响应环境信号的霍乱弧菌毒力基因表达。

Kenneth M Peterson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

霍乱弧菌是亚洲霍乱的病原体,是一种革兰氏阴性活动细菌,可通过口服受污染的食物或水源获得。霍乱弧菌O1血清群导致大流行性霍乱,分为两种生物型,经典型和El - Tor型(Butterton和Calderwood, 1995年;Mekalanos表示1985)。El Tor生物型是造成当前霍乱大流行的原因。在没有疾病的情况下,弧菌的生命周期包括在海洋和河口环境中与浮游动物、甲壳类动物、昆虫和水生植物一起自由游动的阶段。弧菌与环境中的各种表面相互作用,产生可能促进生存的生物膜(Watnick etaL, 1999)。在宿主体内,活动弧菌必须避开宿主的先天防御机制,穿透覆盖肠绒毛的黏液层,粘附并定植于小肠上皮表面,进入非运动期,通过在感染部位分泌大量外蛋白进行复制并引起疾病(Oliver and Kaper, 1997)。与霍乱感染相关的大量腹泻导致弧菌传播回水环境,从而延续了生命周期的环境阶段。弧菌生命周期的宿主阶段只能通过一组毒力基因(ToxR-regulon)的作用来实现,这些基因由一个复杂的、尚不完全了解的调控级联控制。ToxR调控子定植和毒素基因在响应尚未完全定义的特定宿主信号时协调表达(Skorupsky和Taylor 1997)。虽然对影响ToxR调控级联的宿主信号知之甚少,但很明显,这些肠内信号在使弧菌在宿主内生存和繁殖的能力最大化方面发挥着重要作用。了解霍乱弧菌发病机制中涉及的复杂事件的关键将是阐明触发弧菌毒力基因表达的肠内信号分子。了解这种宿主-寄生虫相互作用的分子基础将为致病菌如何建立感染提供重要信息,并为治疗和/或预防细菌感染提供新方法。本文将对目前已知的宿主信号和霍乱弧菌用于协调宿主毒力基因表达的复杂的ToxR调控系统进行综述。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Expression of Vibrio cholerae virulence genes in response to environmental signals.

Vibrio cholerae, the causative agent of Asiatic cholera, is a gram-negative motile bacterial species acquired via oral ingestion of contaminated food or water sources. The O1 serogroup of V. cholerae is responsible for pandemic cholera and is divided into two biotypes, classical and El Tor (Butterton and Calderwood, 1995; Mekalanos, 1985). The El Tor biotype is responsible for the current cholera pandemic. In the absence of disease, the vibrio life cycle consists of a free-swimming phase in marine and estuarine environments in association with zooplankton, crustaceans, insects, and water plants. Vibrios interact with various surfaces found in the environment to generate biofilms which may promote survival (Watnick etaL, 1999). Within the host the motile vibrios must evade the innate host defense mechanisms, penetrate the mucus layer covering the intestinal villi, adhere to and colonize the epithelial surface of the small intestine, assume a non-motile phase, replicate and cause disease by secreting numerous exoproteins at the site of infection (Oliver and Kaper, 1997). The voluminous diarrhea associated with cholera infection leads to the dissemination of the vibrios back into a watery environment and thus a continuation of the environmental phase of the life cycle. The host phase of the vibrio life cycle is only possible through the action of a group of virulence genes (ToxR-regulon) controlled by a complex and incompletely understood regulatory cascade. The ToxR regulon colonization and toxin genes are coordinately expressed in response to specific host signals that have yet to be completely defined (Skorupsky and Taylor 1997). Although little is known regarding the host signals that impact the ToxR regulatory cascade, it is clear that these intraintestinal signals play an important role in maximizing the ability of the vibrios to survive and multiply within the host. Key to understanding the complex events involved in the pathogenesis of V. cholerae will be elucidating the intraintestinal signaling molecules that trigger the expression of vibrio virulence genes. Understanding the molecular basis of this host-parasite interaction will provide important information with respect to how pathogenic bacteria establish infection and provide insights leading to novel methods for treating and/or preventing bacterial infections. This review will summarize what is known regarding host signaling and the complex ToxR regulatory system employed by V. cholerae to coordinate virulence gene expression within the host.

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