نتایج جستجو برای: bordetella species
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Dear Editor, Bordetella, of the family Alcaligenaceae, is a genus containing gram-negative coccoid rod species. To date, nine species have been assigned to the genus Bordetella [1]. Human infections caused by B. petrii have seldom been reported since its first detection in 2001 [2-8]. Among seven reported cases, four were recovered from respiratory specimens [4-6, 8], while three were recovered...
The Bordetella BvgAS signal transduction system controls the expression of at least three phenotypic phases, the Bvg(+) or virulent phase, the Bvg(-) or avirulent phase, and the Bvg(i) or Bvg intermediate phase, which has been hypothesized to be important for transmission. bipA, the first identified Bvg(i)-phase gene, encodes a protein with similarity to the well-characterized bacterial adhesin...
In a recent experiment, we found that mice previously infected with Bordetella pertussis were not protected against a later infection with Bordetella parapertussis, while primary infection with B. parapertussis conferred cross-protection. This challenges the common assumption made in most mathematical models for pathogenic strain dynamics that cross-immunity between strains is symmetric. Here w...
Background and Objective: Bordetella pertussis is a gram-negative cocobacilli bacterium and etiologic agent of whooping cough that in recent years, the number of its cases is on the rise. The ability of biofilm production helps this bacterium in interference with host immune system, severity of illness and antibiotic sensitivity. Thus, due to the importance of this factor, in this investigation...
BACKGROUND Bordetella pertussis infections continue to be a major public health challenge in Canada. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays to detect B pertussis are typically based on the multicopy insertion sequence IS481, which offers high sensitivity but lacks species specificity. METHODS A novel B pertussis real-time PCR assay based on the porin gene was tested in parallel with several p...
Bordetella avium is thought to be strictly an avian pathogen. However, 16S rRNA gene sequencing identified 2 isolates from 2 humans with respiratory disease as B. avium and a novel B. avium-like strain. Thus, B. avium and B. avium-like organisms are rare opportunistic human pathogens.
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