Literature DB >> 16004362

How do microsporidia invade cells?

Caspar Franzen1.   

Abstract

Microsporidia are obligate intracellular eukaryotic parasites that utilize a unique mechanism to infect host cells. One of the main characteristics of all microsporidia is that they produce spores containing an extrusion apparatus that consists of a coiled polar tube ending in an anchoring disc at the apical part of the spore. With appropriate conditions inside a suitable host, the polar tube is discharged through the thin anterior end of the spore, thereby penetrating a new host cell for inoculating the infective sporoplasm into the new host cell. This method of invading new host cells is one of the most sophisticated infection mechanisms in biology and ensures that the microsporidia enter the host cell unrecognized and protected from the host defence reactions. Recent studies have shown that microsporidia gain access to host cells by phagocytosis as well. However, after phagocytosis, the special infection mechanism of the microsporidia is used to escape from the maturing phagosomes and to infect the cytoplasm of the cells. Gaining access to cells by endocytosis, and escaping destruction in the phago-/endo-/lysosome by egressing quickly from the phagocytic vacuole to multiply outside the lysosome, is a common phenomenon in biology that has been evolved several times during evolution. How this is put into execution by the microsporidia is an inimitable principle by which an obligate intracellular organism has managed this problem. The extrusion apparatus of the microsporidia has obviously ensured the success of this phylum during evolution, resulting in a group of obligate intracellular organisms, capable of infecting almost any type of host and cell.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 16004362     DOI: 10.14411/fp.2005.005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Folia Parasitol (Praha)        ISSN: 0015-5683            Impact factor:   2.122


  12 in total

1.  Microsporidial keratitis in patients with hot springs exposure.

Authors:  Nai-Wen Fan; Chih-Chiau Wu; Te-Li Chen; Wei-Kuang Yu; Chien-Pei Chen; Shui-Mei Lee; Pei-Yu Lin
Journal:  J Clin Microbiol       Date:  2011-11-23       Impact factor: 5.948

2.  Interactions of Encephalitozoon cuniculi polar tube proteins.

Authors:  Boumediene Bouzahzah; Fnu Nagajyothi; Kaya Ghosh; Peter M Takvorian; Ann Cali; Herbert B Tanowitz; Louis M Weiss
Journal:  Infect Immun       Date:  2010-03-22       Impact factor: 3.441

Review 3.  Microsporidia: Obligate Intracellular Pathogens Within the Fungal Kingdom.

Authors:  Bing Han; Louis M Weiss
Journal:  Microbiol Spectr       Date:  2017-04

4.  An Ultrastructural Study of the Extruded Polar Tube of Anncaliia algerae (Microsporidia).

Authors:  Peter M Takvorian; Bing Han; Ann Cali; William J Rice; Leslie Gunther; Frank Macaluso; Louis M Weiss
Journal:  J Eukaryot Microbiol       Date:  2019-08-08       Impact factor: 3.346

5.  Interaction and assembly of two novel proteins in the spore wall of the microsporidian species Nosema bombycis and their roles in adherence to and infection of host cells.

Authors:  Donglin Yang; Guoqing Pan; Xiaoqun Dang; Yawei Shi; Chunfeng Li; Pai Peng; Bo Luo; Maofei Bian; Yue Song; Cheng Ma; Jie Chen; Zhengang Ma; Lina Geng; Zhi Li; Rui Tian; Cuifang Wei; Zeyang Zhou
Journal:  Infect Immun       Date:  2015-01-20       Impact factor: 3.441

6.  Toll-like receptor 2 recognition of the microsporidia Encephalitozoon spp. induces nuclear translocation of NF-kappaB and subsequent inflammatory responses.

Authors:  Jeffrey Fischer; Colby Suire; Hollie Hale-Donze
Journal:  Infect Immun       Date:  2008-08-04       Impact factor: 3.441

7.  The Ordospora colligata genome: Evolution of extreme reduction in microsporidia and host-to-parasite horizontal gene transfer.

Authors:  Jean-François Pombert; Karen Luisa Haag; Shadi Beidas; Dieter Ebert; Patrick J Keeling
Journal:  mBio       Date:  2015-01-13       Impact factor: 7.867

8.  A Novel Spore Wall Protein from Antonospora locustae (Microsporidia: Nosematidae) Contributes to Sporulation.

Authors:  Longxin Chen; Runting Li; Yinwei You; Kun Zhang; Long Zhang
Journal:  J Eukaryot Microbiol       Date:  2017-04-10       Impact factor: 3.346

9.  Five questions about microsporidia.

Authors:  Patrick Keeling
Journal:  PLoS Pathog       Date:  2009-09-25       Impact factor: 6.823

10.  Strategies for maximizing ATP supply in the microsporidian Encephalitozoon cuniculi: direct binding of mitochondria to the parasitophorous vacuole and clustering of the mitochondrial porin VDAC.

Authors:  Christian Hacker; Matthew Howell; David Bhella; John Lucocq
Journal:  Cell Microbiol       Date:  2013-12-06       Impact factor: 3.715

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.