Abstract

Outer Membrane Vesicles (OMVs) of Gram-negative bacteria are spherical membrane-enclosed entities of endocytic origin. Reported in the consortia of different bacterial species, production of OMVs into extracellular milieu seems essential for their survival. Enriched with bioactive proteins, toxins, and virulence factors, OMVs play a critical role in the bacteria-bacteria and bacteria-host interactions. Emergence of OMVs as distinct cellular entities helps bacteria in adaptating to diverse niches, in competing with other bacteria to protect members of producer species and more importantly play a crucial role in host-pathogen interaction. Composition of OMV, their ability to modulate host immune response, along with coordinated secretion of bacterial effector proteins, endows them with the armory, which can withstand hostile environments. Study of the OMV production under natural and diverse stress conditions has broadened the horizons, and also opened new frontiers in delineating the molecular machinery involved in disease pathogenesis. Playing diverse biological and pathophysiological functions, OMVs hold a great promise in enabling resurgence of bacterial diseases, in concomitance with the steep decline in the efficiency of antibiotics. Having multifaceted role, their emergence as a causative agent for a series of infectious diseases increases the probability for their exploitation in the development of effective diagnostic tools and as vaccines against diverse pathogenic species of Gram-negative origin.

Highlights

  • The era of existence of prokaryotes, as autonomous structures has prevailed for a long time

  • Outer Membrane Vesicles are small, spherically bilayered (100–300 nm) vesicles released into extracellular milieu from the outer membrane (OM) of Gram-negative bacteria (Beveridge, 1999)

  • Outer Membrane Vesicles (OMVs) mediated transfer of virulence factors, adhesion molecules, toxins and other immunomodulatory compounds, constitutes a separate secretory system, that operates in Gram-negative bacteria to gain access to host tissues and bloodstream

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Summary

Arif Tasleem Jan*

Emergence of OMVs as distinct cellular entities helps bacteria in adaptating to diverse niches, in competing with other bacteria to protect members of producer species and more importantly play a crucial role in host-pathogen interaction. Playing diverse biological and pathophysiological functions, OMVs hold a great promise in enabling resurgence of bacterial diseases, in concomitance with the steep decline in the efficiency of antibiotics. Having multifaceted role, their emergence as a causative agent for a series of infectious diseases increases the probability for their exploitation in the development of effective diagnostic tools and as vaccines against diverse pathogenic species of Gram-negative origin

INTRODUCTION
OUTER MEMBRANE VESICLES
PRODUCTION OF OMVs
BIOGENESIS OF OMVs
Associated function
Invasion of host tissue
Complement binding
COMPOSITION OF OMVs
Nucleic Acids
FUNCTION OF OMVs
Bacterial Mortality and Nutrient Acquisition
Stress Response and Biofilm Formation
Invasion of Host and Modulation of Immune Defense
Full Text
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