Search results for "bacteri"

showing 10 items of 5466 documents

High gas pressure: An innovative method for the inactivation of dried bacterial spores

2012

In this article, an original non-thermal process to inactivate dehydrated bacterial spores is described. The use of gases such as nitrogen or argon as transmission media under high isostatic pressure led to an inactivation of over 2 logs CFU/g of Bacillus subtilis spores at 430 MPa, room temperature, for a 1 min treatment. A major requirement for the effectiveness of the process resided in the highly dehydrated state of the spores. Only a water activity below 0.3 led to substantial inactivation. The solubility of the gas in the lipid components of the spore and its diffusion properties was essential to inactivation. The main phenomenon involved seems to be the sorption of the gas under pres…

Spores BacterialMicrobial ViabilityChromatographyWater activityNitrogenChemistryMicroorganismfungiColony Count MicrobialBioengineeringNoble GasesApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyEndosporeSporeMembraneChemical engineeringGerminationHydrostatic PressureArgonDesiccationSolubilityInert gasBacillus subtilisDisinfectantsBiotechnologyBiotechnology and Bioengineering
researchProduct

Pathogenicity of intrathoracically administrated Bacillus thuringiensis spores in Blatta orientalis.

2006

Abstract The ability of Bacillus thuringiensis to produce septicaemia in Periplaneta americana and Blatta orientalis has been investigated. Spores and crystals from several wild-type strains as well as spores of a B. thuringiensis crystal-deficient mutant, were first orally administrated at high doses, and no significant mortality was recorded. Intrathoracic injection of spore suspensions in P. americana revealed that this species is not very susceptible to B. thuringiensis spores. B. orientalis , by contrast, was found to be very susceptible to B. thuringiensis , with a LD 50 of about 35,000 spores, that is similar to that reported on Lepidoptera challenged with parenterally injected B. th…

Spores Bacterialanimal structuresbiologyVirulencefungiBlattaBacillus thuringiensisAdministration OralCockroachesThoraxbiology.organism_classificationMedian lethal doseBacillalesSporeMicrobiologyLepidoptera genitaliaLethal Dose 50BiopesticideBacillus thuringiensisAnimalsDisease SusceptibilityPest Control BiologicalEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPeriplanetaJournal of invertebrate pathology
researchProduct

Abundance of cellular material and proteins in the atmosphere.

2005

Suspended atmospheric particles play a crucial role in any global climate scenario: They can both enforce and suppress radiative forcing. In developing climate modeling further, a deeper understanding of atmospheric aerosol is needed. Because of extreme local and temporal variations, proper incorporation of aerosols into models requires modeling of the aerosol itself. It turns out that cellular material and proteins compose up to 25% of the atmospheric aerosol. Consequently, the source strength of the biogenic aerosol in general must be corrected and should be estimated on the order of other major aerosol sources.

SporesMeteorologyCellsAir MicrobiologyEnvironmentAtmospheric sciencesTroposphereAtmosphereAnimalsHumansParticle SizeAerosolsMultidisciplinaryBacteriaAtmosphereFungiBiogeochemistryEukaryotaProteinsRadiative forcingAerosolAtmospheric chemistryVirusesEnvironmental sciencePollenClimate modelSeasonsBioaerosolScience (New York, N.Y.)
researchProduct

Bacterial growth and biological properties of Cymbopogon schoenanthus and Ziziphus lotus are modulated by extraction conditions

2020

Abstract The present study aims to evaluate the antibacterial activity and biological properties of two traditional Saharian plants (Cymbopogon schoenanthus and Ziziphus lotus). The plant extracts were obtained by using a different combination of extraction methods (conventional vs. ultrasound-assisted) and solvents (water vs. ethanol:water (50:50, v/v)). The antioxidant profile, anti-inflammatory activity and impact on bacterial growth (foodborne and probiotic bacteria) of the obtained extracts were assessed. The plant species showed the hierarchically more important role in determining the biological properties of the extracts, followed by extraction solvent and extraction conditions. Con…

Staphylococcus aureus030309 nutrition & dieteticsLotusCymbopogon schoenanthusBacterial growthProbioticAntioxidantsBioactive compounds03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0404 agricultural biotechnologySettore AGR/13 - CHIMICA AGRARIACymbopogon schoenanthusUltrasoundFood scienceCymbopogon0303 health sciencesbiologyfungiExtraction (chemistry)food and beveragesZiziphus lotusZiziphus04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesbiology.organism_classificationAntimicrobial040401 food scienceConventional extractionAntibacterialchemistryLotusZiziphus lotusTroloxAntioxidantAntibacterial activityFood Science
researchProduct

Characterization of antimicrobial properties on the growth of S. aureus of novel renewable blends of gliadins and chitosan of interest in food packag…

2007

The biocide properties of chitosan-based materials have been known for many years. However, typical antimicrobial formulations of chitosan, mostly chitosonium salts, are known to be very water sensitive materials which may impair their use in many application fields such as food packaging or food coating applications. This first work reports on the development and characterization of the antimicrobial properties of novel fully renewable blends of chitosan with more water-resistant gliadin proteins isolated from wheat gluten. Chitosan release to the nutrient broth from a wide range of blends was studied making use of the ninhydrin method. The results indicated that both pure chitosan and its…

Staphylococcus aureusBiocideColony Count MicrobialActive packagingFood Contaminationmacromolecular substancesengineering.materialMicrobiologyGliadinChitosanchemistry.chemical_compoundFood PreservationFood scienceChitosanbusiness.industryFood Packagingtechnology industry and agricultureGeneral Medicineequipment and suppliesAntimicrobialAnti-Bacterial AgentsBiotechnologyFood coatingcarbohydrates (lipids)Food packagingSolubilitychemistryNinhydrinFood PreservativesengineeringFood TechnologyBiopolymerbusinessFood ScienceInternational Journal of Food Microbiology
researchProduct

Thickness measurement of soft thin films on periodically patterned magnetic substrates by phase difference magnetic force microscopy

2013

The need for accurate measurement of the thickness of soft thin films is continuously encouraging the development of techniques suitable for this purpose. We propose a method through which the thickness of the film is deduced from the quantitative measurement of the contrast in the phase images of the sample surface acquired by magnetic force microscopy, provided that the film is deposited on a periodically patterned magnetic substrate. The technique is demonstrated by means of magnetic substrates obtained from standard floppy disks. Colonies of Staphylococcus aureus adherent to such substrates were used to obtain soft layers with limited lateral (a levy microns) and vertical (hundreds of n…

Staphylococcus aureusCantileverMaterials scienceThickness measurementMagnetic domainSurface PropertiesMicroscopy Atomic ForceAtomic force microscopyOpticsPeriodic magnetic domainsHomogeneity (physics)Thin filmInstrumentationDetection limitPhase differenceBacteriabusiness.industryMagnetic PhenomenaThickness measurement Magnetic force microscopy Atomic force microscopy Periodic magnetic domains BacteriaAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsMagnetic force microscopyatomic force microscopy; bacteria; magnetic force microscopy; periodic magnetic domains; thickness measurementNanometreMagnetic force microscopebusiness
researchProduct

Alpha-toxin of Staphylococcus aureus

1991

Alpha-toxin, the major cytotoxic agent elaborated by Staphylococcus aureus, was the first bacterial exotoxin to be identified as a pore former. The protein is secreted as a single-chain, water-soluble molecule of Mr 33,000. At low concentrations (less than 100 nM), the toxin binds to as yet unidentified, high-affinity acceptor sites that have been detected on a variety of cells including rabbit erythrocytes, human platelets, monocytes and endothelial cells. At high concentrations, the toxin additionally binds via nonspecific absorption to lipid bilayers; it can thus damage both cells lacking significant numbers of the acceptor and protein-free artificial lipid bilayers. Membrane damage occu…

Staphylococcus aureusCell Membrane PermeabilityToxinBacterial ToxinsCell MembraneBiologymedicine.disease_causeHemolysin ProteinsApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyTransmembrane proteinExocytosisCell membraneHemolysin ProteinsStructure-Activity Relationshipmedicine.anatomical_structureBiochemistrymedicineBiophysicsAnimalsHumansLipid bilayerStaphylococcus aureus alpha toxinExotoxinResearch ArticleMicrobiological Reviews
researchProduct

Pyrrolomycins as antimicrobial agents. Microwave-assisted organic synthesis and insights into their antimicrobial mechanism of action

2019

Abstract New compounds able to counteract staphylococcal biofilm formation are needed. In this study we investigate the mechanism of action of pyrrolomycins, whose potential as antimicrobial agents has been demonstrated. We performed a new efficient and easy method to use microwave organic synthesis suitable for obtaining pyrrolomycins in good yields and in suitable amount for their in vitro in-depth investigation. We evaluate the inhibitory activity towards Sortase A (SrtA), a transpeptidase responsible for covalent anchoring in Gram-positive peptidoglycan of many surface proteins involved in adhesion and in biofilm formation. All compounds show a good inhibitory activity toward SrtA, havi…

Staphylococcus aureusClinical BiochemistryPharmaceutical ScienceMicrobial Sensitivity Testsmedicine.disease_causeSettore BIO/19 - Microbiologia Generale01 natural sciencesBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundBacterial ProteinsDrug DiscoverymedicinePyrrolesEnzyme InhibitorsMicrowavesMolecular BiologyEnzyme Assays010405 organic chemistryChemistryOrganic ChemistryBiofilmN-Acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine AmidaseAntimicrobialAminoacyltransferasesAntimicrobial resistance Pyrrolomycins Sortase A Staphylococcus aureus In-silico docking studies MAOS Pharmacokinetics studies Murein hydrolase activitySettore CHIM/08 - Chimica Farmaceutica0104 chemical sciencesAnti-Bacterial AgentsMolecular Docking Simulation010404 medicinal & biomolecular chemistryCysteine EndopeptidasesBiochemistryMechanism of actionDocking (molecular)Staphylococcus aureusSettore CHIM/03 - Chimica Generale E InorganicaSortase ABiofilmsPseudomonas aeruginosaMolecular MedicineOrganic synthesisPeptidoglycanmedicine.symptom
researchProduct

Discovery and structure-activity relationship studies of irreversible benzisothiazolinone-based inhibitors against Staphylococcus aureus sortase A tr…

2014

Gram-positive bacteria, in general, and staphylococci, in particular, are the widespread cause of nosocomial and community-acquired infections. The rapid evolvement of strains resistant to antibiotics currently in use is a serious challenge. Novel antimicrobial compounds have to be developed to fight these resistant bacteria, and sortase A, a bacterial cell wall enzyme, is a promising target for novel therapies. As a transpeptidase that covalently attaches various virulence factors to the cell surface, this enzyme plays a crucial role in the ability of bacteria to invade the host's tissues and to escape the immune response. In this study we have screened a small molecule library against rec…

Staphylococcus aureusClinical BiochemistryPharmaceutical ScienceVirulenceStaphylococcal infectionsmedicine.disease_causeBiochemistryBacterial cell structureMicrobiologyStructure-Activity RelationshipBacterial ProteinsSortaseDrug DiscoverymedicineFluorescence Resonance Energy TransferHumansEnzyme InhibitorsMolecular BiologybiologyChemistryOrganic ChemistryStaphylococcal InfectionsAntimicrobialmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationAminoacyltransferasesHigh-Throughput Screening AssaysMolecular Docking SimulationCysteine EndopeptidasesThiazolesBiochemistryStaphylococcus aureusSortase AMolecular MedicineBacteriaBioorganicmedicinal chemistry
researchProduct

Elimination of a bacterial pore-forming toxin by sequential endocytosis and exocytosis

2008

Staphylococcus aureus alpha-toxin is the archetype of bacterial pore forming toxins and a key virulence factor secreted by the majority of clinical isolates of S. aureus. Toxin monomers bind to target cells and oligomerize to form small beta-barrel pores in the plasma membrane. Many nucleated cells are able to repair a limited number of lesions by unknown, calcium-independent mechanisms. Here we show that cells can internalize alpha-toxin, that uptake is essential for cellular survival, and that pore-complexes are not proteolytically degraded, but returned to the extracellular milieu in the context of exosome-like structures, which we term toxosomes.

Staphylococcus aureusEndosomeBacterial ToxinsBiophysicsEndosomesBiologyEndocytosisHemolysin ProteinsBiochemistryα-ToxinExocytosisVirulence factorExocytosisCell LineHemolysin ProteinsStructural BiologyNucleated cellChlorocebus aethiopsGeneticsExtracellularAnimalsHumansMolecular BiologyCell NucleusBacterial pore forming toxinPore-forming toxinInnate defence mechanismCell BiologyEndocytosisCell biologyExosomeBiochemistryCOS CellsMutationMacrolidesFEBS Letters
researchProduct