嗜肺军团菌
生物
毒力
军团菌
细胞内寄生虫
微生物学
效应器
细胞内
分泌物
细菌
病菌
军团病
致病岛
细胞生物学
遗传学
基因
生物化学
作者
Christopher I. Graham,Teassa L. MacMartin,Teresa R. de Kievit,Ann Karen C. Brassinga
摘要
Abstract Legionella pneumophila is a gram‐negative bacteria found in natural and anthropogenic aquatic environments such as evaporative cooling towers, where it reproduces as an intracellular parasite of cohabiting protozoa. If L. pneumophila is aerosolized and inhaled by a susceptible person, bacteria may colonize their alveolar macrophages causing the opportunistic pneumonia Legionnaires' disease. L. pneumophila utilizes an elaborate regulatory network to control virulence processes such as the Dot/Icm Type IV secretion system and effector repertoire, responding to changing nutritional cues as their host becomes depleted. The bacteria subsequently differentiate to a transmissive state that can survive in the environment until a replacement host is encountered and colonized. In this review, we discuss the lifecycle of L. pneumophila and the molecular regulatory network that senses nutritional depletion via the stringent response, a link to stationary phase‐like metabolic changes via alternative sigma factors, and two‐component systems that are homologous to stress sensors in other pathogens, to regulate differentiation between the intracellular replicative phase and more transmissible states. Together, we highlight how this prototypic intracellular pathogen offers enormous potential in understanding how molecular mechanisms enable intracellular parasitism and pathogenicity.
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