Prolonged inhibition of bacterial protein synthesis abolishes Salmonella invasion

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Abstract

We have found that prolonged inhibition of bacterial protein synthesis abolishes the ability of Salmonella typhimurium to enter HEp-2 cells. Our results suggest that an essential invasion factor has a functional half-life that is seen as a gradual loss of invasiveness in the absence of protein synthesis. Therefore, Salmonella invasiveness appears to be a transient phenotype that is lost unless protein synthesis is maintained. This finding may explain why salmonellae grown to stationary phase lose their ability to enter cultured cells. In addition, a short-lived capacity to enter cells may be important during infection so that bacterial invasiveness is limited to certain times and host sites during pathogenesis.

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MacBeth, K. J., & Lee, C. A. (1993). Prolonged inhibition of bacterial protein synthesis abolishes Salmonella invasion. Infection and Immunity. https://doi.org/10.1128/iai.61.4.1544-1546.1993

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