Pathogenicity and virulence of Bordetella pertussis and its adaptation to its strictly human host

Archive ouverte

Belcher, Thomas | Dubois, Violaine | Rivera-Millot, Alex | Locht, Camille | Jacob-Dubuisson, Françoise

Edité par CCSD ; Taylor & Francis -

International audience. The highly contagious whooping cough agent Bordetella pertussis has evolved as a humanrestricted pathogen from a progenitor which also gave rise to Bordetella parapertussis and Bordetella bronchiseptica. While the latter colonizes a broad range of mammals and is able to survive in the environment, B. pertussis has lost its ability to survive outside its host through massive genome decay. Instead, it has become a highly successful human pathogen by the acquisition of tightly regulated virulence factors and evolutionary adaptation of its metabolism to its particular niche. By the deployment of an arsenal of highly sophisticated virulence factors it overcomes many of the innate immune defenses. It also interferes with vaccine-induced adaptive immunity by various mechanisms. Here, we review data from in vitro, human and animal models to illustrate the mechanisms of adaptation to the human respiratory tract and provide evidence of ongoing evolutionary adaptation as a highly successful human pathogen.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Streamlined copper defenses make Bordetella pertussis reliant on custom-made operon

Archive ouverte | Rivera-Millot, Alex | CCSD

International audience. Copper is both essential and toxic to living beings, which tightly controls its intracellular concentration. At the host–pathogen interface, copper is used by phagocytic cells to kill invadin...

Posttranscriptional Regulation by Copper with a New Upstream Open Reading Frame

Archive ouverte | Roy, Gauthier | CCSD

International audience. Copper is essential to most living beings but also highly toxic and as such is an important player at the host-pathogen interface. Bacteria have thus developed homeostatic mechanisms to tight...

A widespread family of ribosomal peptide metallophores involved in bacterial adaptation to metal stress

Archive ouverte | Leprevost, Laura | CCSD

Ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptides (RiPPs) are a structurally diverse group of natural products that bacteria employ in their survival strategies. Herein, we characterized the structure, the biosynt...

Chargement des enrichissements...