Contribution of toxins to the pathogenesis of inhalational anthrax
Autor: | Jean-Nicolas Tournier, Dominique R. Vidal, Anne Quesnel-Hellmann, Aurélie Cleret |
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Rok vydání: | 2007 |
Předmět: |
Inhalation Exposure
Lung biology Bacterial Toxins Immunology biology.organism_classification Models Biological Microbiology Pathophysiology Bacillus anthracis Anthrax Pathogenesis medicine.anatomical_structure Immune system Infectious disease (medical specialty) Virology Inhalational anthrax medicine Animals Humans Histological examination |
Zdroj: | Cellular Microbiology. 9:555-565 |
ISSN: | 1462-5822 1462-5814 |
Popis: | Summary Inhalational anthrax is a life-threatening infectious disease of considerable concern, especially as a potential bioterrorism agent. Progress is gradually being made towards understanding the mechanisms used by Bacillus anthracis to escape the immune system and to induce severe septicaemia associated with toxaemia and leading to death. Recent advances in fundamental research have revealed previously unsuspected roles for toxins in various cell types. We summarize here pathological data for animal models and macroscopic histological examination data from recent clinical records, which we link to the effects of toxins. We describe three major steps in infection: (i) an invasion phase in the lung, during which toxins have short-distance effects on lung phagocytes; (ii) a phase of bacillus proliferation in the mediastinal lymph nodes, with local effects of toxins; and (iii) a terminal, diffusion phase, characterized by a high blood bacterial load and by long-distance effects of toxins, leading to host death. The pathophysiology of inhalational anthrax thus involves interactions between toxins and various cell partners, throughout the course of infection. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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