Quorum sensing and the population-dependent control of virulence

One crucial feature of almost all bacterial infections is the need for the invading pathogen to reach a critical cell population density sufficient to overcome host defences and establish the infection. Controlling the expression of virulence determinants in concert with cell population density may...

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Veröffentlicht in:Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological sciences 2000-05, Vol.355 (1397), p.667-680
Hauptverfasser: Williams, Paul, Camara, Miguel, Hardman, Andrea, Swift, Simon, Milton, Deborah, Hope, Victoria J., Winzer, Klaus, Middleton, Barrie, Pritchard, David I., Bycroft, Barrie W.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:One crucial feature of almost all bacterial infections is the need for the invading pathogen to reach a critical cell population density sufficient to overcome host defences and establish the infection. Controlling the expression of virulence determinants in concert with cell population density may therefore confer a significant survival advantage on the pathogen such that the host is overwhelmed before a defence response can be fully initiated. Many different bacterial pathogens are now known to regulate diverse physiological processes including virulence in a cell-density-dependent manner through cell-cell communication. This phenomenon, which relies on the interaction of a diffusible signal molecule (e.g. an N -acylhomoserine lactone) with a sensor or transcriptional activator to couple gene expression with cell population density, has become known as 'quorum sensing' . Although the size of the 'quorum' is likely to be highly variable and influenced by the diffusibility of the signal molecule within infected tissues, nevertheless quorum-sensing signal molecules can be detected in vivo in both experimental animal model and human infections. Furthermore, certain quorum-sensing molecules have been shown to possess pharmacological and immunomodulatory activity such that they may function as virulence determinants per se. As a consequence, quorum sensing constitutes a novel therapeutic target for the design of small molecular antagonists capable of attenuating virulence through the blockade of bacterial cell-cell communication.
ISSN:0962-8436
1471-2970
1471-2970
DOI:10.1098/rstb.2000.0607