Infected Tissues (infected + tissue)

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Life Sciences


Selected Abstracts


A case of mucormycosis limited to the parotid gland

HEAD & NECK: JOURNAL FOR THE SCIENCES & SPECIALTIES OF THE HEAD AND NECK, Issue 12 2005
Arun Chandu BDSc, FDSRCS(Eng), MBBS(Hons)
Abstract Background. Mucormycosis is a rare fungal infection commonly affecting structures in the head and neck such as air sinuses, orbits, and the brain. Common predisposing factors include diabetes and immunosuppression. To date, only one case of mucormycosis involving the parotid gland has been reported, and this infection was associated with a fatal outcome. Methods. We report a case of parotid gland mucormycosis in a 45-year-old woman with type 2 diabetes, who was successfully treated with a superficial parotidectomy and intravenous amphotericin B. Results. After initial surgical and antifungal therapy, the patient was left with a residual facial nerve palsy for which multiple sling procedures were performed. She is currently alive and well 6 years after the diagnosis of mucormycosis. Conclusions. Mucormycosis of the parotid gland is a rare form of this often-fatal infection. In this case, infection remained isolated to the parotid gland and was diagnosed soon after presentation. The patient most likely survived because of the early diagnosis, successful surgical removal of all infected tissue, use of intravenous amphotericin therapy, and the aggressive management of comorbidities such as her diabetes. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Head Neck27: XXX,XXX, 2005 [source]


The impact of successive infections on the lung microenvironment

IMMUNOLOGY, Issue 4 2007
Arnaud Didierlaurent
Summary The effect of infection history on the immune response is ignored in most models of infectious disease and in preclinical vaccination studies. No one, however, is naïve and repeated microbial exposure, in particular during childhood, shapes the immune system to respond more efficiently later in life. Concurrent or sequential infections influence the immune response to secondary unrelated pathogens. The involvement of cross-reactive acquired immunity, in particular T-cell responses, is extensively documented. In this review, we discuss the impact of successive infections on the infected tissue itself, with a particular focus on the innate response of the respiratory tract, including a persistent alteration of (1) epithelial or macrophage expression of Toll-like receptors or adherence molecules used by subsequent bacteria to invade the host, (2) the responsiveness of macrophages and neutrophils and (3) the local cytokine milieu that affects the activation of local antigen-presenting cells and hence adaptive immunity to the next infection. We emphasize that such alterations not only occur during coinfection, but are maintained long after the initial pathogen is cleared. As innate responses are crucial to the fight against local pathogens but are also involved in the maintenance of the homeostasis of mucosal tissues, dysregulation of these responses by repeated infections is likely to have a major impact on the outcome of infectious or allergic disease. [source]


Sensitive and Specific Digoxigenin-labelled RNA Probes for Routine Detection of Citrus tristeza virus by Dot-blot Hybridization

JOURNAL OF PHYTOPATHOLOGY, Issue 6 2006
L. Barbarossa
Abstract A non-radioactive dot-blot hybridization assay for the successful detection of Citrus tristeza virus (CTV) RNA in total nucleic acid extracts of infected citrus was developed. Two digoxigenin (DIG)-labelled minus-sense riboprobes, complementary to the coat protein gene sequence of a Chinese and an Apulian CTV isolate were synthesized. Several citrus tissues were evaluated as optimal virus source and leaf petioles were found appropriate material for reliable detection. The hybridization assay showed a detection limit corresponding to 0.2 mg of fresh infected tissue. The riboprobes allowed CTV detection in isolates from different geographical areas, grown in the screenhouse or in the field, resulting in similar hybridization patterns. The infected trees were tested during different seasons with positive results, although from July to August most of the samples gave a weaker hybridization signal, compared to other seasons. The high sensitivity and reliability of the molecular hybridization assay described make it a good alternative to serological methods for CTV detection. [source]


Fusarium eumartii Growth in Resistant and Susceptible Oak Species

JOURNAL OF PHYTOPATHOLOGY, Issue 9 2001
A. Ragazzi
Fusarium eumartii is a fungus associated with declining Quercus robur, in which it is found in the vessels. The response of oak species to infection is known to vary: Q. robur is susceptible, but Quercus cerris and Quercus pubescens are resistant. An experiment was carried out in 1996 and repeated in 1997, to examine how F. eumartii colonization differed in oak species that were susceptible or resistant to the fungus by counting the number of vessels with mycelium at various distances from the inoculation site in infected seedlings and by determining the amount of viable fungus in infected tissue. Infected vessels with mycelium were counted on sections (10 ,m thick) cut at 0, 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 cm from the inoculation site on 1-year-old inoculated seedlings as well as on sections cut every 2 cm to the seedling tip. The amount of viable fungus was determined by counting the colony forming units (CFUs) in stem segments from the same seedlings. Quercus robur seedlings had the greatest number of infected vessels and the greatest number of CFUs. Forty days after inoculation, the extent of vertical fungal spread was 28.12 cm in Q. robur, 3.15 cm in Q. cerris and 3.00 cm in Q. pubescens. The greatest number of CFUs was found in Q. robur at day 5 after inoculation. Analysis of variance confirmed the results. [source]


Turnip yellow mosaic virus: transfer RNA mimicry, chloroplasts and a C-rich genome

MOLECULAR PLANT PATHOLOGY, Issue 5 2004
THEO W. DREHER
SUMMARY Taxonomy:,Turnip yellow mosaic virus (TYMV) is the type species of the genus Tymovirus, family Tymoviridae. TYMV is a positive strand RNA virus of the alphavirus-like supergroup. Physical properties:, Virions are non-enveloped 28-nm T = 3 icosahedrons composed of a single 20-kDa coat protein that is clustered in 20 hexameric and 12 pentameric subunits. Infectious particles and empty capsids coexist in infected tissue. The genomic RNA is 6.3 kb long, with a 5,m7GpppG cap and a 3, untranslated region ending in a tRNA-like structure to which valine can be covalently added. The genome has a distinctive skewed C-rich, G-poor composition (39% C, 17% G). Viral proteins:, Two proteins, whose open reading frames extensively overlap, are translated from the genomic RNA. p206, which contains sequences indicative of RNA capping, NTPase/helicase and polymerase activities, is the only viral protein that is necessary for genome replication in single cells. It is produced as a polyprotein and self-cleaved to yield 141- and 66-kDa proteins. p69 is required for virus movement within the plant and is also a suppressor of gene silencing. The coat protein is expressed from the single subgenomic RNA. Hosts and symptoms:, TYMV has a narrow host range almost completely restricted to the Cruciferae. Experimental host species are Brassica pekinensis (Chinese cabbage) or B. rapa (turnip), in which diffuse chlorotic local lesions and systemic yellow mosaic symptoms appear. Arabidopsis thaliana can also be used. Clumping of chloroplasts and the accumulation of vesicular invaginations of the chloroplast outer membranes are distinctive cytopathological symptoms. High yields of virus are produced in all leaf tissues, and the virus is readily transmissible by mechanical inoculation. Localized transmission by flea beetles may occur in the field. [source]


Successful treatment of pulmonary zygomycosis in two transplant recipients with liposomal amphotericin B and partial surgical resection followed by posaconazole

MYCOSES, Issue 2 2010
David T. Cooke
Summary Pulmonary zygomycosis is a relatively uncommon complication of solid organ or peripheral blood stem cell transplantation and has a high associated mortality. Optimal therapy consists of complete resection of infected tissue and treatment with amphotericin B (AmB). We describe two patients, one of whom underwent orthotopic heart transplantation and the other who received a peripheral blood stem cell transplant, who were diagnosed with invasive pulmonary zygomycosis. Both patients were treated with a liposomal preparation of AmB and early partial resection of the infected structures followed by prolonged posaconazole maintenance therapy. Despite incomplete resection, this treatment regimen resulted in a favourable outcome in both patients, including survival of more than 17 months in one patient at last follow up. For patients in whom complete resection of pulmonary zygomycosis is not possible, subtotal resection and treatment with liposomal AmB followed by therapy with posaconazole may be an effective treatment option. [source]


Comparative Analysis of Phytophthora infestans Induced Gene Expression in Potato Cultivars with Different Levels of Resistance

PLANT BIOLOGY, Issue 6 2005
B. Ros
Abstract: Differential gene expression was analyzed after infection with Phytophthora infestans in six potato cultivars with different levels of resistance to late blight. To verify the infection of the potato leaflets, the amount of phytopathogen mRNA within the plant material was quantified by real-time quantitative PCR. The expression of 182 genes selected from two subtracted cDNA libraries was studied with cDNA array hybridization using RNA from non-infected and infected potato leaflets. Gene up- and down-regulation were clearly detectable in all cultivars 72 h post inoculation. Gene expression patterns in susceptible cultivars differed from those in potato varieties with a higher level of resistance. In general, a stronger gene induction was observed in the susceptible cultivars compared to the moderately to highly resistant potato varieties. Five genes with the highest homology to stress and/or defence-related genes were induced specifically in the susceptible cultivars. Four genes responded to pathogen attack independently of the level of resistance of the cultivar used, and three genes were repressed in infected tissue of most cultivars. Even in the absence of P. infestans infection, six genes showed higher expression levels in the somewhat resistant cultivars Bettina and Matilda. Possible reasons for the different levels of gene expression are discussed. [source]


Modified immunohistological staining allows detection of Ziehl,Neelsen-negative Mycobacterium tuberculosis organisms and their precise localization in human tissue

THE JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY, Issue 5 2005
Timo Ulrichs
Abstract The diagnosis of mycobacterial infection depends on the Ziehl,Neelsen (ZN) stain, which detects mycobacteria because of their characteristic acid-fast cell wall composition and structure. The histological diagnosis of tuberculosis (TB) comprises various aspects: (1) sensitive detection of mycobacteria; (2) precise localization of mycobacteria in the context of granulomatous lesions; (3) ,staging' of disease according to mycobacterial spread and granulomatous tissue integrity. Thus, detection of minute numbers of acid-fast bacteria in tissue specimens is critical. The conventional ZN stain fails to identify mycobacteria in numbers less than 104 per ml. Hence many infections evade diagnosis. PCR is highly sensitive, but allows neither localization within tissues nor staging of mycobacterial disease, and positive findings frequently do not correlate with disease. In this study, an anti- Mycobacterium bovis bacille Calmette,Guérin polyclonal antiserum (pAbBCG) was used to improve immunostaining, which was compared to the ZN stain in histological samples. Screening of tissue samples including lungs, pleural lesions, lymph nodes, bone marrow, and skin for mycobacterial infection revealed that pAbBCG staining detects infected macrophages harbouring intracellular mycobacteria or mycobacterial material as well as free mycobacteria that are present at low abundance and not detected by the ZN stain. The positive pAbBCG staining results were confirmed either by PCR analysis of microdissected stained tissue or by culture from tissue. This immunostaining approach allows precise localization of the pathogen in infected tissue. Copyright © 2005 Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Ambient pH controls the expression of endopolygalacturonase genes in the necrotrophic fungus Sclerotinia sclerotiorum

FEMS MICROBIOLOGY LETTERS, Issue 2 2003
Pascale Cotton
Abstract In the necrotrophic fungus Sclerotinia sclerotiorum, secretion of polygalacturonases (PGs) and decrease of the environmental pH via oxalic acid production are considered as the main pathogenicity determinants. In order to evaluate the relationship between these two aspects of the infection process, we analyzed the expression of the endoPG-encoding genes pg1,3. Transcription of pg1,3 was not carbon regulated but was strictly controlled by pH and highly favored in a narrow range of acidic pH. During plant infection, a pH gradient was established in relation to oxalic acid secretion. Transcripts of pg1,3 were localized to the zone of colonization of healthy tissues while transcripts of genes encoding other lytic enzymes were restricted to the more acidic zones of the infected tissues. Our results show that progressive acidification of the ambient medium by the fungus is a major strategy for the sequential expression of pathogenicity factors. [source]


Protective role of osteopontin in endodontic infection

IMMUNOLOGY, Issue 1 2010
Susan R. Rittling
Summary Endodontic infections are polymicrobial infections resulting in bone destruction and tooth loss. The host response to these infections is complex, including both innate and adaptive mechanisms. Osteopontin (OPN), a secreted, integrin-binding protein, functions in the regulation of immune responses and enhancement of leucocyte migration. We have assessed the role of OPN in the host response to endodontic infection using a well-characterized mouse model. Periapical bone loss associated with endodontic infection was significantly more severe in OPN-deficient mice compared with wild-type 3 weeks after infection, and was associated with increased areas of inflammation. Expression of cytokines associated with bone loss, interleukin-1, (IL-1,) and RANKL, was increased 3 days after infection. There was little effect of OPN deficiency on the adaptive immune response to these infections, as there was no effect of genotype on the ratio of bacteria-specific immunoglobulin G1 and G2a in the serum of infected mice. Furthermore, there was no difference in the expression of cytokines associated with T helper type 1/type2 balance: IL-12, IL-10 and interferon-,. In infected tissues, neutrophil infiltration into the lesion area was slightly increased in OPN-deficient animals 3 days after infection: this was confirmed by a significant increase in expression of neutrophil elastase in OPN-deficient samples at this time-point. We conclude that OPN has a protective effect on polymicrobial infection, at least partially because of alterations in phagocyte recruitment and/or persistence at the sites of infection, and that this molecule has a potential therapeutic role in polymicrobial infections. [source]


Substance P receptor antagonist reverses intestinal pathophysiological alterations occurring in a novel ex-vivo model of Cryptosporidium parvum infection of intestinal tissues derived from SIV-infected macaques

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL PRIMATOLOGY, Issue 3 2008
A. Garza
Abstract Background,Cryptosporidium infection leads to life-threatening diarrhea in AIDS patients. Pathogenesis of cryptosporidiosis is due to intestinal physiological alterations. We devised an ex-vivo model using ex-vivo Cryptosporidium parvum infection of jejunal tissues derived from SIV-infected macaques and studied the role of substance P (SP) in the pathogenesis of cryptosporidiosis. Methods, We measured jejunal SP protein levels using ELISA, and electrophysiological alterations using the Ussing chamber technique in an ex vivo model of Cryptosporidium infection. Paraformaldehyde-fixed jejunum from SIV-infected macaques with and without naturally occurring cryptosporidiosis was studied for SP protein expression by immunohistochemistry and fluorescence deconvolution microscopy. Results,Ex-vivo Cryptosporidium -infected tissues and tissues from SIV-infected macaques with naturally occurring cryptosporidiosis demonstrated elevated SP protein levels compared with tissues from SIV-infected animals without ex-vivo C. parvum infection or tissues from SIV-infected animals that have no evidence of cryptosporidiosis. In our ex-vivo model of Cryptosporidium infection, we demonstrated pathophysiological alterations that were blocked by SP-receptor antagonist treatment. Conclusions, These studies suggest that SP-receptor antagonists could prove useful for treatment of AIDS-related cryptosporidiosis. [source]


Case report: Rift Valley Fever with vertical transmission in a pregnant Sudanese woman

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL VIROLOGY, Issue 5 2008
Ishag Adam
Abstract Rift Valley Fever (RVF) is a viral disease transmitted to humans by mosquito bite and contact with animals or their infected tissues. A 29-year old primigravidae presented in early labour with symptoms suggestive of RVF. She delivered baby of 3.2 kg with skin rash, palpable liver and spleen. The two samples from the mother and neonate were found to be positive for RVF-IgM. This report demonstrate that, RVF can be vertically transmitted. J. Med. Virol. 80:929,929, 2008. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Occurrence of Alfalfa Bacterial Stem Blight Disease in Kurdistan Province, Iran

JOURNAL OF PHYTOPATHOLOGY, Issue 10 2007
B. Harighi
Abstract During spring and summer of 2004 and 2005, a new disease of alfalfa was observed for the first time in some areas of the Kurdistan province in Iran. Symptoms were initially yellowed area on leaves, within which water-soaked, irregular spots developed. These spots eventually coalesced to produce large necrotic areas. Symptoms on petiole and stem include water-soaked lesions, which later turned brown. Gram negative and rod-shaped bacteria were isolated from infected tissues. From the results of LOPAT tests (levan production, oxidase reaction, potato soft rot, arginine dihydrolase and tobacco hypersensitivity) and other phenotypic, biochemical and physiological properties investigated, the causal bacterium have been identified as Pseudomonas syringae pv. syringae. Pathogenicity of selected strains was confirmed by injecting a bacterial suspension into leaf tissue from the underside of leaves. [source]


Staphylococcus aureus haem oxygenases are differentially regulated by iron and haem

MOLECULAR MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 5 2008
Michelle L. Reniere
Summary Iron acquisition is a vital process for most pathogenic bacteria, as iron is a limiting nutrient during infection. Staphylococcus aureus, an increasingly important pathogen, acquires iron from host haem via elaboration of the iron-regulated surface determinant system (Isd). IsdG and IsdI are haem oxygenases that have been proposed to degrade exogenous haem in the bacterial cytoplasm as a mechanism to liberate free iron for use as a nutrient source. Herein, we report that IsdG and IsdI are both important for S. aureus growth on haemin as a sole iron source and are necessary for full S. aureus pathogenesis. Investigations into the regulation of these enzymes revealed that IsdG and IsdI are differentially regulated by iron and haem through both transcriptional and post-transcriptional mechanisms. Additionally, IsdI was found to be expressed in infected tissues at the sites of abscess formation, suggesting that abscesses are iron-starved microenvironments inside the host. These findings suggest that S. aureus differentially regulates IsdG and IsdI in response to alterations in iron and haem availability during infection. [source]


The TEA/ATTS transcription factor CaTec1p regulates hyphal development and virulence in Candida albicans

MOLECULAR MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 3 2000
Anja Schweizer
The temporal and spatial expression of stage-specific genes during morphological development of fungi and higher eukaryotes is controlled by transcription factors. In this study, we report the cloning and functional analysis of the Candida albicans TEC1 (CaTEC1) gene, a new member of the TEA/ATTS family of transcription factors that regulates C. albicans virulence. The promoters of the type 4, 5 and 6 proteinase isogenes (SAP4,6) contain repetitive TEA/ATTS consensus sequence motifs. This finding suggests a possible role for a homologue of Saccharomyces cerevisiae TEC1 during the activation of proteinase gene expression in C. albicans. CaTEC1 is predominantly expressed in the hyphal form of C. albicans. In vitro, serum-induced hyphal formation as well as evasion from M, after phagocytosis is suppressed in catec1/catec1 mutant cells. Furthermore, expression of the proteinase isogenes SAP4,6 is no longer inducible in these mutant cells. The deletion of the CaTEC1 gene attenuates virulence of C. albicans in a systemic model of murine candidiasis, although both mutant and revertant cells that were prepared from infected tissues or the vaginal mucosa grew in a hyphal morphology in vivo. CaTEC1 complements the pseudohyphal and invasive growth defect of haploid and diploid S. cerevisiae tec1/tec1 mutant cells and strongly activates the promoter of FLO11, a gene required for pseudohyphal growth. This study provides the first evidence pointing to an essential role for a member of the TEA/ATTS transcription factor family that had so far only been ascribed to function during development as a virulence regulator in microbial pathogenesis. [source]


Erwinia amylovora modifies phenolic profiles of susceptible and resistant apple through its type III secretion system

PHYSIOLOGIA PLANTARUM, Issue 3 2008
Isabelle Pontais
Fire blight is a disease affecting Maloideae caused by the necrogenic bacterium Erwinia amylovora, which requires the type III protein secretion system (TTSS) for pathogenicity. Profiles of methanol-extractable leaf phenolics of two apple (Malus × domestica) genotypes with contrasting susceptibility to this disease were analyzed by HPLC after infection. Some qualitative differences were recorded between the constitutive compositions of the two genotypes but in both of them dihydrochalcones accounted for more than 90% of total phenolics. Principal component analysis separated leaves inoculated with a virulent wild-type strain from those inoculated with a non-pathogenic TTSS-defective mutant or with water. The changes in levels of the various groups of phenolics in response to the virulent bacterium were similar between the two genotypes, with a significant decrease of dihydrochalcones and a significant increase of hydroxycinnamate derivatives. Differences between genotypes were, however, recorded in amplitude and kinetic of variation in these groups. Occurrence of oxidation and polymerization reactions is proposed, based on the browning process of infected tissues, but whether some by-products act in defense as toxic compounds remain to be tested. Among direct antibacterial constitutive compounds present in apple leaves, the dihydrochalcone phloretin only was found at levels close to lethal concentrations in both genotypes. However, E. amylovora exhibited the ability to stabilize this compound at sublethal levels even in the resistant apple, rejecting the hypothesis of its involvement in the resistance of this genotype. [source]


Ultrastructural aspects of tomato leaves infected by Tomato torrado virus (ToTV) and co-infected by other viruses

PLANT PATHOLOGY, Issue 2 2010
A. Alfaro-Fernández
Optical and electron microscopy studies were carried out to investigate the cytopathology induced in tomato leaves infected by Tomato torrado virus (ToTV), a new picorna-like virus associated with the ,Torrado' disease. Infected leaves, showing typical Torrado disease symptoms were surveyed in commercial greenhouses in the main tomato production areas of Spain. The effect of the co-infection of ToTV with other viruses which commonly infect tomato crops was also studied. Ultra-thin sections of ToTV-infected tomato leaves did not show a strong cellular alteration. However, crystalline arrays of isometric virus-like particles (VLPs) of 20,30 nm in the inclusion bodies were observed in phloem parenchyma cells of the infected tissues. Tissues co-infected by ToTV and either Tomato chlorosis virus (ToCV) or Pepino mosaic virus (PepMV) presented more severe cellular alterations. The most deleterious consequences for tomato cells were found in triple infections of ToTV, PepMV and Tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV), where characteristic cell wall overgrowth was distinguishable, together with a large amount of necrotic cells. [source]


Studies on amoebae and cysts associated with the isolation of Spongospora subterranea f.sp. subterranea in vitro

PLANT PATHOLOGY, Issue 4 2001
X.-S. Qu
New evidence is presented to support the contention that the amoeba/cyst colonies isolated from surface-sterilized Spongospora subterranea f.sp. subterranea -infected potato tubers and spore balls have a saprophytic phase but are contaminants and not S. subterranea. Amoebae isolated from infected tissues and spore balls formed colonies associated with bacteria on 1% water agar at 18°C and encysted after 5,7 days. These cysts were morphologically distinct from the resting spores of S. subterranea and were formed singly or in a layer, unlike the spore ball (cystosorus) of S. subterranea. Amoebae, cysts and mixtures of amoebae and cysts in primary, secondary and tertiary subcultures failed to infect tomato roots. PCR amplification of DNA from amoebae, cysts and spore balls using the S. subterranea -specific primer pair SsF/R generated a 434-bp product from S. subterranea spore balls only and not from amoebae or cysts. When an amoeba/cyst-specific primer pair AmF/R was designed and used for PCR amplification, a single 411-bp product was generated from DNA of amoebae and cysts, but not from DNA of S. subterranea spore balls. These results are discussed in relation to earlier reports claiming the successful isolation of S. subterranea and other plasmodiophorids in vitro. [source]


Differential expansion, activation and effector functions of conventional and plasmacytoid dendritic cells in mouse tissues transiently infected with Listeria monocytogenes

CELLULAR MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 7 2006
Miguel A. Tam
Summary Dendritic cells (DC) are crucial in generating immunity to infection. Here we characterize changes in DC in terms of number, activation and effector functions, focusing on conventional DC (cDC) and plasmacytoid DC (pDC), in Listeria -infected mice. Kinetic studies showed a subset- and tissue-specific expansion of cDC and upregulation of CD80 and CD86 on splenic and mesenteric lymph node (MLN) cDC after intragastric infection. Expansion of pDC was more prolonged than cDC, and pDC upregulated CD86 and MHC-II, but not CD80, in both the spleen and MLN. cDC were an important source of IL-12 but not TNF-, during infection, while pDC made neither of these cytokines. Instead other CD11cint cells produced these cytokines. Using five-colour flow cytometry and double intracellular cytokine staining, we detected phenotypically similar CD11cintCD11b+Gr1+ cells with distinct capacities to produce TNF-,/IL-12 or TNF-,/iNOS (inducible nitric oxide synthase) in Listeria -infected tissues. IL-12p70 was also produced by sorted CD11chi and CD11cintCD11b+Gr1+ cells. Furthermore, production of TNF-,, iNOS and IL-12 was differentially dependent on cellular localization of the bacteria. Cytosol-restricted bacteria induced TNF-, and iNOS-producing cells, albeit at lower frequency than wild-type bacteria. In contrast, IL-12 was induced only with wild-type bacteria. These data provide new insight into the relative abundance and function of distinct CD11c-expressing populations during the early stage of Listeria infection. [source]


The role of pneumolysin in pneumococcal pneumonia and meningitis

CLINICAL & EXPERIMENTAL IMMUNOLOGY, Issue 2 2004
R. A. HIRST
SUMMARY Diseases caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae include pneumonia, septicaemia and meningitis. All these are associated with high morbidity and mortality. The pneumococcus can colonize the nasopharynx, and this can be a prelude to bronchopneumonia and invasion of the vasculature space. Proliferation in the blood can result in a breach of the blood,brain barrier and entry into the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) where the bacteria cause inflammation of the meningeal membranes resulting in meningitis. The infected host may develop septicaemia and/or meningitis secondary to bronchopneumonia. Also septicaemia is a common precursor of meningitis. The mechanisms surrounding the sequence of infection are unknown, but will be dependent on the properties of both the host and bacterium. Treatment of these diseases with antibiotics leads to clearance of the bacteria from the infected tissues, but the bacteriolytic nature of antibiotics leads to an acute release of bacterial toxins and thus after antibiotic therapy the patients can be left with organ-specific deficits. One of the main toxins released from pneumococci is the membrane pore forming toxin pneumolysin. Here we review the extensive studies on the role of pneumolysin in the pathogenesis of pneumococcal diseases. [source]


Improvement of RNA purification from infected tissues to explore the in vivo host,pathogen interactions with microarrays

CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTION, Issue 2009
Q. Leroy
No abstract is available for this article. [source]