A toxic quick-change artist

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Aeromonas hydrophila pathogenic bacteria (blue) secrete aerolysin toxin (green).
Aeromonas hydrophila pathogenic bacteria (blue) secrete aerolysin toxin (green). At the surface of its target cell, the protein undergoes major changes that lead to the formation of a pore in the host cell plasma membrane. The host cell thereby gets leaky and dies. © Nuria Cirauqui, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro.
Molecular biologists at the University of Bern have discovered a mechanism which enables a deadly toxin to penetrate and destroy human cells. Their findings can serve a rational framework for the design and development of new anti-toxin drugs. Pathogenic bacteria produce a variety of toxins in order to attack their hosts. Some of these toxins have also been classified as potential bioterrorism weapons. A particularly efficient and deadly type of toxin punches holes in the membrane of host cells, and thereby kills them. This type of toxin, called pore forming toxins, is found in a very large number of bacteria. Aeromonas hydrophila is a bacterium that produces a pore forming toxin called aerolysin.
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