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Typhoid toxin is a critical virulence factor of Salmonella Typhi, the cause of typhoid fever in humans 1. In experimental animals, this toxin can reproduce some of the acute, pathognomonic symptoms of typhoid fever. Typhoid toxin is a unique AB5 toxin in that it possesses two active ("A") enzymatic subunits linked to a single pentameric "B" subunit that targets these activities to specific cells and tissues 2. In addition, typhoid toxin has a rather unique biology since it is only expressed when S. Typhi is within mammalian cells, and it is subsequently exported to the extracellular environment by a specific vesicle trafficking process 3,4. This unique biology has hampered the ability to study the mechanisms by which the toxin is exported from the bacteria into the lumen of the Salmonella-containing vacuole since, until very recently, the only assay available to monitor toxin secretion was the visualization of the vesicle carrier intermediates in infected mammalian cells. Previous studies in our laboratory identified a gene, ttsA, which is essential for the secretion of typhoid toxin from bacterial cells 5. This gene, encoded within the same pathogenicity islet that contains the genes for the components of typhoid toxin, encodes a homolog of bacteriophage N-acetyl-β-D-muramidases. The recent discovery in our laboratory of the gene regulatory network that controls the expression of typhoid toxin within cells 6 has allowed the identification of in-vitro growth conditions that permit typhoid toxin expression. These growth conditions have allowed us to study the function of TtsA and, in the process, identified what we believe to be a novel mechanism of protein secretion described in our recent paper in Nature Microbiology.
Intestinal inflammation Salmonella style
It has been long known that intestinal inflammation is central for the pathology that follows infection with non-typhoidal Salmonellae such as Salmonella Typhimurium. However, in recent years work carried out in the laboratories of Wolf-Dietrich Hardt and Andreas Baumler have established that the inflammatory response is also required for Salmonella Typhimurium to compete with the resident intestinal microbiota and to secure essential nutrients. Unlike most other tissues, where the mere presence of bacterial products capable of stimulating innate immune receptors can trigger inflammation, the intestinal tract presents a challenge to those pathogens that need inflammation to sustain their livelihood. Indeed, the presence in the intestinal tract of an abundance of microbial products with the potential to stimulate innate immune receptors demands for the intestinal epithelium to be subject to negative regulatory mechanisms that can prevent the pathology that could result from the indiscriminate firing of these receptors. In fact, misregulation of those mechanisms can result in chronic inflammatory conditions such as inflammatory bowel disease. Consequently, to initiate an inflammatory response in the gut, S. Typhimurium cannot relay on the stimulation of innate immune receptors by the standard “pathogen-associated molecular patterns” (e. g LPS, peptidoglycan, flagellin) that, like many other bacteria, posses in abundance. Therefore, the mechanisms by which Salmonella trigger intestinal inflammation have been a long-standing question in the field and have been the subject of some controversy. We believe that a paper that we recently published in Nature Microbiology has finally clarified this important issue.