000 04042 a2200373 4500
999 _c10780
_d10780
020 _a0762306106
050 _aQR187
_bPHA 1999
100 _aGordon, Siamon
_evolume editor
245 _aPhagocytosis :
_bmicrobial invasion /
_cSiamon Gordon
264 _aStamford :
_bJAI Press,
_c1999
300 _axix, 381 pages :
_billustrations
336 _2rdacontent
_atext
_btxt
337 _2rdamedia
_aunmediated
_bn
338 _2rdacarrier
_avolume
_bnc
440 _a Advances in cell and molecular biology of membranes and organelles
500 _aVolume 6 1999 English
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index
505 _aCover; CONTENTS; LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS; INTRODUCTION TO THE SERIES; PREFACE; CHAPTER 1. PATHOGEN STRATEGIES: A HITCHIKER'S GUIDE TO THE MACROPHAGE; CHAPTER 2. ANTIPHAGOCYTOSIS BY YERSINIA: A MECHANISM INVOLVING PTPAsE-MEDIATED DISRUPTION OF HOST-CELL FOCAL COMPLEXES; CHAPTER 3. INVASION OF MAMMALIAN CELLS BY LISTERIA MONOCYTOGENES; CHAPTER 4. THE ROLE OF COMPLEMENT RECEPTOR TYPE 3 IN THE INVASION STRATEGIES OF MYCOBACTERIUM TUBERCULOSIS; CHAPTER 5. MYCOBACTERIA AND THE ENDOCYTIC PATHWAY CHAPTER 6. LEGIONELLA PNEUMOPHILA AND MYCOBACTERIUM TUBERCULOSIS: TWO PATHWAYS THROUGH THE MONONUCLEAR PHAGOCYTECHAPTER 7. PHAGOCYTOSIS OF PSEUDOMONAS AERUGINOSA; CHAPTER 8. INTERACTION OF SALMONELLA SPP WITH HOST CELLS; CHAPTER 9. SHIGELIA HOST CELL INVASION: SIGNIFICANCE IN PATHOGENESIS; CHAPTER 10. BRUCELLA ABORTUS INVASION AND SURVIVAL WITHIN PROFESSIONAL AND NONPROFESSIONAL PHAGOCYTES; CHAPTER 11. EN ROUTE TO THE VACUOLE: TRACING THE SECRETORY PATHWAY OF TOXOPLASMA GONDII; CHAPTER 12. ACTIVE CELL INVASION BY TOXOPLASMA GONDll LEADS TO AVOIDANCE OF PHAGOCYTIC PROCESSING CHAPTER 13. REGULATED EXOCYTOSIS OF LYSOSOMES: A NOVEL PATHWAY REVEALED BY THE INTERACTION OF TRYPANOSOMA CRUZI WITH HOST CELLSCHAPTER 14. PHAGOCYTOSIS OF LEISHMANIA: INTERACTION WITH THE HOST AND INTRACELLULAR TRAFFICKING; CHAPTER 15. CELLULAR MECHANISMS OF PHAGOCYTOSIS OF CANDIDA BY MURINE MACROPHAGES; CHAPTER 16. NONOPSONIC FIMH-MEDIATED PHAGOCYTOSIS OF E. COLI AND ITS POSSIBLE CONTRIBUTION TO RECURRENT URINARY TRACT INFECTIONS; CHAPTER 17. CELL CO-INFECTIONS WITH NONVIRAL PATHOGENS AND THE CONSTRUCTION OF DOUBLY INFECTED PHAGOSOMES; INDEX
520 _aThe present volume focuses on microbial invasion strategies of pathogen uptake. An accompanying volume (Vol. 5) in the series presents the phagocytic process from the viewpiont of the host cell. This field of study is growing rapidly after a somewhat slow start over recent decades. This collection of invited chapters attempts to reflect current research and brings together cell biologists, microbiologists, and immunologists wiht disthemes, hopefully like a symphony rather than a boring catalogue. It will be evident that editorial bias favors intracellular parasitism and medically important organisms. The neutrophil is far more than a supporting player to the macrophage and some attempt is made to remind the reader of some of its unique skills. To retain a manageable size, the emphasis is on relatively early events such as mutual recognition, cell entry, and response, rather than on longterm changes in gene expression by either host cell or pahtogen. Viruses are excluded not because of lack of importance but because of somewhat different research approaches, although it is becoming increasingly clear that large viruses (e.g. Vaccinia) and Listeria monocytogenes, share common strategies in invasion and intercellular spread
650 _a Bacteria pathogenicity
650 _aCell Membrane immunology
650 _aInvasion microbienne
650 _aMacrophages
650 _aMicrobial invasiveness
650 _aMicrobiology (General)
650 _aPhagocytes
650 _aPhagocytose
650 _aPhagocytosis
650 _a SCIENCE Life Sciences Anatomy & Physiology
650 _afagocytose
650 _aphagocytosis
700 _aTartakoff, Alam M.
_eseries editor
942 _2lcc
_cBK
_h187
_iPHA
_kQR