| Literature DB >> 32021316 |
Taher Azimi1,2, Maryam Zamirnasta3, Mahmood Alizadeh Sani4,5, Mohammad Mehdi Soltan Dallal6, Ahmad Nasser3,6,7.
Abstract
Salmonella can be categorized into many serotypes, which are specific to known hosts or broadhosts. It makes no difference which one of the serotypes would penetrate the gastrointestinal tract because they all face similar obstacles such as mucus and microbiome. However, following their penetration, some species remain in the gastrointestinal tract; yet, others spread to another organ like gallbladder. Salmonella is required to alter the immune response to sustain its intracellular life. Changing the host response requires particular effector proteins and vehicles to translocate them. To this end, a categorized gene called Salmonella pathogenicity island (SPI) was developed; genes like Salmonella pathogenicity island encode aggressive or modulating proteins. Initially, Salmonella needs to be attached and stabilized via adhesin factor, without which no further steps can be taken. In this review, an attempt has been made to elaborate on each factor attached to the host cell or to modulating and aggressive proteins that evade immune systems. This review includes four sections: (A) attachment factors or T3SS- independent entrance, (B) effector proteins or T3SS-dependent entrance, (c) regulation of invasive genes, and (D) regulation of immune responses.Entities:
Keywords: Salmonella; T3SS; effector proteins; immune response; pathogenesis
Year: 2020 PMID: 32021316 PMCID: PMC6954085 DOI: 10.2147/IDR.S230604
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Drug Resist ISSN: 1178-6973 Impact factor: 4.003
Specifications of Salmonella Effector Proteins and Their Mechanisms
| Effector Proteins | Location | Activity | Mechanisms |
|---|---|---|---|
| SipA | SPI-1 | Activate caspase-1 | Maturation of SCV |
| SopB | SPI-5 | Activate Rho –GTPase, affecting ion balance | Maturation of SCV- mediate invasion |
| SopE | SPI-5 (Prophage) | Nucleotide exchange factor | Maturation of SCV- mediate invasion |
| SopA | SPI-1 | Involved invasion | Maturation of SCV |
| SopD | Outside of SPI-1, cooperative with SopB, (translocate with SPI-1 T3SS) | Inhibit Rab-7 activity | Maturation of SCV- mediate invasion |
| SpvB | Plasmid (in subspecies I), chromosome in II, IIIa and VII | Induce apoptosis, Similar to | Mediate invasion |
| SpiC | SPI-2 | Inhibit endosomal trafficking | Mediate invasion |
| SseF | SPI-2 | Localize the SCV to the Golgi region | Mediate invasion |
| SseG | SPI-2 | Interact with SseF | Mediate invasion |
| SseJ | SPI-2 | Interact with OSBP1 | Mediate invasion |
| SseL | SPI-2 | Mediate macrophage killing | Mediate invasion |
| SspH2 | SPI-12 | Immune evasion | Intracellular survival |
Figure 1Interaction between Salmonella attachment factors (T3SS-independent entrance) and host proteins.
Salmonella Adhesins and Their Effects
| Adhesins | Species | Location | Effects |
|---|---|---|---|
| SiiE | All | SPI-4 | Adhesin to the epithelial cell |
| MisL | All | SPI-3 | Binding to the fibronectin |
| PagN | All | Chromosome | Bind to the heparan sulphate |
| STIV | Chromosome | Bind to the MET in host cell | |
| RcK | Plasmid | Complement resistance |
Figure 2An overview of the entrance, Salmonella-containing vacuole formation, Sif formation, and replication inside the host vacuole.
Figure 3A comprehensive review of Salmonella mechanisms in the regulation of pathogenic genes.