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Listeriolysin O allows Listeria monocytogenes replication in macrophage vacuoles

A recent study revealed that Listeria monocytogenes can replicate in the vacuoles within macrophages. Cheryl L. Birmingham and her team from the University of Toronto in Canada observed the localisation of bacteria in large LAMP1+ compartments that they denoted spacious Listeria-containing phagosomes (SLAPs). The SLAPs could also be seen in vitro. They turned out to be non-acidic and non-degradative compartments that are generated in an autophagy-dependent manner.
In the SLAPs, bacteria replication was reduced when compared to the bacteria in the cytosol. Listeriolysin O (LLO, encoded by the gene hly) is a pore-forming toxin, crucial for Listeria monocytogenes virulence. This toxin was necessary and sufficient for SLAP formation. Listeria monocytogenes mutants, exhibiting only low expression of LLO, could not escape phagosomes but did replicated slowly in SLAPs when observed for 72 h. The Canadian scientists discovered a mechanism by which Listeria monocytogenes can uphold a persistent infection in host macrophages.

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Listeria monocytogenes

LAMP1

Macrophages

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01.07.2008  |  Anna Lena Marwedel      RSS Feed  Research News


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