2, which participates in type I IFN signaling, mimicked Ifnar1 deficiency in delaying the Mtb-induced death of BMDMs (Fig. 3 D).
BMDMs produced no detectable type I IFNs without infection but secreted IFN-β when infected with Mtb (Fig. S2 C), consistent with numerous reports that Mtb induces macrophages to produce type I IFNs (Cheng and Schorey, 2018; Collins et al., 2015; Dey et al., 2015; Manca et al., 2005; Stanley et al., 2007; Wassermann et al., 2015; Watson et al., 2015). Addition of exogenous IFN-β or IFN-α further enhanced the Mtb-induced cell death of WT but not Ifnar1−/− BMDMs (Fig. S2 D). Temporarily blocking type I IFN signaling with anti-IFNAR1 monoclonal mAb partially protected WT B6 and 129S2 BMDMs from Mtb-induced death (Fig. 3 E and Fig. S2 E), confirming the importance of type I IFN signaling in this type of macrophage death.
Blocking type I IFN signaling protects Mtb-infected mice
Given the evidence that type I IFNs may be detrimental to a host with TB, several investigators have tested the effect of genetically deleting Ifnar1 in mouse models of TB. This has had limited impact in C57BL/6 mice (Antonelli et al., 2010; Desvignes et al., 2012; Mayer-Barber et al., 2011; Moreira-Teixeira et al., 2016; Stanley et al., 2007). However, the whole blood transcriptome signature of Mtb-infected 129S2 mice more closely resembles that of humans with TB (Domaszewska et al., 2017), and Dorhoi et al. (2014) reported that Ifnar1 deficiency on the 129S2 background was protective. Therefore, we decided to test the impact of anti-IFNAR1 mAb or isotype-matched control IgG in 129S2 mice.
We began with a prophylactic regimen as proof of concept. Mice were given anti-IFNAR1 or control IgG 1 d before aerosol infection with ∼300 CFU of Mtb and weekly thereafter. Anti-IFNAR1 prevented weight loss and mortality (Fig. 4 A and Fig. S3 A) and reduced Mtb CFU and gross pathology in the lungs (Fig. S3, B and C).
Because host-directed therapy of TB would most likely be used as an adjunct to anti-mycobacterial therapy, we next tested the combination of anti-IFNAR1 mAbs and rifampin (Rif), a component of the 6-mo regimen used for drug-sensitive TB. Prophylactic and ongoing weekly administration of anti-IFNAR1 mAb was complemented by a daily dose of 3 mg/kg Rif beginning on day 28 after infection. Although Rif alone had little effect on Mtb burden by day 37 (that is, after 9 d of treatment), the combination of Rif with anti-IFNAR1 afforded a greater reduction in CFU in lungs and livers than Rif alone, suggesting the potential value of combination therapy (Fig. S3 D).
Next, we tested the effect of administering anti-IFNAR1 mAb beginning after TB disease was well established. 129S2 mice infected with ∼300 CFU of Mtb were given anti-IFNAR1 mAb, control mAb, or PBS and either Rif or its vehicle (Veh) beginning on day 14 after infection, when the lung Mtb burden had reached ∼106 CFU (Fig. 4 B). About two thirds of the mice treated with PBS + Veh or control IgG + Veh succumbed to TB, while 90% of mice treated with anti-IFNAR1 + Veh survived (Fig. 4 C). In these experiments, we used Rif at 7.5 mg/kg, which sufficed to keep the mice alive for the duration of the experiment (Fig. 4 C) and lowered the Mtb burden (Fig. 4 D, top panel). On day 33, the bacterial load in the lungs of mice treated with anti-IFNAR1 + Veh was nearly 1.5 log10 lower than in those receiving PBS + Veh or control IgG + Veh (Fig. 4 D, top panel). The bacterial load reduction was consistent with the less severe pulmonary pathology in anti-IFNAR1–treated groups (Fig. 4 E). There was little change in spleen CFU (Fig. S3 E), but blocking type I IFN signaling, especially when combined with Rif treatment, yielded a statistically significant reduction in bacterial load in the liver, where Rif alone had no measurable impact (Fig. 4 D, bottom panel).
Next, we tested the impact of lower and higher bacterial burdens at the onset of infection, because the size of the inoculum impacts the rate of disease progression in mouse models of TB and can influence the results of specific interventions (e.g., Amaral et al., 2019). When mice were infected with less than ∼200 CFU and then treated as in Fig. 4 B, all of them survived for the duration of the experiment, but the combination of anti-IFNAR1 mAb and Rif yielded the lowest Mtb load in the lungs and livers (Fig. 4 F). When mice were infected with a mean inoculum of 450 CFU and treated as in Fig. 4 B, the death rates increased to 87% and 80% for control IgG + Veh and PBS + Veh treatments, respectively, and reached 18% for Rif alone. However, anti-IFNAR1 treatment alone lowered the death rate to 60%, and the combination of anti-IFNAR1 and Rif protected all the animals (Fig. 4 G). Finally, mice were infected with an extremely high bacterial inoculum (mean, 1,700 CFU). By the time treatment began on day 14, the lung Mtb load had already reached nearly 107 CFU. Mice in the control groups succumbed within 30 d, while anti-IFNAR1 significantly prolonged survival (Fig. 4 H).
In sum, blocking type I IFN signaling was effective against TB when treatment started after disease was established, whether the disease was progressing slowly or rapidly, and augmented the benefit of Rif.
The mechanism of Mtb-induced macrophage cell death has been an enigma. The study of different mycobacterial species, different Mtb strains, and different macrophage sources are contributing factors. Using mouse BMDMs infected with virulent Mtb of the H37Rv strain, we confirmed that Mtb infection inhibited apoptosis (Behar et al., 2010), perhaps because it induced c-FLIP. We failed to detect activation of necroptosis triggered by Mtb infection alone, and we excluded the role of pyroptosis, parthanatos, ferroptosis, or autophagy in Mtb-induced macrophage death under the conditions studied. This suggests that the Mtb-induced macrophage cell death studied here is likely to proceed by a novel mechanism. The Mtb-infected macrophages shrink, adopt a crenellated appearance, and then disappear as recognizable cellular units in conjunction with the appearance of small particulate material in the medium, suggesting a form of lytic or necrotic death whose signaling and execution deserve further study.
We discovered that type I IFN signaling is an important mediator of Mtb-induced macrophage cell death. Type I IFN signaling has been implicated in host cell death in Salmonella typhimurium infection, where it promoted macrophage necroptosis in a manner dependent on RIPK1 and RIPK3 and led to poor control of the infection (Robinson et al., 2012). However, the notion that type I IFN signaling is detrimental to a host with TB has not previously been directly linked to macrophage cell death (Moreira-Teixeira et al., 2018; Trinchieri, 2010).
Type I IFNs affect many cells in diverse ways, and we do not propose that triggering the death of Mtb-infected macrophages is the most important specific mechanism of its adverse effects in TB; however, it is one of the first specific mechanisms identified. Not only does the death of infected macrophages release the pathogen to infect other cells, but the release of host cell contents may trigger tissue-damaging inflammation. Absence of Ifnar1 in 129S2 mice markedly reduced migration of inflammatory monocytes and neutrophils to the lungs (Dorhoi et al., 2014), and prophylaxis with anti-IFNAR1 mAb protected mice subsequently infected with virulent Mycobacterium bovis (Wang et al., 2019). Type I IFNs impaired the activation of macrophages by type II IFN (IFN-γ; Yoshida et al., 1988), which is essential for controlling TB in mice (Cooper et al., 1993; Flynn et al., 1993) and people (Jouanguy et al., 1996; Jouanguy et al., 1997), and this was also seen in the context of infection with Listeria monocytogenes (Rayamajhi et al., 2010) and Mycobacterium leprae (Teles et al., 2013). In vitro, we found that exposure to IFN-γ led to less type I IFN production after Mtb infection (Fig. S2 D).
Our work supports a recent report that inhibition of type I IFN signaling in vivo protects mice against TB (Ji et al., 2019). In the present study, benefit was seen with onset of treatment at a higher bacterial burden and with less frequent dosing of anti-IFNAR1 mAb. The major new finding in our mouse studies was that anti-IFNAR1 mAb augmented the protection afforded by Rif, supporting the potential therapeutic value of blocking type I IFN signaling as an adjunct to antibiotic treatment. The question can now be asked: what specific sub-routines in the type I IFN signaling pathway in Mtb-infected macrophages lead to their death and by what molecular machinery? Can small-molecule inhibitors and macrophage-specific conditional knockouts thereof contribute to protection of mice from TB and shorten the duration of an otherwise optimal multidrug regimen without resorting to blocking type I IFN signaling more broadly?
The centrality of type I IFN signaling in macrophage cell death triggered by Mtb infection provides a new angle from which to study the role of type I IFNs in bacterial pathogenesis. Chemical-biological and genetic studies are underway to delve further into the mechanism. Knowledge of specific steps in this pathway may contribute to the design of host-directed therapies of bacterial infections.
Materials and methods
Cell lines and primary macrophages
RAW264.7 (ATCC; Cat# TIB-71, male), HEK293T (ATCC; Cat# CRL-3216, female), HT-1080 (ATCC; Cat# CCL-121, male), and L929 (ATCC; Cat# CCL-1, male) were cultured in DMEM supplemented with 10% FBS, 2 mM L-glutamine, 10 mM Hepes, pH 7.5, and 1 mM sodium pyruvate at 37°C in a 5% CO2 incubator. L929-conditioned medium (LCM) was filtered through a 0.22-µm sterile unit with a polyethersulfone membrane, aliquoted, and frozen at −30°C. 2 d before Mtb infection, RAW264.7 cells were preadapted to DMEM supplemented with 2% FBS, 2 mM L-glutamine, 10 mM Hepes, pH 7.5, and 1 mM sodium pyruvate and maintained in this medium for the duration of infection unless otherwise stated.
To prepare BMDMs, mouse femurs were flushed with DMEM and the cell-containing supernatant was collected after allowing debris to settle at 1 g. The cells were centrifuged at 193 g for 8 min at room temperature (hereafter, all centrifugations were performed at room temperature unless otherwise specified), and the pellet was resuspended and cultured in DMEM supplemented with 10% FBS, 2 mM L-glutamine, 10 mM Hepes, pH 7.5, 1 mM sodium pyruvate, and 20% LCM at 37°C in a 5% CO2 incubator for 6–7 d. On the day of harvest, adherent cells were washed once with ice-cold PBS and incubated in cold PBS + 1 mM EDTA at 4°C for 10 min. Cells were dislodged by gentle pipetting, collected by centrifugation as above, resuspended in cold PBS, washed again the same way, and then cultured in DMEM supplemented with 10% FBS, 2 mM L-glutamine, 10 mM Hepes, pH 7.5, 1 mM sodium pyruvate, and 10% LCM.
Mice
WT C57BL/6 (#000664), WT C57BL/6N (#005304), Casp1−/− (#032662), Gsdmd−/− (#032410), Stat2−/− (#023309), Casp1−/−Casp11−/− (#016621), and Cas9 knockin (#026179) mice (all in C57BL/6 background) were purchased from The Jackson Laboratory. Casp11−/− mice were kindly provided by J. Blander. Cas9 knockin mice were mated with WT C57BL/6 mice, and the resulting offspring carrying one Cas9 allele (Cas9-het) were used for electroporation of gRNA amplicons. Female 129S2 mice (#476) were purchased from Charles River Laboratories, rested for 2 wk, and then infected at the age of 8 wk. All mice were housed in a specific pathogen-free facility. When infected with Mtb, mice were housed in a BSL3 vivarium. All mouse experiments were approved by and performed in accordance with requirements of the Weill Cornell Medicine Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee.
Plasmids and reagents
LentiGuide plasmid (#52963) was purchased from Addgene. Plasmids with gRNA insertions were verified by Sanger sequencing. Mouse IFN-γ (#11276905001), TNFα (#T0157), CHX (#C4859), Rif (#R3501), Nec-1 (#N9037), Erastin (#E7781), RSL3 (#SML2234), and puromycin (#P8833) were purchased from Sigma. Mouse IFN-αA (#12100-1), mouse IFN-β (#12405-1), and Mouse IFN-β ELISA Kit, High Sensitivity (#42410-1) were from PBL Assay Science. BMN 673 (#A4153), ABT-888 (#A3002), rucaparib (#A4156), and z-VAD-FMK (#A1902) were from Apexbio. Fer-1 (#17729) was from Cayman Chemical. Smac mimetic birinapant (#501015095) was from Fisher Scientific.
For neutralization on cells, mouse IgG1 κ isotype control (#16-4714-82) was from Affymetrix, and anti-mouse IFN α/β receptor I (IFNAR1; #16-5945-85) was from Life Technologies. For use in mice, mouse monoclonal anti-human IFN-γ Rα chain (as control IgG; #G737) and mouse monoclonal anti-mouse IFNAR1 (MAR1-5A3; #I-1188) were purchased from Leinco Technologies. Antibodies for β-actin (#sc-47778) and RIPK3 (#sc-374639) were from Santa Cruz Biotechnology. Antibodies for cleaved caspase-3 (Asp175; #9664S), caspase-3 (#9662S), cleaved caspase-8 (Asp387; #9429S), caspase-8 (#4927S), phospho-RIP1 (Ser166; #31122S), MLKL (#37705S), and phospho-MLKL (Ser345; #37333S) were from Cell Signaling Technology. Phospho-RIPK3 (Thr231/Ser232; #ab222320) and ATG16L1 (#ab187671) antibodies were from Abcam. RIPK1 antibody (#610459) was from BD Biosciences. Anti-FLIP (Dave-2; #AG-20B-0005-C100) was from Adipogen Corporation.
Bacterial culture and macrophage infection
Mtb H37Rv was used in this study. Mtb was grown in Middlebrook 7H9 medium containing 0.5% glycerol, 10% oleic acid–dextrose–catalase (BD Biosciences; #212351) supplement, and 0.02% tyloxapol at 37°C in a 5% CO2 incubator. For infection of macrophages, Mtb cultures reaching an OD580 of 0.3–0.5 were centrifuged at 3,082 g, and the pellet was resuspended in PBS + 0.02% tyloxapol. The suspension was enriched for single cells by centrifugation at 123 g for 10 min with the brake set to 0. Mtb cell number was calculated by assuming 0.1 OD580 = 5 × 107 bacteria/ml. The required number of bacteria was centrifuged for 10 min at 3,082 g, resuspended in mammalian cell culture medium for infection of cells, and added to macrophages to initiate infection. 4 h after the addition of Mtb, macrophage monolayers were washed twice with PBS prewarmed to 37°C, and then fresh medium was replaced. No antibiotics were used at any time in the preparation, infection, or postinfection incubation of macrophages. For measuring extracellular bacterial burden, cell culture supernatant was removed for serial dilution and plating. For measuring intracellular bacterial burden, adherent cells in 24-well plates were washed twice with PBS and then lysed with 100 µl of 0.5% Triton X-100 in PBS at room temperature for 5 min. 400 µl PBS was then supplemented, and cellular content was mixed well by pipetting up and down. The lysates were used for serial dilution and plating on 7H11+glycerol+OADC agar plates.
Cell viability assays
Cell viability was measured in two ways, as indicated in the figure legends. The viability of BMDMs was assayed by measuring ATP levels using a Promega CellTiter-Glo kit according to the manufacturer’s instructions. The viability of RAW264.7 cells was assayed using a Promega CytoTox 96 Non-Radioactive Cytotoxicity Assay kit in the Total Cell Number Assay mode with slight modification. The remaining adherent cells were washed once with PBS, then lysed in the kit’s 1 × lysis buffer at 37°C for 45–60 min. An aliquot of the lysate was used for the lactate dehydrogenase enzymatic assay as instructed. Percentage viability was normalized to that of uninfected cells.
ELISA
At indicated times after Mtb infection of macrophages, cell culture supernatant was centrifuged at 21,130 g at 4°C for 5 min, and the supernatant was passed through a 0.22-µm cellulose acetate filter before being removed from the BSL3 facility. Neat samples were used for the IFN-β ELISA following the manufacturers’ instructions.
CRISPR-Cas9 screen
Propagation of the Genome-wide Mouse Lentiviral CRISPR gRNA Library v1 (Addgene) followed the distributor’s guide. The lentivirus library was prepared as described (Shi et al., 2015). RAW264.7 cells (2 × 107) stably expressing Cas9 protein were infected with the lentivirus library at an MOI of 0.3 with 8 µg/ml of polybrene. Cells were harvested 72 h later, reseeded at a density of 105 cells/ml, and treated with 5 µg/ml puromycin to remove noninfected cells. About 8 d later, the resulting mutant cells were harvested, and 3 × 108 cells were infected with Mtb at an MOI of 10 while another 108 cells served as control. 4 h after Mtb infection, cells were washed twice with prewarmed PBS to remove extracellular Mtb, and fresh medium was replaced. 5 d after infection, when ∼5% of the cells remained, the medium was replaced with fresh medium (10% FBS) containing 10 µg/ml Rif and 12.5 µM moxifloxacin to kill Mtb and allow surviving host cells to recover. After another 7 d, when cells were ∼90% confluent, cells were harvested and genomic DNA was prepared as described (Shi et al., 2015). The screen was repeated three times on separate occasions.
The gRNA was amplified as in Shi et al. (2015) using primers listed in Table S1, and the quality of the amplicons was checked by a High-Sensitivity DNA Assay (Agilent) before they were sequenced in a HiSeq2500 (Illumina) using the 50-bp single-end sequencing protocol (sequencing primer listed in Table S1). The first 19 nucleotides from each sequencing read are the gRNA sequence recovered from the library. The frequency of each gRNA was calculated by dividing the gRNA read number by the total sample read number. Besides those gRNAs with 0 frequency in certain samples, the frequency of all other gRNAs ranged above 0.947. Before the fold enrichment was calculated, the frequency of each gRNA was increased by 0.01 to get rid of the “divisor being 0” error with negligible change of actual value, and then fold enrichment was calculated by comparing the processed frequency of each gRNA in the experimental sample with that in the control sample. The fold enrichment data were then analyzed by the Broad Institute CRISPR Screen Analysis Tool (https://portals.broadinstitute.org/gpp/public/analysis-tools/crispr-gene-scoring) using the Negative Binomial Distribution (STARS) method with the threshold set to a standard 10%. Because we are only interested in the biological meaning of positive selection, we used the positive selection result to calculate the average score and average −log10(P value) of three replicates. Candidate genes were determined based on the criterion that they were identified in at least two of the three independent experiments. The volcano plot of average −log10(p) versus average score was generated, and top hits were highlighted in red.
Generation of Ifnar2−/− RAW264.7 cells using CRISPR-Cas9
The generation of CRISPR-Cas9 knockout cell lines was adapted from a published approach (Ran et al., 2013). 2 × 105 RAW264.7 cells were transfected with 0.5 µg gRNA-expressing pSpCas9(BB)-2A-eGFP plasmid, and 48–72 h after transfection, eGFP-positive cells were sorted by flow cytometry on a BD Biosciences FACS Aria II or Influx sorter and cultured till confluency. Genomic DNA was prepared from a subset of cells, and gRNA efficiency was validated by SURVEYOR assay. Cells were then sorted singly into individual wells of 96-well plates. The genotype of each clone was verified by sequencing of the PCR fragments. The gRNA sequence for Ifnar2 is 5′-ACATAACAATACGAAATTCC-3′.
Electroporation of gRNAs into Cas9 BMDMs
LentiGuide plasmids with the correct gRNA insertion were used as templates to amplify hU6 promoter-gRNA fragments in a 50 µl × 8 PCR reaction system using NEB Phusion polymerase. The following primers were used: forward: 5′-ACCCAGAGAGGGCCTATTTC-3′; reverse: 5′-CTGTCCCTGTAATAAACCCG-3′. The gRNA sequences used are negative control: 5′-GAACTCGTTAGGCCGTGAAG-3′ (Sanjana et al., 2014); Atg16l1-a: 5′-ACCGAACTGCACAAGAAGCG-3′; and Atg16l1-b: 5′-GGGTCTGGTTGGCTACCTCG-3′. If the intensity and purity of the PCR products were good, then the rest of the amplified DNA was purified using a Qiagen PCR purification kit and eluted with 200 µl double distilled H2O. 20 µl of 3 M NaAc (pH 5.2) followed by 500 µl ethanol was added to precipitate DNA at −80°C for at least 1 h. After centrifugation at 18,506 g at 4°C for 20 min, the DNA pellet was washed twice with 70% ethanol and allowed to air dry. DNA was then solubilized using 12 µl sterile double distilled H2O, and the concentration was checked using Nanodrop. The Mouse Macrophage Nucleofector Kit (Lonza) was used to electroporate 3 µg DNA into 2 × 107 freshly isolated bone marrow cells from Cas9-het mice on an Amaxa Nucleofector II machine following the manufacturer’s instructions. Electroporated cells were differentiated in 20% LCM-containing DMEM as above and harvested on day 7 for use.
Aerosol infection
Mtb H37Rv was grown in Middlebrook 7H9 medium containing 0.5% glycerol, 10% albumin–dextrose–saline supplement, and 0.05% Tween-80 at 37°C in a 5% CO2 incubator. Log phase cultures were centrifuged, and the pellet was resuspended in PBS + 0.05% Tween-80. A suspension enriched in single cells was prepared as above. The required volume was centrifuged for 10 min at 3,082 g, and the pellet was resuspended in PBS. This Mtb inoculum was used to infect mice using a Glas-Col Inhalation Exposure System.
Administration of antibodies and antibiotic
The schedule of administration of antibodies, Rif, or Veh is illustrated in the figures. Antibodies were administrated by intraperitoneal injection. For the first dose (2.5 mg), antibodies were diluted to 6.25 mg/ml in PBS, and 400 µl was injected. For later weekly doses, 0.5 mg of antibodies in 200 µl was injected. The volume of PBS injected as a control matched the volume used to administer antibodies.
Rif was solubilized in Veh (0.5% carboxymethylcellulose and 0.25% Tween-80) by sonication. 200 µl Rif or Veh was delivered to mice by oral gavage once a day for 5 consecutive days/week.
Mouse harvest
On day 1 after infection, two to five mice were euthanized with CO2, and lung homogenates in PBS were plated on 7H10 agar supplemented with 0.5% glycerol and 10% OADC. CFU were counted 3 wk later to determine the initial bacterial load. On indicated days, mice were euthanized with CO2, and lungs, livers, and spleens were harvested. Each organ (except the upper lobe of the left lung) was homogenized in PBS, serially diluted, and plated on 7H10 agar for determination of CFU at 3 wk. The upper lobes of the left lungs were fixed in 10% formalin.
Statistical analyses
Results of cell viability assays, ELISAs, and bacterial growth assays in macrophages are represented as means ± SD. Mtb burden in mouse organs and changes in mouse body weight are represented as means ± SEM. Data were analyzed by two-tailed Mann-Whitney test of ranks (unpaired, nonparametric t test) using Prism (GraphPad Software). Mouse survival assays were analyzed by log-rank (Mantel-Cox) test. P values were noted as follows: ns, not significant; *, P < 0.05; **, P < 0.01; ***, P < 0.001; ****, P < 0.0001.
Online supplemental material
Fig. S1 displays additional data related to Fig. 1, showing that Mtb-infected macrophages do not show markers of apoptosis, and their death is not likely to involve ferroptosis, necroptosis, parthanatos, or autophagic cell death. This figure also contains the Fer-1 authentication result. Fig. S2 displays additional data related to Fig. 2 and 3, showing that type I IFNs induced by Mtb infection contribute to Mtb-triggered macrophage death. Fig. S3 displays additional data related to Fig. 4, showing that prophylactic administration of anti-IFNAR1 mAb protects 129S2 mice against TB. Table S1 contains the oligonucleotide sequences used for the CRISPR-Cas9 screen.
Acknowledgments
We thank J. Sun (Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY) for providing Ifnar1−/− and J. Blander (The Jill Roberts Institute for Research in Inflammatory Bowel Disease, Weill Cornell Graduate School of Medical Science, New York, NY) for providing Casp11−/− mice; K. Cadwell, P. Martin, and E. Rudensky (New York University School of Medicine, New York, NY) for cells from an Atg16l1fl/fl-Lysm-Cre mouse; the WCM Genomics Resource Core Facility, A. Tan, and T. Zhang for help with high throughput sequencing and data analysis; and the Flow Cytometry Core Facility for help with cell sorting. We thank A. Sher and S. Ehrt for advice; R. Schreiber for assistance with anti-IFNAR1 mAb; L. Wu and G. Weskamp for help with electroporation of bone marrow cells with gRNA amplicons; and H. Su, R. Olvera, C. Trujillo, H. Xu, and members of the Nathan laboratory for helpful discussions and technical assistance.
L. Zhang is a Cancer Research Institute/Robertson Foundation Fellow. This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (grant no. 1R01AI138940), the Milstein Program in Chemical Biology and Translational Medicine (to C.F. Nathan), and the Potts Memorial Foundation (to L. Zhang). The Department of Microbiology and Immunology is supported by the William Randolph Hearst Foundation.
Author contributions: L. Zhang and C.F. Nathan conceived the study; L. Zhang designed and performed the majority of experiments, assisted by X. Jiang, D. Pfau, and Y. Ling; X. Jiang contributed greatly to the mouse infection experiments and performed oral gavage and intraperitoneal injection procedures; and L. Zhang and C.F. Nathan analyzed the data and wrote the manuscript with input from the other authors.
References
Competing Interests
Disclosures: The authors declare no competing interests exist.