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Genome-Wide siRNA Screen Identifies Complementary Signaling Pathways Involved in <i>Listeria</i> Infection and Reveals Different Actin Nucleation Mechanisms during <i>Listeria</i> Cell Invasion and Actin Comet Tail Formation

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References

2015

Year

Abstract

Listeria is a bacterial pathogen that induces its internalization within the cytoplasm of human cells and has been used for decades as a major molecular tool to manipulate cells in order to explore and discover cellular functions. We have inactivated individually, for the first time in epithelial cells, all the genes of the human genome to investigate whether each gene modifies positively or negatively the Listeria infectious process. We identified novel signaling cascades that have never been associated with Listeria infection. We have also revisited the role of the molecular complex Arp2/3 involved in the polymerization of the actin cytoskeleton, which was shown previously to be required for Listeria entry and movement inside host cells, and we demonstrate that contrary to the general dogma, some subunits of the complex are dispensable for both Listeria entry and bacterial movement.

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