990 resultados para gastrointestinal infection
Resumo:
During systemic disease in mice, Salmonella enterica grows intracellularly within discrete foci of infection in the spleen and liver. In concomitant infections, foci containing different S. enterica strains are spatially separated. We have investigated whether functional interactions between bacterial populations within the same host can occur despite the known spatial separation of the foci and independence of growth of salmonellae residing in different foci. In this study we have demonstrated that bacterial numbers of virulent S. enterica serovar Typhimurium C5 strain in mouse tissues can be increased by the presence of the attenuated aroA S. Typhimurium SL3261 vaccine strain in the same tissue. Disease exacerbation does not require simultaneous coinjection of the attenuated bacteria. SL3261 can be administered up to 48 hr after or 24 hr before the administration of C5 and still determine higher tissue numbers of the virulent bacteria. This indicates that intravenous administration of a S. enterica vaccine strain could potentially exacerbate an established infection with wild-type bacteria. These data also suggest that the severity of an infection with a virulent S. enterica strain can be increased by the prior administration of a live attenuated vaccine strain if infection occurs within 48 hr of vaccination. Exacerbation of the growth of C5 requires Toll-like receptor 4-dependent interleukin-10 production with the involvement of both Toll/interleukin-1 receptor-domain-containing adaptor inducing interferon-beta and myeloid differentiation factor 88.
Resumo:
Growth of Salmonella enterica in mammalian tissues results from continuous spread of bacteria to new host cells. Our previous work indicated that infective S. enterica are liberated from host cells via stochastic necrotic burst independently of intracellular bacterial numbers. Here we report that liver phagocytes can undergo apoptotic caspase-3-mediated cell death in vivo, with apoptosis being a rare event, more prevalent in heavily infected cells. The density-dependent apoptotic cell death is likely to constitute an alternative mechanism of bacterial spread as part of a bet-hedging strategy, ensuring an ongoing protective intracellular environment in which some bacteria can grow and persist.
Resumo:
Salmonella enterica causes a range of life-threatening diseases in humans and animals worldwide. Current treatments for S. enterica infections are not sufficiently effective, and there is a need to develop new vaccines and therapeutics. An understanding of how S. enterica spreads in tissues has very important implications for targeting bacteria with vaccine-induced immune responses and antimicrobial drugs. Development of new control strategies would benefit from a more sophisticated evaluation of bacterial location, spatiotemporal patterns of spread and distribution in the tissues, and sites of microbial persistence. We review here recent studies of S. enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium) infections in mice, an established model of systemic typhoid fever in humans, which suggest that continuous bacterial spread to new infection foci and host phagocytes is an essential trait in the virulence of S. enterica during systemic infections. We further highlight how infections within host tissues are truly heterogeneous processes despite the fact that they are caused by the expansion of a genetically homogeneous microbial population. We conclude by discussing how understanding the within-host quantitative, spatial and temporal dynamics of S. enterica infections might aid the development of novel targeted preventative measures and drug regimens.
Resumo:
Background: Gastrointestinal stromal tumours (GISTs) are the most common primary mesenchymal neoplasia in the gastrointestinal tract, although they represent only a small fraction of total gastrointestinal malignancies in adults (<2%). GISTs can be located at any level of the gastrointestinal tract; the stomach is the most common location (60-70%), in contrast to the rectum, which is most rare (4%). When a GIST invades into the adjacent prostate tissue, it can simulate prostate cancer. In this study, we report on a case comprising the unexpected collision between a rectal GIST tumour and a prostatic adenocarcinoma. Findings: We describe the complexity of the clinical, endoscopic and radiological diagnosis, of the differential diagnosis based on tumour biopsy, and of the role of neoadjuvant therapy using imatinib prior to surgical treatment. Conclusions: Although isolated cases of coexisting GISTs and prostatic adenocarcinomas have reviously been described, this is the first reported case in the medical literature of a collision tumour involving a rectal GIST and prostatic adenocarcinoma components.
Resumo:
The commensal microbiota impacts specific immune cell populations and their functions at peripheral sites, such as gut mucosal tissues. However, it remains unknown whether gut microbiota control immunity through regulation of hematopoiesis at primary immune sites. We reveal that germ-free mice display reduced proportions and differentiation potential of specific myeloid cell progenitors of both yolk sac and bone marrow origin. Homeostatic innate immune defects may lead to impaired early responses to pathogens. Indeed, following systemic infection with Listeria monocytogenes, germ-free and oral antibiotic-treated mice display increased pathogen burden and acute death. Recolonization of germ-free mice with a complex microbiota restores defects in myelopoiesis and resistance to Listeria. These findings reveal that gut bacteria direct innate immune cell development via promoting hematopoiesis, contributing to our appreciation of the deep evolutionary connection between mammals and their microbiota.
Resumo:
Biological information storage and retrieval is a dynamic process that requires the genome to undergo dramatic structural rearrangements. Recent advances in single-molecule techniques have allowed precise quantification of the nano-mechanical properties of DNA [1, 2], and direct in vivo observation of molecules in action [3]. In this work, we will examine elasticity in protein-mediated DNA looping, whose structural rearrangement is essential for transcriptional regulation in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. We will look at hydrodynamics in the process of viral DNA ejection, which mediates information transfer and exchange and has prominent implications in evolution. As in the case of Kepler's laws of planetary motion leading to Newton's gravitational theory, and the allometric scaling laws in biology revealing the organizing principles of complex networks [4], experimental data collapse in these biological phenomena has guided much of our studies and urged us to find the underlying physical principles.
Resumo:
Part I
The infection of E. coli by ΦX174 at 15°C is abortive; the cells are killed by the infection but neither mature phage nor SS (single-stranded) DNA are synthesized. Parental RF (replicative form) is formed and subsequently replicated at 15°C. The RF made at 15°C shows normal infectivity and full competence to act as precursor to progeny SS DNA after an increase in temperature to 37°C. The investigations suggest that all of the proteins required for SS DNA synthesis and phage maturation are present in the abortive infection at 15°C.
Three possible causes are suggested for the abortive infection at 15°C: (a) A virus-coded protein whose role is essential to the infection is made at 15°C and assumes its native conformation, but its rate of activity is too low at this temperature to sustain the infection process. (b) Virus maturation may involve the formation of a DNA-protein complex and conformational changes which have an energy threshold infrequently reached at 15°C. (c) A host-coded protein present in uninfected cells, and whose activity is essential to the infection at all temperatures, but not to the host at 15°C, is inactive at 15°C. An hypothesis of this type is offered which proposes that the temperature-limiting factor in SS DNA synthesis in vivo may reflect a temperature-dependent property of the host DNA polymerase.
Part II
Three distinct stages are demonstrated in the process whereby ΦX174 invades its host: (1) Attachment: The phage attach to the cell in a manner that does not irreversibly alter the phage particle and which exhibits "single-hit" kinetics. The total charge on the phage particle is demonstrated to be important in determining the rate at which stable attachment is effected. The proteins specified by ΦX cistrons II, III and VII play roles, which may be indirect, in the attachment reaction. (2) Eclipse: 'The attached phage undergo a conformational change. Some of the altered phage particles spontaneously detach from the cell (in a non-infective form) while the remainder are more tightly bound to the cell. The altered phage particles detached (spontaneously or chemically) from such complexes have at least 40% of their DNA extruded from the phage coat. It is proposed that this particle is, or derives from, a direct intermediate in the penetration of the viral DNA.
The kinetics for the eclipse of attached phage particles are first-order with respect to phage concentration and biphasic; about 85% of the phage eclipse at one rate (k = 0.86 min-1) and the remainder do so at a distinctly lesser rate (k = 0.21 min-1).
The eclipse event is very temperature-dependent and has the relatively high Arrhenius activation energy of 36.6 kcal/mole, indicating the cooperative nature of the process. The temperature threshold for eclipse is 17 to 18°C.
At present no specific ΦX cistron is identified as affecting the eclipse process. (3) DNA penetration: A fraction of the attached, eclipsed phage particles corresponding in number to the plaque-forming units complete DNA penetration. The penetrated DNA is found in the cell as RF, and the empty phage protein coat remains firmly attached to the exterior of the cell. This step is inhibited by prior irradiation of the phage with relatively high doses of UV light and is insensitive to the presence of KCN and NaN3. Temporally excluded superinfecting phages do not achieve DNA penetration.
Both eclipsed phage particles and empty phage protein coats may be dissociated from infected cells; some of their properties are described.
Resumo:
Objective The protein Hwp1, expressed on the pathogenic phase of Candida albicans, presents sequence analogy with the gluten protein gliadin and is also a substrate for transglutaminase. This had led to the suggestion that C. albicans infection (CI) may be a triggering factor for Celiac disease (CeD) onset. We investigated cross-immune reactivity between CeD and CI. Methods Serum IgG levels against recombinant Hwp1 and serological markers of CeD were measured in 87 CeD patients, 41 CI patients, and 98 healthy controls (HC). IgA and IgG were also measured in 20 individuals from each of these groups using microchips sensitized with 38 peptides designed from the N-terminal of Hwp1. Results CI and CeD patients had higher levels of anti-Hwp1 (p= 0.0005 and p= 0.004) and anti-gliadin (p= 0.002 and p= 0.0009) antibodies than HC but there was no significant difference between CeD and CI patients. CeD and CI patients had higher levels of anti-transglutaminase IgA than HC (p= 0.0001 and p= 0.0039). During CI, the increase in anti-Hwp1 paralleled the increase in anti-gliadin antibodies. Microchip analysis showed that CeD patients were more reactive against some Hwp1 peptides than CI patients, and that some deamidated peptides were more reactive than their native analogs. Binding of IgG from CeD patients to Hwp1 peptides was inhibited by gamma III gliadin peptides. Conclusions Humoral cross-reactivity between Hwp1 and gliadin was observed during CeD and CI. Increased reactivity to Hwp1 deamidated peptide suggests that transglutaminase is involved in this interplay. These results support the hypothesis that CI may trigger CeD onset in genetically-susceptible individuals.
Resumo:
Background: In this study we describe the clinical and molecular characteristics of an outbreak due to carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae (CR-KP) producing CTX-M-15 and OXA-48 carbapenemase. Isogenic strains, carbapenem-susceptible K. pneumoniae (CS-KP) producing CTX-M-15, were also involved in the outbreak. Results: From October 2010 to December 2012 a total of 62 CR-KP and 23 CS-KP were isolated from clinical samples of 42 patients (22 had resistant isolates, 14 had susceptible isolates, and 6 had both CR and CS isolates). All patients had underlying diseases and 17 of them (14 patients with CR-KP and 3 with CS-KP) had received carbapenems previously. The range of carbapenem MICs for total isolates were: imipenem: 2 to >32 mu g/ml vs. <2 mu g/ml; meropenem: 4 to >32 mu g/ml vs. <2 mu g/ml; and ertapenem: 8 to >32 mu g/ml vs. <2 mu g/ml. All the isolates were also resistant to gentamicin, ciprofloxacin, and cotrimoxazole. Both types of isolates shared a common PFGE pattern associated with the multilocus sequence type 101 (ST101). The bla(CTX-M-15) gene was detected in all the isolates, whereas the bla(OXA-48) gene was only detected in CR-KP isolates on a 70 kb plasmid. Conclusions: The clonal spread of K. pneumoniae ST101 expressing the OXA-48 and CTX-M-15 beta-lactamases was the cause of an outbreak of CR-KP infections. CTX-M-15-producing isolates lacking the blaOXA-48 gene coexisted during the outbreak.
Resumo:
[en]Human papillomavirus (HPV) belongs to the Papillomaviridae virus family and it is one of the most common sexual transmission infections. HPV genome is composed of eight genes, including two early genes and six late genes. Among these late genes, E6 and E7 code for proteins that trigger cell-cycle re-entry in infected cells, which can lead to cervical cancer development. The IARC (International Agency for Research Cancer) proposed a guideline based on Hill’s criteria to determine whether the relation between HPV infection and cervical cancer is causal or not. Epidemiological studies have demonstrated that HPV infection is a necessary but non-sufficient cause for cervical cancer. Furthermore, HPV infection is considered the first necessary cause described of a human cancer, being HPV16 and 18 carcinogenic to humans and the most studied types. Cervical cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death among women worldwide. Different screening programs are carried out with the aim of preventing cervical cancer; such as cytologies and HPV tests. There are two main methods which are equally usable to detect HPV: the real-time PCR assays and the array assays. Regarding the molecular mechanisms of HPV mediated malignancies, E2, E6 and E7 proteins of HPV16 lead to immune response evasion, inducing IL-10 and TGF-β1 gene expression. Besides, E6 and E7 proteins allow cell-cycle reentry, phosphorylating RB and ubiquitinating p53 respectively. HPV genome integration in host genome leads to the alteration of host and viral genes expression, including oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes. However, the differences of E6 and E7 oncoproteins in different HPV types is poorly known due to the fact that almost the most studied HPV type has been HPV16.
Resumo:
Os enterococos estão amplamente distribuídos no ambiente. Nos seres humanos, compõem a microbiota do trato gastrintestinal, da cavidade oral e do trato geniturinário. Nas últimas décadas, esses microrganismos se tornaram importantes agentes etiológicos de infecções hospitalares. Uma característica marcante desses microrganismos é a resistência intrínseca a vários antimicrobianos utilizados habitualmente no tratamento de infecções, além de alguns fatores que tem sido relacionado à virulência de enterococos. Este estudo investigou a presença de enterococos em amostras de infecção e colonização de pacientes hospitalizados, profissionais de saúde, dietas hospitalares e manipuladores de alimentos. Foram analisadas 276 amostras de colonização, de quadros de infecção, dietas orais e manipuladores de alimento. Não foram recuperadas amostras dos profissionais de saúde. Todas as amostras foram submetidas a testes convencionais de caracterização do gênero e espécies. Testes de susceptibilidade aos antimicrobianos foram empregados pelo método de disco difusão, além da CIM para vancomicina e teicoplanina. A produção de biofilme e a expressão da gelatinase também foram avaliadas. Os genes de resistência a gentamicina, estreptomicina e vancomicina e os genes de virulência cylA, esp e fsr foram pesquisados pela técnica de PCR. O polimorfismo genético foi determinado por PFGE. A espécie E. faecalis foi a prevalente nas amostras isoladas de colonização e infecção (42,2% e 81,9%, respectivamente). E. casseliflavus (58,9%) foi a mais freqüente dentre as amostras das dietas hospitalares e E. faecium (46,7%) de manipuladores. Dentre as amostras de colonização as maiores taxas de resistência foram observadas para eritromicina (76,3%) e ciprofloxacina (53,9%). Dentre as amostras de infecção, >70% foram resistentes a eritromicina, ciprofloxacina e tetraciclina. Resistência a níveis elevados de gentamcina (HLR-GE) e estreptomicina (HLR-ST) foi detectada em 24,6% e 20,4% das amostras, respectivamente, e todas foram portadoras dos respectivos genes. A maioria das amostras de colonização (52,6%) e infecção (55,7%) foram multirresistentes. A taxa para resistência a níveis elevados de vancomicina foi de 5,2% e todas eram portadoras do gene vanA. Em relação a formação de biofilme, 70,2% foram produtoras, com uma maior freqüência dentre as de infecção. A expressão de gelatinase foi detectada em 28,9% e 44,3% das amostras de colonização e infecção, respectivamente. Nenhuma das amostras isoladas das dietas hospitalares e de manipuladores expressou gelatinase. Nas amostras pertencentes as espécies E. faecalis e E. faecium (n=109) 16,5%, 51,4% e 48,6% apresentaram produtos de amplificação referentes aos genes cylA, esp e fsr, respectivamente. A análise do polimorfismo genético revelou uma extensa diversidade dentre as amostras pertencentes as espécies E. faecalis e E. faecium, não acarretando um perfil eletroforético prevalente. Entretanto, foi observado um perfil único dentre as amostras de E. gallinarum resistentes a vancomicina (vanA). Este estudo mostrou que amostras de enterococos isoladas de diferentes fontes, não só de quadros infecciosos, podem representar um risco para a população, apontando para uma maior reflexão quanto ao papel desses microrganismos nas infecções humanas, particularmente no ambiente hospitalar.
Resumo:
As leishmanioses são um grupo de doenças causadas por protozoários do gênero Leishmania spp que afetam 98 países. No Brasil, no ano de 2013, foram relatados 3.253 casos de leishmaniose visceral e 18.226 casos de Leishmaniose Tegumentar Americana. O tratamento de primeira escolha continua sendo realizado com antimoniais pentavalentes, e em casos de insucessos os fármacos de segunda escolha são a pentamidina e a anfotericina B. Tais medicamentos causam intensos efeitos adversos e ultimamente têm surgido cepas resistentes aos mesmos. Em áreas endêmicas têm sido cada vez mais comum o surgimento da co-infecção Leishmania com Mycobacterium tuberculosis. O tratamento para a tuberculose com pirazinamida (PZA) e isoniazida (INZ), controla a leishmaniose. Esses dados sugerem atividade anti-leishmania da PZA e da INZ. O objetivo deste trabalho foi avaliar a atividade in vitro da INZ e da PZA e seus compostos derivados (série G e série R, respectivamente) sobre Leishmania (Viannia) braziliensis. As moléculas foram testadas em monocamadas de macrófagos peritoneais de camunongos infectados com L. (V) braziliensis durante 48h. Todas as moléculas testadas inibiram o índice de infecção de forma dose dependente em comparação aos controles. As moléculas da série R foram mais ativas do que a PZA, porém o resultado foi significativo somente para a R02 (p < 0,005). Apenas a molécula R05 (76,64M) foi relativamente tóxica para macrófagos. Os compostos mais ativos foram R02, G01 e G02, cujos índices de seletividade foram 14,31, 19 e 30, respectivamente. A dosagem de nitrito foi feita em sobrenadantes de monocamadas de macrófagos peritoniais infectados e tratados com as substâncias nas concentrações 10 e 100M. A G01 e a G02 estimularam a produção de NO2 nas duas concentrações, entretanto o resultado foi estatisticamente significativo para a G02 em 100M (p < 0,0001), a G05 só estimulou óxido nítrico na maior concentração. Todos os compostos da série R estimularam NO2, contudo, o resultado foi estatisticamente significativo para a R03 e R05 a 100M (p < 0,001). Adicionalmente, foi realizado uma análise preditiva in sílico de parâmetros farmacocinéticos das moléculas mais ativas in vitro, utilizando o software admetSAR. Os dados obtidos mostraram que de forma semelhante às suas moléculas originais a G01, G02 e R02 apresentaram alta capacidade de serem absorvidas pelo trato gastrointestinal, baixo potencial hepatotoxico e carcinogênico. Juntos, esses dados demonstram que essas moléculas são seletivamente tóxicas para o parasito com potencial para serem testadas pela via oral em estudos em modelo experimental de infecção.