Title of article
Cellular bioterrorism: how Brucella corrupts macrophage physiology to promote invasion and proliferation
Author/Authors
Maria-Pilar، نويسنده , , Jimenez de Bagues and Dudal، نويسنده , , Sherri and Dornand، نويسنده , , Jacques and Gross، نويسنده , , Antoine، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
12
From page
227
To page
238
Abstract
Brucellosis is a worldwide human zoonosis caused by intracellular bacteria of the genus Brucella. Virulence factors play an important role in allowing Brucella infection and proliferation within macrophages. Brucella enters macrophages through lipid raft microdomains, avoids phagolysosome fusion, and inhibits TNF-α secretion and apoptosis. Furthermore, Brucella can perturb bactericidal activity in macrophages by influencing the host cell response to its advantage through its LPS or by activating the cAMP/PKA pathway. To date, small steps have been taken in defining and understanding the virulence factors of Brucella used in macrophage subversion, but further investigation is required to fully explain virulence and persistence.
Keywords
Proliferation , Bioterrorism , Brucella
Journal title
Clinical Immunology
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Clinical Immunology
Record number
1851389
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