Salmonella redirects phagosomal maturation

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Abstract

Following invasion of host cells, Salmonella occupies an intracellular vacuole that superficially resembles a phagosome. However, unlike bona fide phagosomes that undergo a maturation process to become microbicidal phago-lysosomes, Salmonella avoid killing by arresting and diverting the maturation program of the invasion vacuole. As a result of this re-routing, the bacteria generate a protected niche where they survive and replicate.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Brumell, J. H., & Grinstein, S. (2004). Salmonella redirects phagosomal maturation. Current Opinion in Microbiology. Elsevier Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mib.2003.12.005

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