Successful establishment of infection by bacterial pathogens requires adhesion to host cells, colonization of tissues, and in certain cases, cellular invasion—followed by intracellular multiplication, dissemination to other tissues, or persistence. Bacteria use monomeric adhesins/invasins or highly sophisticated macromolecular machines such as type III secretion systems and retractile type IV pili to establish a complex host/pathogen molecular crosstalk that leads to subversion of cellular functions and establishment of disease
ABSTRACT Pathogen attachment to host tissue is critical in the progress of many infections. Bacteria...
Abstract The ability to adhere to host surfaces is by far the most vital step in the successful colo...
Specific adhesion to host tissue cells is an essential virulence factor of most bacterial pathogens....
International audienceSuccessful establishment of infection by bacterial pathogens requires adhesion...
Most commensal and pathogenic bacteria interacting with eukaryotic hosts express adhesive molecules ...
AbstractMost bacteria that colonize eukaryotes must bind directly to host cells to establish a repli...
Pathogen attachment to host cells is a key process during infection, and inhibition of pathogen adhe...
SummaryFollowing contact with the epithelium, the enteric intracellular bacterial pathogen Shigella ...
AbstractThe recent identification of E-cadherin as the cell-surface receptor for the Listeria monocy...
The invasion process of S. flexneri is well characterized, but mechanisms underlying this bacterium’...
The ability of bacterial species to colonize and infect host organisms is critically dependent upon ...
Evolving under the constant exposure to an abundance of diverse microbial life, the human body has d...
Bacterial adhesion is an important step in tissue colonization and depends extensively on the surfac...
Specific adhesion to host tissue cells is an essential virulence factor of most bacterial pathogens....
In this review, two of the most important virulence factors of bacterial invasion of epithelial cell...
ABSTRACT Pathogen attachment to host tissue is critical in the progress of many infections. Bacteria...
Abstract The ability to adhere to host surfaces is by far the most vital step in the successful colo...
Specific adhesion to host tissue cells is an essential virulence factor of most bacterial pathogens....
International audienceSuccessful establishment of infection by bacterial pathogens requires adhesion...
Most commensal and pathogenic bacteria interacting with eukaryotic hosts express adhesive molecules ...
AbstractMost bacteria that colonize eukaryotes must bind directly to host cells to establish a repli...
Pathogen attachment to host cells is a key process during infection, and inhibition of pathogen adhe...
SummaryFollowing contact with the epithelium, the enteric intracellular bacterial pathogen Shigella ...
AbstractThe recent identification of E-cadherin as the cell-surface receptor for the Listeria monocy...
The invasion process of S. flexneri is well characterized, but mechanisms underlying this bacterium’...
The ability of bacterial species to colonize and infect host organisms is critically dependent upon ...
Evolving under the constant exposure to an abundance of diverse microbial life, the human body has d...
Bacterial adhesion is an important step in tissue colonization and depends extensively on the surfac...
Specific adhesion to host tissue cells is an essential virulence factor of most bacterial pathogens....
In this review, two of the most important virulence factors of bacterial invasion of epithelial cell...
ABSTRACT Pathogen attachment to host tissue is critical in the progress of many infections. Bacteria...
Abstract The ability to adhere to host surfaces is by far the most vital step in the successful colo...
Specific adhesion to host tissue cells is an essential virulence factor of most bacterial pathogens....