Bacterial strategies for immune systems — Role of the type VI secretion system

The process of host infection by bacteria is complicated. Bacterial infections strongly induce the host immune system, which necessitates a robust clearance of the infection. However, bacteria have over time developed strategies that enable their evasion of attacks by the host immune system. One suc...

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Veröffentlicht in:International immunopharmacology 2023-01, Vol.114, p.109550-109550, Article 109550
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Yurou, Zeng, Minmin, Xia, Lin, Valerie Olovo, Chinasa, Su, Zhaoliang, Zhang, Ying
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container_title International immunopharmacology
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creator Wang, Yurou
Zeng, Minmin
Xia, Lin
Valerie Olovo, Chinasa
Su, Zhaoliang
Zhang, Ying
description The process of host infection by bacteria is complicated. Bacterial infections strongly induce the host immune system, which necessitates a robust clearance of the infection. However, bacteria have over time developed strategies that enable their evasion of attacks by the host immune system. One such strategy is the type VI secretion system (T6SS), a special needle-like secretion system that is widespread in Gram-negative bacteria and is responsible for delivering effector proteins into the external bacterial environment or directly into the host cell cytosol. Bacterial T6SS and its secreted effector proteins play an important role in the interaction between bacteria and host immune system. They also serve as antigens that are employed in the development of vaccines for clinical trials as well as future vaccine candidates. This review focuses mainly on aspects of T6SS effectors that impact the strength of the host immune system, including inflammation, autophagy, and apoptosis (silent programmed cell death). The T6SS-based vaccines are also described.
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subjects Apoptosis
Autophagy
Bacteria - metabolism
Bacterial Proteins - metabolism
Immune System - metabolism
Immune systems
Inflammation
T6SS
Type VI Secretion Systems - metabolism
Vaccines
title Bacterial strategies for immune systems — Role of the type VI secretion system
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