Bacterial Invasion: The Paradigms of Enteroinvasive Pathogens
Top Cited Papers
- 9 April 2004
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 304 (5668) , 242-248
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1090124
Abstract
Invasive bacteria actively induce their own uptake by phagocytosis in normally nonphagocytic cells and then either establish a protected niche within which they survive and replicate, or disseminate from cell to cell by means of an actin-based motility process. The mechanisms underlying bacterial entry, phagosome maturation, and dissemination reveal common strategies as well as unique tactics evolved by individual species to establish infection.Keywords
This publication has 60 references indexed in Scilit:
- Arf6 and Phosphoinositol-4-Phosphate-5-Kinase Activities Permit Bypass of the Rac1 Requirement for β1 Integrin–mediated Bacterial UptakeThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2003
- Nod1 Detects a Unique Muropeptide from Gram-Negative Bacterial PeptidoglycanScience, 2003
- An essential role for NOD1 in host recognition of bacterial peptidoglycan containing diaminopimelic acidNature Immunology, 2003
- 'Small' talk: Opa proteins as mediators of Neisseria–host-cell communicationCurrent Opinion in Microbiology, 2003
- The road less traveledThe Journal of cell biology, 2002
- SalmonellaInteractions with Host Cells: Type III Secretion at WorkAnnual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology, 2001
- ListeriaPathogenesis and Molecular Virulence DeterminantsClinical Microbiology Reviews, 2001
- InlB-Dependent Internalization of Listeria Is Mediated by the Met Receptor Tyrosine KinaseCell, 2000
- Binding of the Shigella protein IpaA to vinculin induces F-actin depolymerizationThe EMBO Journal, 1999
- Exploitation of Mammalian Host Cell Functions by Bacterial PathogensScience, 1997