4.6 Review

Mechanical Forces Govern Interactions of Host Cells with Intracellular Bacterial Pathogens

Journal

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/mmbr.00094-20

Keywords

cellular biomechanics; cytoskeletal mechanics; extracellular matrix mechanics; intracellular bacterial pathogens

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [R01AI036929]
  2. HHMI
  3. American Heart Association [18CDA34070047]
  4. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG
  5. German Research Foundation) [EXC 2124-390838134]

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Understanding the interaction between host cells and bacterial pathogens is crucial for combating infectious diseases. Both chemical and mechanical signals play a role in this interaction. Bacterial pathogens have developed mechanisms to alter the mechanical properties of host cells to promote their own survival and dissemination, while host responses to infection rely on mechanical alterations to limit the spread of infection. Bioengineering tools and techniques can be used to measure host cell mechanics during infection and explore the modulation of infection by mechanical signals.
To combat infectious diseases, it is important to understand how host cells interact with bacterial pathogens. Signals conveyed from pathogen to host, and vice versa, may be either chemical or mechanical. To combat infectious diseases, it is important to understand how host cells interact with bacterial pathogens. Signals conveyed from pathogen to host, and vice versa, may be either chemical or mechanical. While the molecular and biochemical basis of host-pathogen interactions has been extensively explored, relatively less is known about mechanical signals and responses in the context of those interactions. Nevertheless, a wide variety of bacterial pathogens appear to have developed mechanisms to alter the cellular biomechanics of their hosts in order to promote their survival and dissemination, and in turn many host responses to infection rely on mechanical alterations in host cells and tissues to limit the spread of infection. In this review, we present recent findings on how mechanical forces generated by host cells can promote or obstruct the dissemination of intracellular bacterial pathogens. In addition, we discuss how in vivo extracellular mechanical signals influence interactions between host cells and intracellular bacterial pathogens. Examples of such signals include shear stresses caused by fluid flow over the surface of cells and variable stiffness of the extracellular matrix on which cells are anchored. We highlight bioengineering-inspired tools and techniques that can be used to measure host cell mechanics during infection. These allow for the interrogation of how mechanical signals can modulate infection alongside biochemical signals. We hope that this review will inspire the microbiology community to embrace those tools in future studies so that host cell biomechanics can be more readily explored in the context of infection studies.

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