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Hijacking of the Host's Immune Surveillance Radars by Burkholderia pseudomallei

Journal

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.718719

Keywords

Burkholderia pseudomallei; immunology; melioidosis; pathogenesis; virulence

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Funding

  1. University of Malaya Impact-Oriented Interdisciplinary Research Grant by Ministry of Higher Education - University of Malaya [IIRG019-2019]
  2. Frontiers Research Grant [FG012-17AFR]
  3. Department of Science and TechnologyScience and Engineering Research Board, Government of India [CRG/2019/006096]

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B. pseudomallei infection causes melioidosis with varying severity, diverse pathological manifestations, complex mechanisms of latency and relapse, and the crucial role of immune response in eradicating the pathogen. However, the question of why some individuals are asymptomatic while others are life-threatening remains unanswered.
Burkholderia pseudomallei (B. pseudomallei) causes melioidosis, a potentially fatal disease for which no licensed vaccine is available thus far. The host-pathogen interactions in B. pseudomallei infection largely remain the tip of the iceberg. The pathological manifestations are protean ranging from acute to chronic involving one or more visceral organs leading to septic shock, especially in individuals with underlying conditions similar to COVID-19. Pathogenesis is attributed to the intracellular ability of the bacterium to 'step into' the host cell's cytoplasm from the endocytotic vacuole, where it appears to polymerize actin filaments to spread across cells in the closer vicinity. B. pseudomallei effectively evades the host's surveillance armory to remain latent for prolonged duration also causing relapses despite antimicrobial therapy. Therefore, eradication of intracellular B. pseudomallei is highly dependent on robust cellular immune responses. However, it remains ambiguous why certain individuals in endemic areas experience asymptomatic seroconversion, whereas others succumb to sepsis-associated sequelae. Here, we propose key insights on how the host's surveillance radars get commandeered by B. pseudomallei.

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