2020
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms8121933
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The T3SS of Shigella: Expression, Structure, Function, and Role in Vacuole Escape

Abstract: Shigella spp. are one of the leading causes of infectious diarrheal diseases. They are Escherichia coli pathovars that are characterized by the harboring of a large plasmid that encodes most virulence genes, including a type III secretion system (T3SS). The archetypal element of the T3SS is the injectisome, a syringe-like nanomachine composed of approximately 20 proteins, spanning both bacterial membranes and the cell wall, and topped with a needle. Upon contact of the tip of the needle with the plasma membran… Show more

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Cited by 43 publications
(64 citation statements)
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References 204 publications
(353 reference statements)
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“…To avoid host autophagic defenses, pathogenic species have developed 3 strategies: evasion, inhibition, and subversion [ 5 , 9 ]. For example, a type III secretion system enables Shigella to avoid being detected by the host autophagic machinery [ 12 ]; Legionella pneumophila inhibits autophagy in mammalian cells [ 30 ]; and Staphylococcus aureus impairs autophagy for replication [ 28 , 31 ]. Similarly, Mycoplasma pneumoniae induced autophagy in mice [ 14 ], whereas Mycoplasma ovipneumoniae activated autophagy in RAW 264.7 cells [ 13 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…To avoid host autophagic defenses, pathogenic species have developed 3 strategies: evasion, inhibition, and subversion [ 5 , 9 ]. For example, a type III secretion system enables Shigella to avoid being detected by the host autophagic machinery [ 12 ]; Legionella pneumophila inhibits autophagy in mammalian cells [ 30 ]; and Staphylococcus aureus impairs autophagy for replication [ 28 , 31 ]. Similarly, Mycoplasma pneumoniae induced autophagy in mice [ 14 ], whereas Mycoplasma ovipneumoniae activated autophagy in RAW 264.7 cells [ 13 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, some of these pathogens have developed strategies to circumvent autophagy or to use it to establish replicative niches within various cell types [ 9 , 10 ]. For example, autophagy benefits several bacterial pathogens, including Salmonella and Legionella, although it is an effective defense mechanism inhibiting survival of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in host cells [ 5 , 11 , 12 ]. For Mycoplasma species, which are the smallest prokaryotes capable of self-replication, autophagy has an important role in host–pathogen interactions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Flagella, which are flexible and extend 5-20 μm from the surface of E. coli , should be more easily bound by curli-displayed VHHs than structures closely associated with the microbial surface, where binding may be sterically constrained [58]. We next tested EcN expressing VHHs targeting Type III secretion systems (T3SSs), which extend less than 50 nm from the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria [59], for binding and pathogen neutralization.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bsa comprises the structural components of the apparatus (the basal body spans both bacterial membranes, and an extracellular needle protrudes from the bacterial surface) as shown in Figure 1 , secreted proteins (translocators and effectors), chaperones, and cytoplasmic regulators [ 42 ]. Similarly to its Salmonella and Shigella homologs, Bsa follows the inside-out model for its assembly [ 43 ].…”
Section: Contentmentioning
confidence: 99%