Host-pathogen interactions: basic concepts of microbial commensalism, colonization, infection, and disease

A Casadevall, L Pirofski - Infection and immunity, 2000 - Am Soc Microbiol
A Casadevall, L Pirofski
Infection and immunity, 2000Am Soc Microbiol
Most of the terminology used to define the host-microbe interaction has been in use for
nearly a century. Early in this period, microbes were thought to be primary aggressors that
governed the host-pathogen interaction, resulting in disease. Later, new information about
the attributes of microbes and their hosts resulted in the understanding that the
hostpathogen interaction does not always result in disease. This recognition, in turn, led to
the introduction of terms to explain states in which microbes exist within hosts without …
Most of the terminology used to define the host-microbe interaction has been in use for nearly a century. Early in this period, microbes were thought to be primary aggressors that governed the host-pathogen interaction, resulting in disease. Later, new information about the attributes of microbes and their hosts resulted in the understanding that the hostpathogen interaction does not always result in disease. This recognition, in turn, led to the introduction of terms to explain states in which microbes exist within hosts without causing overt disease and why some microbes only cause disease in certain hosts. Commensal, carrier state, and opportunist were terms put forth to account for microbes and conditions that were sometimes associated with disease but for which Koch’s postulates could not be fulfilled for one reason or another. Most of these terms were originally proposed to describe the behavior of particular microbes, rather than to define a more general host-microbe relationship. Recently, we reviewed the concepts of virulence and pathogenicity and described how the definitions for these terms changed over the years as microbiologists tried to find ways to convey that microbial pathogenesis reffects an interaction between two entities, host and pathogen (7). Based on the concept that host damage was the most relevant outcome of the host-pathogen interaction, we proposed revisions to the definitions of the terms pathogen, pathogenicity, and virulence (7). However, the proposed framework suggested a need to reexamine the terms used to define the outcomes of host-microbe interactions. Here, we critically review the origin and historical evolution of key concepts used to describe the outcome of host-microbe interactions, namely, infection, commensalism, colonization, persistence, infection, and disease. We propose that the meaning of these terms can be clarified by placing them in the context of the damage framework put forth previously (7).
American Society for Microbiology