نتایج جستجو برای: phagolysosome

تعداد نتایج: 288  

Journal: :Molecular Systems Biology 2008
Jacqueline Garcia John Shea Fernando Alvarez-Vasquez Asfia Qureshi Chiara Luberto Eberhard O Voit Maurizio Del Poeta

Cryptococcus neoformans (Cn) is the most common cause of fungal meningitis worldwide. In infected patients, growth of the fungus can occur within the phagolysosome of phagocytic cells, especially in non-activated macrophages of immunocompromised subjects. Since this environment is characteristically acidic, Cn must adapt to low pH to survive and efficiently cause disease. In the present work, w...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 2005
Marina Santic Maëlle Molmeret Yousef Abu Kwaik

Legionella pneumophila is an intracellular pathogen that modulates the biogenesis of its phagosome to evade endocytic vesicle traffic. The Legionella-containing phagosome (LCP) does not acquire any endocytic markers and is remodeled by the endoplasmic reticulum during early stages. Here we show that intracellular replication of L. pneumophila is inhibited in gamma interferon (IFN-gamma)-activat...

Journal: :Blood 2005
Markus Munder Faustino Mollinedo Jero Calafat Javier Canchado Cristina Gil-Lamaignere José M Fuentes Claudia Luckner Gwendolyn Doschko Germán Soler Klaus Eichmann Frank-Michael Müller Anthony D Ho Martin Goerner Manuel Modolell

The balance of arginine metabolism via nitric oxide synthase (NOS) or arginase is an important determinant of the inflammatory response of murine macrophages and dendritic cells. Here we analyzed the expression of the isoform arginase I in human myeloid cells. Using healthy donors and patients with arginase I deficiency, we found that in human leukocytes arginase I is constitutively expressed o...

2014
Dhriti Chatterjee Sankar Addya Reas S. Khan Lawrence C. Kenyon Alexander Choe Randall J. Cohrs Kenneth S. Shindler Jayasri Das Sarma

Neurotropic recombinant strain of Mouse Hepatitis Virus, RSA59, induces meningo-encephalitis, myelitis and demyelination following intracranial inoculation. RSA59 induced neuropathology is partially caused by activation of CNS resident microglia, as demonstrated by changes in cellular morphology and increased expression of a microglia/macrophage specific calcium ion binding factor, Iba1. Affyme...

Journal: :Cell reports 2017
Philipp Wiemann Adi Perevitsky Fang Yun Lim Yana Shadkchan Benjamin P Knox Julio A Landero Figueora Tsokyi Choera Mengyao Niu Andrew J Steinberger Marcel Wüthrich Rachel A Idol Bruce S Klein Mary C Dinauer Anna Huttenlocher Nir Osherov Nancy P Keller

The Fenton-chemistry-generating properties of copper ions are considered a potent phagolysosome defense against pathogenic microbes, yet our understanding of underlying host/microbe dynamics remains unclear. We address this issue in invasive aspergillosis and demonstrate that host and fungal responses inextricably connect copper and reactive oxygen intermediate (ROI) mechanisms. Loss of the cop...

2013
Matt Shipman Kirk Lubick David Fouchard Rajani Gurram Paul Grieco Mark Jutila Edward A. Dratz

Coxiella burnetii is an obligate intracellular bacterial pathogen and the causative agent of Q fever. Chronic Q fever can produce debilitating fatigue and C. burnetii is considered a significant bioterror threat. C. burnetii occupies the monocyte phagolysosome and although prior work has explained features of the host-pathogen interaction, many aspects are still poorly understood. We have condu...

Journal: :The Journal of Experimental Medicine 2003
Isabelle Vergne Jennifer Chua Vojo Deretic

The capacity of Mycobacterium tuberculosis to infect latently over one billion people and cause two million fatalities annually rests with its ability to block phagosomal maturation into the phagolysosome in infected macrophages. Here we describe how M. tuberculosis toxin lipoarabinomannan (LAM) causes phagosome maturation arrest, interfering with a new pathway connecting intracellular signalin...

Journal: :Cell 2007
Nicole van der Wel David Hava Diane Houben Donna Fluitsma Maaike van Zon Jason Pierson Michael Brenner Peter J. Peters

M. tuberculosis and M. leprae are considered to be prototypical intracellular pathogens that have evolved strategies to enable growth in the intracellular phagosomes. In contrast, we show that lysosomes rapidly fuse with the virulent M. tuberculosis- and M. leprae-containing phagosomes of human monocyte-derived dendritic cells and macrophages. After 2 days, M. tuberculosis progressively translo...

2016
Heather A. Danhof Slavena Vylkova Elisa M. Vesely Amy E. Ford Manuel Gonzalez-Garay Michael C. Lorenz

The opportunistic fungal pathogen Candida albicans thrives within diverse niches in the mammalian host. Among the adaptations that underlie this fitness is an ability to utilize a wide array of nutrients, especially sources of carbon that are disfavored by many other fungi; this contributes to its ability to survive interactions with the phagocytes that serve as key barriers against disseminate...

2017
Elisa M Vesely Robert B Williams James B Konopka Michael C Lorenz

Phagocytosis by innate immune cells is one of the most effective barriers against the multiplication and dissemination of microbes within the mammalian host. Candida albicans, a pathogenic yeast, has robust mechanisms that allow survival upon macrophage phagocytosis. C. albicans survives in part because it can utilize the alternative carbon sources available in the phagosome, including carboxyl...

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