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Priming virulence factors for delivery into the host

Abstract

Several medically important Gram-negative bacterial pathogens inject virulence factors into host cells through a type III secretion system and specialized bacterial chaperones are required for their effective delivery. Recent structural work shows that these chaperones maintain virulence factors in a partially non-globular conformation that is primed for unfolding and translocation through the 'injectisome'.

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Figure 1: The type III secretion system of Gram-negative bacterial pathogens injects virulence factors into host cells.
Figure 2: Crystal structures of type III secretion chaperone–virulence-factor complexes.
Figure 3: A comparison of several type III secretion chaperones from different pathogenic bacteria.

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Correspondence to C. Erec Stebbins or Jorge E. Galán.

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DATABASES

Swiss-Prot

CesT

DnaK

ExoS

GroEL

IpgC

LcrH

Rac1

SicA

SicP

SigE

SptP

SycE

YopE

YopH

YopM

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Stebbins, C., Galán, J. Priming virulence factors for delivery into the host. Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol 4, 738–744 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1038/nrm1201

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