4.7 Review

Persistence of obligate intracellular pathogens: alternative strategies to overcome host-specific stresses

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2023.1185571

Keywords

persistence; obligate intracellular bacteria; Chlamydia; Coxiella; stringent response; tryptophan starvation; iron starvation; interferon-gamma

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In order to survive inside host cells, obligate intracellular bacteria reduce their genome size by eliminating non-essential genes. While living inside a host cell provides a stable environment, these bacteria depend on the host for nutrients and are susceptible to nutrient limitations. They develop persistence as a survival strategy, which compromises antibiotic therapy and leads to chronic infections. This review discusses the strategies used by obligate intracellular bacteria and highlights their unique response mechanisms.
In adapting to the intracellular niche, obligate intracellular bacteria usually undergo a reduction of genome size by eliminating genes not needed for intracellular survival. These losses can include, for example, genes involved in nutrient anabolic pathways or in stress response. Living inside a host cell offers a stable environment where intracellular bacteria can limit their exposure to extracellular effectors of the immune system and modulate or outright inhibit intracellular defense mechanisms. However, highlighting an area of vulnerability, these pathogens are dependent on the host cell for nutrients and are very sensitive to conditions that limit nutrient availability. Persistence is a common response shared by evolutionarily divergent bacteria to survive adverse conditions like nutrient deprivation. Development of persistence usually compromises successful antibiotic therapy of bacterial infections and is associated with chronic infections and long-term sequelae for the patients. During persistence, obligate intracellular pathogens are viable but not growing inside their host cell. They can survive for a long period of time such that, when the inducing stress is removed, reactivation of their growth cycles resumes. Given their reduced coding capacity, intracellular bacteria have adapted different response mechanisms. This review gives an overview of the strategies used by the obligate intracellular bacteria, where known, which, unlike model organisms such as E. coli, often lack toxin-antitoxin systems and the stringent response that have been linked to a persister phenotype and amino acid starvation states, respectively.

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