نتایج جستجو برای: pore forming toxin

تعداد نتایج: 200158  

2013
Nalini Ramarao Vincent Sanchis

The Bacillus cereus sensu lato group contains diverse Gram-positive spore-forming bacteria that can cause gastrointestinal diseases and severe eye infections in humans. They have also been incriminated in a multitude of other severe, and frequently fatal, clinical infections, such as osteomyelitis, septicaemia, pneumonia, liver abscess and meningitis, particularly in immuno-compromised patients...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2011
Benoît-Joseph Laventie Hendrik Jan Rademaker Maher Saleh Ernie de Boer Rick Janssens Tristan Bourcier Audrey Subilia Luc Marcellin Rien van Haperen Joyce H G Lebbink Tao Chen Gilles Prévost Frank Grosveld Dubravka Drabek

Panton-Valentine leukocidin (PVL) is a pore-forming toxin associated with current outbreaks of community-associated methicillin-resistant strains and implicated directly in the pathophysiology of Staphylococcus aureus-related diseases. Humanized heavy chain-only antibodies (HCAb) were generated against S. aureus PVL from immunized transgenic mice to neutralize toxin activity. The active form of...

Journal: :The FEBS journal 2006
Jorge Alegre-Cebollada Ignacio Rodríguez-Crespo José G Gavilanes Alvaro Martínez del Pozo

Sticholysin II is a pore-forming toxin produced by the sea anemone Stichodactyla helianthus. We studied its cytolytic activity on COS-7 cells. Fluorescence spectroscopy and flow cytometry revealed that the toxin permeabilizes cells to propidium cations in a dose-dependent and time-dependent manner. This permeabilization is impaired by preincubation of cells with cyclodextrin. Isolation of deter...

Journal: :Cell 2000
Alistair J. Wallace Timothy J. Stillman Angela Atkins Stuart J. Jamieson Per A. Bullough Jeffrey Green Peter J. Artymiuk

Hemolysin E (HlyE) is a novel pore-forming toxin of Escherichia coli, Salmonella typhi, and Shigella flexneri. Here we report the X-ray crystal structure of the water-soluble form of E. coli HlyE at 2.0 A resolution and the visualization of the lipid-associated form of the toxin in projection at low resolution by electron microscopy. The crystal structure reveals HlyE to be the first member of ...

Journal: :PLoS ONE 2007
Heather M. Scobie John M. Marlett G. Jonah A. Rainey D. Borden Lacy R. John Collier John A.T. Young

The anthrax toxin receptors, ANTXR1 and ANTXR2, act as molecular clamps to prevent the protective antigen (PA) toxin subunit from forming pores until exposure to low pH. PA forms pores at pH approximately 6.0 or below when it is bound to ANTXR1, but only at pH approximately 5.0 or below when it is bound to ANTXR2. Here, structure-based mutagenesis was used to identify non-conserved ANTXR2 resid...

Journal: :Cell 2010
Christopher J. Bohlen Avi Priel Sharleen Zhou David King Jan Siemens David Julius

Toxins have evolved to target regions of membrane ion channels that underlie ligand binding, gating, or ion permeation, and have thus served as invaluable tools for probing channel structure and function. Here, we describe a peptide toxin from the Earth Tiger tarantula that selectively and irreversibly activates the capsaicin- and heat-sensitive channel, TRPV1. This high-avidity interaction der...

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 2009
Geneviève Lebel Vincent Vachon Gabrielle Préfontaine Frédéric Girard Luke Masson Marc Juteau Aliou Bah Geneviève Larouche Charles Vincent Raynald Laprade Jean-Louis Schwartz

Pore formation in the apical membrane of the midgut epithelial cells of susceptible insects constitutes a key step in the mode of action of Bacillus thuringiensis insecticidal toxins. In order to study the mechanism of toxin insertion into the membrane, at least one residue in each of the pore-forming-domain (domain I) interhelical loops of Cry1Aa was replaced individually by cysteine, an amino...

2007
Vladimir A. Karginov Ekaterina M. Nestorovich Frank Schmidtmann Tanisha M. Robinson Adiamseged Yohannes Nour Eddine Fahmi Sergey M. Bezrukov Sidney M. Hecht

Many pathogens utilize the formation of transmembrane pores in target cells in the process of infection. A great number of pore-forming proteins, both bacterial and viral, are considered to be important virulence factors, which makes them attractive targets for the discovery of new therapeutic agents. Our research is based on the idea that compounds designed to block the pores can inhibit the a...

2006
BRAD D. BARROWS JOEL S. GRIFFITTS RAFFI V. AROIAN

The major virulence factor produced by the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) is a pore‐forming toxin called crystal (Cry) toxin, which targets and kills insects and nematodes. To understand how this bacterial toxin interacts with its invertebrate hosts, a genetic screen in C. elegans for nematodes resistant to Bt toxin was carried out. Four of the five genes that mutated to toxin resistance...

2015
Miša Mojca Cajnko Maja Marušić Matic Kisovec Nejc Rojko Mojca Benčina Simon Caserman Gregor Anderluh Daniel Gillet

Listeria monocytogenes is a food and soil-borne pathogen that secretes a pore-forming toxin listeriolysin O (LLO) as its major virulence factor. We tested the effects of LLO on an intestinal epithelial cell line Caco-2 and compared them to an unrelated pore-forming toxin equinatoxin II (EqtII). Results showed that apical application of both toxins causes a significant drop in transepithelial el...

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