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    Group A Streptococcus (GAS) has a fantastically wide tissue tropism in humans, manifesting as different diseases depending on the strain's virulence factor repertoire and the tissue involved. Activation of immune cells and pro-inflammatory signaling has historically been considered an exclusively host-protective response that a pathogen would seek to avoid. However, recent advances in human and animal models suggest that in some tissues, GAS will activate and manipulate specific pro-inflammatory pathways to promote growth, nutrient acquisition, persistence, recurrent infection, competition with other microbial species, dissemination, and transmission. This review discusses molecular interactions between the host and pathogen to summarize how infection varies across tissue and stages of inflammation. A need for inflammation for GAS survival during common, mild infections may drive selection for mechanisms that cause pathological and excess inflammation severe diseases such as toxic shock syndrome, necrotizing fasciitis, and rheumatic heart disease. Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.

    Citation

    Stephanie Guerra, Christopher LaRock. Group A Streptococcus interactions with the host across time and space. Current opinion in microbiology. 2024 Feb;77:102420

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    PMID: 38219421

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