Pathogenic enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) are the major bacterial cause of diarrhea in young children in developing countries and in travelers, causing significant mortality in children. Adhesive fimbriae are a prime virulence factor for ETEC, initiating colonization of the small intestinal epithelium. Similar to other Gram-negative bacteria, ETEC express one or more diverse fimbriae, some assembled by the chaperone-usher pathway and others by the alternate chaperone pathway.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFShigella flexneri is a Gram-negative enteric pathogen that is the predominant cause of bacillary dysentery. Shigella uses a type III secretion system to deliver effector proteins that alter normal target cell functions to promote pathogen invasion. The type III secretion apparatus (T3SA) consists of a basal body, an extracellular needle, and a tip complex that is responsible for delivering effectors into the host cell cytoplasm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFShigella flexneri uses its type III secretion apparatus (TTSA) to inject host-altering proteins into targeted eukaryotic cells. The TTSA is composed of a basal body and an exposed needle with invasion plasmid antigen D (IpaD) forming a tip complex that controls secretion. The bile salt deoxycholate (DOC) stimulates recruitment of the translocator protein IpaB into the maturing TTSA needle tip complex.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFShigella flexneri contact with enterocytes induces a burst of protein secretion via its type III secretion apparatus (TTSA) as an initial step in cellular invasion. We have previously reported that IpaD is positioned at the TTSA needle tip (M. Espina et al.
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