Search results for "transposon insertion sequencing"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Comprehensive identification of Vibrio vulnificus genes required for growth in human serum.

2018

ABSTRACT Vibrio vulnificus can be a highly invasive pathogen capable of spreading from an infection site to the bloodstream, causing sepsis and death. To survive and proliferate in blood, the pathogen requires mechanisms to overcome the innate immune defenses and metabolic limitations of this host niche. We created a high-density transposon mutant library in YJ016, a strain representative of the most virulent V. vulnificus lineage (or phylogroup) and used transposon insertion sequencing (TIS) screens to identify loci that enable the pathogen to survive and proliferate in human serum. Initially, genes underrepresented for insertions were used to estimate the V. vulnificus essential gene set;…

0301 basic medicineMicrobiology (medical)septicaemiatransposon insertion sequencing (TIS)capsuleImmunologyVirulenceVibrio vulnificusMicrobiologylcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseasesMicrobiology03 medical and health sciencesMiceBacterial ProteinsAnimalsHumanslcsh:RC109-216GenePathogenVibrio vulnificusMice Inbred BALB CInnate immune systembiologyType II secretion systemVirulencebiology.organism_classificationVibrio3. Good health030104 developmental biologyInfectious DiseasesBloodEssential geneVibrio InfectionsDNA Transposable ElementsParasitologyFemaleresistance to human complementResearch ArticleVirulence
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Vibrio vulnificus: from water to host

2017

Vibrio vulnificus is an aquatic pathogen autochthonous from temperate, tropical and subtropical ecosystems where it lives either as a sessile cell, forming biofilms or as a free-swimming cell. From these locations, the pathogen can occasionally infect humans and fish causing a disease named vibriosis. The most severe form of human and fish vibriosis is associated with the pathogen’s ability to spread from the infection site to the bloodstream and multiply, process known as invasion. Before invasion, the pathogen has to colonize the mucosal host surface, process that involves not only bacterial attachment/adhesion but also resistance to mucosal immunity, commensal microbiota (competitors) an…

metagenomicsmicrobiologíaAnguilla anguillamicrobiologyhost-associated microbiota:CIENCIAS DE LA VIDA [UNESCO]transposon insertion sequencingEuropean eelUNESCO::CIENCIAS DE LA VIDAmicrobiotaVibrio vulnificusVibrioanguila
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