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Review
. 2024 Jun 22;12(7):1272.
doi: 10.3390/microorganisms12071272.

The Epistemology of Bacterial Virulence Factor Characterization

Affiliations
Review

The Epistemology of Bacterial Virulence Factor Characterization

Matthew Jackson et al. Microorganisms. .

Abstract

The field of microbial pathogenesis seeks to identify the agents and mechanisms responsible for disease causation. Since Robert Koch introduced postulates that were used to guide the characterization of microbial pathogens, technological advances have substantially increased the capacity to rapidly identify a causative infectious agent. Research efforts currently focus on causation at the molecular level with a search for virulence factors (VFs) that contribute to different stages of the infectious process. We note that the quest to identify and characterize VFs sometimes lacks scientific rigor, and this suggests a need to examine the epistemology of VF characterization. We took this premise as an opportunity to explore the epistemology of VF characterization. In this perspective, we discuss how the characterization of various gene products that evolved to facilitate bacterial survival in the broader environment have potentially been prematurely mischaracterized as VFs that contribute to pathogenesis in the context of human biology. Examples of the reasoning that can affect misinterpretation, or at least a premature assignment of mechanistic causation, are provided. Our aim is to refine the categorization of VFs by emphasizing a broader biological view of their origin.

Keywords: bacterial pathogenesis; bacterial virulence factors; evolution of virulence factors; reasoning bias.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

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