Guest guest Posted April 2, 2005 Report Share Posted April 2, 2005 Heres an interesting exploration of TB at the cell/tissue level. This illustrates a number of interesting pitfalls in studying infection. It says the processes in the mouse are pretty different from those in the human. Also, the processes in the human change very signficantly over time, in more ways than one. http://aac.asm.org/cgi/content/full/47/3/833 Interestingly, the authors say the bulk of the biomass is extracellular in established disease (is this also true of the bulk of biomass growth?). They say M. leprae is obligate intracellular - not sure but I think the same may be true of M. avium in the human. It looks like maybe the most crucial virulence factor of Mtb for humans is the Esat6/CF-10 operon product, a secreted factor that lyses host cells. Deletion of this operon has been discovered to be the basis of the attenuation of the M bovis BCG vaccine strains, and it is consitutively lacking in M microti which fails to infect humans. Esat6/CF-10 knockout Mtb penetrate tissue poorly when introduced to the alveolar epithelium. http://cmr.asm.org/cgi/content/full/16/3/463 I wonder how this squares with the virulence correlation for Mtb that I posted about before, having to do with apoptosis of infected cells, and NO production. And how it all compares to whatever M. leprae is doing. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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