Internalization of Salmonella by Macrophages Induces Formation of Nonreplicating Persisters
Imperial College London · Medical Research Council
Abstract
Many bacterial pathogens cause persistent infections despite repeated antibiotic exposure. Bacterial persisters are antibiotic-tolerant cells, but little is known about their growth status and the signals and pathways leading to their formation in infected tissues. We used fluorescent single-cell analysis to identify Salmonella persisters during infection. These were part of a nonreplicating population formed immediately after uptake by macrophages and were induced by vacuolar acidification and nutritional deprivation, conditions that also induce Salmonella virulence gene expression. The majority of 14 toxin-antitoxin modules contributed to intracellular persister formation. Some persisters resumed…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 86.56
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 27
Authors
6- SHSophie HélaineCorresponding
Imperial College London, Medical Research Council
- AMAngela M. ChevertonCorresponding
Imperial College London, Medical Research Council
- KGKathryn G. WatsonCorresponding
Imperial College London, Medical Research Council
- LMLaura M. Faure
Imperial College London, Medical Research Council
- SASophie A. Matthews
Imperial College London, Medical Research Council
Topics & keywords
- Microbiology
- Salmonella
- Biology
- Virulence
- Multidrug tolerance
- Internalization
- Salmonella enterica
- Phagocytosis
- Zero hunger