Epithelial Inflammasomes in the Defense against Salmonella Gut Infection
A recent published review in "Current Opinion in Microbiology" by Fattinger et al from the Hardt and Sellin lab discusses epithelial inflammasomes and their crucial role in the defense against Salmonella gut infection.
The gut epithelium prevents bacterial access to the host's tissues and coordinates a number of mucosal defenses. Fattinger et al review the function of epithelial inflammasomes in the infected host and focus on their role in defense against Salmonella Typhimurium. This pathogen employs flagella to swim towards the epithelium and a type III secretion system (TTSS) to dock and invade intestinal epithelial cells. Flagella and TTSS components are recognized by the canonical NAIP/NLRC4 inflammasome, while LPS activates the non-canonical Caspase-4/11 inflammasome. The relative contributions of these inflammasomes, the activated cell death pathways and the elicited mucosal defenses are subject to environmental control and appear to change along the infection trajectory. It will be an important future task to explain how this may enable defense against the challenges imposed by diverse bacterial enteropathogens.
Link to the paper in external page Current Opinion in Microbiology.