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The sweet connection: Solving the riddle of multiple sugar-binding fimbrial adhesins in Escherichia coli : Multiple E. coli fimbriae form a versatile arsenal of sugar-binding lectins potentially involved in surface-colonisation and tissue tropism

✍ Scribed by Charalampia-Georgia Korea; Jean-Marc Ghigo; Christophe Beloin


Book ID
102757493
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
674 KB
Volume
33
Category
Article
ISSN
0265-9247

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Proteinaceous stalks produced by Gram‐negative bacteria are often used to adhere to environmental surfaces. Among them, chaperone‐usher (CU) fimbriae adhesins, related to prototypical type 1 fimbriae, interact in highly specific ways with different ligands at different stages of bacterial infection or surface colonisation. Recent analyses revealed a large number of potential and often “cryptic” CU fimbriae homologues in the genome of commensal and pathogenic Escherichia coli and closely related bacteria. We propose that CU fimbriae form a yet unexplored arsenal of lectins, carbohydrate‐binding proteins involved in various aspects of bacterial surface adhesion and tissue tropism. Combined efforts of molecular and structural biologists will be required to unravel the biological contribution of the bacterial lectome, however, current progress has already opened up new perspectives in the design of novel anti‐infective strategies.