Table of content
Chapter 1: Introduction, History and Discovery of Bacterial Membrane Vesicles
Lauren Zavan, Natalie J. Bitto1 and Maria Kaparakis-Liaskos
Chapter 2: Biogenesis of Gram-negative OMVs
Franz G. Zingl, Deborah R. Leitner and Stefan Schild
Chapter 3: Biogenesis and Function of Extracellular Vesicles in Gram-positive Bacteria, Mycobacteria and Fungi
Ainhoa Palacios, Carolina Coelho, Maria Maryam, Jose L. Luque-García, Arturo Casadevall and Rafael Prados-Rosales
Chapter 4: Extracellular vesicles in the environment
Steven J. Biller
Chapter 5: Functions of MVs in inter-bacterial communication
Masanori Toyofuku, Yosuke Tashiro, Nobuhiko Nomura, and Leo EberlChapter 6: Membrane Vesicles From Plant Pathogenic Bacteria and Their roles During Plant-Pathogen Interactions
OfirBahar
Chapter 7: Delivery of virulence factors by bacterial membrane vesicles to mammalian host cells
Aftab Nadeem, Jan Oscarsson and Sun Nyunt Wai
Chapter 8: Immunodetection and pathogenesis mediated by bacterial membrane vesicles
Ella L. Johnston, Thomas A. Kufer and Maria Kaparakis-Liaskos
Chapter 9: Membrane Vesicles from the Gut Microbiota and their Interactions with the Host
JosefaBadia and Laura Baldomà
Chapter 10: Bacterial Membrane Vesicles and Their Applications as Vaccines and in Biotechnology
Julie C. Caruana and Scott A. Walper
About the Author: Associate Professor Maria Kaparakis-Liaskos
Associate Professor Maria Kaparakis-Liaskos is Head of the Host-pathogen Interactions and Bacterial Membrane Vesicles Laboratory at La Trobe University, Australia. She is also the Deputy Director of the La Trobe Research Centre for Extracellular Vesicles. Her recent research activities focus on understanding the cellular and molecular mechanisms of host-pathogen interactions with particular focus on bacterial membrane vesicles.
Associate Professor Kaparakis-Liaskos obtained her PhD from the Department of Microbiology and Immunology at the University of Melbourne in Australia in 2005. She then undertook post-doctoral studies at Monash University, working on innate immune responses to Helicobacter pylori and bacterial outer membrane vesicles. She then headed a research group at the Hudson Institute of Medical Research, Australia during which time she identified the mechanisms whereby OMVs were detected by NOD1 and were degraded by autophagy. In 2016, she joined La Trobe University in Melbourne, Australia, where her research is supported by the Australian Research Council (ARC), the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) and the Victorian Endowment for Science Knowledge and Innovation (veski).
Professor Thomas A. Kufer
Professor Thomas Kufer is head of the Department of Immunology at the University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany. His primary research interests are focused on understanding the functions of NLR proteins in host-pathogen interactions, immunity and inflammation.
Professor Kufer obtained his PhD (Dr. rer. nat.) in Cell Biology from the Ludwig-Maximilians University of Munich in 2004. He then undertook post-doctoral studies in the laboratories of Dana Philpott and Philippe Sansonetti in the Pasteur Institute in Paris working on the intracellular pattern recognition receptors NOD1 and NOD2 in the context of Shigella flexneri infection. Subsequently he headed a junior research group funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) at the Institute of Medical Microbiology, Immunology and Hygiene at University of Cologne in Germany working on innate immune responses mediated by NLR proteins. In 2014 he was recruited at the University of Hohenheim as professor for immunology.