نتایج جستجو برای: surface mucus

تعداد نتایج: 644657  

Journal: :Infection and immunity 1989
M Mantle L Basaraba S C Peacock D G Gall

Mucus and its gel-forming glycoprotein component, mucin, are thought to protect the gastrointestinal tract from enteric pathogens by inhibiting their attachment to enterocytes. In this study, we investigated interactions between Yersinia enterocolitica (isogenic strains of virulent and nonvirulent organisms) and crude mucus, highly purified mucin, and brush border membranes (BBMs) isolated from...

ژورنال: بوم شناسی آبزیان 2013
Hajimoradloo, Abdolmajid , Hoseinifar, Seyed Hossein , Roosta, Zahra , Vakili, Farzaneh ,

Fish epidermal mucus and its components provide the first defense line against pathogens. This study was conducted to evaluate the effects of different levels of Lactobacillus acidophilus on antibacterial activity, MIC and some immune parameters of mucus in Puntius tetrazona. Six hundred and thirty fish (0.5 ± 0.03 g) were randomly distributed in 9 aquarium for 3 treatments with 3 replicates (n...

2018
Eamon Dubaissi Karine Rousseau Gareth W Hughes Caroline Ridley Richard K Grencis Ian S Roberts David J Thornton

Mucosal surfaces represent critical routes for entry and exit of pathogens. As such, animals have evolved strategies to combat infection at these sites, in particular the production of mucus to prevent attachment and to promote subsequent movement of the mucus/microbe away from the underlying epithelial surface. Using biochemical, biophysical, and infection studies, we have investigated the hos...

Journal: :American journal of physiology. Gastrointestinal and liver physiology 2001
A Lugea M Mourelle A Domingo A Salas F Guarner J R Malagelada

Epidermal growth factor (EGF) is produced in Brunner's glands and plays a role in healing and repair of duodenal ulcers. We examined the participation of zwitterionic phospholipids of mucus in the effects of EGF. Under anesthesia, groups of rats received an intraduodenal bolus of either saline or EGF. Some rats received subcutaneous indomethacin followed by EGF or EGF followed by a detergent (5...

2012
Xiaoyun Yang Katrien Forier Lennert Steukers Sandra Van Vlierberghe Peter Dubruel Kevin Braeckmans Sarah Glorieux Hans J. Nauwynck

Pseudorabies virus (PRV) initially replicates in the porcine upper respiratory tract. It easily invades the mucosae and submucosae for subsequent spread throughout the body via blood vessels and nervous system. In this context, PRV developed ingenious processes to overcome different barriers such as epithelial cells and the basement membrane. Another important but often overlooked barrier is th...

Journal: :American journal of physiology. Lung cellular and molecular physiology 2013
Robert Tarran Juan R Sabater Tainya C Clarke Chong D Tan Catrin M Davies Jia Liu Arthur Yeung Alaina L Garland M Jackson Stutts William M Abraham Gary Phillips William R Baker Clifford D Wright Sibylle Wilbert

Mucus clearance is an important component of the lung's innate defense system. A failure of this system brought on by mucus dehydration is common to both cystic fibrosis (CF) and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Mucus clearance rates are regulated by the volume of airway surface liquid (ASL) and by ciliary beat frequency (CBF). Chronic treatment with macrolide antibiotics is known ...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2013
Jeremy J Barr Rita Auro Mike Furlan Katrine L Whiteson Marcella L Erb Joe Pogliano Aleksandr Stotland Roland Wolkowicz Andrew S Cutting Kelly S Doran Peter Salamon Merry Youle Forest Rohwer

Mucosal surfaces are a main entry point for pathogens and the principal sites of defense against infection. Both bacteria and phage are associated with this mucus. Here we show that phage-to-bacteria ratios were increased, relative to the adjacent environment, on all mucosal surfaces sampled, ranging from cnidarians to humans. In vitro studies of tissue culture cells with and without surface mu...

2011
Manuela Rinaldi Leentje Dreesen Prisca R Hoorens Robert W Li Edwin Claerebout Bruno Goddeeris Jozef Vercruysse Wim Van Den Broek Peter Geldhof

The mucus layer in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract is considered to be the first line of defense to the external environment. Alteration in mucus components has been reported to occur during intestinal nematode infection in ruminants, but the role of mucus in response to abomasal parasites remains largely unclear. The aim of the current study was to analyze the effects of an Ostertagia ostertag...

2017
Giusi Minniti Live Heldal Hagen Davide Porcellato Sven Martin Jørgensen Phillip B. Pope Gustav Vaaje-Kolstad

The skin of the teleost is a flexible and scaled structure that protects the fish toward the external environment. The outermost surface of the skin is coated with mucus, which is believed to be colonized by a diverse bacterial community (commensal and/or opportunistic). Little is known about such communities and their role in fish welfare. In aquaculture, fish seem to be more susceptible to pa...

1997

Sims, David E., and Margaret M. Horne. Heterogeneity of the composition and thickness of tracheal mucus in rats. Am. J. Physiol. 273 (Lung Cell. Mol. Physiol. 17): L1036– L1041, 1997.—Inability to preserve airway mucus in situ has limited our understanding of its structure and function. This lightand transmission electron-microscopic study of rat tracheal mucus used a nonaqueous fixative that r...

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