天天操夜夜拍丨国产精品超清白人精品av丨天天爽天天噜在线播放丨国产精品久久久久久久福利竹菊丨色综合天天天天做夜夜夜夜做丨国内自拍xxxx18丨白人と日本人の交わりビデオ丨午夜激情在线观看丨成人18视频丨久久66热人妻偷产精品丨视频一区二区三区在线观看丨操操操插插插丨久久的久久爽亚洲精品aⅴ丨91精品一区二区三区在线观看丨aaa女人18毛片水真多丨99re在线视频精品丨超碰免费在丨中文字幕人妻无码专区app丨午夜香蕉视频丨又大又粗欧美黑人aaaaa片丨久久夫妻视频丨乌克兰性欧美精品高清丨亚洲欧美福利视频丨少妇高潮久久久久久一代女皇丨97国产高清

熱門搜索:A549    293T 金黃色葡萄球菌 大腸桿菌 AKK菌
購物車 1 種商品 - 共0元
當前位置: 首頁 > 行業資訊 > Dangerous pathogens use this sophisticated machinery to infe

Dangerous pathogens use this sophisticated machinery to infe

 

Dangerous pathogens use this sophisticated machinery to infect hosts

Date:May 17, 2019

Source:California Institute of Technology

Summary:A detailed new model of a bacterial secretion system provides directions for developing precisely targeted antibiotics.

Gastric cancer, Q fever, Legionnaires' disease, whooping cough -- though the infectious bacteria that cause these dangerous diseases are each different, they all utilize the same molecular machinery to infect human cells. Bacteria use this machinery, called a Type IV secretion system (T4SS), to inject toxic molecules into cells and also to spread genes for antibiotic resistance to fellow bacteria. Now, researchers at Caltech have revealed the 3D molecular architecture of the T4SS from the human pathogen Legionella pneumophila with unprecedented details. This could in the future enable the development of precisely targeted antibiotics for the aforementioned diseases.

The work was done in the laboratory of Grant Jensen, professor of biophysics and biology and Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator, in collaboration with the laboratory of Joseph Vogel at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis (WUSTL). A paper describing the research appeared online on April 22 in the journal Nature Microbiology.

There are nine different types of bacterial secretion systems, Type IV being the most elaborate and versatile. A T4SS can ferry a wide variety of toxic molecules -- up to 300 at once -- from a bacterium into its cellular victim, hijacking cellular functions and overwhelming the cell's defenses.

In 2017, Caltech postdoctoral scholar Debnath Ghosal and his collaborators used a technique called electron cryotomography to reveal, for the first time, the overall low-resolution architecture of the T4SS in Legionella, the bacteria that causes Legionnaires' disease, a severe and often lethal form of pneumonia.

Ghosal, along with Kwangcheol Jeong of WUSTL and their colleagues, have now made a detailed structural model of this dynamic multi-component machine. The team also made precise perturbations to the bacterium's genes to study mutant versions of the T4SS, revealing how this complex machine organizes and assembles.

The model revealed that the secretion system is composed of a distinct chamber and a long channel, like the chamber and barrel of a gun. Characterizing these and other components of the T4SS could enable the development of precisely targeted antibiotics.

Current antibiotics act broadly and wipe out bacteria throughout the body, including the beneficial microorganisms that live in our gut. In the future, antibiotics could be designed to block only the toxin delivery systems (such as the T4SS) of harmful pathogens, rendering the bacteria inert and harmless without perturbing the body's so-called "good bacteria."

The paper is titled "Molecular architecture, polar targeting and biogenesis of the Legionella Dot/Icm T4SS." Ghosal and Jeong are co-first authors. In addition to Jensen and Vogel, other co-authors are former Caltech postdoctoral scholar Yi-Wei Chang, now of the University of Pennsylvania; Jacob Gyore of WUSTL; Lin Teng of the University of Florida; and Adam Gardner of the Scripps Research Institute. The work was funded by the National Institutes of Health.

Story Source:

Materials provided by California Institute of Technology. Original written by Lori Dajose. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.