Item Type: | Review |
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Title: | Tyrosine-phosphorylated bacterial effector proteins: the enemies within |
Creators Name: | Backert, S. and Selbach, M. |
Abstract: | The tyrosine phosphorylation of proteins has a central role during signal transduction in eukaryotes. Recent progress shows that tyrosine phosphorylation is also a common feature of several effector proteins translocated by bacterial type III and type IV secretion systems. The involvement of these secretion systems in disease development is exemplified by a variety of pathogenic processes: pedestal formation (Tir of EPEC and Citrobacter), cell scattering (CagA of Helicobacter), invasion (Tarp of Chlamydia) and possibly proinflammatory responses and cell proliferation (BepD-F of Bartonella). The discovery that different bacterial pathogens use this common strategy to subvert host-cell function suggests that more examples will soon emerge. |
Keywords: | Bacterial Antigens, Bacterial Physiology, Bacterial Proteins, Escherichia coli Proteins, Phosphorylation, Cell Surface Receptors, Tyrosine |
Source: | Trends in Microbiology |
ISSN: | 0966-842X |
Publisher: | Elsevier Science London |
Volume: | 13 |
Number: | 10 |
Page Range: | 476-484 |
Date: | October 2005 |
Official Publication: | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tim.2005.08.002 |
PubMed: | View item in PubMed |
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