Literature DB >> 12489635

Nitric oxide and Mycobacterium leprae pathogenicity.

Paolo Visca1, Giulia Fabozzi, Mario Milani, Martino Bolognesi, Paolo Ascenzi.   

Abstract

Leprosy is an old, still dreaded infectious disease caused by the obligate intracellular bacterium Mycobacterium leprae. During the infectious process, M. leprae is faced with the host macrophagic environment, where the oxidative stress and NO release, combined with low pH, low pO2, and high pCO2, contribute to limit the growth of the bacilli. Comparative genomics has unraveled massive gene decay in M. leprae, linking the strictly parasitic lifestyle with the reductive genome evolution. Compared with Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Mycobacterium bovis, the leprosy bacillus has lost most of the genes involved in the detoxification of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species. The very low reactivity of the unique truncated hemoglobin retained by M. leprae could account for the susceptibility of this exceptionally slow-growing microbe to NO.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12489635     DOI: 10.1080/15216540214542

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  IUBMB Life        ISSN: 1521-6543            Impact factor:   3.885


  7 in total

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Review 3.  Nitric oxide for the prevention and treatment of viral, bacterial, protozoal and fungal infections.

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6.  Human polymorphisms as clinical predictors in leprosy.

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7.  Mycobacterial DnaB helicase intein as oxidative stress sensor.

Authors:  Danielle S Kelley; Christopher W Lennon; Zhong Li; Michael R Miller; Nilesh K Banavali; Hongmin Li; Marlene Belfort
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  7 in total

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