Intracellular survival of S. aureus within phagocytes is facilitated by the modulation of multiple host cell pathways.

Author(s):  
Emilio Vozza
2006 ◽  
Vol 74 (2) ◽  
pp. 1323-1338 ◽  
Author(s):  
Som Subhra Chatterjee ◽  
Hamid Hossain ◽  
Sonja Otten ◽  
Carsten Kuenne ◽  
Katja Kuchmina ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Listeria monocytogenes is a gram-positive, food-borne microorganism responsible for invasive infections with a high overall mortality. L. monocytogenes is among the very few microorganisms that can induce uptake into the host cell and subsequently enter the host cell cytosol by breaching the vacuolar membrane. We infected the murine macrophage cell line P388D1 with L. monocytogenes strain EGD-e and examined the gene expression profile of L. monocytogenes inside the vacuolar and cytosolic environments of the host cell by using whole-genome microarray and mutant analyses. We found that ∼17% of the total genome was mobilized to enable adaptation for intracellular growth. Intracellularly expressed genes showed responses typical of glucose limitation within bacteria, with a decrease in the amount of mRNA encoding enzymes in the central metabolism and a temporal induction of genes involved in alternative-carbon-source utilization pathways and their regulation. Adaptive intracellular gene expression involved genes that are associated with virulence, the general stress response, cell division, and changes in cell wall structure and included many genes with unknown functions. A total of 41 genes were species specific, being absent from the genome of the nonpathogenic Listeria innocua CLIP 11262 strain. We also detected 25 genes that were strain specific, i.e., absent from the genome of the previously sequenced L. monocytogenes F2365 serotype 4b strain, suggesting heterogeneity in the gene pool required for intracellular survival of L. monocytogenes in host cells. Overall, our study provides crucial insights into the strategy of intracellular survival and measures taken by L. monocytogenes to escape the host cell responses.


2010 ◽  
Vol 78 (6) ◽  
pp. 2429-2437 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tracey A. Zola ◽  
Heather R. Strange ◽  
Nadia M. Dominguez ◽  
Joseph P. Dillard ◽  
Cynthia N. Cornelissen

ABSTRACT Survival of Neisseria gonorrhoeae within host epithelial cells is expected to be important in the pathogenesis of gonococcal disease. We previously demonstrated that strain FA1090 derives iron from a host cell in a process that requires the Ton complex and a putative TonB-dependent transporter, TdfF. FA1090, however, lacks the gonococcal genetic island (GGI) that is present in the majority of strains. The GGI in strain MS11 has been partially characterized, and it encodes a type IV secretion system (T4SS) involved in DNA release. In this study we investigated the role of iron acquisition and GGI-encoded gene products in gonococcal survival within cervical epithelial cells. We demonstrated that intracellular survival of MS11 was dependent on acquisition of iron from the host cell, but unlike the findings for FA1090, expression of the Ton complex was not required. Survival was not dependent on a putative TonB-like protein encoded in the GGI but instead was directly linked to T4SS structural components in a manner independent of the ability to release or internalize DNA. These data suggest that expression of selected GGI-encoded open reading frames confers an advantage during cervical cell infection. This study provides the first link between expression of the T4SS apparatus and intracellular survival of gonococci.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kendi Okuda ◽  
Miriam Maria Silva Costa Franco ◽  
Ari Yasunaga ◽  
Ricardo Gazzinelli ◽  
Michel Rabinovitch ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 78 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Elinor Hortle ◽  
Stefan H Oehlers

ABSTRACT Mycobacteria have co-evolved with their hosts resulting in pathogens adept at intracellular survival. Pathogenic mycobacteria actively manipulate infected macrophages to drive granuloma formation while subverting host cell processes to create a permissive niche. Granuloma residency confers phenotypic antimicrobial resistance by physically excluding or neutralising antibiotics. Host-directed therapies (HDTs) combat infection by restoring protective immunity and reducing immunopathology independent of pathogen antimicrobial resistance status. This review covers innovative research that has discovered ‘secondary’ symptoms of infection in the granuloma stroma are actually primary drivers of infection and that relieving these stromal pathologies with HDTs benefits the host. Advances in our understanding of the relationship between tuberculosis and the host vasculature, haemostatic system and extracellular matrix reorganisation are discussed. Preclinical and clinical use of HDTs against these stromal targets are summarised.


IUBMB Life ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 59 (4) ◽  
pp. 274-279 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Júlia M. Alves ◽  
Walter Colli

2009 ◽  
Vol 53 (12) ◽  
pp. 5236-5244 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hao-Chieh Chiu ◽  
Samuel K. Kulp ◽  
Shilpa Soni ◽  
Dasheng Wang ◽  
John S. Gunn ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTEradication of intracellular pathogenic bacteria with host-directed chemical agents has been an anticipated innovation in the treatment of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. We previously synthesized and characterized a novel small-molecule agent, AR-12, that induces autophagy and inhibits the Akt kinase in cancer cells. As both autophagy and the Akt kinase have been shown recently to play roles in the intracellular survival of several intracellular bacteria, includingSalmonellaentericaserovar Typhimurium, we investigated the effect of AR-12 on the intracellular survival ofSalmonellaserovar Typhimurium in macrophages. Our results show that AR-12 induces autophagy in macrophages, as indicated by increased autophagosome formation, and potently inhibits the survival of serovar Typhimurium in macrophages in association with increased colocalization of intracellular bacteria with autophagosomes. Intracellular bacterial growth was partially rescued in the presence of AR-12 by the short hairpin RNA-mediated knockdown of Beclin-1 or Atg7 in macrophages. Moreover, AR-12 inhibits Akt kinase activity in infected macrophages, which we show to be important for its antibacterial effect as the enforced expression of constitutively activated Akt1 in these cells reverses the AR-12-induced inhibition of intracellular serovar Typhimurium survival. Finally, oral administration of AR-12 at 2.5 mg/kg/day to serovar Typhimurium-infected mice reduced hepatic and splenic bacterial burdens and significantly prolonged survival. These findings show that AR-12 represents a proof of principle that the survival of intracellular bacteria can be suppressed by small-molecule agents that target both innate immunity and host cell factors modulated by bacteria.


2009 ◽  
Vol 39 (2) ◽  
pp. 163-173 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carsten G.K. Lüder ◽  
Rebecca R. Stanway ◽  
Marie Chaussepied ◽  
Gordon Langsley ◽  
Volker T. Heussler

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document