Utilizing the Type III Secretion System (T3SS), Shigella spp. uses a cascade of proteins to manipulate, penetrate, and colonize host eukaryotic cells. Inducing epithelial necrosis, Shigella spp. infection is responsible for moderate to severe diarrhea in millions of children and immunocompromised individuals — the majority from under-developed communities. Previous translational research on Shigella spp. has been limited due to the lack of proper in vitro and in vivo models. Understanding infectivity of Shigella spp. heavily relies on imprecise estimations of intracellular Shigella spp., which ultimately impacts vaccine and antibiotic efforts. This project aims to address this problem by developing a novel red intracellular reporter to quantify successful invasion of Shigella flexneri. By using a series of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assemblies, we aim to construct a plasmid with a RFP reporter to be expressed during successful invasion of Shigella spp. The IpaH9.8 MxiE promoter, which has been shown to be expressed upon cell entry, has been integrated within the pUltra RFP plasmid through a Gibson-Reaction assembly and cloned using PCR. The new DNA replicate was electroporated into a streptomycin-resistant S. flexneri strain. We initially tested each strain in vitro by inoculating HCT-8 cells with the newly engineered S. flexneri and monitored for selective RFP expression by intracellular S. flexneri. The outcomes of this project will provide an accurate and efficient method of quantifying invasive S. flexneri. in vitro and in vivo, as well as quantifying efficacy of new antibiotic treatments. The implications of this project are crucial to the advancement of shigellosis research and in furthering the efforts of the international community to abate the rates of disease mortality and burden.