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Results 451 - 500 of 1434
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Marriott Helen M - - 2008
The cholesterol-dependent cytolysins are pore-forming toxins. Pneumolysin is the cytolysin produced by Streptococcus pneumoniae and is a key virulence factor. The protein contains 471 amino acids and four structural domains. Binding to cholesterol is followed by oligomerization and membrane pore formation. Pneumolysin also activates the classical pathway of complement. Mutational ...
Brown Stacie A - - 2008
The ability of the human body to play host to bacterial pathogens has been studied for more than 200 years. Successful pathogenesis relies on the ability to acquire the nutrients that are necessary for growth and survival, yet relatively little is understood about the in vivo physiology and metabolism of ...
Eto Danelle S - - 2008
The FimH adhesin, localized at the distal tips of type 1 pili, binds mannose-containing glycoprotein receptors like alpha3beta1 integrins and stimulates bacterial entry into target host cells. Strains of uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC), the major cause of urinary tract infections, utilize FimH to invade bladder epithelial cells. Here we set ...
Weiss Günter - - 2009
BACKGROUND: The most frequent clinical condition exemplifying the interplay between iron and immune function is the anemia of chronic disease (ACD). METHODS: Based on a review of the current literature this article provides an overview of our current knowledge of iron homeostasis during inflammation, how this contributes to ACD, but ...
Alcock Joe - - 2008
Tissue damage mediated by innate immune cells in reperfusion injury may have a survival benefit in infections, preventing sepsis. Tissue damage by leukocytes - plugging of small vessels, endothelial cell damage, tissue edema around vessels, and stimulation of platelet aggregation - occurs in both reperfusion injury and infection-prone wounds. These ...
Prajsnar Tomasz K - - 2008
With the emergence of multiply resistant Staphylococcus aureus, there is an urgent need to better understand the molecular determinants of S. aureus pathogenesis. A model of staphylococcal pathogenesis in zebrafish embryos has been established, in which host phagocytes are able to mount an effective immune response, preventing overwhelming infection from ...
Hamon Mélanie Anne - - 2008
The link between bacteria and host chromatin remodeling is an emerging topic. The exciting recent discoveries on bacterial impact on host epigenetics, as discussed in this Review, highlight yet another strategy used by bacterial pathogens to interfere with key cellular processes. The study of how pathogens provoke host chromatin changes ...
Scidmore Marci - - 2008
Pathogenic microbes exploit the host cytoskeleton for entry, colonization, and intracellular survival in eukaryotic cells. In this issue of Cell Host & Microbe, Kumar and Valdivia (2008) report that Chlamydia trachomatis co-opts host actin and intermediate filaments to form a dynamic scaffold providing structural integrity to the chlamydial vacuole and ...
Paraje María Gabriela - - 2008
Virulence depends on opposing reactions between host and pathogen and is intrinsically linked to the host immune status. Virulence factors rely upon microbial attributes that mediate cell damage. While the activity of several Candida albicans hydrolytic enzymes is well characterized, the biological role of lipases is uncertain. In this report, ...
Fauvart Maarten - - 2008
Rhizobia are Gram-negative bacteria than can elicit the formation of specialized organs, called root nodules, on leguminous host plants. Upon infection of the nodules, they differentiate into nitrogen-fixing bacteroids. An elaborate signal exchange precedes the symbiotic interaction. In general, both rhizobia and host plants exhibit narrow specificity. Rhizobial factors contributing ...
Cruz Daniel - - 2008
Intracellular pathogens survive by evading the host immune system and accessing host metabolic pathways to obtain nutrients for their growth. Mycobacterium leprae, the causative agent of leprosy, is thought to be the mycobacterium most dependent on host metabolic pathways, including host-derived lipids. Although fatty acids and phospholipids accumulate in the ...
Chai Louis Y A - - 2009
A successful pathogen is one that is able to effectively survive and evade detection by the host innate immune defense. Fungal pathogens have adopted strategies which evade host defense and eventually cause disease in at-risk patients. Shielding of stimulatory surface recognition molecules, shedding of decoy components, induction of anti-inflammatory signals, ...
Crimmins Gregory T - - 2008
To gain insight into the interaction of intracellular pathogens with host innate immune pathways, we performed an unbiased genetic screen of Listeria monocytogenes mutants that induced an enhanced or diminished host innate immune response. Here, we show that the major facilitator superfamily of bacterial multidrug resistance transporters (MDRs) controlled the ...
Barker Katherine S - - 2008
BACKGROUND: During hematogenously disseminated candidiasis, bloodborne Candida albicans interacts with vascular endothelial cells (ECs), which have the capacity to influence the local inflammatory response to this organism. METHODS: To elucidate the EC response to C. albicans, we determined the transcriptional profile of ECs infected with wild-type C. albicans strain SC5314 ...
Pasa Semir - - 2009
Morbidity and mortality in multiple myeloma is often attributed to life-threatening infections. A defect in humoral immunity has been proposed for the predisposition to bacterial infections. Most of the infections are of bacterial origin, and the most serious are septicemia, meningitis, and pneumonia. Thalidomide is a drug with pleiotropic effects. ...
Cosseau Celine - - 2008
Streptococcus salivarius is an early colonizer of human oral and nasopharyngeal epithelia, and strain K12 has reported probiotic effects. An emerging paradigm indicates that commensal bacteria downregulate immune responses through the action on NF-kappaB signaling pathways, but additional mechanisms underlying probiotic actions are not well understood. Our objective here was ...
Bengtson Sara H - - 2009
Bacteria-controlled regulation of host responses to infection is an important virulence mechanism that has been demonstrated to contribute to disease progression. Here we report that the human pathogen Streptococcus pyogenes employs the procarboxypeptidase TAFI (thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor) to modulate the kallikrein/kinin system. To this end, bacteria initiate a chain of ...
Janssen Riny - - 2008
Campylobacter is a major cause of acute bacterial diarrhea in humans worldwide. This study was aimed at summarizing the current understanding of host mechanisms involved in the defense against Campylobacter by evaluating data available from three sources: (i) epidemiological observations, (ii) observations of patients, and (iii) experimental observations including observations ...
Collins Helen L - - 2008
During infection one critical host defence strategy is an attempt to withhold iron from invading pathogens. This is achieved by by proinflammatory cytokines such as IL-6 inducing hepcidin. The net result of this is the removal of iron from the circulation and its sequestration within cells, including cells of the ...
Lövkvist Lena - - 2008
Streptococcus pyogenes (group A Streptococcus) is a human pathogen that causes a wide variety of diseases ranging from uncomplicated superficial infections to severe infections such as streptococcal toxic shock syndrome and necrotizing fasciitis. These bacteria interact with several host cell receptors, one of which is the cell surface complement regulator ...
Nicola André Moraes - - 2008
Phagocytes are considered the most important effector cells in the immune response against fungal infections. To exert their role, they must recognize the invading fungi, internalise, and kill them within the phagosome. Major advances in the field have elucidated the roles of pattern-recognition receptors in the innate immunity sensing and ...
Jain Neena - - 2008
Microorganisms that live in fluctuating environments must constantly adapt their behavior to survive. The host constitutes an important microenvironment in opportunistic and primary fungal pathogens like Cryptococcus neoformans (C. neoformans) and Cryptococcus gattii (C. gattii). In clonal populations, adaptation may be achieved through the generation of diversity. For fungi phenotype ...
Svitek Nicholas - - 2008
Even though ferrets are one of the principal animal models for influenza pathogenesis, the lack of suitable immunological reagents has so far limited their use in host response studies. Using recently established real-time PCR assays for a panel of ferret cytokines, we analyzed the local ferret immune response to human ...
Spoel Steven H - - 2008
In response to biotic stress, crosstalk between plant hormonal signaling pathways prioritizes defense over other cellular functions. Some plant pathogens take advantage of this regulatory system by mimicking hormones that interfere with host immune responses to promote virulence. Here we discuss the various roles that crosstalk may play in response ...
Cassel Suzanne L - - 2008
The astonishing density of microbes in the mammalian gut has raised numerous questions, including how such colonization is tolerated in an immunocompetent location. Clearly the organisms perform a beneficial role, but until now the mechanisms have been less than clear. In a recent study in Nature, Mazmanian et al. (2008) ...
Hölzl Markus A - - 2008
Host defense mechanisms are multilayered and involve physical as well as chemical barriers, antimicrobial factors as well as a broad set of immunocompetent cells. The mode of action of antimicrobial factors is variable, ranging from opsonisation and agglutination to direct killing of pathogens. In the last years it has become ...
Sanjuan Miguel A - - 2008
Autophagy is a conserved pathway that sequesters cytoplasmic material and delivers it to lysosomes for degradation. Digestion of portions of the cell interior plays a key role in the recycling of nutrients, remodeling, and disposal of superfluous organelles. Along with its metabolic function, autophagy is an important mechanism for innate ...
Parsa Kishore V L - - 2008
Tularemia is a zoonotic disease caused by the Gram-negative intracellular pathogen Francisella tularensis. These bacteria evade phagolysosomal fusion, escape from the phagosome and replicate in the host cell cytoplasm. IFNgamma has been shown to suppress the intra-macrophage growth of Francisella through both nitric oxide-dependent and -independent pathways. Since Francisella is ...
Cosson Pierre - - 2008
The core function of the innate immune response, phagocytosis, did not evolve first in metazoans but rather in primitive unicellular eukaryotes. Thus, though amoebae separated from the tree leading to metazoan shortly after the divergence of plants, they share many specific functions with mammalian phagocytic cells. Dictyostelium discoideum is by ...
Lesley Robin - - 2008
Here we discuss the application of the zebrafish as a relatively new model host for the study of mycobacterial pathogenesis. Recent advances in our understanding of host-mycobacteria interactions from the zebrafish include insights into the role of the innate immune system in both controlling and facilitating infection. Analysis in the ...
Arimoto Kei-ichiro - - 2008
As a defense mechanism against infection, host cells have evolved sensor molecules which detect pathogen components directly and induce protective responses against the infection. TLRs, well known receptors, recognize a pathogen on the surface of cells or endosome/lysosome. Many pathogens penetrate into cytoplasm, in where non-TLR sensors recognize pathogen components ...
Kristan Deborah M - - 2008
Long-term calorie restriction (CR) causes numerous physiological changes that ultimately increase mean and maximum lifespan of most species examined to date. One physiological change that occurs with CR is enhanced immune function, as tested using antigens and mitogens to stimulate an immune response. Fewer studies have used intact pathogen exposure ...
Blanco Jose L - - 2008
The immune mechanisms of defence against fungal infections are numerous, and range from protective mechanisms that were present early in evolution (innate immunity) to sophisticated adaptive mechanisms that are induced specifically during infection and disease (adaptive immunity). The first-line innate mechanism is the presence of physical barriers in the form ...
Cerenius Lage - - 2008
Melanisation is an important immune response in many invertebrates. Recent evidence also strongly implies that the melanisation (prophenoloxidase activating) cascade is intimately associated with the appearance of factors stimulating cellular defence by aiding phagocytosis and encapsulation reactions. However, some controversy exists in the field, and at least in flies and ...
Khan W I - - 2008
Infection and inflammation in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract induces a number of changes in the GI physiology of the host. Experimental infections with parasites represent valuable models to study the structural and physiological changes in the GI tract. This review addresses research on the interface between the immune system and ...
Brodsky Igor E - - 2008
Numerous microbial pathogens modulate or interfere with cell death pathways in cultured cells. However, the precise role of host cell death during in vivo infection remains poorly understood. Macrophages infected by pathogenic species of Yersinia typically undergo an apoptotic cell death. This is due to the activity of a Type ...
Carlson, Paul Edward
Francisella tularensis, the causative agent of tularemia, is a pathogen capable of survival and growth in a vast array of environments ranging from arthropod vectors to over one hundred different mammalian hosts, including humans. An understanding of the mechanisms that this bacterium uses to adapt to these varied environments is ...
Hohl Tobias M - - 2008
The pulmonary innate immune system clears inhaled Aspergillus fumigatus conidia (spores) from terminal airways. Failure to control conidial germination in immune compromised hosts can result in hyphal tissue invasion and fatal disease. Insight into the molecular recognition of A. fumigatus by host leukocytes indicates that the innate immune system exploits ...
Ochoa Theresa J - - 2009
Much has been learned in recent years about the mechanisms by which breastfeeding improves child health and survival. However, there has been little progress in using these insights to improve pediatric care. Factors that are important for protecting the breast fed infant might be expected to decrease the adverse effects ...
Radolf Justin D - - 2008
Borrelia burgdorferi must adapt physiologically to two markedly different host milieus and efficiently transit between its mammalian host and arthropod vector during tick feeding. Differential production of lipoproteins is essential for spirochaetes to survive, multiply and migrate within both hosts. Outer-surface protein C (OspC), which is induced during the blood ...
Mendes-Giannini Maria José Soares - - 2008
Host-fungal interactions are inherently complex and dynamic. In order to identify new microbial targets and develop more effective antifungal therapies, it is important to understand the cellular and molecular mechanisms of disease. Paracoccidioidomycosis provokes a variety of clinical symptoms, and Paracoccidioides brasiliensis can reach many tissues, but primarily attacks the ...
Cain Robert J - - 2008
Bacterial pathogens have evolved a specialized type III secretion system (T3SS) to translocate virulence effector proteins directly into eukaryotic target cells. Salmonellae deploy effectors that trigger localized actin reorganization to force their own entry into non-phagocytic host cells. Six effectors (SipC, SipA, SopE/2, SopB, SptP) can individually manipulate actin dynamics ...
Bradley J E - - 2008
Carefully chosen immunological measurements, informed by recent advances in our understanding of the diversity and control of immune mechanisms, can add great interpretative value to ecological studies of infection. This is especially so for co-infection studies, where interactions between species are often mediated via the host's immune response. Here we ...
Faherty Christina S - - 2008
The ability of bacterial pathogens to inhibit apoptosis in eukaryotic cells during infection is an emerging theme in the study of bacterial pathogenesis. Prevention of apoptosis provides a survival advantage because it enables the bacteria to replicate inside host cells. Bacterial pathogens have evolved several ways to prevent apoptosis by ...
Lanier Lewis L - - 2008
Natural killer (NK) cells are well recognized for their ability to provide a first line of defence against viral pathogens and they are increasingly being implicated in immune responses against certain bacterial and parasitic infections. Reciprocally, viruses have devised numerous strategies to evade the activation of NK cells and have ...
Muyskens Jonathan B - - 2008
In their coexistence with microbes, animals must fortify themselves against the onslaught of pathogens while maintaining a healthful consortium of resident commensals. In a recent paper in Science, Ryu and colleagues report that in fruit flies the Caudal transcription factor regulates appropriate immune responses to commensal bacteria, and that when ...
Sitkovsky M - - 2008
The intensity and duration of host responses are determined by protective mechanisms that control tissue injury by dampening down inflammation. Adenosine generation and consequent effects, mediated via A2A adenosine receptors (A2AR) on effector cells, play a critical role in the pathophysiological modulation of these responses in vivo. Adenosine is both ...
Haine Eleanor R - - 2008
Despite the fact that all vertically transmitted symbionts sequester resources from their hosts and are therefore costly to maintain, there is an extraordinary diversity of them in invertebrates. Some spread through host populations by providing their hosts with fitness benefits or by manipulating host sex ratio, but some do not: ...
Lázár-Molnár Eszter - - 2008
The PD-1 costimulatory receptor inhibits T cell receptor signaling upon interacting with its ligands PD-L1 and PD-L2. The PD-1/PD-L pathway is critical in maintaining self-tolerance. In this study, we examined the role of PD-1 in a mouse model of acute infection with Histoplasma capsulatum, a major human pathogenic fungus. In ...
Nagy Z A - - 2008
The need of a specific defence mechanism against intracellular pathogens is proposed to have arisen very early in evolution, perhaps already in protozoa, e.g. amoebae. The phagocytic machinery of amoebae lends itself as a possible starting point for the evolution of such a mechanism. The hypothetical evolutionary pathway described here ...
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