Phagosome proteomics: A powerful tool to assess bacteria-mediated immunomodulation

2Citations
Citations of this article
16Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Bacteria-mediated immunomodulation has important implications in microbial infection and bacterial vaccines. Intraphagosomal bacteria negotiate survival niches with the intracellular environment by modulating the phagosome composition during invasion. The final phagosome composition determines the fate of the intraphagosomal bacterium or the efficacy of a bacterial vaccine. Therefore, the phagosome proteome is a valuable readout to assess the ability of a natural or genetically engineered bacterial strain to modulate the host immune response. Compared to a preparation of latex-bead-containing phagosomes, the preparation of bacterial phagosomes requires additional measures to ensure comparable purity due to their closer density to some other organelles. This bottleneck can be overcome with delicate preparation protocols, proper experimental designs to facilitate bioinformatics based discrimination against contaminating proteins, and the incorporation of stable-isotope labeled internal standards to correct for contaminating fractions of phagosomal proteins. The rapid progress in the proteomics and bioinformatics fields provides an array of techniques that promise to bring about an unprecedented coverage of both known and as yet undiscovered immunomodulation pathways within bacterial phagosome proteomes. A precise portrait of the bacteria-mediated immunomodulation pathways in phagosomes will likely aid in the intelligent design of bioengineered bacterial vaccine strains for important future bio-medical applications. © 2011 Landes Bioscience.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Li, Q. (2011). Phagosome proteomics: A powerful tool to assess bacteria-mediated immunomodulation. Bioengineered Bugs, 2(4), 194–198. https://doi.org/10.4161/bbug.2.4.15563

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free