Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) induces tyrosine phosphorylation of a 90-kDa protein (Hp90) in infected epithelial cells. This in turn facilitates intimate binding of EPEC via the outer membrane protein intimin, effacement of host cell microvilli, cytoskeletal rearrangement, and bacterial uptake. This phenotype has been commonly referred to as attaching/effacing (A/E). The ability of EPEC to induce A/E lesions was de-pendent on bacterial growth phase acid temperature. Early-logarithmic-phase EPEC grown at 37 degrees C elicits strong A/E activity within minutes after infection of HeLa epithelial cells, EPEC de nova protein synthesis du:ring the first minutes of interaction with the host cell was required to elicit A/E lesions, However, once formed, bacterial viability was not needed to maintain A/E lesions, The type of growth media and partial O-2 pressure Level do nut seem to affect the ability of EPEC to cause A/E lesions, The results indicates that the A/E activity of EPEC is tightly regulated by environmental and host factors.