Abstract

One of the recent preoccupations of medical microbiology has been to characterise the mechanisms of virulence of bacterial pathogens at the molecular level. One hundred years after Koch, Stanley Falkow proposed a new, molecular version of Koch’s postulates to define a virulence gene: (a) the gene confers a certain phenotype to the studied bacteria, (b) inactivation of the gene abolishes the phenotype, (c) reintroduction of the gene restores the wild type to the mutant. Although this strategy, based upon mutagenesis and the use of experimental models, allows the identification of many genes, it is not comprehensive. Other methods can be used to complete the identification of virulence factors such as differential expression, either at the level of transcription (transcriptome) or at the level of protein expression (proteome). All these techniques are now supported by the data from complete genome sequencing projects. The pool of information obtained from these approaches allows the definition of the ‘virulome’, which is the assembly of factors a pathogen requires for virulence. Understanding the virulome will open the way to the development of new strategies for vaccination or the development of new generation of antimicrobials.

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