Search results for "Virulence"

showing 10 items of 457 documents

Early Diagnosis of Acanthamoeba Infection during Routine Cytological Examination of Cerebrospinal Fluid

2006

ABSTRACT Early identification of Acanthamoeba in cerebrospinal fluid is mandatory to prevent fatal granulomatous amebic encephalitis. In the case presented here amebic trophozoites were detected in a routine cerebrospinal fluid sample. The antibiotic treatment and the apparently low virulence of this isolate were responsible for the benign progression of the infection.

Microbiology (medical)Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.drug_classCerebrospinal fluid sampleMolecular Sequence DataAntibioticsVirulenceAcanthamoebaCase ReportsLoboseaCerebrospinal fluidRNA Ribosomal 18SmedicineAnimalsHumansAmebicidesCerebrospinal FluidbiologyAcanthamoeba infectionAmebiasisDNA ProtozoanMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationAcanthamoebaEncephalitisFemaleRNA ProtozoanEncephalitisJournal of Clinical Microbiology
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Characterization of the Differential Pathogenicity of Candida auris in a Galleria mellonella Infection Model

2021

ABSTRACT Candida auris is an emergent multidrug-resistant fungal pathogen considered a severe global threat due to its capacity to cause nosocomial outbreaks and deep-seated infections with high transmissibility and mortality. However, evidence on its pathogenicity and the complex host-pathogen interactions is still limited. This study used the in vivo invertebrate model in Galleria mellonella to assess its virulence, exploring the mortality kinetics, melanization response, and morphological changes after fungal infection compared to Candida albicans and Candida parapsilosis, with known high and low pathogenicity, respectively. All C. auris isolates presented less virulence than C. albicans…

Microbiology (medical)PhysiologyVirulenceFungusMothsCandida parapsilosisMicrobiologyMicrobiology03 medical and health sciencesGeneticsAnimalspathogenicityCandida albicansTropism030304 developmental biologyCandida0303 health sciencesGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyEcologybiology030306 microbiologyCandidiasisCell BiologyCandida aurisbiology.organism_classificationCorpus albicansQR1-502Galleria mellonellafilamentationvirulenceDisease Models AnimalPhenotypeInfectious DiseasesCandida aurisLarvaResearch ArticleMicrobiology Spectrum
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Role of murine macrophages and complement in experimental campylobacter infection

1988

Summary. The roles of macrophages and the complement system as potential host defence mechanisms in mice against campylobacter infection were studied in vivo, by depleting the murine serum-complement or the phagocytic cells. Macrophage-depletion was performed by intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection of silica dust, Liquoid or dextran sulphate. During 5 days after infection, such mice showed a significant increase in mortality, compared with controls. In contrast, mice that were previously decomplemented by i.p. injection of Cobra Venom Factor showed no significant increase in mortality. The results with combined macrophage depletion and decomplementation did not differ from those with macrophage…

Microbiology (medical)PolymersVirulenceMice Inbred StrainsBiologymedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyMicrobiologyMiceCampylobacter fetusInbred strainIn vivoCampylobacter InfectionsmedicineAnimalsElapid VenomsVirulenceMacrophagesCampylobacterComplement C3General MedicineHost defenceSilicon DioxidePolyelectrolytesComplement systemSilica dustDextran sulphateImmunologyFemaleJournal of Medical Microbiology
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Starvation can diversify the population structure and virulence strategies of an environmentally transmitting fish pathogen.

2013

Background Generalist bacterial pathogens, with the ability for environmental survival and growth, often face variable conditions during their outside-host period. Abiotic factors (such as nutrient deprivation) act as selection pressures for bacterial characteristics, but their effect on virulence is not entirely understood. “Sit and wait” hypothesis expects that long outside-host survival selects for increased virulence, but maintaining virulence in the absence of hosts is generally expected to be costly if active investments are needed. We analysed how long term starvation influences bacterial population structure and virulence of an environmentally transmitting fish pathogen Flavobacteri…

Microbiology (medical)PopulationVirulenceTrade-offMicrobiologyFlavobacteriumMicrobiologyFish DiseasesFlavobacterium columnareAnimalsTransmissioneducationPathogenAbiotic componenteducation.field_of_studybiologyVirulenceHost (biology)Fishesbiology.organism_classificationStarvationFlavobacterium columnareAdaptationWater MicrobiologyBacteriaResearch ArticleBMC microbiology
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Characteristics of Escherichia coli strains belonging to enteropathogenic E. coli serogroups isolated in Italy from children with diarrhea.

1996

Fifty-five Escherichia coli strains belonging to enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) serogroups were examined for phenotypic and genetic factors associated with virulence. The strains were isolated in Italy from children with diarrhea and identified as EPEC by clinical laboratories using commercially available antisera. O:H serotyping showed that 35 strains (27 of O26, O111, and O128 serogroups) belonged to 11 serotypes considered to be classical EPEC O:H serotypes. The other 20 isolates were classified as 15 nonclassical EPEC O:H serotypes. All the potential EPEC virulence factors associated with bacterial adhesion (localized adherence, fluorescentactin staining test positivity, presence of th…

Microbiology (medical)SerotypeDiarrheaVirulencemedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyPlasmidGenotypemedicineEscherichia coliHumansSerotypingAdhesins BacterialChildEscherichia colibiologyVirulenceHybridization probeEscherichia coli Proteinsbiology.organism_classificationbacterial infections and mycosesEnterobacteriaceaeVirologyBacterial adhesinbacteriaCarrier ProteinsBacterial Outer Membrane ProteinsPlasmidsResearch ArticleJournal of clinical microbiology
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Characterization of Listeria monocytogenes isolates from human listeriosis cases in Italy.

2009

ABSTRACT The objective of this study was to characterize by serotyping, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), and PCR amplification of virulence genes and markers of epidemic clones I, II, and III (ECI, ECII, and ECIII) 54 human isolates from apparently sporadic cases of infection occurring in the Lombardy region and in the province of Florence, Tuscany, Italy, in the years 1996 to 2007. Listeria monocytogenes isolates were provided by the clinical microbiology laboratories of the Lombardy region and the “Careggi” Hospital of Florence, Tuscany, Italy. Serotyping, PFGE after digestion with the AscI and ApaI enzymes, and PCR amplification for the inlA , inlC , and inlJ genes and ECI, ECII,…

Microbiology (medical)SerotypeGenotypeVirulence FactorsEpidemiologyepidemic clonesBiologySettore MED/42 - Igiene Generale E Applicatamedicine.disease_causePolymerase Chain Reactionlaw.inventionMicrobiologyListeria monocytogeneslawPregnancyGenotypehuman casemedicinePulsed-field gel electrophoresisCluster AnalysisHumansListeriosisSerotypingPolymerase chain reactionListeria monocytogeneAgedMolecular EpidemiologyMolecular epidemiologyInfant NewbornPFGEVirologyDNA FingerprintingListeria monocytogenesSubtypingBacterial Typing TechniquesElectrophoresis Gel Pulsed-FieldDNA profilingItalyFemaleJournal of clinical microbiology
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Characterization of Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli O157:H7 isolated in Italy and in France

2002

ABSTRACT Twenty-one Escherichia coli O157:H7 strains isolated in northern Italy from sporadic cases of hemolytic-uremic syndrome and from cattle and food were characterized by virulence gene analysis, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) of Xba I-digested DNA, enterobacterial repetitive intergenic consensus (ERIC) sequence-based PCR (ERIC-PCR), and antibiotic resistance patterns and compared to 18 strains isolated in France from human cases of diarrhea, cattle, and the environment. Strains isolated in Sicily (southern Italy) from a local farm (one strain) and from calves just imported from France (11 strains) and Spain (six strains) were also typed. Whereas the eae and hlyA genes were al…

Microbiology (medical)Settore MED/07 - Microbiologia E Microbiologia ClinicaMeatEpidemiologyCattle DiseasesVirulenceMicrobial Sensitivity TestsEscherichia coli O157Shiga Toxin 1medicine.disease_causePolymerase Chain ReactionShiga Toxin 2law.inventionMicrobiologychemistry.chemical_compoundIntergenic regionShiga-like toxinlawGenotypePulsed-field gel electrophoresismedicineAnimalsHumansChildEscherichia coliEscherichia coli InfectionsPhylogenyPolymerase chain reactionVirulencebiologyShiga toxinShiga Toxin Escherichia coli O157:H7Anti-Bacterial AgentsBacterial Typing TechniquesElectrophoresis Gel Pulsed-FieldItalychemistryHemolytic-Uremic Syndromebiology.proteinCattleFrance
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Resistance to clarithromycin and genotypes in Helicobacter pylori strains isolated in Sicily

2015

The resistance of Helicobacter pylori strains to clarithromycin is increasing in several developed countries and their association with a genetic pattern circulation has been variously explained as related to different geographical areas. In this study we have reported: the prevalence of the resistance of H. pylori, isolated in Sicily, to clarithromycin; the principal point of mutation associated with this resistance; and the more frequent association between resistance to clarithromycin and cagA, the EPIYA motif, and the vacA and oipA genes. Resistance to clarithromycin was detected in 25 % of cases, the main genetic mutation involved being A2143G. The cagA gene was present in 48 % of case…

Microbiology (medical)Settore MED/07 - Microbiologia E Microbiologia ClinicaVirulence FactorsMolecular Sequence Datamedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyMicrobiology (medical); MicrobiologyMicrobiologyHelicobacter InfectionsBacterial ProteinsClarithromycinClarithromycinGenotypeDrug Resistance BacterialmedicinePrevalenceCagAHumansAlleleGeneSicilyMutationbiologyHelicobacter pyloriPrincipal pointGeneral MedicineHelicobacter pyloribacterial infections and mycosesbiology.organism_classificationVirologyAnti-Bacterial Agentsmedicine.drug
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Staphylococcus aureus α-Toxin’s Close Contacts Ensure the Kill

2018

The membrane pore-forming α-toxin is an important virulence factor of Staphylococcus aureus. Target cells can remove pores from their surface, but recent work shows that α-toxin may undermine this self-defense by clinging to epithelial cell junctions. The findings could lead to the development of novel remedies against S. aureus infections.

Microbiology (medical)Staphylococcus aureusVirulence FactorsBacterial ToxinsBiologymedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyVirulence factorCell LineMicrobiologyAdherens junctionADAM10 ProteinHemolysin Proteins03 medical and health sciencesVirologymedicineAnimalsHumans030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesPore-forming toxin030306 microbiologyMembrane ProteinsEpithelial CellsAdherens JunctionsStaphylococcal InfectionsEpitheliumInfectious Diseasesmedicine.anatomical_structureStaphylococcus aureusPinocytosisCarrier ProteinsTrends in Microbiology
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Evolutionary history conditions the timing of transmission in vesicular stomatitis virus.

2001

It has been postulated that early transmitted viruses would evolve to be more virulent than late transmitted ones. The reason for this prediction is that early transmission selects for rapid viral replication and, consequently, rapid host death, whereas late transmission would select for slow-replicating viruses that permit longer survival to the host. To test this prediction, experimental lineages of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) had been adapted to three different transmission dynamics during more than 100 generations. Transmission dynamic differed in the stage of infection at which transmission took place: early, intermediate or late. Regardless the timing of transmission imposed duri…

Microbiology (medical)Time FactorsVirulenceVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusBiologyVirus ReplicationMicrobiologyModels BiologicalVirusVesicular stomatitis Indiana viruslaw.inventionlawRhabdoviridae InfectionsGeneticsHumansMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeneticsExperimental evolutionVirulenceHost (biology)biology.organism_classificationVirologyBiological EvolutionInfectious DiseasesTransmission (mechanics)Viral replicationVesicular stomatitis virusInfection, genetics and evolution : journal of molecular epidemiology and evolutionary genetics in infectious diseases
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