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Results 401 - 450 of 684
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Edwards R A - - 2001
Salmonella are intracellular pathogens that infect and multiply inside macrophages. Although Salmonella are some of the best-studied pathogens, it is difficult to determine quickly and reliably whether the bacteria are intracellular or extracellular. We have developed a novel method using differential fluorescence of two fluorescent proteins to determine the cellular ...
Kaiser P - - 2000
Salmonella enterica is a facultative intracellular pathogen that is capable of causing disease in a range of hosts. Although human salmonellosis is frequently associated with consumption of contaminated poultry and eggs, and the serotypes Salmonella gallinarum and Salmonella pullorum are important world-wide pathogens of poultry, little is understood of the ...
Paschen A - - 2000
An important feature of microbial infections is the ability of the microorganisms to interfere with and modulate the induction of host immune reactions. However, little is known about the effects of broad host range pathogens such as Listeria monocytogenes on similar cell types in different hosts. Here we examine the ...
Sturgill-Koszycki S - - 2000
After ingestion by macrophages, Legionella pneumophila inhibits acidification and maturation of its phagosome. After a 6-10-h lag period, the bacteria replicate for 10-14 h until macrophage lysis releases dozens of progeny. To examine whether the growth phase of intracellular L. pneumophila determines the fate of its phagosome, interactions between the ...
Rolph M S - - 2000
Effective protection against Listeria monocytogenes requires Ag-specific CD8(+) T cells. A substantial proportion of CD8(+) T cells activated during L. monocytogenes infection of C57BL/6 mice are restricted by the MHC class Ib molecule H2-M3. In this study, an H2-M3-restricted CD8(+) T cell clone specific for a known H2-M3 epitope (fMIGWII) ...
Jesenberger V - - 2000
The enterobacterial pathogen Salmonella induces phagocyte apoptosis in vitro and in vivo. These bacteria use a specialized type III secretion system to export a virulence factor, SipB, which directly activates the host's apoptotic machinery by targeting caspase-1. Caspase-1 is not involved in most apoptotic processes but plays a major role ...
Brennan M A - - 2000
We provide evidence that Salmonella typhimurium kills phagocytes by an unusual proinflammatory mechanism of necrosis that is distinguishable from apoptosis. Infection stimulated a distinctly diffuse pattern of DNA fragmentation in macrophages, which contrasted with the marked nuclear condensation displayed by control cells undergoing chemically induced apoptosis. In apoptotic cells, DNA ...
van der Velden A W - - 2000
The enteric pathogen Salmonella enterica serotype Typhimurium induces apoptosis in infected macrophages. This process is rapid, specific, and depends on the type III protein secretion system encoded within Salmonella pathogenicity island 1 (SPI1). Here, we demonstrate that serotype Typhimurium can activate programmed macrophage cell death independently of SPI1. SPI1 independent ...
Paglia P - - 2000
Macrophages are normal targets for Salmonella during natural infections, and it has been demonstrated that attenuated bacteria can deliver nucleic acid vaccine constructs. Therefore, we assessed if attenuated Salmonella can be used for the in vivo delivery of transgenes to their natural cellular target, in an attempt to correct genetic ...
Edelson B T - - 2000
Infection with Listeria monocytogenes is a well studied model for understanding host resistance to intracellular bacteria. Recent advances in the study of Listeria have carefully quantitated the response of CD8(+) T cells to infection and analyzed the effector functions of these cells in vivo. A surprising role for antibody in ...
Wood M W - - 2000
Salmonella-induced enteritis is associated with the induction of an acute intestinal inflammatory response and net fluid secretion into the lumen of infected mucosa. Proteins secreted by the Inv/Spa type III secretion system of Salmonella play a key role in the induction of these responses. We have demonstrated recently that the ...
Watson V A - - 2000
3,4-Dichloropropionaniline (propanil) is an extensively used postemergent herbicide that has been shown to produce toxic and immunotoxic effects. The present report examined if acute exposure to propanil altered in vitro or in vivo cytokine production in response to antigenic stimulation. Studies to determine resistance to infection by the intracellular bacterium ...
Watson P R - - 2000
The interaction between Salmonella serotypes and macrophages is potentially instrumental in determining the outcome of infection. The nature of this interaction was characterized with respect to virulence and serotype-host specificity using pigs as the infection model. Experimental infection with Salmonella typhimurium, Salmonella choleraesuis or Salmonella dublin resulted in enteric, systemic ...
Wing E J - - 2000
Listeria monocytogenes causes sepsis and meningitis in immunocompromised hosts and a devastating maternal/fetal infection in pregnant women. In recent years a more benign gastroenteritis in normal hosts has been described. Listeria has been increasingly identified as a food-borne pathogen, and large-scale contamination of processed foods with resulting outbreaks has occurred ...
Egan P J - - 2000
Although gammadelta T cells are involved in the regulation of inflammation after infection, their precise function is not known. Intraperitoneal infection of T cell receptor (TCR)-delta(-/-) mice with the intracellular bacterium Listeria monocytogenes resulted in the development of necrotic foci in the livers. In contrast, the peritoneal cavities of infected ...
Guleria I - - 2000
Systemic infection with Listeria monocytogenes, a Gram-positive intracellular bacterium, has been used extensively to analyze the innate immune response. Macrophages are central to this response, acting as both the host for and principal defense against this bacterium. During pregnancy L. monocytogenes has a predilection for replication at the maternal-placental interface ...
Genovese L L - - 2000
Previously, our laboratory reported an existing relationship between ontogenesis of heterophil activity and susceptibility to Salmonella enteritidis infection in poultry during the first week post-hatch. The prophylactic administration of S. enteritidis-immune lymphokines has been shown to enhance heterophil function in vitro and reduce S. enteritidis organ invasion in 1-day-old chicks. ...
Mittrücker H W - - 2000
Infection of mice with Salmonella typhimurium results in systemic infection and a disease similar to that seen in humans after infection with S. typhi. The innate immune system can restrict replication of S. typhimurium to a certain degree, but for effective control and eradication of bacteria, acquired immunity is essential. ...
Schwan W R - - 2000
Salmonella serovars are associated with human diseases that range from mild gastroenteritis to host-disseminated enteric fever. Human infections by Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi can lead to typhoid fever, but this serovar does not typically cause disease in mice or other animals. In contrast, S. enterica serovar Typhimurium and S. enterica ...
Soussi N - - 2000
Listeria monocytogenes has been used as an experimental live vector for the induction of CD8-mediated immune responses in various viral and tumoral experimental models. Susceptibility of BALB/c mice to Leishmania major infection has been correlated to the preferential development of Th2 CD4 T cells through an early production of interleukin ...
Yrlid U - - 2000
Salmonella typhimurium is a gram-negative bacterium that survives and replicates inside vacuolar compartments of macrophages. Infection of macrophages with S. typhimurium grown under conditions allowing expression of the type III secretion system results in apoptotic death of the infected cells. Here, we show that infection of bone marrow-derived macrophages (MPhi) ...
Libby S J - - 2000
The pathogenesis of serious systemic Salmonella infections is characterized by survival and proliferation of bacteria inside macrophages. Infection of human monocyte-derived macrophages in vitro with S. typhimurium or S. dublin produces cytopathology characterized by detachment of cells that contain large numbers of proliferating bacteria. This cytopathology is dependent on the ...
Zhou X - - 2000
Salmonella species represent a leading cause of gastroenteritis worldwide. More recently, they have been proposed as putative vaccine delivery vehicles in humans. Oral infection with Salmonella leads to invasion of the intestinal epithelial barrier and subsequent interaction with mucosal macrophages. In this study, we investigated the fate of Salmonella typhimurium-infected ...
Mittrücker H W - - 1999
Efficient T cell activation requires both TCR signals and costimulatory signals. CD28 is one of the molecules that provide costimulatory signals for T cells. We used mice deficient in CD28 expression (CD28-/- mice) to analyze the role of CD28 in the immune response against the intracellular bacterium Salmonella typhimurium, the ...
Schlüter D - - 1999
Listeria monocytogenes (LM) is a common pathogen of cerebral infections. Experimental studies in mice have revealed that epithelial cells of the choroid plexus, ependymal cells, macrophages/microglia, and neurons are the target cells of LM. For the intracerebral pathogenesis of LM cell-to-cell spread via phospholipase C was particularly important. However, phospholipase ...
Conlan J W - - 1999
Systemic listeriosis initiated by parenteral inoculation of mice with Listeria monocytogenes has been used extensively as a model infection for studying mammalian host defense against intracellular bacterial pathogens in general. Most effort has been expended on trying to understand the requirement for specific T cell-mediated immunity for combatting infection with ...
Barton C H - - 1999
Nramp1 (natural resistance-associated macrophage protein one) regulates intracellular pathogen proliferation and macrophage inflammatory responses. Murine Nramp1 exhibits a natural polymorphism with alleles termed resistant and susceptible. Alleles restrict or allow the proliferation of intracellular pathogens, respectively. Structural predictions suggest that Nramp1 encodes the prototypic member of a transporter family. Nramp1 ...
Mittal A - - 1999
Attachment of Salmonella typhimurium to epithelial surfaces elicit significant alterations in different cell signalling events which lead to the development of disease. The present investigation was conducted to evaluate the effect of immunization of rats with porins, on gut physiologic markers following challenge with S. typhimurium. Male albino Wistar rats ...
Hauser A R - - 1999
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a gram-negative opportunistic pathogen that is cytotoxic towards a variety of eukaryotic cells. To investigate the effect of this bacterium on macrophages, we infected J774A.1 cells and primary bone-marrow-derived murine macrophages with the P. aeruginosa strain PA103 in vitro. PA103 caused type-III-secretion-dependent killing of macrophages within 2 ...
Mata M - - 1999
Listeria monocytogenes is a facultative intracellular bacterium that lives and grows in the cytoplasm of the host cell. The hallmark of a listerial infection is a cell-mediated immune response to its own secreted virulence factors. Thus, L. monocytogenes vaccines engineered to secrete HIV proteins may be ideal vectors for boosting ...
Valenti P - - 1999
The apoptosis of infected hepatocytes is a critical step in nonspecific defense against Listeria monocytogenes infection. We have observed that infection by L. monocytogenes in enterocyte-like cells (Caco-2) results in apoptosis. However, a large fraction of infected intestinal epithelial cells escape from cellular condensation and fragmentation, typical of programmed cell ...
Lalmanach A C - - 1999
Knowledge of the host response, of the resistance process, and of the mediators committed against Salmonella infection is essential to progress towards better means of prophylaxis and eradication. In this context, the present contribution attempts to interconnect, with the pivotal role of the macrophage, the early resistance process under the ...
Cornell K A - - 1999
The development of protective immunity against many intracellular bacterial pathogens commonly requires sublethal infection with viable forms of the bacteria. Such infection results in the in vivo activation of specific cell-mediated immune responses, and both CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes may function in the induction of this protective immunity. In ...
Darwin K H - - 1999
Salmonella is one of the most extensively characterized bacterial pathogens and is a leading cause of bacterial gastroenteritis. Despite this, we are only just beginning to understand at a molecular level how Salmonella interacts with its mammalian hosts to cause disease. Studies during the past decade on the genetic basis ...
Ekman P - - 1999
Nitric oxide (NO) has a central role in host defense against intracellular microbes. HLA-B27 has been shown to directly modulate host-microbe interaction in vitro, leading to the impaired elimination of Salmonella in human monocytic U937 cells. Here, we studied whether impaired elimination of Salmonella would result from differences in NO ...
Pabst M J - - 1999
Muramyl peptides are fragments of peptidoglycan from the cell walls of bacteria. Because of their unique chemistry, the immune system recognizes that muramyl peptides are products of bacteria, and it responds by becoming activated to resist infection. This resistance to infection is nonspecific, and extends to unrelated species of bacteria, ...
Matsuzaki G - - 1999
To clarify the role of B cells in the establishment of T cell response against intracellular bacteria, B-cell-deficient (muMT-/-) mice were infected with an intracellular bacteria, Listeria monocytogenes, and T cell response against the bacteria was analyzed. On day 6 of primary Listeria infection, spleen T cells of the muMT-/- ...
Hanawa T - - 1999
Listeria monocytogenes is a facultative intracellular pathogen which can escape bactericidal mechanisms and grow within macrophages. The intracellular environment of macrophages is one of the most stressful environments encountered by an invading bacterium during the course of infection. To study the role of the major stress protein, DnaK, of L. ...
Roos KL - - 1999
Initial empiric therapy for community-acquired bacterial meningitis should be based on the possibility that penicillin-resistant pneumococci may be the etiologic organisms and, hence, should include a combination of third-generation cephalosporin (cefotaxime or ceftriaxone) and vancomycin. Ampicillin should be included if the patient has predisposing factors that are associated with a ...
Ouadrhiri Y - - 1999
Listeria monocytogenes, a facultative intracellular pathogen, readily enters cells and multiplies in the cytosol after escaping from phagosomal vacuoles. Macrophages exposed to gamma interferon, one of the main cellular host defenses against Listeria, become nonpermissive for bacterial growth while containing Listeria in the phagosomes. Using the human myelomonocytic cell line ...
Cauwels A - - 1999
Murine experimental meningitis models induced by either Escherichia coli LPS, live Streptococcus pneumoniae, or Listeria monocytogenes were used to study the origin and potential function of soluble CD14 (sCD14) in the brain during bacterial meningitis. Whereas intracerebral infection caused only a minor and/or transient increase of sCD14 levels in the ...
Lee V T - - 1999
Salmonella and Yersinia spp. infect the intestinal tract of humans. Although these organisms cause fundamentally different diseases, each pathogen relies on type III secretion machines to either inject virulence factors into the cytosol of eukaryotic cells or release toxins into the extracellular milieu. Type III secretion machines are composed of ...
Hersh D - - 1999
Recently, Salmonella spp. were shown to induce apoptosis in infected macrophages. The mechanism responsible for this process is unknown. In this report, we establish that the Inv-Spa type III secretion apparatus target invasin SipB is necessary and sufficient for the induction of apoptosis. Purified SipB microinjected into macrophages led to ...
Gewirtz A T - - 1999
Intestinal epithelial cells respond to Salmonella typhimurium by internalizing this pathogen and secreting, in a polarized manner, an array of chemokines which direct polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) movement. Notably, interleukin-8 (IL-8) is secreted basolaterally and directs PMN through the lamina propria, whereas pathogen-elicited epithelial chemoattractant (PEEC) is secreted apically and directs ...
Kim D - - 1999
Humoral and cell-mediated immune responses of inbred BALB/c male mice were assayed for differential reactivities associated with behavioral sidedness, which was evaluated by spontaneous rotational behavior in a circular cage model system. Mice with left-turning preference had lower in vivo primary IgM and IgG anti-Keyhole Limpet Hemocyanin (KLH) antibody responses, ...
Zhang D - - 1998
In this study, a murine model of Listeria monocytogenes infection was used to investigate effects of restraint stress (RST) on host defense. We observed that the L. monocytogenes infection as well as RST induced an elevation of endogenous corticosterone (CORT) levels and RST synergistically enhanced endogenous CORT levels during the ...
Miller E S - - 1998
Exposure to different forms of psychological and physiological stress can elicit a host stress response, which alters normal parameters of neuroendocrine homeostasis. The present study evaluated the influence of the metabolic stressor 2-deoxy-D-glucose (2-DG; a glucose analog, which when administered to rodents, induces acute periods of metabolic stress) on the ...
MacFarlane A S - - 1998
Our laboratory has shown that immunization of mice with an attenuated strain of Salmonella typhimuriuminduces profound suppression in the capacity of splenocytes to mount an in vitro antibody plaque-forming cell (PFC) response to sheep red blood cells (SRBC) and to proliferate in response to mitogens. In vitro addition of NG-monomethyl-L-arginine ...
Ohya S - - 1998
The contribution of reactive oxygen intermediates (ROI) and reactive nitrogen intermediates (RNI) to the killing of Listeria monocytogenes by macrophages activated by addition of spleen cells from listeria-immune mice plus specific antigen was examined. When macrophages were infected with L. monocytogenes and then spleen cells were added, there was not ...
Gupta S - - 1998
An imbalance in signals delivered to T cells via T-cell receptor and accessory molecules can lead to anergy, apoptosis, or both. In the present study we have demonstrated that Salmonella typhimurium infection in mice leads to a progressive loss of CD4+ T helper (Th) cell population, abnormal T-cell death by ...
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