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  lüll Pyroptosis and host cell death responses during Salmonella infection Fink SL; Cookson BTCell Microbiol  2007[Nov]; 9 (11): 2562-70Salmonella enterica are facultatively intracellular pathogens causing diseases  with markedly visible signs of inflammation. During infection, Salmonella  interacts with various host cell types, often resulting in death of those cells.  Salmonella induces intestinal epithelial cell death via apoptosis, a cell death  programme with a notably non-inflammatory outcome. In contrast, macrophage  infection triggers caspase-1-dependent proinflammatory programmed cell death, a  recently recognized process termed pyroptosis, which is distinguished from other  forms of cellular demise by its unique mechanism, features and inflammatory  outcome. Rapid macrophage pyroptosis depends on the Salmonella pathogenicity  island-1 type III secretion system (T3SS) and flagella. Salmonella dynamically  modulates induction of macrophage pyroptosis, and regulation of T3SS systems  permits bacterial replication in specialized intracellular niches within  macrophages. However, these infected macrophages later undergo a delayed form of  caspase-1-dependent pyroptosis. Caspase-1-deficient mice are more susceptible to  a number of bacterial infections, including salmonellosis, and pyroptosis is  therefore considered a generalized protective host response to infection. Thus,  Salmonella-induced pyroptosis serves as a model to understand a broadly important  pathway of proinflammatory programmed host cell death: examining this system  affords insight into mechanisms of both beneficial and pathological cell death  and strategies employed by pathogens to modulate host responses.|Animals[MESH]|Apoptosis/immunology[MESH]|Cell Death/immunology[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Macrophages/immunology/microbiology/pathology[MESH]|Models, Biological[MESH]|Salmonella Infections/immunology/microbiology/*pathology[MESH]|Salmonella enterica/*immunology[MESH] |