CORRELATIVE FIB/SEM AND DYNAMIC MICROSCOPY REVEAL MACROPINOSOMES ARE KEY PLAYERS IN SHIGELLA INVASION

Allon Weiner 1 Nora Mellouk 1 Noelia Lopez-Montero 1 Yuen-Yan Chang 1 Célia Souque 1 Christine Schmitt 2 Jost Enninga 1
1DIHP, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France
2Ultrapole, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France

Intracellular pathogens include all viruses, many bacteria and parasites capable of invading and surviving within host cells. Key to survival is the subversion of host cell pathways by the pathogen for the purpose of propagation and evading the immune system. The intracellular bacterium Shigella flexneri, the causative agent of bacillary dysentery, invades host cells in a vacuole that is subsequently ruptured to allow growth of the pathogen within the host cytoplasm. We applied dynamic imaging and advanced large volume correlative light electron microscopy (CLEM) to study the highly transient events of S. flexneri’s early invasion into host epithelial cells and elucidate some of its fundamental features. The results obtained provide the basis for a new model of the early steps of S. flexneri invasion, establishing a different view of the enigmatic process of cytoplasmic access by invasive bacterial pathogens.









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