Publication | Closed Access
A <i>Salmonella</i> Locus that Controls Resistance to Microbicidal Proteins from Phagocytic Cells
540
Citations
20
References
1989
Year
Microbial PathogensImmunologyPhagocytic CellsPathogen EffectorBacterial PathogensDisease ResistanceMedical MicrobiologyPathogen TransmissionInfection ControlAntimicrobial ResistanceHost-pathogen InteractionsVirulence FactorPathogen CharacterizationIntracellular SurvivalHost-microbe InteractionClinical MicrobiologyPathogenicityControls ResistanceVirulence FunctionsMicrobicidal ProteinsFacultative Intracellular PathogensAntimicrobial Resistance GenePathogenesisMicrobiologyHost ResistanceMedicine
Facultative intracellular pathogens pose an important health problem because they circumvent a primary defense mechanism of the host: killing and degradation by professional phagocytic cells. A gene of the intracellular pathogen Salmonella typhimurium that is required for virulence and intracellular survival was identified and shown to have a role in resistance to defensins and possibly to other microbicidal mechanisms of the phagocyte. This gene may prove to be a regulatory element in the expression of virulence functions.
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