979 resultados para botulinum toxin type C
Resumo:
Aggretin, a potent platelet activator, was isolated from Calloselasma rhodostoma venom, and 30-amino acid N-terminal sequences of both subunits were determined. Aggretin belongs to the heterodimeric snake C-type lectin family and is thought to activate platelets by binding to platelet glycoprotein alpha(2)beta(1). We now show that binding to glycoprotein (GP) Ib is also required. Aggretin-induced platelet activation was inhibited by a monoclonal antibody to GPIb as well as by antibodies to alpha(2)beta(1). Binding of both of these platelet receptors to aggretin was confirmed by affinity chromatography. No binding of other major platelet membrane glycoproteins, in particular GPVI, to aggretin was detected. Aggretin also activates platelets from Fc receptor gamma chain (Fcgamma)-deficient mice to a greater extent than those from normal control mice, showing that it does not use the GPVI/Fcgamma pathway. Platelets from Fcgamma-deficient mice expressed fibrinogen receptors normally in response to collagen, although they did not aggregate, indicating that these platelets may partly compensate via other receptors including alpha(2)beta(1) or GPIb for the lack of the Fcgamma pathway. Signaling by aggretin involves a dose-dependent lag phase followed by rapid tyrosine phosphorylation of a number of proteins. Among these are p72(SYK), p125(FAK), and PLCgamma2, whereas, in comparison with collagen and convulxin, the Fcgamma subunit neither is phosphorylated nor coprecipitates with p72(SYK). This supports an independent, GPIb- and integrin-based pathway for activation of p72(SYK) not involving the Fcgamma receptor.
Resumo:
Convulxin, a powerful platelet activator, was isolated from Crotalus durissus terrificus venom, and 20 amino acid N-terminal sequences of both subunits were determined. These indicated that convulxin belongs to the heterodimeric C-type lectin family. Neither antibodies against GPIb nor echicetin had any effect on convulxin-induced platelet aggregation showing that, in contrast to other venom C-type lectins acting on platelets, GPIb is not involved in convulxin-induced platelet activation. In addition, partially reduced/denatured convulxin only affects collagen-induced platelet aggregation. The mechanism of convulxin-induced platelet activation was examined by platelet aggregation, detection of time-dependent tyrosine phosphorylation of platelet proteins, and binding studies with 125I-convulxin. Convulxin induces signal transduction in part like collagen, involving the time-dependent tyrosine phosphorylation of Fc receptor gamma chain, phospholipase Cgamma2, p72(SYK), c-Cbl, and p36-38. However, unlike collagen, pp125(FAK) and some other bands are not tyrosine-phosphorylated. Convulxin binds to a glycosylated 62-kDa membrane component in platelet lysate and to p62/GPVI immunoprecipitated by human anti-p62/GPVI antibodies. Convulxin subunits inhibit both aggregation and tyrosine phosphorylation in response to collagen. Piceatannol, a tyrosine kinase inhibitor with some specificity for p72(SYK), showed differential effects on collagen and convulxin-stimulated signaling. These results suggest that convulxin uses the p62/GPVI but not the alpha2beta1 part of the collagen signaling pathways to activate platelets. Occupation and clustering of p62/GPVI may activate Src family kinases phosphorylating Fc receptor gamma chain and, by a mechanism previously described in T- and B-cells, activate p72(SYK) that is critical for downstream activation of platelets.
Resumo:
Only a subset of Shiga toxin (Stx)-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) are human pathogens, but the characteristics that account for differences in pathogenicity are not well understood. In this study, we investigated the distribution of the stx variants coding for Stx2 and its variants in highly virulent STEC of seropathotype A and low-pathogenic STEC of seropathotype C. We analysed and compared transcription of the corresponding genes, production of Shiga toxins, and stx-phage release in basal as well as in induced conditions. We found that the stx(2) variant was mainly associated with strains of seropathotype A, whereas most of the strains of seropathotype C possessed the stx(2-vhb) variant, which was frequently associated with stx(2), stx(2-vha) or stx(2c). Levels of stx(2) and stx(2)-related mRNA were higher in strains belonging to seropathotype A and in those strains of seropathotype C that express the stx(2) variant than in the remaining strains of seropathotype C. The stx(2-vhb) genes were the least expressed, in basal as well as in induced conditions, and in many cases did not seem to be carried by an inducible prophage. A clear correlation was observed between stx mRNA levels and stx-phage DNA in the culture supernatants, suggesting that most stx(2)-related genes are expressed only when they are carried by a phage. In conclusion, some relationship between stx(2)-related gene expression in vitro and the seropathotype of the STEC strains was observed. A higher expression of the stx(2) gene and a higher release of its product, in basal as well as in induced conditions, was observed in pathogenic strains of seropathotype A. A subset of strains of seropathotype C shows the same characteristics and could be a high risk to human health.
Resumo:
BACKGROUND: Acne inversa (hidradenitis suppurativa) is a chronic inflammatory and cicatricial disorder that affects skin areas rich in apocrine glands and terminal hairs, such as perineum and axillae. The exact pathogenesis of the disease is not well understood and the mechanisms by which bacterial superinfection contributes to the disease progression are not clear. Toll-like receptors (TLRs) expressed by inflammatory cells play a crucial role in the innate immune response to bacteria. OBJECTIVES: We sought to investigate the role of TLR2 in the pathogenesis of acne inversa. METHODS: We investigated the expression of TLR2 using real-time polymerase chain reaction analysis and immunohistochemical stainings of tissue samples from patients with acne inversa. Furthermore, we phenotypically characterized the infiltrating cells and their expression of TLR2. RESULTS: Compared with normal skin, a highly increased in situ expression of TLR2 in acne inversa skin lesions was found at both the mRNA and the protein level. The most abundant cells in the dermal infiltrate of acne inversa were CD68+ macrophages, CD209+ dendritic cells (DCs) and CD3+ T cells. CD19+ B cells and CD56+ natural killer cells were found only in small numbers. Double staining with fluorescence-labelled antibodies showed that TLR2 was expressed by infiltrating macrophages (CD68+) and DCs (CD209+). Flow cytometric analysis of isolated infiltrating cells further confirmed surface expression of TLR2 by macrophages and DCs. CONCLUSIONS: These data indicate that the enhanced expression of TLR2 by infiltrating macrophages and DCs may contribute to the pathogenesis of inflammatory lesions of acne inversa.
Resumo:
Strains of Actinobacillus porcitonsillarum are regularly isolated from the tonsils of healthy pigs. A. porcitonsillarum is non pathogenic but phenotypically it strongly resembles the pathogenic species Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae, thereby interfering with the diagnosis of the latter. A. porcitonsillarum is hemolytic but unlike A. pleuropneumoniae, it contains only apxII genes and not apxI or apxIII genes. In contrast to the truncated apxII operon of A. pleuropneumoniae, which lacks the type I secretion genes BD, characterization of the apxII operon in A. porcitonsillarum revealed that it contains an intact and complete apxII operon. This shows a typical RTX operon structure with the gene arrangement apxIICABD. The region upstream of the apxII operon is also different from that in A. pleuropneumoniae and contains an additional gene, aspC, encoding a putative aspartate aminotransferase. Trans-complementation experiments in Escherichia coli and A. pleuropneumoniae indicated that the entire apxII operon of A. porcitonsillarum is sufficient to express and secrete the ApxIIA toxin and that the ApxIIA toxin of A. pleuropneumoniae can be secreted by the type I secretion system encoded by apxIIBD. These findings suggest that the complete apxII operon found in A. porcitonsillarum might be an ancestor of the truncated homologue found in A. pleuropneumoniae. The genetic context of the apxII locus in A. porcitonsillarum and A. pleuropneumoniae suggests that in the latter, the contemporary truncated operon is the result of a recombination event within the species, rather than a horizontal transfer of an incomplete operon.
Resumo:
An ADP-ribosylating toxin named Aeromonas salmonicida exoenzyme T (AexT) in A. salmonicida subsp. salmonicida, the etiological agent of furunculosis in fish, was characterized. Gene aexT, encoding toxin AexT, was cloned and characterized by sequence analysis. AexT shows significant sequence similarity to the ExoS and ExoT exotoxins of Pseudomonas aeruginosa and to the YopE cytotoxin of different Yersinia species. The aexT gene was detected in all of the 12 A. salmonicida subsp. salmonicida strains tested but was absent from all other Aeromonas species. Recombinant AexT produced in Escherichia coli possesses enzymatic ADP-ribosyltransferase activity. Monospecific polyclonal antibodies directed against purified recombinant AexT detected the toxin produced by A. salmonicida subsp. salmonicida and cross-reacted with ExoS and ExoT of P. aeruginosa. AexT toxin could be detected in a wild type (wt) strain of A. salmonicida subsp. salmonicida freshly isolated from a fish with furunculosis; however, its expression required contact with RTG-2 rainbow trout gonad cells. Under these conditions, the AexT protein was found to be intracellular or tightly cell associated. No AexT was found when A. salmonicida subsp. salmonicida was incubated in cell culture medium in the absence of RTG-2 cells. Upon infection with wt A. salmonicida subsp. salmonicida, the fish gonad RTG-2 cells rapidly underwent significant morphological changes. These changes were demonstrated to constitute cell rounding, which accompanied induction of production of AexT and which led to cell lysis after extended incubation. An aexT mutant which was constructed from the wt strain with an insertionally inactivated aexT gene by allelic exchange had no toxic effect on RTG-2 cells and was devoid of AexT production. Hence AexT is directly involved in the toxicity of A. salmonicida subsp. salmonicida for RTG-2 fish cells.
Resumo:
Avibacterium paragallinarum, the etiological agent of infectious coryza in chicken, was found to encode a bivalent serine-protease - RTX-porin toxin named AvxA. This toxin is encoded on a classical RTX operon structure with the activator gene avxC, the structural serin-protease-RTX toxin gene avxA, and the genes for a proper type I secretion system avxBD. AvxA is activated by the product of the avxC gene, secreted by the avxBD specified type I secretion system and proteolytically processed leaving a 95 kDa RTX moiety that is found in culture supernatants of A. paragallinarum serovars A, B and C. The RTX moiety of AvxA (AvxA-RTX) is cytotoxic against the avian macrophage like cell line HD11 but not against bovine macrophage cell line BoMac. Purified IgG from hyper-immune rabbit anti-AvxA-RTX serum made by immunization with recombinant AvxA-RTX from a serotype A strain fully neutralizes the cytotoxic activity of recombinant active AvxA-RTX and of A. paragallinarum serotypes A, B and C. This indicates that AvxA is a common major virulence attribute of all A. paragallinarum serotypes.
Resumo:
Rigid electron donor-acceptor conjugates (1-3) that combine -extended benzodifurans as electron donors and C-60 molecules as electron acceptors with different linkers have been synthesized and investigated with respect to intramolecular charge-transfer events. Electrochemistry, fluorescence, and transient absorption measurements revealed tunable and structure-dependent charge-transfer processes in the ground and excited states. Our experimental findings are underpinned by density-functional theory calculations.
Resumo:
Glycogen is a major substrate in energy metabolism and particularly important to prevent hypoglycemia in pathologies of glucose homeostasis such as type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM). (13) C-MRS is increasingly used to determine glycogen in skeletal muscle and liver non-invasively; however, the low signal-to-noise ratio leads to long acquisition times, particularly when glycogen levels are determined before and after interventions. In order to ease the requirements for the subjects and to avoid systematic effects of the lengthy examination, we evaluated if a standardized preparation period would allow us to shift the baseline (pre-intervention) experiments to a preceding day. Based on natural abundance (13) C-MRS on a clinical 3 T MR system the present study investigated the test-retest reliability of glycogen measurements in patients with T1DM and matched controls (n = 10 each group) in quadriceps muscle and liver. Prior to the MR examination, participants followed a standardized diet and avoided strenuous exercise for two days. The average coefficient of variation (CV) of myocellular glycogen levels was 9.7% in patients with T1DM compared with 6.6% in controls after a 2 week period, while hepatic glycogen variability was 13.3% in patients with T1DM and 14.6% in controls. For comparison, a single-session test-retest variability in four healthy volunteers resulted in 9.5% for skeletal muscle and 14.3% for liver. Glycogen levels in muscle and liver were not statistically different between test and retest, except for hepatic glycogen, which decreased in T1DM patients in the retest examination, but without an increase of the group distribution. Since the CVs of glycogen levels determined in a "single session" versus "within weeks" are comparable, we conclude that the major source of uncertainty is the methodological error and that physiological variations can be minimized by a pre-study standardization. For hepatic glycogen examinations, familiarization sessions (MR and potentially strenuous interventions) are recommended. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Resumo:
Candida albicans causes opportunistic fungal infections in humans and is a significant cause of mortality and morbidity in immune-compromised individuals. Dectin-2, a C-type lectin receptor, is required for recognition of C. albicans by innate immune cells and is required for initiation of the anti-fungal immune response. We set out to identify components of the intracellular signaling cascade downstream of Dectin-2 activation in macrophages and to understand their importance in mediating the immune response to C. albicans in vivo. Using macrophages derived from Phospholipase-C-gamma 1 and 2 (PLCγ1and PLCγ2) knockout mice, we demonstrate that PLCγ2, but not PLCγ1, is required for activation of NF-κB and MAPK signaling pathways after C. albicans stimulation, resulting in impaired production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and reactive oxygen species. PLCγ2-deficient mice are highly susceptible to infections with C. albicans, indicating the importance of this pathway to the anti-fungal immune response. TAK1 and TRAF6 are critical nodes in NF-κB and MAPK activation downstream of immune surveillance and may be critical to the signaling cascade initiated by C-type lectin receptors in response to C. albicans. Macrophages derived from both TAK1 and TRAF6-deficient mice were unable to activate NF-κB and MAPK and consequently failed to produce inflammatory cytokines characteristic of the response to C. albicans. In this work we have identified PLCγ2, TAK1 and TRAF6 as components of a signaling cascade downstream of C. albicans recognition by C-type lectin receptors and as critical mediators of the anti-fungal immune response. A mechanistic understanding of the host immune response to C. albicans is important for the development of anti-fungal therapeutics and in understanding risk-factors determining susceptibility to C. albicans infection.
Improving the compilation of prolog to C using type and determinism information: Preliminary results
Resumo:
We describe the current status of and provide preliminary performance results for a compiler of Prolog to C. The compiler is novel in that it is designed to accept different kinds of high-level information (typically obtained via an analysis of the initial Prolog program and expressed in a standardized language of assertions) and use this information to optimize the resulting C code, which is then further processed by an off-the-shelf C compiler. The basic translation process used essentially mimics an unfolding of a C-coded bytecode emúlator with respect to the particular bytecode corresponding to the Prolog program. Optimizations are then applied to this unfolded program. This is facilitated by a more flexible design of the bytecode instructions and their lower-level components. This approach allows reusing a sizable amount of the machinery of the bytecode emulator: ancillary pieces of C code, data definitions, memory management routines and áreas, etc., as well as mixing bytecode emulated code with natively compiled code in a relatively straightforward way We report on the performance of programs compiled by the current versión of the system, both with and without analysis information.
Resumo:
The relative deficiency of T helper type 1 (Th1) and cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) responses in early life is associated with an increased susceptibility to infections by intracellular microorganisms. This is likely to reflect a preferential polarization of immature CD4 T cells toward a Th2 rather than a Th1 pattern upon immunization with conventional vaccines. In this report, it is shown that a single immunization within the first week of life with DNA plasmids encoding viral (measles virus hemagglutinin, Sendai virus nucleoprotein) or bacterial (C fragment of tetanus toxin) vaccine antigens can induce adult-like Th1 or mixed Th1/Th2 responses indicated by production of IgG2a vaccine-specific antibodies and preferential secretion of interferon-γ (IFN-γ) compared with interleukin (IL)-5 by antigen-specific T cells, as well as significant CTL responses. However, in spite of this potent Th1-driving capacity, subsequent DNA immunization was not capable of reverting the Th2-biased responses induced after early priming with a recombinant measles canarypox vector. Thus, DNA vaccination represents a novel strategy capable of inducing Th1 or mixed Th1/Th2 and CTL responses in neonates and early life, providing it is performed prior to exposure to Th2-driving conventional vaccine antigens.