Tuberculosis: The Microbe Host Interface

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M. tuberculosis remains one of the most successful human pathogens known. The causative agent of tuberculosis, it also has a unique ability to persist for years in the infected, apparently healthy host. This dormant organism can be reactivated years, even decades later to cause tuberculosis. Knowledge regarding the interaction of M. tuberculosis with the host is fundamental to understanding the pathogenesis, leading eventually to the development of strategies for the prevention and control of infection and disease.
By integrating genetic, microbiologic, immunologic, and cell biologic approaches to elucidate pathogenesis, penetrating new insights into the interaction of
M. tuberculosis with the host have emerged. This book reviews the most important state-of-the-art approaches currently used to study microbe-host interactions and highlights emerging methodologies. Strategies to analyze the following topics are included: mycobacterial entry, growth, and gene expression in macrophages; analysis of post-phagocytic events; analysis of signaling in infected macrophage; the acquired immune response; newer animal- and non animal-models systems; latency; and the epidemiology of M. tuberculosis infections.

Author(s): Larry S. Schlesinger, Lucy E. DesJardin
Publisher: CRC Press
Year: 2003

Language: English
Pages: 291
City: Boca Raton

Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of Contributors
Preface
Chapter 1: Mycobacterial Entry and Growth Using In Vitro Macrophage Models
Chapter 2: Analysis of Post-Phagocytic Events
Chapter 3: Analysis of Macrophage Signaling Following M. Tuberculosis Infection
Chapter 4: The Acquired Immune Response to M. Tuberculosis
Chapter 5: New In Vitro Models of Mycobacterial Pathogenesis
Chapter 6: Animal Models in the Analysis of Pathogenesis
Chapter 7: Analysis of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Gene Expression in
Chapter 8: Analysis of Latency
Chapter 9: Molecular Epidemiology: Clinical Utility, Public Health Implication, and Relevance to Pathogenesis
Index
Table