Recognition of Host Immune Activation by Pseudomonas aeruginosa

L Wu, O Estrada, O Zaborina, M Bains, L Shen… - Science, 2005 - science.org
L Wu, O Estrada, O Zaborina, M Bains, L Shen, JE Kohler, N Patel, MW Musch, EB Chang
Science, 2005science.org
It is generally reasoned that lethal infections caused by opportunistic pathogens develop
permissively by invading a host that is both physiologically stressed and immunologically
compromised. However, an alternative hypothesis might be that opportunistic pathogens
actively sense alterations in host immune function and respond by enhancing their virulence
phenotype. We demonstrate that interferon-γ binds to an outer membrane protein in
Pseudomonas aeruginosa, OprF, resulting in the expression of a quorum-sensing …
It is generally reasoned that lethal infections caused by opportunistic pathogens develop permissively by invading a host that is both physiologically stressed and immunologically compromised. However, an alternative hypothesis might be that opportunistic pathogens actively sense alterations in host immune function and respond by enhancing their virulence phenotype. We demonstrate that interferon-γ binds to an outer membrane protein in Pseudomonas aeruginosa, OprF, resulting in the expression of a quorum-sensing dependent virulence determinant, the PA-I lectin. These observations provide details of the mechanisms by which prokaryotic organisms are directly signaled by immune activation in their eukaryotic host.
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