110 resultados para VECTOR-BORNE PATHOGENS
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OBJECTIVES: To test the activity of tigecycline combined with 16 antimicrobials in vitro against 22 gram-positive and 55 gram-negative clinical isolates. METHODS: Antibiotic interactions were determined by chequerboard and time-kill methods. RESULTS: By chequerboard, of 891 organism-drug interactions tested, 97 (11%) were synergistic, 793 (89%) were indifferent and 1 (0.1%) was antagonistic. Among gram-positive pathogens, most synergisms occurred against Enterococcus spp. (7/11 isolates) with the tigecycline/rifampicin combination. No antagonism was detected. Among gram-negative organisms, synergism was observed mainly with trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole against Serratia marcescens (5/5 isolates), Proteus spp. (2/5) and Stenotrophomonas maltophilia (2/5), with aztreonam against S. maltophilia (3/5), with cefepime and imipenem against Enterobacter cloacae (3/5), with ceftazidime against Morganella morganii (3/5), and with ceftriaxone against Klebsiella pneumoniae (3/5). The only case of antagonism occurred against one S. marcescens with the tigecycline/imipenem combination. Selected time-kill assays confirmed the bacteriostatic interactions observed by the chequerboard method. Moreover, they revealed a bactericidal synergism of tigecycline with piperacillin/tazobactam against one penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae and with amikacin against Proteus vulgaris. CONCLUSIONS: Combinations of tigecycline with other antimicrobials produce primarily an indifferent response. Specific synergisms, especially against enterococci and problematic gram-negative isolates, might be worth investigating in in vitro models and/or in animal models simulating the human environment.
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Infectious diseases, both in their endemic and epidemic forms, have shaped the human genome. Ecology has also contributed to geographically constrained pressures on human populations. There are now multiple examples of population-specific genetic variants that modulate susceptibility to infection - several of which have been observed solely in Europeans. The pathogen genome also mutates and adapts to individuals and common alleles in populations. The current understanding has benefited from genome-wide association studies as well as from rapid progress in the genetic characterization of Mendelian immunodeficiencies that are defined by susceptibility to specific pathogens. It is expected that current efforts to characterize rare human genetic variants will contribute to the understanding of severe manifestations of common infections in European and other human groups.
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Breast milk transmission of HIV remains an important mode of infant HIV acquisition. Enhancement of mucosal HIV-specific immune responses in milk of HIV-infected mothers through vaccination may reduce milk virus load or protect against virus transmission in the infant gastrointestinal tract. However, the ability of HIV/SIV strategies to induce virus-specific immune responses in milk has not been studied. In this study, five uninfected, hormone-induced lactating, Mamu A*01(+) female rhesus monkey were systemically primed and boosted with rDNA and the attenuated poxvirus vector, NYVAC, containing the SIVmac239 gag-pol and envelope genes. The monkeys were boosted a second time with a recombinant Adenovirus serotype 5 vector containing matching immunogens. The vaccine-elicited immunodominant epitope-specific CD8(+) T lymphocyte response in milk was of similar or greater magnitude than that in blood and the vaginal tract but higher than that in the colon. Furthermore, the vaccine-elicited SIV Gag-specific CD4(+) and CD8(+) T lymphocyte polyfunctional cytokine responses were more robust in milk than in blood after each virus vector boost. Finally, SIV envelope-specific IgG responses were detected in milk of all monkeys after vaccination, whereas an SIV envelope-specific IgA response was only detected in one vaccinated monkey. Importantly, only limited and transient increases in the proportion of activated or CCR5-expressing CD4(+) T lymphocytes in milk occurred after vaccination. Therefore, systemic DNA prime and virus vector boost of lactating rhesus monkeys elicits potent virus-specific cellular and humoral immune responses in milk and may warrant further investigation as a strategy to impede breast milk transmission of HIV.
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Purpose: We previously demonstrated efficient retinal rescue of RPE65 mouse models (Rpe65-/- (Bemelmans et al, 2006) and Rpe65R91W/R91W mice) using a HIV1-derived lentiviral vector encoding for the mouse RPE65 cDNA. In order to optimize a lentiviral vector as an alternative tool for RPE65-derived Leber Congenital Amaurosis clinical trials, we evaluated the efficiency of an integration-deficient lentiviral vector (IDLV) encoding the human RPE65 cDNA to restore retinal function in the Rpe65R91W/R91W mice. Methods: An HIV-1-derived lentiviral vector expressing either the hrGFPII or the human Rpe65 cDNA under the control of a 0.8 kb fragment of the human Rpe65 promoter (R0.8) was produced by transient transfection of 293T cells. A LQ-integrase mutant was used to generate the IDLV vectors. IDLV-R0.8-hRPE65 or hrGFPII were injected subretinally into 1 month-old Rpe65R91W/R91W mice. Functional rescue was assessed by ERG (1 and 3 months post-injection) and cone survival by immunohistology. Results: An increased light sensitivity was detected by scotopic ERG in animals injected with IDLV-R0.8-hRPE65 compared to hrGFPII-treated animals or untreated mice. However the improvement was delayed compared to integration-proficient LV and observed at 3 months but not 1 month post-injection. Immunolabelling of cone markers showed an increased number of cones in the transduced area compared to control groups. Conclusions: The IDLV-R0.8-hRPE65 vectors allow retinal improvement in the Rpe65R91W/R91W mice. Both rod function and cone survival were demonstrated even if there is a delay in the rescue as assessed by scotopic ERG. Integration-deficient vectors minimize insertional mutagenesis and thus are safer candidates for human application. Further experiments using large animals are now needed to validate correct gene transfer and expression of the RPE65 gene as well as tolerance of the vector after subretinal injection before envisaging a clinical trial application.
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The decision-making process regarding drug dose, regularly used in everyday medical practice, is critical to patients' health and recovery. It is a challenging process, especially for a drug with narrow therapeutic ranges, in which a medical doctor decides the quantity (dose amount) and frequency (dose interval) on the basis of a set of available patient features and doctor's clinical experience (a priori adaptation). Computer support in drug dose administration makes the prescription procedure faster, more accurate, objective, and less expensive, with a tendency to reduce the number of invasive procedures. This paper presents an advanced integrated Drug Administration Decision Support System (DADSS) to help clinicians/patients with the dose computing. Based on a support vector machine (SVM) algorithm, enhanced with the random sample consensus technique, this system is able to predict the drug concentration values and computes the ideal dose amount and dose interval for a new patient. With an extension to combine the SVM method and the explicit analytical model, the advanced integrated DADSS system is able to compute drug concentration-to-time curves for a patient under different conditions. A feedback loop is enabled to update the curve with a new measured concentration value to make it more personalized (a posteriori adaptation).
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Social life is generally associated with an increased exposure to pathogens and parasites, due to factors such as high population density, frequent physical contact and the use of perennial nest sites. However, sociality also permits the evolution of new collective behavioural defences. Wood ants, Formica paralugubris, commonly bring back pieces of solidified coniferous resin to their nest. Many birds and a few mammals also incorporate green plant material into their nests. Collecting plant material rich in volatile compounds might be an efficient way to fight bacteria and fungi. However, no study has demonstrated that this behaviour has a positive effect on survival. Here, we provide the first experimental evidence that animals using plant compounds with antibacterial and antifungal properties survive better when exposed to detrimental micro-organisms. The presence of resin strongly improves the survival of F. paralugubris adults and larvae exposed to the bacteria Pseudomonas fluorescens, and the survival of larvae exposed to the entomopathogenic fungus Metarhizium anisopliae. These results show that wood ants capitalize on the chemical defences which have evolved in plants to collectively protect themselves against pathogens.
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In peripheral tissues circadian gene expression can be driven either by local oscillators or by cyclic systemic cues controlled by the master clock in the brain's suprachiasmatic nucleus. In the latter case, systemic signals can activate immediate early transcription factors (IETFs) and thereby control rhythmic transcription. In order to identify IETFs induced by diurnal blood-borne signals, we developed an unbiased experimental strategy, dubbed Synthetic TAndem Repeat PROMoter (STAR-PROM) screening. This technique relies on the observation that most transcription factor binding sites exist at a relatively high frequency in random DNA sequences. Using STAR-PROM we identified serum response factor (SRF) as an IETF responding to oscillating signaling proteins present in human and rodent sera. Our data suggest that in mouse liver SRF is regulated via dramatic diurnal changes of actin dynamics, leading to the rhythmic translocation of the SRF coactivator Myocardin-related transcription factor-B (MRTF-B) into the nucleus.
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Despite using modern microbiological diagnostic approaches, the aetiological agents of pneumonia remain unidentified in about 50% of cases. Some bacteria that grow poorly or not at all in axenic media used in routine clinical bacteriology laboratory but which can develop inside amoebae may be the agents of these lower respiratory tract infections (RTIs) of unexplained aetiology. Such amoebae-resisting bacteria, which coevolved with amoebae to resist their microbicidal machinery, may have developed virulence traits that help them survive within human macrophages, i.e. the first line of innate immune defence in the lung. We review here the current evidence for the emerging pathogenic role of various amoebae-resisting microorganisms as agents of RTIs in humans. Specifically, we discuss the emerging pathogenic roles of Legionella-like amoebal pathogens, novel Chlamydiae (Parachlamydia acanthamoebae, Simkania negevensis), waterborne mycobacteria and Bradyrhizobiaceae (Bosea and Afipia spp.).
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Parasite population structure is often thought to be largely shaped by that of its host. In the case of a parasite with a complex life cycle, two host species, each with their own patterns of demography and migration, spread the parasite. However, the population structure of the parasite is predicted to resemble only that of the most vagile host species. In this study, we tested this prediction in the context of a vector-transmitted parasite. We sampled the haemosporidian parasite Polychromophilus melanipherus across its European range, together with its bat fly vector Nycteribia schmidlii and its host, the bent-winged bat Miniopterus schreibersii. Based on microsatellite analyses, the wingless vector, and not the bat host, was identified as the least structured population and should therefore be considered the most vagile host. Genetic distance matrices were compared for all three species based on a mitochondrial DNA fragment. Both host and vector populations followed an isolation-by-distance pattern across the Mediterranean, but not the parasite. Mantel tests found no correlation between the parasite and either the host or vector populations. We therefore found no support for our hypothesis; the parasite population structure matched neither vector nor host. Instead, we propose a model where the parasite's gene flow is represented by the added effects of host and vector dispersal patterns.
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UNLABELLED: NYVAC, a highly attenuated, replication-restricted poxvirus, is a safe and immunogenic vaccine vector. Deletion of immune evasion genes from the poxvirus genome is an attractive strategy for improving the immunogenic properties of poxviruses. Using systems biology approaches, we describe herein the enhanced immunological profile of NYVAC vectors expressing the HIV-1 clade C env, gag, pol, and nef genes (NYVAC-C) with single or double deletions of genes encoding type I (ΔB19R) or type II (ΔB8R) interferon (IFN)-binding proteins. Transcriptomic analyses of human monocytes infected with NYVAC-C, NYVAC-C with the B19R deletion (NYVAC-C-ΔB19R), or NYVAC-C with B8R and B19R deletions (NYVAC-C-ΔB8RB19R) revealed a concerted upregulation of innate immune pathways (IFN-stimulated genes [ISGs]) of increasing magnitude with NYVAC-C-ΔB19R and NYVAC-C-ΔB8RB19R than with NYVAC-C. Deletion of B8R and B19R resulted in an enhanced activation of IRF3, IRF7, and STAT1 and the robust production of type I IFNs and of ISGs, whose expression was inhibited by anti-type I IFN antibodies. Interestingly, NYVAC-C-ΔB8RB19R induced the production of much higher levels of proinflammatory cytokines (tumor necrosis factor [TNF], interleukin-6 [IL-6], and IL-8) than NYVAC-C or NYVAC-C-ΔB19R as well as a strong inflammasome response (caspase-1 and IL-1β) in infected monocytes. Top network analyses showed that this broad response mediated by the deletion of B8R and B19R was organized around two upregulated gene expression nodes (TNF and IRF7). Consistent with these findings, monocytes infected with NYVAC-C-ΔB8RB19R induced a stronger type I IFN-dependent and IL-1-dependent allogeneic CD4(+) T cell response than monocytes infected with NYVAC-C or NYVAC-C-ΔB19R. Dual deletion of type I and type II IFN immune evasion genes in NYVAC markedly enhanced its immunogenic properties via its induction of the increased expression of type I IFNs and IL-1β and make it an attractive candidate HIV vaccine vector. IMPORTANCE: NYVAC is a replication-deficient poxvirus developed as a vaccine vector against HIV. NYVAC expresses several genes known to impair the host immune defenses by interfering with innate immune receptors, cytokines, or interferons. Given the crucial role played by interferons against viruses, we postulated that targeting the type I and type II decoy receptors used by poxvirus to subvert the host innate immune response would be an attractive approach to improve the immunogenicity of NYVAC vectors. Using systems biology approaches, we report that deletion of type I and type II IFN immune evasion genes in NYVAC poxvirus resulted in the robust expression of type I IFNs and interferon-stimulated genes (ISGs), a strong activation of the inflammasome, and upregulated expression of IL-1β and proinflammatory cytokines. Dual deletion of type I and type II IFN immune evasion genes in NYVAC poxvirus improves its immunogenic profile and makes it an attractive candidate HIV vaccine vector.
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Laboratory and field experiments have demonstrated in many cases that malaria vectors do not feed randomly, but show important preferences either for infected or non-infected hosts. These preferences are likely in part shaped by the costs imposed by the parasites on both their vertebrate and dipteran hosts. However, the effect of changes in vector behaviour on actual parasite transmission remains a debated issue. We used the natural associations between a malaria-like parasite Polychromophilus murinus, the bat fly Nycteribia kolenatii and a vertebrate host the Daubenton's bat Myotis daubentonii to test the vector's feeding preference based on the host's infection status using two different approaches: 1) controlled behavioural assays in the laboratory where bat flies could choose between a pair of hosts; 2) natural bat fly abundance data from wild-caught bats, serving as an approximation of realised feeding preference of the bat flies. Hosts with the fewest infectious stages of the parasite were most attractive to the bat flies that did switch in the behavioural assay. In line with the hypothesis of costs imposed by parasites on their vectors, bat flies carrying parasites had higher mortality. However, in wild populations, bat flies were found feeding more based on the bat's body condition, rather than its infection level. Though the absolute frequency of host switches performed by the bat flies during the assays was low, in the context of potential parasite transmission they were extremely high. The decreased survival of infected bat flies suggests that the preference for less infected hosts is an adaptive trait. Nonetheless, other ecological processes ultimately determine the vector's biting rate and thus transmission. Inherent vector preferences therefore play only a marginal role in parasite transmission in the field. The ecological processes rather than preferences per se need to be identified for successful epidemiological predictions.
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Les bactéries du genre Pseudomonas ont la capacité étonnante de s'adapter à différents habitats et d'y survivre, ce qui leur a permis de conquérir un large éventail de niches écologiques et d'interagir avec différents organismes hôte. Les espèces du groupe Pseudomonas fluorescens peuvent être facilement isolées de la rhizosphère et sont communément connues comme des Pseudomonas bénéfiques pour les plantes. Elles sont capables d'induire la résistance systémique des plantes, d'induire leur croissance et de contrer des phytopathogènes du sol. Un sous-groupe de ces Pseudomonas a de plus développé la capacité d'infecter et de tuer certaines espèces d'insectes. Approfondir les connaissances sur l'interaction de ces bactéries avec les insectes pourraient conduire au développement de nouveaux biopesticides pour la protection des cultures. Le but de cette thèse est donc de mieux comprendre la base moléculaire, l'évolution et la régulation de la pathogénicité des Pseudomonas plante-bénéfiques envers les insectes. Plus spécifiquement, ce travail a été orienté sur l'étude de la production de la toxine insecticide appelée Fit et sur l'indentification d'autres facteurs de virulence participant à la toxicité de la bactérie envers les insectes. Dans la première partie de ce travail, la régulation de la production de la toxine Fit a été évaluée par microscopie à épifluorescence en utilisant des souches rapportrices de Pseudomonas protegens CHA0 qui expriment la toxine insecticide fusionnée à une protéine fluorescente rouge, au site natif du gène de la toxine. Celle-ci a été détectée uniquement dans l'hémolymphe des insectes et pas sur les racines des plantes, ni dans les milieux de laboratoire standards, indiquant une production dépendante de l'hôte. L'activation de la production de la toxine est contrôlée par trois protéines régulatrices dont l'histidine kinase FitF, essentielle pour un contrôle précis de l'expression et possédant un domaine "senseur" similaire à celui de la kinase DctB qui régule l'absorption de carbone chez les Protéobactéries. Il est donc probable que, durant l'évolution de FitF, un réarrangement de ce domaine "senseur" largement répandu ait contribué à une production hôte-spécifique de la toxine. Les résultats de cette étude suggèrent aussi que l'expression de la toxine Fit est plutôt réprimée en présence de composés dérivés des plantes qu'induite par la perception d'un signal d'insecte spécifique. Dans la deuxième partie de ce travail, des souches mutantes ciblant des facteurs de virulence importants identifiés dans des pathogènes connus ont été générées, dans le but d'identifier ceux avec une virulence envers les insectes atténuée. Les résultats ont suggéré que l'antigène O du lipopolysaccharide (LPS) et le système régulateur à deux composantes PhoP/PhoQ contribuent significativement à la virulence de P. protegens CHA0. La base génétique de la biosynthèse de l'antigène O dans les Pseudomonas plante-bénéfiques et avec une activité insecticide a été élucidée et a révélé des différences considérables entre les lignées suite à des pertes de gènes ou des acquisitions de gènes par transfert horizontal durant l'évolution de certaines souches. Les chaînes latérales du LPS ont été montrées comme vitales pour une infection des insectes réussie par la souche CHA0, après ingestion ou injection. Les Pseudomonas plante-bénéfiques, avec une activité insecticide sont naturellement résistants à la polymyxine B, un peptide antimicrobien modèle. La protection contre ce composé antimicrobien particulier dépend de la présence de l'antigène O et de la modification du lipide A, une partie du LPS, avec du 4-aminoarabinose. Comme les peptides antimicrobiens cationiques jouent un rôle important dans le système immunitaire des insectes, l'antigène O pourrait être important chez les Pseudomonas insecticides pour surmonter les mécanismes de défense de l'hôte. Le système PhoP/PhoQ, connu pour contrôler les modifications du lipide A chez plusieurs bactéries pathogènes, a été identifié chez Pseudomonas chlororaphis PCL1391 et P. protegens CHA0. Pour l'instant, il n'y a pas d'évidence que des modifications du lipide A contribuent à la pathogénicité de cette bactérie envers les insectes. Cependant, le senseur-kinase PhoQ est requis pour une virulence optimale de la souche CHA0, ce qui suggère qu'il régule aussi l'expression des facteurs de virulence de cette bactérie. Les découvertes de cette thèse démontrent que certains Pseudomonas associés aux plantes sont de véritables pathogènes d'insectes et donnent quelques indices sur l'évolution de ces microbes pour survivre dans l'insecte-hôte et éventuellement le tuer. Les résultats suggèrent également qu'une recherche plus approfondie est nécessaire pour comprendre comment ces bactéries sont capables de contourner ou surmonter la réponse immunitaire de l'hôte et de briser les barrières physiques pour envahir l'insecte lors d'une infection orale. Pour cela, les futures études ne devraient pas uniquement se concentrer sur le côté bactérien de l'interaction hôte-microbe, mais aussi étudier l'infection du point de vue de l'hôte. Les connaissances gagnées sur la pathogénicité envers les insectes des Pseudomonas plante-bénéfiques donnent un espoir pour une future application en agriculture, pour protéger les plantes, non seulement contre les maladies, mais aussi contre les insectes ravageurs. -- Pseudomonas bacteria have the astonishing ability to survive within and adapt to different habitats, which has allowed them to conquer a wide range of ecological niches and to interact with different host organisms. Species of the Pseudomonas fluorescens group can readily be isolated from plant roots and are commonly known as plant-beneficial pseudomonads. They are capable of promoting plant growth, inducing systemic resistance in the plant host and antagonizing soil-borne phytopathogens. A defined subgroup of these pseudomonads evolved in addition the ability to infect and kill certain insect species. Profound knowledge about the interaction of these particular bacteria with insects could lead to the development of novel biopesticides for crop protection. This thesis thus aimed at a better understanding of the molecular basis, evolution and regulation of insect pathogenicity in plant-beneficial pseudomonads. More specifically, it was outlined to investigate the production of an insecticidal toxin termed Fit and to identify additional factors contributing to the entomopathogenicity of the bacteria. In the first part of this work, the regulation of Fit toxin production was probed by epifluorescence microscopy using reporter strains of Pseudomonas protegens CHAO that express a fusion between the insecticidal toxin and a red fluorescent protein in place of the native toxin gene. The bacterium was found to express its insecticidal toxin only in insect hemolymph but not on plant roots or in common laboratory media. The host-dependent activation of Fit toxin production is controlled by three local regulatory proteins. The histidine kinase of this regulatory system, FitF, is essential for the tight control of toxin expression and shares a sensing domain with DctB, a sensor kinase regulating carbon uptake in Proteobacteria. It is therefore likely that shuffling of a ubiquitous sensor domain during the evolution of FitF contributed to host- specific production of the Fit toxin. Findings of this study additionally suggest that host-specific expression of the Fit toxin is mainly achieved by repression in the presence of plant-derived compounds rather than by induction upon perceiving an insect-specific signal molecule. In the second part of this thesis, mutant strains were generated that lack factors previously shown to be important for virulence in prominent pathogens. A screening for attenuation in insect virulence suggested that lipopolysaccharide (LPS) O-antigen and the PhoP-PhoQ two-component regulatory system significantly contribute to virulence of P. protegens CHAO. The genetic basis of O-antigen biosynthesis in plant-beneficial pseudomonads displaying insect pathogenicity was elucidated and revealed extensive differences between lineages due to reduction and horizontal acquisition of gene clusters during the evolution of several strains. Specific 0 side chains of LPS were found to be vital for strain CHAO to successfully infect insects by ingestion or upon injection. Insecticidal pseudomonads with plant-beneficial properties were observed to be naturally resistant to polymyxin B, a model antimicrobial peptide. Protection against this particular antimicrobial compound was dependent on the presence of O-antigen and modification of the lipid A portion of LPS with 4-aminoarabinose. Since cationic antimicrobial peptides play a major role in the immune system of insects, O-antigenic polysaccharides could be important for insecticidal pseudomonads to overcome host defense mechanisms. The PhoP-PhoQ system, which is well-known to control lipid A modifications in several pathogenic bacteria, was identified in Pseudomonas chlororaphis PCL1391 and P. protegens CHAO. No evidence was found so far that lipid A modifications contribute to insect pathogenicity in this bacterium. However, the sensor kinase PhoQ was required for full virulence of strain CHAO suggesting that it additionally regulates the expression of virulence factors in this bacterium. The findings of this thesis demonstrate that certain plant-associated pseudomonads are true insect pathogens and give some insights into how these microbes evolved to survive within and eventually kill the insect host. Results however also point out that more in-depth research is needed to know how exactly these fascinating bacteria manage to bypass or overcome host immune responses and to breach physical barriers to invade insects upon oral infection. To achieve this, future studies should not only focus on the bacterial side of the microbe-host interactions but also investigate the infection from a host-oriented view. The knowledge gained about the entomopathogenicity of plant-beneficial pseudomonads gives hope for their future application in agriculture to protect plants not only against plant diseases but also against insect pests.