Guest guest Posted March 28, 2005 Report Share Posted March 28, 2005 In some mammal cell types, mitochondrial membrane damage, releasing various factors, is an essential part of the cell suicide cascade. This step may not be essential to suicide in other cell types, but may happen anyway. During apoptotic signaling, various cytoplasmic proteins from the mammal genome act to damage or protect mitochondrial membranes. Key membrane-damaging pro-apoptotic proteins are very potently degraded by Chlamydia trachomatis to protect human endothelial cells from artificially-induced apoptosis in vitro (Zhong G 2005). Which may be crucial to persistance of chlamydia, and conceivably other intracellular pests, in vivo. Genes for these proteins may have been captured by eucaryotes from the proto-mitochondria themselves. Phylogenetic evidence for this is presented in this article. A possible history of the interaction is proposed in the epilogue, copied below: http://www.nature.com/cgi-taf/DynaPage.taf?file=/cdd/journal/v9/n4/full/4400991a\ ..html " After submission of the manuscript of this study, it came to our attention that mitochondrial endosymbiosis and the origin of eukaryotic PCD [programmed cell death] could be linked in a straightforward hypothesis. The early alpha-proteobacterial endosymbionts might have been using secreted and membrane proteases, such as metacaspases, paracaspases and HtrA-like proteases, to kill their host cells once those became unhospitable environments, e.g. because of scarcity of nutrients. Such a mechanism could enable the endosymbionts to efficiently use the corpse of the assassinated host and move to another host. During subsequent evolution, this weapon of aggression might have been appropriated by the host and made into a means of programmed suicide, with the subsequent addition of regulatory components. In general terms, this idea has been proposed by Frade and idis (Frade JM, idis TM (1997) Origin of eukaryotic programmed cell death: a consequence of aerobic metabolism? Bioessays 19: 827-832). " Consider that we are talking about unicellular proto-eucaryote hosts here, so killing the host cell will not expose parasites to immune system componants - only to the open environment they came from. The life processes of the host can benefit parasites, but at a certain point this might be outweighed by the strain on the parasites from defensive host chemistry changes and the potential benefit to the parasites of dispersing into new hosts. At that point they secrete factors that kill the host. The genetics of this machinery is eventually captured by proto-eucaryotes - perhaps because kin selection stably favors their rapid apoptosis upon infection, as proffered here: http://www.nature.com/cgi-taf/DynaPage.taf?file=/cdd/journal/v9/n4/full/4400986a\ ..html What a brilliant move by proto-eucaryotes - by " stealing " the capability for apoptosis their immunity is vastly improved (not the immunity of individual cells of course, but that of clones, or sets of related clones, existing in proximity). As a small bonus apoptosis even allows them to develop successful multicellularity. But the procaryotes strike back, possibly perpetuating infection largely by means of secreted factors that interfere with apoptosis. And then what? Interestingly, some procaryotes are parasitised by fellow procaryotes such as Bdellovibrio. The immense majority of procaryotes are undescribed so there might be alot more. I wonder if any procaryote hosts have developed cell suicide, unbeknownst as yet to science. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 28, 2005 Report Share Posted March 28, 2005 you're having a good time eric . you're keeping your mind awake and alive. an interesting fact about epidemics is the virulence of an infection decreases over time, host and pathogen adapt to each other. why is that. maybe to some extent in the beginning you just kill off the weaker ones (genetically). but also the more successful pathogen is one that can live with its host and be transmitted. so maybe there is selective pressure on the pathogen that way. i don't know what that means for lyme because tbd are bioweaponized (i believe) but i guess eventually, it would mean they became less virulent. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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