SummaryThe mammalian intestine is colonized with a diverse community of bacteria that perform many beneficial functions but can threaten host health upon tissue invasion. Epithelial cell-intrinsic innate immune responses are essential to limit the invasion of both commensal and pathogenic bacteria and maintain beneficial host-bacterial relationships; however, little is known about the role of various cellular processes, notably autophagy, in controlling bacterial interactions with the intestinal epithelium in vivo. We demonstrate that intestinal epithelial cell autophagy protects against tissue invasion by both opportunistically invasive commensals and the invasive intestinal pathogen Salmonella Typhimurium. Autophagy is activated following...
It was previously observed that plasma membrane cholesterol plays a critical role in the Salmonella-...
International audienceMany enteropathogenic bacteria target the mammalian gut. The mechanisms protec...
International audienceIn order to survive inside the host cell, bacterial pathogens have evolved a v...
While intestinal epithelial cells are known for secreting antimicrobial molecules, cell intrinsic de...
<div><p>Cell death is a critical host response to regulate the fate of bacterial infections, innate ...
Cell death is a critical host response to regulate the fate of bacterial infections, innate immune r...
The gastrointestinal epithelium deploys multiple innate defense mechanisms to fight microbial intrud...
One of the most significant challenges of cell biology is to understand how each type of cell copes ...
Abstract The intestinal mucosa is a site of multiple stressors and forms the barrier between the int...
Autophagy is a physiologically and immunologically controlled intracellular homeostatic pathway that...
Autophagy is a conserved homeostatic process by which cells degrade and recycle cytoplasmic contents...
Many pathogenic bacteria can invade phagocytic and non-phagocytic cells and colonize them intracellu...
Intestinal Paneth cells limit bacterial invasion by secreting antimicrobial proteins, including lyso...
Extracellular HMGB1 (high mobility group box 1) is considered as a damage-associated molecular patte...
Autophagy can orchestrate innate immune responses to bacterial infection by targeting invading patho...
It was previously observed that plasma membrane cholesterol plays a critical role in the Salmonella-...
International audienceMany enteropathogenic bacteria target the mammalian gut. The mechanisms protec...
International audienceIn order to survive inside the host cell, bacterial pathogens have evolved a v...
While intestinal epithelial cells are known for secreting antimicrobial molecules, cell intrinsic de...
<div><p>Cell death is a critical host response to regulate the fate of bacterial infections, innate ...
Cell death is a critical host response to regulate the fate of bacterial infections, innate immune r...
The gastrointestinal epithelium deploys multiple innate defense mechanisms to fight microbial intrud...
One of the most significant challenges of cell biology is to understand how each type of cell copes ...
Abstract The intestinal mucosa is a site of multiple stressors and forms the barrier between the int...
Autophagy is a physiologically and immunologically controlled intracellular homeostatic pathway that...
Autophagy is a conserved homeostatic process by which cells degrade and recycle cytoplasmic contents...
Many pathogenic bacteria can invade phagocytic and non-phagocytic cells and colonize them intracellu...
Intestinal Paneth cells limit bacterial invasion by secreting antimicrobial proteins, including lyso...
Extracellular HMGB1 (high mobility group box 1) is considered as a damage-associated molecular patte...
Autophagy can orchestrate innate immune responses to bacterial infection by targeting invading patho...
It was previously observed that plasma membrane cholesterol plays a critical role in the Salmonella-...
International audienceMany enteropathogenic bacteria target the mammalian gut. The mechanisms protec...
International audienceIn order to survive inside the host cell, bacterial pathogens have evolved a v...