Bacterial secretion systems: An overview

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Abstract

One essential prokaryotic cell function is the transport of proteins from the cytoplasm into other compartments of the cell, the environment, and/or other bacteria or eukaryotic cells-a process known as protein secretion. Prokaryotes have developed numerous ways of transporting protein cargo between locations, which largely involve the assistance of dedicated protein secretion systems. Protein secretion systems are essential for the growth of bacteria and are used in an array of processes. Some secretion systems are found in almost all bacteria and secrete a wide variety of substrates, while others have been identified in only a small number of bacterial species or are dedicated to secreting only one or a few proteins. In certain cases, these dedicated secretion systems are used by bacterial pathogens to manipulate the host and establish a replicative niche. Other times, they are required to take advantage of an environmental niche, perhaps by secreting proteins that help bacteria to compete with nearby microorganisms. There are several different classes of bacterial secretion systems, and their designs can differ based on whether their protein substrates cross a single phospholipid membrane, two membranes, or even three membranes, where two are bacterial and one is a host membrane. Due to the specificity of expression of some of these secretion systems in bacterial pathogens, antimicrobials are being developed against these systems to augment our current repertoire of antibiotics. This topic is discussed in Section VII, "Targeted Therapies".

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Green, E. R., & Mecsas, J. (2016). Bacterial secretion systems: An overview. In Virulence Mechanisms of Bacterial Pathogens (pp. 213–239). wiley. https://doi.org/10.1128/9781555819286.ch8

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