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Results 451 - 500 of 684
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Shen H - - 1998
The intracellular bacterium Listeria monocytogenes continues to serve as a model to define general paradigms of cell-mediated immunity. Genetic manipulations of the bacterium and its murine host have allowed us to begin dissecting the intricate interactions between this bacterium and the immune system. As a result, we have gained new ...
Taylor P D - - 1998
The OxyR regulon is known to mediate protection against oxidizing agents in Salmonella typhimurium. We reported previously that ahp, one of the OxyR-regulated loci, is induced during macrophage interaction (K. P. Francis, P. D. Taylor, C. J. Inchley, and M. P. Gallagher, J. Bacteriol. 179:4046-4048, 1997). We now report on ...
Forde C B - - 1998
The uptake and persistence of Bordetella bronchiseptica was characterized in murine phagocytes by using a novel bioluminescence-based reporter system. A mini-Tn5 promoter probe carrying the intact lux operon from the terrestrial bacterium Photorhabdus luminescens which allowed measurement of light output without the addition of exogenous substrate was constructed. It was ...
Kogut M H - - 1998
Heterophils are important mediators of innate resistance in poultry, especially in young birds that have not yet developed an acquired immune response. Invasion of the intestinal mucosa by Salmonella spp. initiates the recruitment of large numbers of heterophils to the lamina propria. Thus, the heterophilic response can control, but not ...
Steinhoff U - - 1998
ICAM-1 and P-selectin are adhesion molecules that regulate leukocyte migration, extravasation to inflammatory sites, and other immune cell interactions. T cell-mediated resistance against acute infection with Listeria monocytogenes and chronic infection with Mycobacterium bovis Calmette-Guérin bacillus was investigated in mutant mice lacking P-selectin and/or ICAM-1. Mice deficient in P-selectin (Psel-/-), ...
Friedman H - - 1998
Legionella pneumophila, the causative agent of legionnaires' disease, is a gram-negative pleomorphic bacillus and fastidious in its growth in artificial medium. These bacteria grow readily intracellularly, including growth in macrophages and other phagocytic cells. Humoral antibodies develop readily to these bacteria not only in infected patients, but also in persons ...
Weinstein D L - - 1998
Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi (hereafter referred to as S. typhi) is a host-restricted pathogen that adheres to and invades the distal ileum and subsequently disseminates to cause typhoid fever in humans. However, S. typhi appears to be avirulent in small animals. In contrast, other pathogenic salmonellae, such as S. enterica ...
Schüller S - - 1998
Macrophage cells play a central role during infection with Listeria monocytogenes by both providing a major habitat for bacterial multiplication and presenting bacterial antigens to the immune system. In this study, we investigated the influence of L. monocytogenes infection on the expression of MHC class I and class II genes ...
Ohya S - - 1998
Exposure of Listeria monocytogenes to gentamicin 5 mg/L for 4 h resulted in the killing of most extracellular bacteria, but had no effect on the survival of bacteria inside macrophages. Higher concentrations of gentamicin caused a reduction in the number of intracellular bacteria. This effect was associated with cellular uptake ...
Cossart P - - 1998
Listeria monocytogenes is a food borne pathogen which has the very unique property of crossing three barriers during infection eliciting meningitis, meningo-encephalitis and abortions with a mortality rate of about 30%. Indeed, after crossing the intestinal barrier, Listeria disseminates via the lymph and the blood, to the brain and/or the ...
Miller M A - - 1997
IL-12 is a pivotal cytokine signal for the development of Th1-type cellular responses that are required for control of intracellular pathogens. We previously demonstrated that coinjection of IL-12 with heat-killed Listeria monocytogenes, which was not immunogenic when injected alone, elicited intense Ag-specific T cell responses that conferred protection against subsequent ...
Barsig J - - 1997
Various pathogenic bacteria with the capacity to live within eukaryotic cells activate an apoptotic program in infected host cells. Induction of apoptosis by Listeria monocytogenes in murine dendritic cells and hepatocytes has been described. Here we address the questions of whether and how the pathogen kills macrophages, its most important ...
Merrick J C - - 1997
During the acute phase of growth of Listeria monocytogenes in spleen and lymph nodes, the infective foci consist of macrophages and neutrophils accompanied by extensive death of lymphocytes. Many of the lymphocytes die by apoptosis. The lesions are found by 48 hours after infection and can regress with time. Depending ...
Galyov E E - - 1997
Enteritis induced by non-typhoid pathogenic Salmonella is characterized by fluid secretion and inflammatory responses in the infected ileum. The inflammatory response provoked by Salmonella initially consists largely of a neutrophil (PMN) migration into the intestinal mucosa and the gut lumen. The interactions between Salmonella and intestinal epithelial cells are known ...
Richter-Dahlfors A - - 1997
Salmonella typhimurium is considered a facultative intracellular pathogen, but its intracellular location in vivo has not been demonstrated conclusively. Here we describe the development of a new method to study the course of the histopathological processes associated with murine salmonellosis using confocal laser scanning microscopy of immunostained sections of mouse ...
North R J - - 1997
Murine listeriosis was introduced 35 years ago as a model with which to analyze mechanisms of antibacterial defense that are independent of antibodies. Listeria monocytogenes was shown to be an intramacrophage pathogen with capacity to induce the generation of a state of specific immunity in the form of DTH and ...
Mocci S - - 1997
The Listeria monocytogenes (L. monocytogenes) infection model has been a useful system to evaluate the cellular interactions leading to host immunity. The initiation of the innate immune response in naive animals and subsequent progression to acquired immunity represent an integrated system with numerous layers of complexity. Coincident with experimental infection ...
Bost K L - - 1997
The induction by intracellular pathogens of interleukin-12 (IL-12) secretion is of particular importance since this cytokine has been shown to be necessary for optimal cell-mediated immune responses. Several recent investigations have suggested that cultured macrophages are a significant source of IL-12 following intracellular infection with pathogens such as Salmonella spp. ...
Fleming S D - - 1997
It is not known why some macrophages can kill certain microbes, such as the facultative intracellular bacterium Listeria monocytogenes (L. monocytogenes), while other macrophages cannot. Perhaps listericidal activity is a property of macrophages at specific stages of differentiation; may be the ability to kill this bacterium is regulated by the ...
Mielke M E - - 1997
Lymphocyte-mediated inflammation is a hallmark of autoimmune diseases, such as multiple sclerosis. Crohn's disease, rheumatoid arthritis and sarcoidosis. However, this type of inflammation probably developed under evolutionary pressure from pathogenic microorganisms, such as mycobacteria and other intracellular infective agents. One such pathogen, the gram-positive bacterium Listeria monocytogenes (L. monocytogenes), induces ...
Kaufmann S H - - 1997
Experimental infection of mice with Listeria monocytogenes (L. monocytogenes) has served as an appropriate model for analyzing Th1-cell-driven immune responses. Generally, Th2 responses are absent and IL-4 is not detectable. Here, we describe experimental settings under which IL-4 is detectable in listeriosis. Our data suggest that IL-4 is rapidly produced ...
Czuprynski C J - - 1997
Use of murine listeriosis as an experimental model has greatly increased our understanding of the complex interplay of cells and mediators in non-specific antibacterial resistance (innate immunity). Important contributions made with this experimental model include demonstrating the ability of inflammatory cytokines (i.e. IFN-gamma, IL-1 alpha, TNF-alpha) to protect against bacterial ...
Unanue E R - - 1997
Resistance to infection with Listeria monocytogenes involves a series of cellular interactions, many of which are carried out by cytokines. Macrophages, NK cells and neutrophils participate in early stages of Listeria resistance. The neutrophil is specially important for clearance of the liver phase of listeriosis. Macrophages and NK cells interact ...
Flesch I E - - 1997
IL-4 is a major promotor of Th2 differentiation and an antagonist of IFN-gamma production. Although experimental listeriosis is characterized by a Th1 response, IL-4-producing cells were detected in spleens of mice promptly after Listeria monocytogenes infection. We identified this early IL-4 as inducer of the chemokine, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1), ...
Laitio P - - 1997
Human major histocompatibility complex class I allele HLA-B27 is associated with a group of diseases called spondyloarthropathies. In reactive arthritis (ReA), the disease is triggered by certain infections, e.g. gastroenteritis caused by Salmonella. The host/microbe interaction is abnormal in susceptible individuals leading to inefficient elimination of arthritis-triggering bacteria, fragments of ...
Cookson B T - - 1997
Murine infection with Salmonella typhimurium provides models for typhoid fever and long-lasting protective immunity conferred by oral vaccination with viable attenuated bacteria. To further understand the role of T cells in these systems, we identified a bacterial Ag recognized by murine T cells responding to a Salmonella infection. From orally ...
Flesch I E - - 1997
Acquired resistance against Listeria monocytogenes is a typical T helper (Th) 1 dominated immune response, whereas Th2 cytokines are thought to worsen listeriosis. We investigated effects of recombinant IL-13 (rIL-13) on the host response to L. monocytogenes in mice. Although IL-13 has been described as a Th2 cytokine with deactivating ...
Unanue E R - - 1997
Reports in the past few years have shown the involvement of different cells and cytokines in controlling the infection with the intracellular facultative pathogen Listeria monocytogenes. A synergistic interaction of T-cell-independent and -dependent processes takes place but the nature of these interactions and of the relevant cells and cytokines depends ...
Buchmeier N A - - 1997
Survival of Salmonella typhimurium within macrophages is associated with virulence. Most data on the fate of Salmonella during infection of macrophages are derived from viable counts of intracellular bacteria. These counts are a result of a combination of bacterial death and growth within the intracellular population but may not reflect ...
Jiang X - - 1997
Hepatocytes constitute the principal site of listerial replication in the livers of mice infected i.v. CD8+ T lymphocytes play a predominant role in the host defenses to Listeria monocytogenes. In vitro experiments by others undertaken to delineate the functions of CD8+ T lymphocytes have focused primarily on their interaction with ...
Bäumler A J - - 1997
S. typhimurium initiates infection of its mammalian host by attachment to mucosal surfaces in the intestine and subsequent invasion of epithelial cells. To date, three S. typhimurium fimbrial operons, fim, lpf and pef, have been characterized. This analysis suggests that fimbrial adhesins fulfill multiple functions during the initial phase of ...
Moriishi K - - 1996
Listeria monocytogenes replicates in a phagocytic cell following escape into the host cytoplasm. Listeriolysin O, secreted by L. monocytogenes, which belongs to the thiol-activated hemolysin family, is known to play an important role in the escape of the bacterium into the host cytoplasm. In this study, we demonstrated that expression ...
Ishibashi Y - - 1996
We have identified the complement receptors on human and murine macrophages involved in the recognition of Salmonella serovars, and investigated their relevance to the intracellular survival. S. typhi was capable of surviving within human monocyte-derived macrophages, whereas S. typhimurium was not. Conversely, S. typhimurium, but not S. typhi, resisted intracellular ...
Schlech W F - - 1996
Listeriosis is primarily a foodborne disease and the pathogenesis of infection is determined by passage of the organism from the gastrointestinal lumen to the reticuloendothelial cells of the liver and spleen. Subsequent invasive events such as sepsis and meningitis develop. The immune response to Listeria is characterized by early macrophage ...
Karem K L - - 1996
The use of attenuated Salmonella vaccine vectors as delivery vehicles for heterologous antigens has been extensive. The majority of work has analyzed the specific immune responses to the recombinant antigen in question. In addition, most analysis has been performed on animals maintained with sterile food, water, and bedding. This report ...
Lo-Man R - - 1996
Attenuated salmonellae represent an attractive vehicle for the delivery of heterologous protective antigens to the immune system. Here, we have investigated the influence of the genetic background of the host which regulates the growth and elimination of Salmonella cells on the cellular response induced against a foreign antigen delivered by ...
Monack D M - - 1996
Invasive Salmonella typhimurium induces dramatic cytoskeletal changes on the membrane surface of mammalian epithelial cells and RAW264.7 macrophages as part of its entry mechanism. Noninvasive S. typhimurium strains are unable to induce this membrane ruffling. Invasive S. typhimurium strains invade RAW264.7 macrophages in 2 h with 7- to 10-fold higher ...
Oh Y K - - 1996
The virulence of Salmonella typhimurium for mice results, in part, from its ability to survive after phagocytosis by macrophages. Although it is generally agreed that intracellular bacteria persist in membrane-bound phagosomes, there remains some question as to whether these phagosomes fuse with macrophage lysosomes. This report describes the maturation of ...
Khelef N - - 1996
Bordetella pertussis produces a catalase and a Fe-superoxide dismutase. The importance of these enzymes in virulence was investigated, in vitro as well as in vivo, by using mutants deficient in their production. The catalase-deficient mutant survived within polymorphonuclear leukocytes, killed J774A.1 macrophages through apoptosis, and behaved as the parental strain ...
Chen L M - - 1996
We have shown by a variety of microscopical and biochemical techniques that Salmonella spp. are cytotoxic for cultured J774A.1 and bone marrow-derived murine macrophages. The cytotoxicity is initially manifested by inhibition of membrane ruffling and macropinocytosis in infected macrophages, and is followed by cell death. Macrophages killed by Salmonella spp. ...
Klimpel G R - - 1996
Cholera toxin (CT) has been shown to induce stem cell factor (SCF) production in mouse ligated intestinal loops. Further, SCF interaction(s) with its receptor (c-kit) was shown to be important for the intestinal tract secretory response after CT exposure. In this study, we have investigated whether SCF production is induced ...
Sugita-Konishi Y - - 1996
We studied the immune functions of IgY obtained from hens immunized with a mixture of formalin-treated pathogenic bacteria. The IgY inhibited the growth of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, the production of Staphylococcus aureus enterotoxin-A, and adhesion of Salmonella enteritidis to cultured human intestinal cells (Caco 2). The results indicated that IgY specific ...
Lindgren S W - - 1996
Phagocytic cells are a critical line of defense against infection. The ability of a pathogen to survive and even replicate within phagocytic cells is a potent method of evading the defense mechanisms of the host. A number of pathogens survive within macrophages after phagocytosis and this contributes to their virulence. ...
Guzmán C A - - 1996
Infection of a murine-spleen dendritic cell line by Listeria monocytogenes was found to induce cell death through apoptosis. To characterize the bacterial product(s) involved in induction of apoptosis, dendritic cells were infected with the L. monocytogenes EGD strain and several isogenic mutants deficient in the production of individual listerial virulence ...
Gupta S - - 1996
Vaccine development and understanding of cellular immune modulatory mechanisms in salmonella infections have been impeded due to the paucity of data on antigens capable of eliciting effective immune responses. The present study was done to evaluate the efficacy of five major purified salmonella antigens (porins, pili, flagella, outer membrane proteins ...
Matsui K - - 1996
We attempted to purify a substance that inhibits mitogen-induced proliferation of murine splenic T-lymphocytes from Salmonella typhimurium. The soluble fraction of a suspension of bacteria disrupted by sonication was chromatographed serially on Mono Q HR, Superdex 200 HR and HiLoad Superdex 75 p.g. columns. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis ...
Sieper J - - 1996
Reactive arthritis is triggered by an infection, either of the genitourinary or gastrointestinal tracts; the common triggering bacteria in enteric ReA include salmonella, shigella, yersinia, and campylobacter. It is still not clear how such different bacteria can lead to a similar clinical picture and have a similar association with the ...
Schlüter D - - 1996
In humans, infection with Listeria monocytogenes (L. monocytogenes) can severely affect the central nervous system (CNS). In the present study we have employed a murine model of CNS listeriosis to characterize the intracerebral distribution of L. monocytogenes. Following intracerebral application of a low dose of L. monocytogenes (serovar 1/2a, EGD ...
McCormick B A - - 1996
Salmonella infections are a principal source of gastroenteritis and enteric fever in a variety of animals, including humans. An essential step in the development of Salmonella pathogenesis is the entry of bacteria into non-phagocytic cells, including those that line the intestinal epithelium. As a consequence of specific cues from the ...
Miller M A - - 1995
The development of effective vaccine strategies for intracellular pathogens, including bacteria, viruses, and parasites, is one of the major frontiers of scientific research. For the studies described here, the murine model of Listeria infection was used to evaluate the adjuvant effects of IL-12 when used as an immunization component. These ...
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