Publication | Open Access
Mycobacterium tuberculosis Induces an Atypical Cell Death Mode to Escape from Infected Macrophages
126
Citations
39
References
2011
Year
Cell death caused by virulent M. tuberculosis is distinct from classical apoptosis, pyroptosis or pyronecrosis. Mycobacterial genes essential for cytotoxicity are regulated by the PhoPR two-component system. This atypical death mode provides a mechanism for viable bacilli to exit host macrophages for spreading infection and the eventual transition to extracellular persistence that characterizes advanced pulmonary tuberculosis.
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