肺炎链球菌
生物
微生物学
殖民地化
免疫系统
马车
病菌
人口
肺炎球菌感染
人类病原体
使负有责任或义务
呼吸道
免疫学
传输(电信)
细菌
呼吸系统
生态学
病理
医学
解剖
抗生素
工程类
电气工程
环境卫生
遗传学
作者
Jeffrey N. Weiser,Daniela M. Ferreira,James C. Paton
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41579-018-0001-8
摘要
Streptococcus pneumoniae has a complex relationship with its obligate human host. On the one hand, the pneumococci are highly adapted commensals, and their main reservoir on the mucosal surface of the upper airways of carriers enables transmission. On the other hand, they can cause severe disease when bacterial and host factors allow them to invade essentially sterile sites, such as the middle ear spaces, lungs, bloodstream and meninges. Transmission, colonization and invasion depend on the remarkable ability of S. pneumoniae to evade or take advantage of the host inflammatory and immune responses. The different stages of pneumococcal carriage and disease have been investigated in detail in animal models and, more recently, in experimental human infection. Furthermore, widespread vaccination and the resulting immune pressure have shed light on pneumococcal population dynamics and pathogenesis. Here, we review the mechanistic insights provided by these studies on the multiple and varied interactions of the pneumococcus and its host. Carriage of Streptococcus pneumoniae on the mucosa of the upper respiratory tract is the prerequisite for transmission and tissue invasion. In this Review, Weiser, Ferreira and Paton summarize the mechanisms that allow pneumococci to transmit and progress from colonizer to pathogen.
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