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Recent "mycobacteria" articles

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Highly accurate antibody assays for early and rapid detection of tuberculosis in African and Asian elephants
Rena Greenwald et al.
Clinical and vaccine immunology : CVI, CVI.00038-09 (04 Mar 2009)
 
targetTB: A target identification pipeline for Mycobacterium tuberculosis through an interactome, reactome and genome-scale structural analysis
Karthik Raman, Yeturu Kalidas, and Nagasuma Chandra
BMC Systems Biology 2 (1), 109 (19 Dec 2008)
Posted by karthik (who is an author) and 2 others to target mycobacteria on Fri Feb 27 2009 at 14:03 UTC | info | related
 
Mycobacterium tuberculosis interactome analysis unravels potential pathways to drug resistance
Karthik Raman and Nagasuma Chandra
BMC Microbiology 8 (1), 234 (23 Dec 2008)
Posted by karthik (who is an author) and 1 other to mycobacteria resistance on Fri Feb 27 2009 at 14:02 UTC | info | related
 
The ? factors of Mycobacterium tuberculosis
S. Rodrigue et al.
FEMS Microbiology Reviews 30 (6), 926-41 (2006)
 
PLoS Pathogens: A Peer-Reviewed Open-Access Journal
www.plospathogens.org
polar localisation of secretry apparatus in Mycobacteria
 
Cell - Who Benefits from Granulomas, Mycobacteria or Host?
www.cell.com
By investigating host-pathogen interactions in zebrafish using intravital imaging, 4 provide evidence that aggregates of immune cells known as granulomas, long thought to constrain mycobacterial infection, may instead facilitate its spread.
 
Cell - The Role of the Granuloma in Expansion and Dissemination of Early Tuberculous Infection
www.cell.com
Granulomas, organized aggregates of immune cells, form in response to persistent stimuli and are hallmarks of tuberculosis. Tuberculous granulomas have long been considered host-protective structures formed to contain infection. However, work in zebrafish infected with Mycobacterium marinum suggests that granulomas contribute to early bacterial growth. Here we use quantitative intravital microscopy to reveal distinct steps of granuloma formation and assess their consequence for infection. Intracellular mycobacteria use the ESX-1/RD1 virulence locus to induce recruitment of new macrophages to, and their rapid movement within, nascent granulomas. This motility enables multiple arriving macrophages to efficiently find and phagocytose infected macrophages undergoing apoptosis, leading to rapid, iterative expansion of infected macrophages and thereby bacterial numbers. The primary granuloma then seeds secondary granulomas via egress of infected macrophages. Our direct observations provide insight into how pathogenic mycobacteria exploit the granuloma during the innate immune phase for local expansion and systemic dissemination.
 
MICROBIOLOGY: TB Bacteria May Reign Over Cells Intended to Bridle Them - on article in Cell
MICROBIOLOGY TB Bacteria May Reign Over Cells Intended to Bridle Them
Evelyn Strauss
Science 323 (5911), 196 (09 Jan 2009)
Researchers report this week that rather than protecting the host as conventional wisdom holds, the hallmark tuberculosis lesions called granulomas in fact promote bacterial multiplication early in infection.
 
Immunity -- Tumor Necrosis Factor Signaling Mediates Resistance to Mycobacteria by Inhibiting Bacterial Growth and Macrophage Death
www.immunity.com
Tumor necrosis factor (TNF), a key effector in controlling tuberculosis, is thought to exert protection by directing formation of granulomas, organized aggregates of macrophages and other immune cells. Loss of TNF signaling causes progression of tuberculosis in humans, and the increased mortality of Mycobacterium tuberculosis-infected mice is associated with disorganized necrotic granulomas, although the precise roles of TNF signaling preceding this endpoint remain undefined. We monitored transparent Mycobacterium marinum-infected zebrafish live to conduct a stepwise dissection of how TNF signaling operates in mycobacterial pathogenesis. We found that loss of TNF signaling caused increased mortality even when only innate immunity was operant. In the absence of TNF, intracellular bacterial growth and granuloma formation were accelerated and was followed by necrotic death of overladen macrophages and granuloma breakdown. Thus, TNF is not required for tuberculous granuloma formation, but maintains granuloma integrity indirectly by restricting mycobacterial growth within macrophages and preventing their necrosis.
 
Secreted transcription factor controls Mycobacterium tuberculosis virulence
Sridharan Raghavan et al.
Nature 454 (7205), 717-21 (07 Aug 2008)
Bacterial pathogens trigger specialized virulence factor secretion systems on encountering host cells. The ESX-1 protein secretion system of Mycobacterium tuberculosis—the causative agent of the human disease tuberculosis—delivers bacterial proteins into host cells during infection and is critical for virulence, but how it is regulated is unknown. Here we show that EspR (also known as Rv3849) is a key regulator of ESX-1 that is required for secretion and virulence in mice. EspR activates transcription of an operon that includes three ESX-1 components, Rv3616c–Rv3614c, whose expression in turn promotes secretion of ESX-1 substrates. EspR directly binds to and activates the Rv3616c–Rv3614c promoter and, unexpectedly, is itself secreted from the bacterial cell by the ESX-1 system that it regulates. Efflux of the DNA-binding regulator results in reduced Rv3616c–Rv3614c transcription, and thus reduced ESX-1 secretion. Our results reveal a direct negative feedback loop that regulates the activity of a secretion system essential for virulence. As the virulence factors secreted by the ESX-1 system are highly antigenic, fine control of secretion may be critical to successful infection.

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