Abstract: | Bacterial membrane vesicles Cells of all three domains of our life (eukaryotes, bacteria and archaea) produce and segregate membrane vesicles surrounded by a lipid double membrane. Most of them are spherical with a diameter of 20–500 nm and can contain in their interior, the lumen, different types of molecules called cargo. In most cases they contain different proteins, polysaccharides and metabolites and sometimes nucleic acids (DNA, RNA) as well as misfolded proteins. Membrane vesicles play an important role in the horizontal gene transfer and in pathogenesis. Furthermore, it has been shown quite recently that membrane vesicles can transfer phage receptors to phage resistant cells and even closely related species. Worldwide several companies investigate their application as vaccines. In addition, investigations are going on to find out whether membrane vesicles can be used in genomic engineering. |