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Flagellar system translocates T3SS effectors critical for Salmonella infection

Created on 07 Jun 2026

Authors

Dreus, A., Matheova, P., Spejzlova, M., Grabe, G., Schmidtova, J., Pospisilova, M., Brabec, T., Cerny, O.

Abstract

Type 3 secretion system (T3SS) injectisomes, the essential virulence factors of many bacterial pathogens, are thought to have evolved from the flagellar T3SS. Despite their high degree of structural similarity, whether flagella can translocate effector proteins typically associated with T3SS injectisomes remains poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that the flagellar T3SS of Salmonella translocates T3SS effectors directly into the host cell cytosol and that this process is critical for productive infection. We show that upon host cell adhesion, flagella were required for efficient Salmonella invasion. Fully assembled flagella enabled effector translocation in a process dependent on the flagellar motor. Notably, flagella continued to translocate effectors within the Salmonella-containing vacuole until expression of the Salmonella pathogenicity island 2-encoded T3SS injectisome was induced. Together, these findings reveal a previously overlooked function of bacterial flagella in host-pathogen interactions and redefine their contribution to Salmonella virulence.

Preprint server: bioRxiv
The authors list and abstract were imported from bioRxiv on 07 Jun 2026.

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