Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3399123 Current Opinion in Microbiology 2013 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

An eponymous feature of microbes is their small size, and size affects their pathogenesis. The recognition of microbes by host factors, for example, is often dependent on the density and number of molecular interactions occurring over a limited surface area. As a consequence, certain antimicrobial substances, such as complement, appear to target particles with a larger surface area more effectively. Although microbes may inhibit these antimicrobial activities by minimizing their effective size, the host uses defenses such as agglutination by immunoglobulin to counteract this microbial evasion strategy. Some successful pathogens in turn are able to prevent immune mediated clearance by expressing virulence factors that block agglutination. Thus, microbial size is one of the battlegrounds between microbial survival and host defense.

► Microbial size varies and is a factor in interaction with a host. ► Small microbial size allows for evasion of important host defenses. ► Several host defenses function by increasing effective microbial size. ► Some pathogens are able to evade defenses that target their small size.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Immunology and Microbiology Microbiology
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