181 resultados para BACTEROIDES-FORSYTHUS
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Pós-graduação em Doenças Tropicais - FMB
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Objective: To characterize the microbial etiology of chronic suppurative otitis media comparing the methods of classical bacteriological culture and polymerase chain reaction.Design/Setting/Patients: Bacteriological analysis by classical culture and by molecular polymerase chain reaction of 35 effusion otitis samples from patients with cleft lip and palate attending the Hospital for Rehabilitation of Craniofacial Anomalies of the University of Sao Paulo, Bauru, Brazil.Interventions: Collection of clinical samples of otitis by effusion through the external auditory tube.Main Outcome Measure: Otolaryngologic diagnosis of chronic suppurative otitis media.Results: Positive cultures were obtained from 83% of patients. Among the 31 bacterial lineages the following were isolated. In order of decreasing frequency: Pseudomonas aeruginosa (54.9%), Staphylococcus aureus (25.9%), and Enterococcus faecalis (19.2%). No anaerobes were isolated by culture. The polymerase chain reaction was positive for one or more bacteria investigated in 97.1% of samples. Anaerobe lineages were detected by the polymerase chain reaction method, such as Fusobacterium nucleatum, Bacteroides fragilis, and Peptostreptococcus anaerobius.Conclusions: Patients with cleft lip and palate with chronic suppurative otitis media presented high frequency of bacterial infection in the middle ear. The classical bacteriological culture did not detect strict anaerobes, whose presence was identified by the polymerase chain reaction method.
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This study isolated and quantified intestinal bacteria of children with cleft palate before and after palatoplasty. A prospective study was conducted from May 2007 to September 2008 on 18 children with cleft palate, aged one to four years, of both genders, attending a tertiary cleft center in Brazil for palatoplasty, to analyze the effect of surgical palate repair on the concentration of anaerobes Bacteroides sp, Bifidobacterium sp and microaerophiles Lactobacillus sp in feces of infants with cleft palate before and 24 hours after treatment with cefazolin for palatoplasty. There was significant reduction of Lactobacillus sp (p < 0.002), Bacteroides sp (p < 0.001) and Bifidobacterium sp (p = 0.021) after palatoplasty, revealing that surgery and utilization of cefazolin significantly influenced the fecal microbiota comparing collections before and after surgery. However, due to study limitations, it was not possible to conclude that other isolated factors, such as surgical stress, anesthetics and other medications used in palatoplasty might have a significant influence on the microbiota. Considering the important participation of the intestinal microbiota on both local and systemic metabolic and immunological activities of the host, professionals should be attentive to the possible influence of these changes in patients submitted to cleft repair.
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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The occurrence of Porphyromonas gulae, Porphyromonas macacae, Fusobacterium nucleatum and Fusobacterium canifelinum in subgingival plaque from dogs with and without periodontitis as well as their antimicrobial susceptibility were evaluated. From 50 dogs with periodontitis were identified 38 P. gulae, 8 P. macacae, 26 F. nucleatum and 15 F. canifelinum, and from 50 dogs without periodontitis were identified 15 P. gulae, 12 F. nucleatum and 11 F. canifelinum. All strains were susceptible to most of the antibiotics tested, however, different resistance rates to clarithromycin, erythromycin and metronidazole among strains were observed. The role of P. gulae, P. macacae, F. nucleatum and F. canifelinum in periodontal disease of household pets needs to be defined to a better prevention and treatment of the canine periodontitis. (c) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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Zusammenfassung Die komplexe Lebensgemeinschaft des Termitendarms fasziniert die Biologen schon seit langem. Es ist bekannt, dass Termiten ihre Nahrung mit Hilfe von symbiontischen Bakterien und Protozoen verdauen können. Ohne ihre Symbionten würden sie verhungern. Das Zusammenspiel von Termiten und darmbewohnenden Mikroorganismen, zu denen Flagellaten, Bakterien, Archaebakterien und Hefen gehören, ist trotz moderner Untersuchungstechniken keineswegs vollständig aufgeklärt. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden:1) Einige kultivierte und nicht-kultivierte Bakterien charakterisiert, die an der Darmwand von Mastotermes darwiniensis lokalisiert sind. Die Darmwandbakterien wurden entweder nach Kultivierung oder direkt von der Darmwand für die Analyse der 16S rDNA verwendet. Die Sequenzierung erfolgte entweder nach DGGE oder nach Klonierung der PCR-Produkte. Die identifizierten Bakterien kann man in 7 Gruppen teilen:1: Gram-positive Bakterien mit hohem GC-Gehalt 2: Gram-positive Bakterien mit niedrigem GC-Gehalt 3: Fusobakterien-ähnliche Bakterien 4: ß-Proteobakterien5: Verrucomicrobien6: Bacteroides-ähnliche Bakterien7: Methanogene Bakterien 2) Aufgrund des Vorhandenseins des Coenzyms Deazaflavin-Derivats F420, kann man Methanbakterien mikroskopisch identifizieren und von anderen Bakterien unterscheiden, weil Methanbakterien im kurzwelligen Blaulicht blaugrün aufleuchten. Untersuchungen haben gezeigt, dass mindestens zwei Morphotypen von Methanbakterien an der Darmwand von M. darwiniensis vorkommen. Sie wurden auch über 16S rDNA Sequenzanalyse identifiziert. Ihre Lokalisierung an der Darmwand wurde durch Fluoreszenz-in-situ-Hybridsierung mit spezifischen Oligonukleotiden nachgewiesen. Schließlich konnte gezeigt werden, dass pro Gramm Termite 2,6 µg Methan pro Stunde produziert werden. 3) Bis jetzt wurden aus verschiedenen Termiten sulfatreduzierende Bakterien (SRB) isoliert. Deshalb wurde in dieser Arbeit die Verbreitung der SRB in verschiedenen Insekten untersucht. Insgesamt wurden zwei Sequenzen aus Libellenlarven (FSBO4 und FSBRO2), drei Sequenzen aus Zuckmückenlarven (FSCI, FSCII und FSC4), eine Sequenz aus Rosenkäfern (FSPa4-5) und ebenfalls eine Sequenz aus Eintagsfliegenlarven (FSB6) identifiziert. Alle identifizierten Bakterien ausser Klon FSB6, gehören zur Gattung Desulfovibrio. Klon FSB6 gehört zu der Gram-positiven Gattung Desulfotomaculum.Außerdem wurde die Sulfatreduktionsrate der SRB im Darm von Rosenkäfern (Pachnoda marginata), Holz- bzw. Sulfat-gefütterten Termiten (Mastotermes darwiniensis) und einer Reinkultur von Desulfovibrio intestinalis gemessen. Dabei konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Aktivität pro Zelle in Holz-gefütterten Termite am höchsten ist (4,9 nmol/107 Bakterien x h).
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Gut microbial acquisition during the early stage of life is an extremely important event since it affects the health status of the host. In this contest the healthy properties of the genus Bifidobacterium have a central function in newborns. The aim of this thesis was to explore the dynamics of the gut microbial colonization in newborns and to suggest possible strategies to maintain or restore a correct balance of gut bacterial population in infants. The first step of this work was to review the most recent studies on the use of probiotics and prebiotics in infants. Secondly, in order to prevent or treat intestinal disorders that may affect newborns, the capability of selected Bifidobacterium strains to reduce the amount of Enterobacteriaceae and against the infant pathogen Streptococcus agalactiae was evaluated in vitro. Furthermore, the ability of several commercial fibers to stimulate selectively the growth of bifidobacterial strains was checked. Finally, the gut microbial composition in the early stage of life in response to the intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis (IAP) against group B Streptococcus was studied using q-PCR, DGGE and next generation sequencing. The results globally showed that Bifidobacterium breve B632 strain is the best candidate for the use in a synbiotic product coupled to a mixture of two selected prebiotic fibers (galactooligosaccharides and fructooligosaccharides) for gastrointestinal disorders in infants. Moreover, the early gut microbial composition was affected by IAP treatment with infants showing lower counts of Bifidobacterium spp. and Bacteroides spp. coupled to a decrement of biodiversity of bacteria, compared to control infants. These studies have shown that IAP could affect the early intestinal balance in infants and they have paved the way to the definition of new strategies alternative to antibiotic treatment to control GBS infection in pregnant women.
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In NawaRo-Biogasanlagen (BGA) kann es durch das Angebot an leicht fermentierbaren Kohlenstoff¬quel¬len zu einer bakteriell bedingten Übersäuerung durch unerwünschte kurzkettige Fettsäuren kommen. Häufiger kommt es zur Akkumulation von Propionsäure. Methanogene Archaea können bei niedrigen pH-Werten nicht mehr wachsen. Somit kann der gesamte Prozess der mikrobiellen Bildung von Biogas zum Erliegen kom¬men, was für die Biogasbetreiber zu erheblichen finanziellen Verlusten führt. Das Ziel dieser Disserta¬tion war die Aufklärung der anaeroben bakteriellen Population, die in Biogasanlagen Propionsäure ab¬bauen kann. Aus Propionat entsteht dabei Acetat und Wasserstoff. Da dieser anaerobe Prozess endergon verläuft, kann Propionsäure anaerob nur abgebaut werden, wenn der Wasserstoffpartialdruck niedrig ge¬halten wird. Diese Aufgabe erfüllen in Biogasanalgen methanogene Archaea. Die sog. sekundären Gärer leben somit in synthropher Kultur mit methanogenen Archaea.rnIn dieser Arbeit wurden die Mikroorganismen von Propionsäure-abbauenden Anreicherungskulturen aus vier NawaRo-BGA‘s identifiziert und ihr Substrat- und Produktspektrum analysiert. Die Anreicherungskul¬turen wurden vom Prüf- und Forschungsinstitut e. V. in Pirmasens zur Verfügung gestellt. Durch Analyse der bakteriellen 16S rDNA-Sequenzen der erhaltenen stabilen Propionsäure-abbauenden Mischkulturen wurde gezeigt, dass sich unter den Bakterien hauptsächlich Verwandte von den Clostridiales, aber auch Bacteroides sp., δ-, ε- so¬wie γ-Proteobakterien, Spirochäten, Synergistales und ungewöhnlicher Weise auch Thermotogales befanden. Aus Propionsäure-abbauenden Mischkulturen und aus Fermentern mesophiler NawaRo-Biogasanlagen wurden anaerobe Bakterien und methanogene Archaea angereichert und isoliert. Es wurden aus den Propionsäure-abbauenden Mischkulturen Stämme in Reinkultur erhalten, die entsprechend der 16S rDNA-Analyse als Clostridium sartagoforme Stamm Ap1a520 und Proteiniphilum acetatigenes Stamm Fp1a520 identifiziert wurden. Sowohl aus Fermentern und Nachgärern von drei NawaRo-BGA‘s als auch aus zwei Laborfermentern des Leibniz-Instituts für Agrartechnik in Potsdam-Bornim e.V. (ATB) wurden Reinkulturen von methanogenen Archaea erhalten. Diese konnten den Species Methanobacterium formicicum, Metha¬noculleus bourgensis, Methanosarcina barkeri, Methanosarcina mazei, Methanosarcina sp., Methanosaeta concilii und Methanomethylovorans sp. zugeordnet werden. Damit wurden in dieser Arbeit unter anderem die typischen bisher nur durch molekularbiologische Methoden identifizierten Species methanogener Ar¬chaea aus unterschiedlichen Fermentern in Reinkultur erhalten. Dabei wurde gezeigt, dass die specifically amplified polymorphic DNA-PCR (SAPD-PCR) eine geeignete Methode darstellt, Stämme der gleichen Art methanogener Archaea voneinander zu unterscheiden. Die Methanproduktion der kultivierten methanoge¬nen Archaea wurde gaschromatographisch analysiert. Es zeigte sich, dass die hydrogenotrophe Metha¬nogenese der effizientere und ergiebigere Weg zur Bildung von Methan ist. Mit der Bestimmung der Zellzahl des Isolates Methanoculleus bourgensis Stamm TAF1.1 bei gleichzeitiger Messung der Methanbildung wurde gezeigt, dass die Methanbildung nicht zwangsläufig mit dem Wachstum korreliert. Ne-ben Pflanzenfasern beinhalteten das hergestellte Reaktorfiltrat in den Kultivierungsansätzen Acetat, die essentielle Aminosäure Valin und den Zuckeralkohol Glycerol. Gezielte Misch¬kul¬turen von sekundären Gärern mit methanogenen Isolaten ergaben einen fördernden Einfluss auf diese Bak¬terien durch hydrogenotrophe Archaea. Diese Bakterien bauten Substrate ab oder bildeten Produkte, die sie unter den gegebenen Bedingungen ohne hydrogenotrophe Archaea nicht umsetzen konnten.
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With the advent of high through-put sequencing (HTS), the emerging science of metagenomics is transforming our understanding of the relationships of microbial communities with their environments. While metagenomics aims to catalogue the genes present in a sample through assessing which genes are actively expressed, metatranscriptomics can provide a mechanistic understanding of community inter-relationships. To achieve these goals, several challenges need to be addressed from sample preparation to sequence processing, statistical analysis and functional annotation. Here we use an inbred non-obese diabetic (NOD) mouse model in which germ-free animals were colonized with a defined mixture of eight commensal bacteria, to explore methods of RNA extraction and to develop a pipeline for the generation and analysis of metatranscriptomic data. Applying the Illumina HTS platform, we sequenced 12 NOD cecal samples prepared using multiple RNA-extraction protocols. The absence of a complete set of reference genomes necessitated a peptide-based search strategy. Up to 16% of sequence reads could be matched to a known bacterial gene. Phylogenetic analysis of the mapped ORFs revealed a distribution consistent with ribosomal RNA, the majority from Bacteroides or Clostridium species. To place these HTS data within a systems context, we mapped the relative abundance of corresponding Escherichia coli homologs onto metabolic and protein-protein interaction networks. These maps identified bacterial processes with components that were well-represented in the datasets. In summary this study highlights the potential of exploiting the economy of HTS platforms for metatranscriptomics.
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Background: The bacterial colonization of the oral mucosa was evaluated in patients with asymptomatic oral lichen planus (OLP) and compared to the microbiologic status in mucosally healthy subjects. Methods: Bacteria from patients with clinically and histopathologically diagnosed OLP from the Stomatology Service, Department of Oral Surgery and Stomatology, School of Dental Medicine, University of Bern, were collected with a non-invasive swab system. Samples were taken from OLP lesions on the gingiva and from non-affected sites on the contralateral side of the mouth. The control population did not have OLP and was recruited from the student clinic. All samples were processed with the checkerboard DNA-DNA hybridization method using well-defined bacterial species for the analysis. Results: Significantly higher bacterial counts of Bacteroides ureolyticus (P = 0.001), Dialister species (sp.) (P = 0.006), Staphylococcus haemolyticus (P = 0.007), and Streptococcus agalactiae (P = 0.006) were found in samples taken from OLP lesions compared to sites with no clinical evidence of OLP. Significantly higher bacterial counts were found for Capnocytophaga sputigena, Eikenella corrodens, Lactobacillus crispatus, Mobiluncus curtisii, Neisseria mucosa, Prevotella bivia, Prevotella intermedia, and S. agalactiae at sites with lesions in subjects with OLP compared to sites in control subjects (P <0.001). Conclusions: Microbiologic differences were found between sites with OLP and sites in subjects without a diagnosis of OLP. Specifically, higher counts of staphylococci and S. agalactiae were found in OLP lesions.
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Escherichia coli O157:H7 is a food-borne pathogen causing hemorrhagic colitis and hemolytic-uremic syndrome, especially in children. The main virulence factor responsible for the more serious disease is the Shiga toxin 2 (Stx2), which is released in the gut after oral ingestion of the organism. Although it is accepted that the amount of Stx2 produced by E. coli O157:H7 in the gut is critical for the development of disease, the eukaryotic or prokaryotic gut factors that modulate Stx2 synthesis are largely unknown. In this study, we examined the influence of prokaryotic molecules released by a complex human microbiota on Stx2 synthesis by E. coli O157:H7. Stx2 synthesis was assessed after growth of E. coli O157:H7 in cecal contents of gnotobiotic rats colonized with human microbiota or in conditioned medium having supported the growth of complex human microbiota. Extracellular prokaryotic molecules produced by the commensal microbiota repress stx(2) mRNA expression and Stx2 production by inhibiting the spontaneous and induced lytic cycle mediated by RecA. These molecules, with a molecular mass of below 3 kDa, are produced in part by Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron, a predominant species of the normal human intestinal microbiota. The microbiota-induced stx(2) repression is independent of the known quorum-sensing pathways described in E. coli O157:H7 involving SdiA, QseA, QseC, or autoinducer 3. Our findings demonstrate for the first time the regulatory activity of a soluble factor produced by the complex human digestive microbiota on a bacterial virulence factor in a physiologically relevant context.
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BACKGROUND: The objective of this study was to assess the oral microbiota and clinical data in subjects without access to traditional oral hygiene methods and who ate a diet available in the Stone Age. METHODS: Ten subjects living in an environment replicating the Stone Age for 4 weeks were enrolled in this study. Bleeding on probing (BOP), gingival and plaque indices, and probing depth (PD) were assessed at baseline and at 4 weeks. Microbiologic samples were collected at the mesio-buccal subgingival aspects of all teeth and from the dorsum of the tongue and were processed by checkerboard DNA-DNA hybridization methods. RESULTS: No subject had periodontitis. Mean BOP decreased from 34.8% to 12.6% (P <0.001). Mean gingival index scores changed from 0.38 to 0.43 (not statistically significant) and mean plaque scores increased from 0.68 to 1.47 (P <0.001). PD at sites of subgingival sampling decreased (mean difference: 0.2 mm; P <0.001). At week 4, the total bacterial count was higher (P <0.001) for 24 of 74 species, including Bacteroides ureolyticus, Eikenella corrodens, Lactobacillus acidophilus, Capnocytophaga ochracea, Escherichia coli, Fusobacterium nucleatum naviforme, Haemophilus influenzae, Helicobacter pylori, Porphyromonas endodontalis, Staphylococcus aureus (two strains), Streptococcus agalactiae, Streptococcus anginosis, and Streptococcus mitis. Bacterial counts from tongue samples were higher at baseline (P <0.001) for 20 species, including Tannerella forsythia (previously T. forsythensis), Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans (previously Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans; serotype a), and Streptococcus spp. CONCLUSIONS: The experimental gingivitis protocol is not applicable if the diet (e.g., Stone Age) does not include refined sugars. Although plaque levels increased, BOP and PD decreased. Subgingival bacterial counts increased for several species not linked to periodontitis, whereas tongue bacterial samples decreased during the study period.
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OBJECTIVE To analyze the subgingival microflora composition of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients with untreated chronic periodontitis and compare them with systemically healthy controls also having untreated chronic periodontitis. METHOD Thirty IBD patients [15 with Crohn's disease (CD) and 15 with ulcerative colitis (UC)] and 15 control individuals participated in the study. All patients had been diagnosed with untreated chronic periodontitis. From every patient, subgingival plaque was collected from four gingivitis and four periodontitis sites with paper points. Samples from the same category (gingivitis or periodontitis) in each patient were pooled together and stored at -70 °C until analysis using a checkerboard DNA-DNA hybridization technique for 74 bacterial species. RESULTS Multiple-comparison analysis showed that the groups differed in bacterial counts for Bacteroides ureolyticus, Campylobacter gracilis, Parvimonas micra, Prevotella melaninogenica, Peptostreptococcus anaerobius, Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus anginosus, Streptococcus intermedius, Streptococcus mitis, Streptococcus mutans, and Treponema denticola (P<0.001). CD patients had significantly higher levels of these bacteria than UC patients either in gingivitis or in periodontitis sites (P<0.05). CD patients harbored higher levels of P. melaninogenica, S. aureus, S. anginosus, and S. mutans compared with controls both at gingivitis and at periodontitis sites (P<0.05). UC patients harbored higher levels of S. aureus (P=0.01) and P. anaerobius (P=0.05) than controls only in gingivitis sites. CONCLUSION Our study showed that even with similar clinical periodontal parameters, IBD patients harbor higher levels of bacteria that are related to opportunistic infections in inflamed subgingival sites that might be harmful for the crucial microbe-host interaction.