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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Lounging in a lysosome: the intracellular lifestyle of Coxiella burnetii.

Daniel E. Voth, +1 more
- 01 Apr 2007 - 
- Vol. 9, Iss: 4, pp 829-840
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TLDR
Current understanding of the cellular events that occur during parasitism of host cells by Coxiella, including deployment of a type IV secretion system to deliver effector proteins to the host cytosol is summarized.
Abstract
Summary Most intracellular parasites employ sophisticated mechanisms to direct biogenesis of a vacuolar replicative niche that circumvents default maturation through the endolysosomal cascade. However, this is not the case of the Q fever bacterium, Coxiella burnetii. This hardy, obligate intracellular pathogen has evolved to not only survive, but to thrive, in the harshest of intracellular compartments: the phagolysosome. Following internalization, the nascent Coxiella phagosome ultimately develops into a large and spacious parasitophorous vacuole (PV) that acquires lysosomal characteristics such as acidic pH, acid hydrolases and cationic peptides, defences designed to rid the host of intruders. However, transit of Coxiella to this environment is initially stalled, a process that is apparently modulated by interactions with the autophagic pathway. Coxiella actively participates in biogenesis of its PV by synthesizing proteins that mediate phagosome stalling, autophagic interactions, and development and maintenance of the mature vacuole. Among the potential mechanisms mediating these processes is deployment of a type IV secretion system to deliver effector proteins to the host cytosol. Here we summarize our current understanding of the cellular events that occur during parasitism of host cells by Coxiella.

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Book ChapterDOI

Tropical Rickettsial Infections

Daniel H. Paris, +1 more
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Digestibility of glycated milk proteins and the peptidomics of their in vitro digests.

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Host cell autophagy in immune response to zoonotic infections.

TL;DR: The role of host cell autophagy in the regulation of immune response against intracellular pathogens, emphasizing on selected bacterial and protozoan zoonoses is focused on.
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Melatonin application differentially modulates the enzymes associated with antioxidative machinery and ascorbate-glutathione cycle during arsenate exposure in indica rice varieties.

TL;DR: Clear insights are provided regarding mechanistic details of the regulation of antioxidative enzymes by melatonin in contrasting rice genotypes, which may prove helpful to generate As-tolerance in susceptible rice varieties grown in marginalized soil, thereby improving crop yield and productivity.
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Determinants of Phagosomal pH During Host-Pathogen Interactions.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe how phagosomal pH is regulated during phagocytosis, why it varies in different types of professional phagocytes, and the strategies developed by prototypical intracellular pathogens to manipulate PHAGomal pH to survive, replicate, and eventually escape from the phagocyte.
References
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TL;DR: It is demonstrated that autophagic pathways can overcome the trafficking block imposed by M. tuberculosis, which is a hormonally, developmentally, and immunologically regulated process, represents an underapp appreciated innate defense mechanism for control of intracellular pathogens.
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TL;DR: In this paper, a large number of mutants called dot that were unable to replicate intracellularly because of an inability of the bacteria to alter the endocytic pathway of macrophages were isolated.
Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: Findings suggest that M. tuberculosis retards the maturation of its phagosome along the endosomal-lysosomal pathway and resides in a compartment with endosome, as opposed to lysosomal, characteristics; and the intraphagosomal pathway, i.e., the pathway followed by several intracellular parasites that inhibit phagosomes-lysOSome fusion, is heterogeneous.
Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: The determinants and consequences of the fusion and fission reactions that underlie phagosomal maturation are the topic of this review.
Journal ArticleDOI

A bacterial guanine nucleotide exchange factor activates ARF on Legionella phagosomes.

TL;DR: It is shown that L. pneumophilaproduce a protein called RalF that functions as an exchange factor for the ADP ribosylation factor (ARF) family of guanosine triphosphatases (GTPases) and is a substrate of the Dot/Icm secretion apparatus.
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