id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-332484-qy8vj6uu Pierini, Roberto Modulation of membrane traffic between endoplasmic reticulum, ERGIC and Golgi to generate compartments for the replication of bacteria and viruses 2009-04-01 .txt text/plain 4247 239 42 This review describes examples where both intracellular bacteria (Salmonella, Chlamydia and Legionella) and viruses (picornaviruses and hepatitis C) recruit membrane vesicles to sites of replication by modulating proteins that control the secretory pathway. Intracellular bacteria remain within membrane-bound vacuoles to avoid delivery to lysosomes and then recruit vesicles from the secretory pathway to provide nutrients necessary for microbial growth and cell division. Many viruses generate densely packed membrane vesicles to shield them from recognition by cellular defence pathways that recognise double-stranded RNA, and at the same time the membranes provide a platform to recruit viral and host proteins required for replication [3] [4] [5] . This review describes how recent work on intracellular bacteria such as Salmonella, Chlamydia and Leigionella draws parallels with studies on (+) strand RNA viruses where microbial proteins recruit membranes by modulating proteins that control the secretory pathway. ./cache/cord-332484-qy8vj6uu.txt ./txt/cord-332484-qy8vj6uu.txt