Molecular Mimicry: a Paradigm of Host-Microbe Coevolution Illustrated by <i>Legionella</i>
Sonia Mondino, Silke Schmidt, Carmen Buchrieser
Abstract
Through coevolution with host cells, microorganisms have acquired mechanisms to avoid the detection by the host surveillance system and to use the cell’s supplies to establish themselves. Indeed, certain pathogens have evolved proteins that imitate specific eukaryotic cell proteins, allowing them to manipulate host pathways, a phenomenon termed molecular mimicry. Bacterial “eukaryotic-like proteins” are a remarkable example of molecular mimicry. They are defined as proteins that strongly resemble eukaryotic proteins or that carry domains that are predominantly present in eukaryotes and that are generally absent from prokaryotes.
Topics & Concepts
Molecular mimicryCoevolutionMimicryBiologyHost (biology)Evolutionary biologyComputational biologyGeneticsEcologyImmune systemLegionella and Acanthamoeba researchVibrio bacteria research studiesNeutrophil, Myeloperoxidase and Oxidative Mechanisms