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Home - Biology - How a common hormone helps a pathogen thrive

Biology

How a common hormone helps a pathogen thrive

Last updated: January 22, 2026 12:15 am
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The latest discoveries in Immunology

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How a common hormone helps a pathogen thrive

The bacterium Neisseria gonorrhoeae, which causes gonorrhea, faces a major challenge in the human body: acquiring iron, an essential nutrient that is tightly sequestered by host proteins. New research reveals that the human stress hormone norepinephrine can override the bacterium’s primary iron-regulatory system, the Fur regulon. By derepressing this system, norepinephrine enables the pathogen to express genes necessary for scavenging iron, thereby allowing it to grow even under severely iron-limited conditions. This finding uncovers a direct link between host neuroendocrine signaling and bacterial metabolic adaptation during infection.

Why it might matter to you:
This work provides a concrete molecular mechanism for how host physiology can be co-opted to fuel a bacterial infection, a concept central to understanding host-pathogen dynamics. For researchers focused on immune evasion and adjuvant design, identifying such host-derived signals that pathogens exploit could reveal novel targets for therapeutic intervention, potentially disrupting a pathogen’s ability to establish itself without directly targeting the microbe.


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