Dormant forms of mycobacteria |
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Authors: | MO Shleeva EG Salina AS Kaprelyants |
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Institution: | 1. Bach Institute of Biochemistry, Russian Academy of Sciences, Leninskii prosp., 33, k. 2, Moscow, 119071, Russia
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Abstract: | Dormant states of bacteria with drastically decreased metabolic activity, enhanced resistance to harmful factors, and absence of cell division is a form for surviving unfavorable environmental conditions. This state does not necessarily imply formation of highly differentiated spores and cysts; it has been demonstrated for non-spore-forming bacteria, including pathogenic ones. The latency of a number of infectious diseases is generally believed to be related to the capacity of bacteria (including Mycobacterium tuberculosis, an infective agent of tuberculosis) to produce dormant forms. Indeed, some results of histological investigation and modeling of latent infections in animals, as well as results obtained with in vitro models, support the hypothesis of production of dormant forms by tuberculosis bacteria. In the present review, existing experimental models of dormant form production in mycobacteria are considered, as well as modern data concerning the mechanisms of their formation and their relation to the “nonculturable” state. The mechanisms of reversion to culturability and the role of extracellular factors in reactivation of dormant forms are discussed in detail. |
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