Search results for "Salmon"

showing 10 items of 354 documents

New insights regarding Acinetobacter genomic island-related elements

2020

The objective of this study was to mobilize the Acinetobacter genomic island 1-A (AGI1-A) from Enterobacter hormaechei EclCSP2185 (E. cloacae complex) and to search for the distribution and structure of AGI1-related elements in the NCBI database. AGI1-A was transferred to Escherichia coli. Analysis of the attachment (att) sites could locate the possible recombination crossover in the att sequences at position 10-11 (GG) in the last 18 bp of trmE. In silico detection of AGI backbones in the wgs database identified AGI variants in Salmonella enterica (83 strains), Vibrio cholerae (33), E. hormaechei (12), Acinetobacter baumannii (2), most belonging to prevalent clones (ST40, ST69, ST114 and S…

Acinetobacter baumanniiDNA Bacterial0301 basic medicineMicrobiology (medical)Genomic IslandsKlebsiella pneumoniae[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]030106 microbiologyEnterobactermedicine.disease_causeIntegronIntegrons03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineDrug Resistance Multiple BacterialGenomic islandEscherichia colimedicineHumansPharmacology (medical)030212 general & internal medicineProteus mirabilisVibrio choleraeEscherichia coliGeneticsbiologySalmonella entericaSequence Analysis DNAGeneral MedicineAcinetobacterbiology.organism_classificationAnti-Bacterial AgentsAcinetobacter baumanniiInfectious DiseasesSalmonella entericaVibrio choleraebiology.protein
researchProduct

The influence of food competition and host specificity on the transmission of Triaenophorus crassus (Cestoda) and Cystidicola farionis (Nematoda) to …

2000

Abstract As a superior competitor for planktonic food, vendace ( Coregonus albula ), when abundant, is expected to displace whitefish ( Coregonus lavaretus ) from feeding on plankton and to force it to rely more on benthic food. The predicted result would be a reduced abundance of the copepod-transmitted cestode Triaenophorus crassus in whitefish, but an increase in the abundance of the nematode Cystidicola farionis transmitted via benthic amphipods. We studied the occurrence of both parasites in whitefish during 1991–1996 in three interconnected areas at Lake Saimaa, Finland, where the densities of the vendace stocks varied due to natural fluctuation in year-class strengths. In accordance …

AdolescentNematodaPopulationSpirurida InfectionsBiologyPopulation densityZooplanktonHost-Parasite InteractionsFish DiseasesfoodCoregonus lavaretusCrustaceaCoregonus albulaAnimalsHumansCoregonuseducationSalmonidaeFinlandeducation.field_of_studyfood.dishEcologyfungiFeeding Behaviorbiology.organism_classificationCestode InfectionsInfectious DiseasesCestodaParasitologyCopepodSalmonidaeSpiruroideaInternational journal for parasitology
researchProduct

Expression of host defense scavenger receptors in spondylarthropathy

2001

Objective Reactive arthritis (ReA) is postulated to be caused by a defective host defense against gram-negative bacteria. HLA–B27 could play a role in this process, but does not account for the many HLA–B27 negative patients. The objective of this study was to test the expression of 3 macrophage scavenger receptors (SRs) that are responsible for innate immunity against gram-negative bacteria: SR class A type I (SR-AI), SR-AII, and the macrophage receptor with collagenous structure (MARCO). We postulate that defects in such receptors might also contribute to the host risk factors that increase the predisposition to ReA and perhaps other subtypes of spondylarthropathy (SpA). Methods Periphera…

AdultCD36 AntigensMalemusculoskeletal diseasesCellular immunityAdolescentInflammatory arthritisImmunologyPeripheral blood mononuclear cellArthritis ReactiveImmune systemRheumatologyProhibitinsSynovial FluidmedicineImmunology and AllergySynovial fluidHumansPharmacology (medical)Spondylitis AnkylosingRNA MessengerScavenger receptorReceptors ImmunologicDNA PrimersReceptors LipoproteinReceptors Scavengerbusiness.industryReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionMacrophagesSynovial MembraneMembrane ProteinsScavenger Receptors Class AMiddle AgedScavenger Receptors Class Bmedicine.diseaseMacrophage receptor with collagenous structuremedicine.anatomical_structureImmunologySalmonella InfectionsLeukocytes MononuclearFemaleSynovial membranebusinessArthritis and rheumatism
researchProduct

Persistent Endemicity of Salmonella bongori 48:z 35 :− in Southern Italy: Molecular Characterization of Human, Animal, and Environmental Isolates

2002

ABSTRACT From 1984 to 1999, we collected 31 isolates of the rare serovar Salmonella bongori 48:z 35 :− in southern Italy. Twenty-four of the isolates were from cases of acute enteritis in humans. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis analysis showed that all but one of our isolates were at least 80% similar. Our findings suggest that genetically related S. bongori 48:z 35 :− strains are endemically circulating in southern Italy.

AdultDNA BacterialMicrobiology (medical)SerotypeSalmonella bongoriSettore MED/07 - Microbiologia E Microbiologia ClinicaVeterinary medicineHuman animalSalmonellaEndemic DiseasesEpidemiologymedicine.disease_causeEnteritisMicrobiologySalmonellamedicineAnimalsHumansSalmonella bongori Human isolates Animal isolates Environmental Isolates ItalyGel electrophoresisSalmonella Infections AnimalbiologyInfantmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationPulsed field electrophoresisEnteritisBacterial Typing TechniquesElectrophoresis Gel Pulsed-FieldItalyChild PreschoolSalmonella InfectionsEndemic diseasesWater MicrobiologyJournal of Clinical Microbiology
researchProduct

Soluble-protein and antigenic heterogeneity in axenic Blastocystis hominis isolates: pathogenic implications.

1999

The protein profile and the antigenic cross-reactivity of 18 axenic isolates of Blastocystis hominis obtained from symptomatic patients with chronic diarrhea (14 isolates) showing no evidence of parasitic etiology and from patients with acute diarrhea attributable in 2 cases to Salmonella spp. were analyzed. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of soluble proteins showed the existence of a common profile composed of 31 bands, with molecular weights ranging between 24 and >200 kDa, and minor differences in the proteins of 149, 118, 106, 50, 48, 47, and 30 kDa. These differences allowed us to classify the strains into three related patterns (I–III). In an indirect immunof…

AdultDiarrheaSalmonellaImmunodiffusionProtozoan ProteinsAntigens ProtozoanHIV InfectionsBlastocystis InfectionsBiologyLoboseaCross Reactionsmedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyAntigenmedicineAnimalsHumansBlastocystis hominisAxenicGel electrophoresisBlastocystisGeneral VeterinaryGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationVirologyMolecular WeightDiarrheaInfectious DiseasesInsect ScienceAcute DiseaseChronic DiseaseSalmonella InfectionsProtozoaParasitologyElectrophoresis Polyacrylamide Gelmedicine.symptomParasitology research
researchProduct

Unique Characteristics of the Intestinal Immune System as an Inductive Site after Antigen Reencounter

2004

Background Immunization prepares the body for a reencounter with the microbe. Information on the targeting of immune effector cells during secondary immune response--that is, lymphocyte homing--is scarce. In the present study, the homing potentials of lymphocytes are examined after antigen reencounter at mucosal versus nonmucosal sites. Methods Orally or parenterally immunized volunteers were reimmunized orally or parenterally with Salmonella typhi Ty21a, and the expression of the gut homing receptor (HR), alpha(4)beta(7), and of the peripheral lymph node HR, L-selectin, was investigated in circulating antigen-specific antibody-secreting cells (ASCs). Lymphocytes were sorted by HR expressio…

AdultMaleLymphocyteReceptors Lymphocyte HomingAdministration OralPriming (immunology)chemical and pharmacologic phenomenaLymphocyte migration into lymph nodeLymphocyte Activation03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineImmune systemAntigenmedicineHumansImmunology and AllergyInfusions ParenteralAntibody-Producing CellsLymphocyte homing receptor030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesbiologyDrug Administration RoutesTyphoid-Paratyphoid VaccinesSalmonella typhi3. Good healthIntestinesInfectious Diseasesmedicine.anatomical_structureImmune SystemImmunologybiology.proteinFemaleL-selectin030215 immunologyHoming (hematopoietic)The Journal of Infectious Diseases
researchProduct

Synovial fluid-derivedYersinia-reactive T cells responding to human 65-kDa heat-shock protein and heat-stressed antigen-presenting cells

1991

Humoral and cellular immune reactions to heat-shock proteins have been implicated in the pathogenesis of arthritis. Heat-shock proteins occur in bacteria as well as all eukaryotes and have been highly conserved during evolution. Cross-reactivity between bacterial and human heat-shock proteins induced at the site of inflammation may underlie the pathogenesis of some forms of arthritis. In order to test this hypothesis, we raised and cloned a Yersinia-specific T cell line from the synovial fluid lymphocytes of a patient with Yersinia-induced reactive arthritis. From this line we obtained a CD4+ T cell clone that proliferated in response to Yersinia antigens and both to the mycobacterial and t…

AdultMaleSalmonella typhimuriumHot TemperatureT-LymphocytesT cellImmunologyDose-Response Relationship ImmunologicAntigen-Presenting CellsArthritisCross ReactionsBiologyArthritis ReactiveImmune systemTetanus ToxinAntigenHeat shock proteinCandida albicansSynovial FluidEscherichia colimedicineHumansImmunology and AllergySynovial fluidAntigen-presenting cellHeat-Shock ProteinsT lymphocytebeta-Galactosidasemedicine.diseaseYersiniaCell biologymedicine.anatomical_structureImmunologyEuropean Journal of Immunology
researchProduct

A 66-kilodalton heat shock protein of Salmonella typhimurium is responsible for binding of the bacterium to intestinal mucus

1992

Salmonella typhimurium infections have increased during the last few years. However, the interplay of virulence factors in S. typhimurium pathogenesis is still poorly understood, particularly with regard to the mechanisms and components of the bacterium which are involved in its interaction with the intestinal mucus. We have observed that S. typhimurium is aggregated by incubation with colonic mucus (guinea pig model). To quantify this phenomenon, an aggregation assay was established. By using this assay, it was found that the aggregation profile of S. typhimurium strains freshly isolated from patients (age 9 and older) with salmonellosis correlated with the severity of the disease. An isol…

AdultMaleSalmonella typhimuriumSalmonellaAdolescentGuinea PigsImmunologyVirulencemedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyBacterial AdhesionMicrobiologyFecesBacterial ProteinsIntestinal mucosaHeat shock proteinCentrifugation Density GradientmedicineAnimalsHumansIntestinal MucosaChildHeat-Shock ProteinsbiologyTemperatureAntibodies MonoclonalMiddle Agedbiology.organism_classificationEnterobacteriaceaeMucusInfectious DiseasesPolyclonal antibodiesbiology.proteinFemaleParasitologyBacteriaResearch ArticleInfection and Immunity
researchProduct

Salmonella-reactive Synovial Fluid T-cell Clones in a Patient with Post-infectious Salmonella Arthritis

1990

From a patient with reactive arthritis following Salmonella typhimurium enteritis, synovial fluid T-lymphocytes were cloned and expanded in vitro. Seven out of 74 clones showed a marked proliferative response to antigens of heat-killed Salmonella typhimurium with autologous T-cell-depleted peripheral blood mononuclear cells as antigen-presenting cells. The Salmonella-reactive clones were of the CD4+ phenotype, antigen-induced proliferation could be inhibited by a monoclonal antibody to HLA class II. One clone recognized both Salmonella and Campylobacter jejuni antigens in the proliferation assay. The multiclonality of Salmonella-reactive synovial fluid T-cells indicates that the microorgani…

AdultMaleSalmonella typhimuriumSalmonellaT-LymphocytesT cellImmunologyArthritismedicine.disease_causeCampylobacter jejuniPeripheral blood mononuclear cellMicrobiologyRheumatologyAntigenSalmonellaSynovitisSynovial FluidmedicineHumansImmunology and AllergySynovial fluidBlood CellsbiologyArthritisGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseVirologyClone Cellsmedicine.anatomical_structureSalmonella InfectionsCell DivisionScandinavian Journal of Rheumatology
researchProduct

Thermal resistance and upper lethal temperatures of underyearling Lake Inari Arctic charr

1997

Underyearling Arctic charr were acclimated to six temperatures between 6 and 21·5°C and thermal tolerance and resistance were tested after an acclimation period of at least 2 weeks. Resistance times were influenced by acclimation temperature and the highest upper incipient lethal temperature was 23–24°C. An upper limit for cultivation of Lake Inari charr is suggested to be 21°C which is the intercept of the function which represents the upper limit of the thermal tolerance zone.

Animal scienceArcticbiologyEcologyThermal resistanceHeat resistanceAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationAcclimatizationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSalmonidaeJournal of Fish Biology
researchProduct