Search results for "microbiology"

showing 10 items of 7546 documents

Pharmaceutical Approaches to Target Antibiotic Resistance Mechanisms

2017

There is urgent need for new therapeutic strategies to fight the global threat of antibiotic resistance. The focus of this Perspective is on chemical agents that target the most common mechanisms of antibiotic resistance such as enzymatic inactivation of antibiotics, changes in cell permeability, and induction/activation of efflux pumps. Here we assess the current landscape and challenges in the treatment of antibiotic resistance mechanisms at both bacterial cell and community levels. We also discuss the potential clinical application of chemical inhibitors of antibiotic resistance mechanisms as add-on treatments for serious drug-resistant infections. Enzymatic inhibitors, such as the deriv…

0301 basic medicineImipenemmedicine.drug_classAvibactam030106 microbiologyAntibioticsDrug resistancePharmacologyBiologySettore BIO/19 - Microbiologia Generalemedicine.disease_causeMicrobiology03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundAntibiotic resistanceDrug DiscoverymedicineHumansPseudomonas InfectionsBeta-Lactamase InhibitorsPseudomonas aeruginosaDrug Discovery3003 Pharmaceutical ScienceEnterobacteriaceae InfectionsDrug Resistance MicrobialSettore CHIM/08 - Chimica FarmaceuticaImipenemchemistryMolecular Medicine; Drug Discovery3003 Pharmaceutical ScienceMolecular MedicineEffluxbeta-Lactamase InhibitorsAzabicyclo Compoundsmedicine.drugJournal of Medicinal Chemistry
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2016

Protein export is central for the survival and virulence of intracellular P. falciparum blood stage parasites. To reach the host cell, exported proteins cross the parasite plasma membrane (PPM) and the parasite-enclosing parasitophorous vacuole membrane (PVM), a process that requires unfolding, suggestive of protein translocation. Components of a proposed translocon at the PVM termed PTEX are essential in this phase of export but translocation activity has not been shown for the complex and questions have been raised about its proposed membrane pore component EXP2 for which no functional data is available in P. falciparum. It is also unclear how PTEX mediates trafficking of both, soluble as…

0301 basic medicineImmunoprecipitation030106 microbiologyImmunologyChromosomal translocationBiologyTransloconMicrobiologyTransmembrane proteinTransport proteinCell biology03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biologyMembrane proteinVirologyparasitic diseasesProtein purificationGeneticsParasitologyProtein foldingMolecular BiologyPLOS Pathogens
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Pirin: A novel redox-sensitive modulator of primary and secondary metabolism in Streptomyces

2018

Pirins are evolutionarily conserved iron-containing proteins that are found in all kingdoms of life, and have been implicated in diverse molecular processes, mostly associated with cellular stress. In the present study, we started from the evidence that the insertional inactivation of pirin-like gene SAM23877_RS18305 (pirA) by Phi C31 Att/Int system-based vectors in spiramycin-producing strain Streptomyces ambofaciens ATCC 23877 resulted in marked effects on central carbon and energy metabolism gene expression, high sensitivity to oxidative injury and repression of polyketide antibiotic production. By using integrated transcriptomic, proteomic and metabolite profiling, together with genetic…

0301 basic medicineIn silico030106 microbiologyBioengineeringStreptomycesApplied Microbiology and Biotechnology03 medical and health sciencesPolyketideBacterial ProteinsIron-Binding ProteinsGene expressionActinomycetes; Antibiotics; Beta-oxidation of fatty acids; Pirin; Secondary metabolismSecondary metabolismGenePsychological repressionbiologyChemistryActinomyceteAntibioticbiology.organism_classificationStreptomycesComplementation030104 developmental biologyMetabolic EngineeringBiochemistryPirinPolyketidesSecondary metabolismOxidation-ReductionBeta-oxidation of fatty acidBiotechnology
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Imaging Bacterial Colonies and Phage-Bacterium Interaction at Sub-Nanometer Resolution Using Helium-Ion Microscopy

2017

Imaging of microbial interactions has so far been based on well‐established electron microscopy methods. This study presents a new way to study bacterial colonies and interactions between bacteria and their viruses, bacteriophages (phages), in situ on agar plates using helium ion microscopy (HIM). In biological imaging, HIM has advantages over traditional scanning electron microscopy with its sub‐nanometer resolution, increased surface sensitivity, and the possibility to image nonconductive samples. Furthermore, by controlling the He beam dose or by using heavier Ne ions, the HIM instrument provides the possibility to mill out material in the samples, allowing for subsurface imaging and in …

0301 basic medicineIn situfood.ingredientScanning electron microscope030106 microbiologyBiomedical EngineeringAnalytical chemistryGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biologylaw.inventionBiomaterialsAgar plate03 medical and health sciencesfoodlawhelium-ion microscopyAgarsub-nanometer resolutionphage–bacterium interactionbiologyResolution (electron density)ta1182biology.organism_classification030104 developmental biologyBiophysicsbacterial coloniesElectron microscopeBiological imagingBacteria
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Regulation of kynurenine biosynthesis during influenza virus infection.

2017

Influenza A viruses (IAVs) remain serious threats to public health because of the shortage of effective means of control. Developing more effective virus control modalities requires better understanding of virus–host interactions. It has previously been shown that IAV induces the production of kynurenine, which suppresses T-cell responses, enhances pain hypersensitivity and disturbs behaviour in infected animals. However, the regulation of kynurenine biosynthesis during IAV infection remains elusive. Here we showed that IAV infection induced expression of interferons (IFNs), which upregulated production of indoleamine-2,3-dioxygenase (IDO1), which catalysed the kynurenine biosynthesis. Furt…

0301 basic medicineIndoleshost-pathogen interactionViral Nonstructural Proteinsmedicine.disease_causeVirus ReplicationBiochemistryinfluenza viruschemistry.chemical_compoundMiceInfluenza A Virus H1N1 SubtypeInterferonOximesinnate immunityLungOxazolesKynurenineRegulation of gene expressionMice Inbred BALB CSulfonamidesTryptophaninterferon3. Good healthHost-Pathogen InteractionsFemaleMetabolic Networks and Pathwaysmedicine.drugHost–pathogen interaction030106 microbiologyPrimary Cell CultureBiologyta3111Antiviral AgentsVirus03 medical and health sciences3-dioxygenase (IDO1)Orthomyxoviridae InfectionsmedicineAnimalsHumansImmunologic FactorsIndoleamine-Pyrrole 23-DioxygenasePyrrolesMolecular BiologyInnate immune systemta1184Macrophagesta1183ta1182Cell BiologyVirologyindoleamine-pyrrole 2Thiazoles030104 developmental biologyHerpes simplex virusViral replicationchemistryGene Expression RegulationInterferonsTranscriptomeKynurenineThe FEBS journal
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Co-circulation of the two influenza B lineages during 13 consecutive influenza surveillance seasons in Italy, 2004-2017

2019

AbstractBackgroundSince 1985, two antigenically distinct lineages of influenza B viruses (Victoria-like and Yamagata-like) have circulated globally. Trivalent seasonal influenza vaccines contain two circulating influenza A strains but a single B strain and thus provide limited immunity against circulating B strains of the lineage not included in the vaccine. In this study, we describe the characteristics of influenza B viruses that caused respiratory illness in the population in Italy over 13 consecutive seasons of virological surveillance, and the match between the predominant influenza B lineage and the vaccine B lineage, in each season.MethodsFrom 2004 to 2017, 26,886 laboratory-confirme…

0301 basic medicineInfluenza virological surveillance Influenza B virus Victoria lineage Yamagata lineage Vaccine matchmedicine.medical_specialtyLineage (evolution)PopulationInfluenza B viruHemagglutinin (influenza)Vaccine matchSettore MED/42 - Igiene Generale E ApplicataViruslcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseases03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineMedical microbiologyImmunityRetrospective StudieInfluenza HumanmedicineHumanslcsh:RC109-216030212 general & internal medicineeducationPhylogenyRetrospective Studieseducation.field_of_studybiologyStrain (biology)Victoria lineageInfluenza B virus; Influenza virological surveillance; Italy; Vaccine match; Victoria lineage; Yamagata lineageVirologyInfluenzaInfluenza B virus030104 developmental biologyInfectious DiseasesInfluenza virological surveillanceParasitologyItalyInfluenza VaccinesInfluenza virological surveillance Influenza B virus Victoria lineage Yamagata lineage Vaccine match ItalyEpidemiological Monitoringbiology.proteinInfluenza B virus; Influenza virological surveillance; Italy; Vaccine match; Victoria lineage; Yamagata lineage; Epidemiological Monitoring; Humans; Influenza B virus; Influenza Vaccines; Influenza Human; Italy; Phylogeny; Retrospective Studies; SeasonsSeasonsInfluenza VaccineYamagata lineageResearch ArticleHuman
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Innate immune response to tick-borne pathogens: Cellular and molecular mechanisms induced in the hosts

2020

This article belongs to the Special Issue Inflammasome.

0301 basic medicineInnate immune responseHost Defense MechanismReviewInflammasomelcsh:ChemistryTicksTheileriaTick borne pathogensRickettsialcsh:QH301-705.5SpectroscopyGene ontology analysisgene ontology analysisInflammasomeGeneral MedicineAcquired immune systemComputer Science ApplicationsTick-Borne DiseasesTumor necrosis factor alphamedicine.drugAnaplasma030106 microbiologyEhrlichiaBabesiaBiologyCatalysisMicrobiologyInorganic Chemistry03 medical and health sciencesAntigeninflammasomeparasitic diseasesmedicineAnimalsHumansPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryMolecular BiologyInnate immune systemOrganic Chemistrygene ontology analysibiology.organism_classificationImmunity InnateComplement systemInsect Vectors030104 developmental biologyRickettsialcsh:Biology (General)lcsh:QD1-999innate immune responsetick borne pathogens
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Oral epithelial cells orchestrate innate type 17 responses to Candida albicans through the virulence factor candidalysin

2017

Candida albicans is a dimorphic commensal fungus that causes severe oral infections in immunodeficient patients. Invasion of C. albicans hyphae into oral epithelium is an essential virulence trait. Interleukin-17 (IL-17) signaling is required for both innate and adaptive immunity to C. albicans. During the innate response, IL-17 is produced by γδ T cells and a poorly understood population of innate-acting CD4+ αβ T cell receptor (TCRαβ)+ cells, but only the TCRαβ+ cells expand during acute infection. Confirming the innate nature of these cells, the TCR was not detectably activated during the primary response, as evidenced by Nur77eGFP mice that report antigen-specific signaling through the …

0301 basic medicineInnate immune systembiologyVirulence FactorsImmunologyPattern recognition receptorEpithelial CellsInflammationGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationAcquired immune systemArticleCorpus albicansMicrobiologyFungal Proteins03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biology0302 clinical medicineImmunityCandida albicansmedicinemedicine.symptomCandida albicansCandidalysin030215 immunologyScience Immunology
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Iflavirus increases its infectivity and physical stability in association with baculovirus

2016

Virus transmission and the prevalence of infection depend on multiple factors, including the interaction with other viral pathogens infecting the same host. In this study, active replication of an iflavirus, Spodoptera exigua iflavirus 1 (order Picornavirales) was observed in the offspring of insects that survived following inoculation with a pathogenic baculovirus, Spodoptera exigua multiple nucleopolyhedrovirus. Tracking the origin of the iflavirus suggested the association of this virus with the occlusion bodies of the baculovirus. Here we investigated the effect of this association on the stability and infectivity of both viruses. A reduction in baculovirus pathogenicity, without affect…

0301 basic medicineInsect virusVirus virus interactionviruses030106 microbiologyLaboratory of Virologylcsh:MedicineSpodopteraMicrobiologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyVirusVirus-virus interactionLaboratorium voor Virologie03 medical and health sciencesVirologyExiguaVirus parasitismInsect virusBaculovirusAgricultural ScienceInfectivitybiologyEcologyHost (biology)IflavirusGeneral Neurosciencelcsh:RGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationVirologyCo-infection030104 developmental biologyVirus virus interactionPicornaviralesEPSGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesVirus–virus interactionEntomology
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The 40-Year Mystery of Insect Odorant-Binding Proteins

2021

International audience; The survival of insects depends on their ability to detect molecules present in their environment. Odorant-binding proteins (OBPs) form a family of proteins involved in chemoreception. While OBPs were initially found in olfactory appendages, recently these proteins were discovered in other chemosensory and non-chemosensory organs. OBPs can bind, solubilize and transport hydrophobic stimuli to chemoreceptors across the aqueous sensilla lymph. In addition to this broadly accepted “transporter role”, OBPs can also buffer sudden changes in odorant levels and are involved in hygro-reception. The physiological roles of OBPs expressed in other body tissues, such as mouthpar…

0301 basic medicineInsectaChemoreceptorOdorant bindinglcsh:QR1-502Gene ExpressionReviewInsectReceptors OdorantBiochemistryPheromoneslcsh:MicrobiologytasteSexual Behavior Animal0302 clinical medicinemedia_commonbiologyRihanichemosensory functionsArthropod mouthparts3. Good healthCell biologyDrosophila melanogasterodorant-protein-binding assayInsect ProteinsPheromoneDrosophila melanogasterolfactionmedia_common.quotation_subjectK.OlfactionFerveurEvolution Molecularnon-chemosensory functions03 medical and health sciencesAnimals[SDV.BBM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry Molecular BiologyL. The 40-Year Mystery of Insect Odorant-Binding Proteins insectMolecular BiologyJ.-F.fungiBriandTransporterbiology.organism_classificationodorantprotein-binding assayHematopoiesis030104 developmental biologyinsect[SDV.AEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and Nutrition030217 neurology & neurosurgeryBiomolecules
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