Klebsiella pneumoniae emerging anti-immunology paradigms: from stealth to evasion
Joana Sá‐Pessoa, Ricardo Calderón-González, Alix Lee, José A. Bengoechea
Abstract
Klebsiella pneumoniae (KP) is a global threat to human health due to the isolation of multidrug-resistant strains. Despite advancements in understanding KP's population structure, antibiotic resistance mechanisms, and transmission patterns, a gap remains in how KP evades defenses, allowing the pathogen to flourish in tissues despite an activated immune system. KP infection biology has been shaped by the notion that the pathogen has evolved to shield from defenses more than actively suppress them. This review describes new paradigms of how KP exploits the coevolution with the innate immune system to hijack immune effectors and receptors to ablate signaling pathways and to counteract cell-intrinsic immunity, making apparent that KP can no longer be considered only as a stealth pathogen.