Immune evasion by Mycobacterium tuberculosis: living with the enemy

JAL Flynn, J Chan - Current opinion in immunology, 2003 - Elsevier
JAL Flynn, J Chan
Current opinion in immunology, 2003Elsevier
Mycobacterium tuberculosis is successful as a pathogen because of its ability to persist in an
immunocompetent host. This bacterium lives within the macrophage, a cell whose function is
the elimination of microbes. Recent advances have improved our understanding of how M.
tuberculosis evades two major antimicrobial mechanisms of macrophages: phagolysosome
fusion and the production of toxic reactive nitrogen intermediates. M. tuberculosis also
modulates antigen presentation to prevent the detection of infected macrophages by CD4+ T …
Mycobacterium tuberculosis is successful as a pathogen because of its ability to persist in an immunocompetent host. This bacterium lives within the macrophage, a cell whose function is the elimination of microbes. Recent advances have improved our understanding of how M. tuberculosis evades two major antimicrobial mechanisms of macrophages: phagolysosome fusion and the production of toxic reactive nitrogen intermediates. M. tuberculosis also modulates antigen presentation to prevent the detection of infected macrophages by CD4+ T cells.
Elsevier