[HTML][HTML] Pili in gram-positive pathogens

JL Telford, MA Barocchi, I Margarit… - Nature Reviews …, 2006 - nature.com
JL Telford, MA Barocchi, I Margarit, R Rappuoli, G Grandi
Nature Reviews Microbiology, 2006nature.com
Most bacterial pathogens have long filamentous structures known as pili or fimbriae
extending from their surface. These structures are often involved in the initial adhesion of the
bacteria to host tissues during colonization. In Gram-negative bacteria, pili are typically
formed by non-covalent interactions between pilin subunits. By contrast, the recently
discovered pili in Gram-positive pathogens are formed by covalent polymerization of
adhesive pilin subunits. Evidence from studies of pili in the three principal streptococcal …
Abstract
Most bacterial pathogens have long filamentous structures known as pili or fimbriae extending from their surface. These structures are often involved in the initial adhesion of the bacteria to host tissues during colonization. In Gram-negative bacteria, pili are typically formed by non-covalent interactions between pilin subunits. By contrast, the recently discovered pili in Gram-positive pathogens are formed by covalent polymerization of adhesive pilin subunits. Evidence from studies of pili in the three principal streptococcal pathogens of humans indicates that the genes that encode the pilin subunits and the enzymes that are required for the assembly of these subunits into pili have been acquired en bloc by the horizontal transfer of a pathogenicity island.
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