Search results for "ALBI"

showing 10 items of 440 documents

Discovery of 2-aryl and 2-pyridinylbenzothiazoles endowed with antimicrobial and aryl hydrocarbon receptor agonistic activities

2020

Highlights • Sixteen functionalized benzothiazoles were evaluated as antimicrobial agents and as AhR modulators. • The benzothiazoles showed noticeable antimicrobial effects against Gram-positive and Gram-negative pathogens and against the yeast C. albicans. • Six benzothiazoles exhibited significant AhR agonist effects in a cell-based reporter gene assay. • Structure-activity relationship analysis exposed some relevant headings on the substituent's contributions to the studied biological effects. • Compound 12 displayed promising biocide activity and AhR agonism as well as an adequate ADMET profile and binding similarities with FICZ.

Staphylococcus aureus[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Pharmaceutical Science02 engineering and technology[CHIM.THER]Chemical Sciences/Medicinal ChemistryAntifungal030226 pharmacology & pharmacyArticleAgonism03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineAnti-Infective AgentsEscherichia coli[SDV.BBM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry Molecular BiologyReporter genebiologyArylBenzothiazole021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyAntimicrobialDruglikenessAryl hydrocarbon receptor[SDV.MP.BAC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/BacteriologyCorpus albicansAntibiofilmAnti-Bacterial Agents3. Good healthAntibacterial[SDV.MP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and ParasitologyReceptors Aryl HydrocarbonBenzothiazolechemistryBiochemistryAh receptorbiology.protein[INFO.INFO-BI]Computer Science [cs]/Bioinformatics [q-bio.QM]0210 nano-technologyEndogenous agonist
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4-Diazopyrazole Derivatives as Potential New Antibiofilm Agents

2008

<i>Background:</i> The recognition that chronic infections and infections associated with medical devices are biofilm related has been the impulse for investigating the antibiofilm properties of some diazopyrazoles biologically active as antimicrobials. <i>Methods:</i> The susceptibility of staphylococcal biofilms was determined at concentrations ranging from 25 to 1.5 µg/ml using crystal violet and methylthiazotetrazolium (MTT) staining. In the case of <i>Candida albicans,</i> we first assessed the anti-germ tube formation effect of 4-NO<sub>2</sub> (compound 1c) and then we evaluated its antibiofilm activity at concentrations ranging from 10…

StaphylococcusGerm tubeMicrobiologychemistry.chemical_compoundCandida albicansDrug DiscoveryPharmacology (medical)Crystal violetCandida albicansPharmacologyTube formationAza CompoundsMolecular StructurebiologyStaphylococcus biofilms Candida Albicans biofilms Antibiofilms activity DiazopyrazolesBiofilmBiological activityGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationAntimicrobialSettore CHIM/08 - Chimica FarmaceuticaCorpus albicansInfectious DiseasesOncologychemistryBiofilmsPyrazoles
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Support for a Vraconnian Stage between the Albian sensu stricto and the Cenomanian (Cretaceous System)

2008

The geological scale for the middle Cretaceous currently used throughout the world was proposed by Alcide d'Orbigny in the XIXth century between the years 1842 and 1847 and establishes the succession of stages as Albian, Cenomanian and Turonian. In 1868 Renevier proposed that a supplemental chronostratigraphic division be intercalated between the Albian and the Cenomanian: the Vraconnian stage. This term was not generally accepted and after a period when it was referred to by Breistroffer (1936) as a substage constituting the upper part of the Albian, as an equivalent of the Stoliczkaia dispar ammonite Zone, its abandonment was "recommended" by the Conference on the Lower Cretaceous held in…

Stratigraphysequence stratigraphyzones[ SDU.STU.ST ] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/StratigraphyCretaceousForaminiferaPaleontologyzonationlcsh:StratigraphyStage (stratigraphy)Sequence stratigraphyTethysCenomanianlcsh:QE701-760lcsh:QE640-699[ SDU.STU.PG ] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/PaleontologyAmmoniteammonitesbiologylcsh:QE1-996.5foraminiferaPaleontologyGeologyVraconnianTuronianAlbianbiology.organism_classificationlanguage.human_languageCretaceouslcsh:Geologylcsh:Paleontology[SDU.STU.ST] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/StratigraphylanguagePeriod (geology)foraminifers[SDU.STU.PG] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/PaleontologyCenomanianVraconnian stageGeologyMarine transgression
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Induction of apoptosis in a leukemia cell line by triterpene saponins from Albizia adianthifolia

2004

Abstract Triterpenoid saponins, which are present in plants and some marine animals, exert various important pharmacological effects. The present study examines the effects of adianthifoliosides A, B, and D (AdA, AdB, and AdD) together with two prosapogenins (Pro1 and Pro2) obtained from Albizia adianthifolia (Mimosaceae) on human leukemia T-cells (Jurkat cells) and on splenocytes. AdA, AdB, and AdD were found to exhibit a cytotoxic effect on Jurkat cells, whereas the prosapogenins were found to exert a lymphoproliferative effect on this cell type. Furthermore, all tested compounds were found to exert a synergistic lymphoproliferative activity with concanavalin A (ConA) on splenocytes. The …

T-LymphocytesClinical BiochemistryPharmaceutical ScienceAlbizziaApoptosisHemolysisBiochemistryJurkat cellsCell LineJurkat Cellschemistry.chemical_compoundDrug DiscoveryTumor Cells CulturedHumansCytotoxic T cellPropidium iodideOleanolic AcidCytotoxicityMolecular BiologyPlants MedicinalDose-Response Relationship DrugbiologyChemistryOrganic ChemistryBiological activitySaponinsbiology.organism_classificationAntineoplastic Agents PhytogenicTriterpenesBiochemistryConcanavalin ACell culturebiology.proteinMolecular MedicineAlbizia adianthifoliaBioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry
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Role of IFN-gamma in immune responses to Candida albicans infections

2014

Candida albicans is the most frequent etiologic agent that causes opportunistic fungal infections called candidiasis, a disease whose systemic manifestation could prove fatal and whose incidence is increasing as a result of an expanding immunocompromised population. Here we review the role of interferon-gamma (IFN-γ) in host protection against invasive candidiasis. This cytokine plays an essential role in both the innate and adaptive arms of the immune response to candidiasis. We focus on recent progress on host-pathogen interactions leading to the production of IFN-γ by host cells. IFN-γ is produced by CD4 Th1, CD8, γδ T, and natural killer (NK) cells, essentially in response to both IL-12…

T-LymphocytesFarmacologíamedicine.medical_treatmentPopulationReviewDiseaseMicrobiologyIFN-gammaInterferon-gammaImmune systemCandida albicansmedicineHumansInterferon gammaeducationCandida albicanseducation.field_of_studybiologyCandidiasisbiology.organism_classificationCorpus albicansKiller Cells NaturalCytokineImmune SystemHost-Pathogen InteractionsImmunologyTh17 CellsInfectionCD8medicine.drug
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Candida albicans: to be or not to be recognized by TLR4? Response to “Both TLR2 and TLR4 are involved in the recognition of Candida albicans” by M.G.…

2006

TLR2Infectious DiseasesbiologyImmunologyTLR4Candida albicansbiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologyMicrobiologyMicrobes and Infection
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Initial steps of wall protoplast regeneration in Candida albicans

1997

Summary Cell wall regeneration of individual Candida albicans yeast and mycelial protoplasts was studied with confocal and electron microscopy using polyclonal antibodies and leetins. Quantitative measurements of the fluorescence emitted by individual protoplasts during the process of regeneration indicate that chitin is the first polymer to be laid down, whereas β(1,3)- and β(1,6)glucan are incorporated at a later stage. Mannoproteins were found on the surface of fresh protoplasts and those newly synthesized were then deposited with time. During the first steps of wall regeneration, the proteins that interacted covalently with chitin or glucan were different, but the same species were foun…

Time FactorsBlotting WesternChitinMicrobiologyMicrobiologyFungal ProteinsCell wallchemistry.chemical_compoundChitinCell WallCandida albicansCell Wall SkeletonFluorescent Antibody Technique IndirectCandida albicansGlucansMolecular BiologyGlucanchemistry.chemical_classificationMembrane GlycoproteinsbiologyProtoplastsRegeneration (biology)fungiGeneral MedicineProtoplastbiology.organism_classificationYeastcarbohydrates (lipids)Microscopy ElectronBiochemistrychemistryPolyclonal antibodiesbiology.proteinElectrophoresis Polyacrylamide GelCell DivisionResearch in Microbiology
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Use of a Genetically Engineered Strain To Evaluate the Pathogenic Potential of Yeast Cell and Filamentous Forms duringCandida albicansSystemic Infect…

2007

ABSTRACTThe pathogenesis ofCandida albicanssystemic infection is complex and results from the balance between its intrinsic virulence attributes and the host immune responses. Morphogenetic transitions between yeast cell and filamentous forms are considered one of the main virulence attributes inC. albicans. We have examined the pathogenesis of a genetically engineeredC. albicansstrain in which morphogenetic conversions can be externally manipulated in immunodeficient mice; these included B-cell deficient, nude (T cell deficient), SCID (lacking both functional T and B cells), and DBA/2N (C5 deficient with impaired neutrophil activity) mice. We also tested mice severely immunosuppressed by c…

Time FactorsT cellImmunologyCellMice NudeVirulenceMice SCIDKidneyMicrobiologyMicrobiologyFungal ProteinsMiceImmune systemCandida albicansmedicineAnimalsCandida albicansMice Inbred BALB CFungal proteinbiologyCandidiasisbiology.organism_classificationVirologyYeastCorpus albicansMice Inbred C57BLInfectious Diseasesmedicine.anatomical_structureDoxorubicinMice Inbred DBAFemaleParasitologyFungal and Parasitic InfectionsGenetic EngineeringInfection and Immunity
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From attachment to damage: defined genes of Candida albicans mediate adhesion, invasion and damage during interaction with oral epithelial cells.

2010

Candida albicans frequently causes superficial infections by invading and damaging epithelial cells, but may also cause systemic infections by penetrating through epithelial barriers. C. albicans is an unusual pathogen because it can invade epithelial cells via two distinct mechanisms: induced endocytosis, analogous to facultative intracellular enteropathogenic bacteria, and active penetration, similar to plant pathogenic fungi. Here we investigated the molecular basis of C. albicans epithelial interactions. By systematically assessing the contributions of defined fungal pathways and factors to different stages of epithelial interactions, we provide an expansive portrait of the processes an…

Transcription GeneticGenes Fungallcsh:MedicineMycologyPathogenesisEndocytosisMicrobiologyMicrobiologyFungal ProteinsCandidiasis OralStress PhysiologicalCandida albicansCell AdhesionHumansCell adhesionCandida albicanslcsh:SciencePathogenBiologyMicrobial PathogensFungal proteinMouthMultidisciplinarybiologyIntracellular parasitelcsh:RFungiFungal DiseasesGlyoxylatesEpithelial Cellsbiology.organism_classificationIsocitrate LyaseCorpus albicansUp-RegulationHost-Pathogen InteractionInfectious DiseasesCaco-2Medicinelcsh:QCaco-2 CellsTranscriptomeSuperficial MycosesResearch ArticlePLoS ONE
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Expression levels of a filament-specific transcriptional regulator are sufficient to determine Candida albicans morphology and virulence

2009

Candida albicans , the major human fungal pathogen, undergoes a reversible morphological transition from single yeast cells to pseudohyphal and hyphal filaments (elongated cells attached end-to-end). Because typical C. albicans infections contain a mixture of these morphologies it has, for many years, been difficult to assess the relative contribution of each form to virulence. In addition, the regulatory mechanisms that determine growth in pseudohyphal and hyphal morphologies are largely unknown. To address these questions we have generated a C. albicans strain that can be genetically manipulated to grow completely in the hyphal form under non-filament-inducing conditions in vitro. This w…

Transcription GeneticPopulationHyphaeVirulenceMicrobiologyMiceCandida albicansGene expressionTranscriptional regulationmedicineAnimalsCandida albicanseducationeducation.field_of_studyMultidisciplinaryVirulencebiologyCandidiasismedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationYeastCorpus albicansDisease Models AnimalCommentarySystemic candidiasisTranscription FactorsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
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