Optimizing the balance between host and environmental survival skills: lessons learned from Listeria monocytogenes |
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Authors: | Bobbi Xayarath Nancy E Freitag |
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Affiliation: | Department of Microbiology & Immunology, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA. |
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Abstract: | Environmental pathogens - organisms that survive in the outside environment but maintain the capacity to cause disease in mammals - navigate the challenges of life in habitats that range from water and soil to the cytosol of host cells. The bacterium Listeria monocytogenes has served for decades as a model organism for studies of host-pathogen interactions and for fundamental paradigms of cell biology. This ubiquitous saprophyte has recently become a model for understanding how an environmental bacterium switches to life within human cells. This review describes how L. monocytogenes balances life in disparate environments with the help of a critical virulence regulator known as PrfA. Understanding L. monocytogenes survival strategies is important for gaining insight into how environmental microbes become pathogens. |
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