z-logo
Premium
How to become a killer, or is it all accidental? Virulence strategies in oral streptococci
Author(s) -
Sitkiewicz I.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
molecular oral microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.18
H-Index - 77
eISSN - 2041-1014
pISSN - 2041-1006
DOI - 10.1111/omi.12192
Subject(s) - virulence , accidental , microbiology and biotechnology , streptococcus pyogenes , biology , bacteria , genetics , staphylococcus aureus , gene , physics , acoustics
Summary Streptococci are a diverse group of Gram‐positive microorganisms sharing common virulence traits and similar strategies to escape the oral niche and establish an infection in other parts of the host organism. Invasive infection with oral streptococci is “a perfect storm” that requires the concerted action of multiple biotic and abiotic factors. Our understanding of streptococcal pathogenicity and infectivity should probably be less mechanistic and driven not only by the identification of novel virulence factors. The observed diversity of the genus, including the range of virulence and pathogenicity mechanisms, is most likely the result of interspecies interactions, a massive horizontal gene transfer between streptococci within a shared oral niche, recombination events, selection of specialized clones, and modification of regulatory circuits. Selective pressure by the host and bacterial communities is a driving force for the selection of virulence traits and shaping the streptococcal genome. Global regulatory events driving niche adaptation and interactions with bacterial communities and the host steer research interests towards attempts to define the oral interactome on the transcriptional level and define signal cross‐feeding and co‐expression and co‐regulation of virulence genes.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here