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Applications of microscopy in salmonella research.
[typhoid]
Salmonella
enterica
is
a
Gram
-negative
enteropathogen
that
can
cause
localized
infections
,
typically
resulting
in
gastroenteritis
,
or
systemic
infection
,
e
.
g
.
,
typhoid
fever
,
in
humans
and
many
other
animals
.
Understanding
the
mechanisms
by
which
Salmonella
induces
disease
has
been
the
focus
of
intensive
research
.
This
has
revealed
that
Salmonella
invasion
requires
dynamic
cross-talk
between
the
microbe
and
host
cells
,
in
which
bacterial
adherence
rapidly
leads
to
a
complex
sequence
of
cellular
responses
initiated
by
proteins
translocated
into
the
host
cell
by
a
type
3
secretion
system
.
Once
these
Salmonella-induced
responses
have
resulted
in
bacterial
invasion
,
proteins
translocated
by
a
second
type
3
secretion
system
initiate
further
modulation
of
cellular
activities
to
enable
survival
and
replication
of
the
invading
pathogen
.
Elucidation
of
the
complex
and
highly
dynamic
pathogen-host
interactions
ultimately
requires
analysis
at
the
level
of
single
cells
and
single
infection
events
.
To
achieve
this
goal
,
researchers
have
applied
a
diverse
range
of
microscopy
techniques
to
analyze
Salmonella
infection
in
models
ranging
from
whole
animal
to
isolated
cells
and
simple
eukaryotic
organisms
.
For
example
,
electron
microscopy
and
high
-resolution
light
microscopy
techniques
such
as
confocal
microscopy
can
reveal
the
precise
location
of
Salmonella
and
its
relationship
to
cellular
components
.
Widefield
light
microscopy
is
a
simpler
approach
with
which
to
study
the
interaction
of
bacteria
with
host
cells
and
often
has
advantages
for
live
cell
imaging
,
enabling
detailed
analysis
of
the
dynamics
of
infection
and
cellular
responses
.
Here
we
review
the
use
of
imaging
techniques
in
Salmonella
research
and
compare
the
capabilities
of
different
classes
of
microscope
to
address
specific
types
of
research
question
.
We
also
provide
protocols
and
notes
on
some
microscopy
techniques
used
routinely
in
our
own
research
.
Diseases
Validation
Diseases presenting
"fever"
symptom
22q11.2 deletion syndrome
acute rheumatic fever
alexander disease
allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis
canavan disease
carcinoma of the gallbladder
child syndrome
congenital toxoplasmosis
cushing syndrome
cystinuria
dracunculiasis
erdheim-chester disease
esophageal adenocarcinoma
esophageal carcinoma
familial mediterranean fever
focal myositis
hodgkin lymphoma, classical
lamellar ichthyosis
legionellosis
locked-in syndrome
malignant atrophic papulosis
neonatal adrenoleukodystrophy
neuralgic amyotrophy
oculocutaneous albinism
papillon-lefèvre syndrome
pyomyositis
pyruvate dehydrogenase deficiency
scrub typhus
severe combined immunodeficiency
sneddon syndrome
systemic capillary leak syndrome
triple a syndrome
typhoid
waldenström macroglobulinemia
wolf-hirschhorn syndrome
This symptom has already been validated