Search results for "Clos"

showing 10 items of 1439 documents

Selective growth-inhibitory effect of 8-hydroxyquinoline towards Clostridium difficile and Bifidobacterium longum subsp. longum in co-culture analyse…

2014

The major risk factor for Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) is the use of antibiotics owing to the disruption of the equilibrium of the host gut microbiota. To preserve the beneficial resident probiotic bacteria during infection treatment, the use of molecules with selective antibacterial activity enhances the efficacy by selectively removing C. difficile. One of them is the plant alkaloid 8-hydroxyquinoline (8HQ), which has been shown to selectively inhibit clostridia without repressing bifidobacteria. Selective antimicrobial activity is generally tested by culture techniques of individual bacterial strains. However, the main limitation of these techniques is the inability to describe …

Microbiology (medical)Bifidobacterium longumbiologymedicine.diagnostic_testClostridioides difficilemedicine.drug_classAntibioticsGeneral MedicineClostridium difficileGut floraFlow CytometryOxyquinolinebiology.organism_classificationAntimicrobialMicrobiologyAnti-Bacterial AgentsFlow cytometryMicrobiologyClostridiamedicineMicrobial InteractionsBifidobacteriumAntibacterial activityIn Situ Hybridization FluorescenceJournal of Medical Microbiology
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Cloning of Clostridium difficile toxin B gene and demonstration of high N-terminal homology between toxin A and B.

1990

High titered Clostridium sordellii lethal toxin antiserum, cross-reactive with C. difficile cytotoxin B (ToxB), was used to isolate toxB fragments from a C. difficile expression library. Recombinant clones containing toxB fragments of the 5' and 3' end were isolate. A 2.5-kb HincII fragment of chromosomal DNA overlaps both groups of clones. A partial restriction map of the total toxB gene is presented. The gene is positioned upstream of utxA and toxA, toxB has a size of 6.9 kb, corresponding to a 250-kDa polypeptide. A partial sequence of the 5' end of toxB was determined. The sequence contains 398 bp upstream of toxB with a putative Shine-Dalgarno box (AGGAGA) and 609 bp of the toxB open r…

Microbiology (medical)DNA BacterialImmunologyBacterial ToxinsMolecular Sequence DataRestriction MappingClostridium difficile toxin AClostridium difficile toxin BMolecular cloningBiologyCross ReactionsHomology (biology)Restriction mapBacterial ProteinsSequence Homology Nucleic AcidImmunology and AllergyAmino Acid SequenceCloning MolecularPeptide sequenceGeneticsBase SequenceClostridioides difficileNucleic acid sequenceGeneral MedicineMolecular biologyAntibodies BacterialOpen reading frameGenes BacterialDNA ProbesMedical microbiology and immunology
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Cyclospora cayetanensis: first imported infections in Germany.

1997

Over the last decade increasing numbers of enteritis cases have been attributed to infection with a new coccidian species that was named Cyclospora cayetanensis in 1993. Diarrhea caused by this agent is clinically indistinguishable from cryptosporidiosis, isosporiasis and microsporidiosis, but Cyclospora infections are often very prolonged (up to 15 weeks) and may cause severe weight loss. Diagnosis of infection is important because, in contrast to diarrhea caused by Cryptosporidium and microsporidia, treatment with co-trimoxazole is effective. Here we report the cases of two female patients, aged 70 and 58 years old, respectively, who suffered from severe, prolonged diarrhea after a vacati…

Microbiology (medical)DiarrheaIsosporiasisMicrosporidiosisCyclospora cayetanensisEnteritisMicrobiologyDiagnosis DifferentialFecesEucoccidiidaparasitic diseasesmedicineAnimalsHumansIntestinal Diseases ParasiticAgedTravelbiologyCoccidiosisCryptosporidiumGeneral MedicineMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationVirologyCyclosporaDiarrheaCoccidiosisInfectious DiseasesFemalemedicine.symptomInfection
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Recombinant epidermolytic (exfoliative) toxin A of Staphylococcus aureus is not a superantigen

1992

The epidermolytic (exfoliative) toxins produced by Staphylococcus aureus cause epidermolysis and skin blistering. In addition, they have been implicated to belong to the group of T lymphocyte stimulating molecules known as "superantigens". Here we show that recombinant epidermolytic toxin A produced in S. aureus is not mitogenic for human and murine T lymphocytes. We discuss the possibility that minute contaminations of highly mitogenic exoproteins may cause the mitogenicity in several proteins that are reported to be superantigens.

Microbiology (medical)Staphylococcus aureusT-LymphocytesBlotting WesternImmunologyClostridium difficile toxin ABiologyLymphocyte Activationmedicine.disease_causeMonocytesMicrobiologylaw.inventionMicelawSuperantigenmedicineAnimalsHumansImmunology and AllergyCloning MolecularStaphylococcus aureus delta toxinCells CulturedAntigens BacterialMice Inbred BALB CToxinGeneral MedicineT lymphocyteRecombinant ProteinsExfoliatinsCytolysisStaphylococcus aureusRecombinant DNAInterleukin-2SpleenMedical Microbiology and Immunology
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Colonization Resistance of the Gut Microbiota against Clostridium difficile

2015

Antibiotics strongly disrupt the human gut microbiota, which in consequence loses its colonization resistance capacity, allowing infection by opportunistic pathogens such as Clostridium difficile. This bacterium is the main cause of antibiotic-associated diarrhea and a current problem in developed countries, since its incidence and severity have increased during the last years. Furthermore, the emergence of antibiotic resistance strains has reduced the efficiency of the standard treatment with antibiotics, leading to a higher rate of relapses. Here, we review recent efforts focused on the impact of antibiotics in the gut microbiome and their relationship with C. difficile colonization, as w…

Microbiology (medical)medicine.drug_classAntibioticsReviewColonisation resistanceBiologyGut floradigestive systemBiochemistryMicrobiologyantibioticsMicrobiologyAntibiotic resistancecolonization resistancemedicinePharmacology (medical)ColonizationGeneral Pharmacology Toxicology and PharmaceuticsPathogenlcsh:RM1-950Clostridium difficileClostridium difficileAntimicrobialbiology.organism_classificationlcsh:Therapeutics. PharmacologyInfectious Diseasesgut microbiota restorationAntibiotics
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Long-term lacustrine paleo-productivity and/or paleo-anoxia trends controlled by eccentricity cycles in the continental Autun Basin (France) at the C…

2020

<p>The organic-rich lacustrine beds of the Autun Basin (France) were deposited from the late Gzhelian (late Carboniferous) to the Sakmarian (early Permian), encompassing the Carboniferous-Permian boundary (∼299 Ma). Those deposits reach up to 1500 m thick, and correspond to a tropical, intra-mountainous late-orogenic basin infilling associated with the Variscan orogeny (Marteau, 1983; Schneider et al., 2006). Organic-rich and laminated facies are attributed to distal lacustrine environments which sometimes alternate with silty to sandy rich deltaic depositional environments (Mercuzot et al., 2019). The four successive formations (respectively the Igornay, Muse, …

Milankovitch cycles010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesPermianGeochemistry[SDU.STU]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences15. Life on landCyclostratigraphyStructural basin010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesSedimentary depositional environment13. Climate actionCarboniferousFacies[SDU.STU] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth SciencesOil shaleGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciences
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Fourfold [2]rotaxanes of calix[4]arenes by ring closure.

2006

Models MolecularRotaxanesChemistryStereochemistryClosure (topology)Hydrogen BondingGeneral ChemistryRing (chemistry)MetathesisCatalysisCyclizationPolymer chemistryCalixareneCalixarenesAngewandte Chemie (International ed. in English)
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Reversed Enantioselectivity of Diisopropyl Fluorophosphatase against Organophosphorus Nerve Agents by Rational Design

2009

Diisopropyl fluorophosphatase (DFPase) from Loligo vulgaris is an efficient and robust biocatalyst for the hydrolysis of a range of highly toxic organophosphorus compounds including the nerve agents sarin, soman, and cyclosarin. In contrast to the substrate diisopropyl fluorophosphate (DFP) the nerve agents possess an asymmetric phosphorus atom, which leads to pairs of enantiomers that display markedly different toxicities. Wild-type DFPase prefers the less toxic stereoisomers of the substrates which leads to slower detoxification despite rapid hydrolysis. Enzyme engineering efforts based on rational design yielded two quadruple enzyme mutants with reversed enantioselectivity and overall en…

Models MolecularSarinStereochemistryRational designCyclosarinStereoisomerismGeneral ChemistryNervous SystemBiochemistryCatalysisKineticschemistry.chemical_compoundOrganophosphorus CompoundsPhosphoric Triester HydrolasesColloid and Surface ChemistrychemistrySomanHydrolasemedicineDiisopropyl fluorophosphateChemical Warfare AgentsCrystallizationDiisopropyl-fluorophosphatasemedicine.drugNerve agentJournal of the American Chemical Society
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Effectiveness of cyclosporine A in patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis in a real-life clinical setting in Italy: the TRANSITION study

2020

Background: Cyclosporine A (CsA) is one of the systemic therapeutic options for moderate-to-severe psoriasis, based on its efficacy and rapidity of action. The current study investigated the response to CsA in patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis. Materials and Methods: TRANSITION was an observational, cross-sectional, multicentre study which evaluated the proportion of partial- and suboptimal-responders among patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis treated with continuous CsA for >= 12 weeks. Patients demonstrating a Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) response of >= 90, >= 75 and <90, >= 50 and <75 and <50 were defined as responders, subopt…

Moderate to severeMalemedicine.medical_specialtysystemic therapy.macromolecular substancesDermatologySystemic therapySeverity of Illness Indexsystemic therapy030207 dermatology & venereal diseases03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePsoriasisMedicineHumansPsoriasisIn patientPASI; cyclosporine A; moderate to severe plaque psoriasis; systemic therapy030203 arthritis & rheumatologyPlaque psoriasisbusiness.industryPASIMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasemoderate to severe plaque psoriasiDermatologycyclosporine A; moderate to severe plaque psoriasis; PASI; systemic therapyCross-Sectional StudiesTreatment OutcomeCyclosporineQuality of LifeFemalebusinesscyclosporine Amoderate to severe plaque psoriasis
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Enantioselective synthesis of fluorinated alpha-amino acids and derivatives in combination with ring-closing metathesis: intramolecular pi-stacking i…

2001

[reaction: see text]. Hydride reduction of C=N bonds stereocontrolled by intramolecular pi-stacking interactions of 1-naphthylsulfinyl and N-aryl groups, nonoxidative Pummerer rearrangement, and ring-closing metathesis are efficiently combined in a highly stereoselective entry to enantiomerically pure cyclic and acyclic fluorinated beta-amino alcohols and alpha-amino acid derivatives, respectively.

Molecular StructureChemistryHydrideStereochemistryPummerer rearrangementOrganic ChemistryStackingEnantioselective synthesisStereoisomerismFluorineMetathesisBiochemistryRing-closing metathesisIntramolecular forcePhysical and Theoretical ChemistryAmino AcidsAcyclic diene metathesisOrganic letters
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