نتایج جستجو برای: shiga toxin 1

تعداد نتایج: 2792898  

2017
Pragathi B. Shridhar Chris Siepker Lance W. Noll Xiaorong Shi T. G. Nagaraja Jianfa Bai

Shiga toxin producing Escherichia coli (STEC) are important foodborne pathogens responsible for human illnesses. Cattle are a major reservoir that harbor the organism in the hindgut and shed in the feces. Shiga toxins (Stx) are the primary virulence factors associated with STEC illnesses. The two antigenically distinct Stx types, Stx1 and Stx2, encoded by stx1 and stx2 genes, share approximatel...

2013
Julie In Valeriy Lukyanenko Jennifer Foulke-Abel Ann L. Hubbard Michael Delannoy Anne-Marie Hansen James B. Kaper Nadia Boisen James P. Nataro Chengru Zhu Edgar C. Boedeker Jorge A. Girón Olga Kovbasnjuk

Life-threatening intestinal and systemic effects of the Shiga toxins produced by enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) require toxin uptake and transcytosis across intestinal epithelial cells. We have recently demonstrated that EHEC infection of intestinal epithelial cells stimulates toxin macropinocytosis, an actin-dependent endocytic pathway. Host actin rearrangement necessary for EHEC at...

2006
Heidi Hehnly David Sheff Mark Stamnes Adam Linstedt

The bacterial exotoxin Shiga toxin is endocytosed by mammalian host cells and transported retrogradely through the secretory pathway before entering the cytosol. Shiga toxin also increases the levels of microfilaments and microtubules (MTs) upon binding to the cell surface. The purpose for this alteration in cytoskeletal dynamics is unknown. We have investigated whether Shiga toxin-induced chan...

Journal: :The Lancet. Infectious diseases 2011
Martina Bielaszewska Alexander Mellmann Wenlan Zhang Robin Köck Angelika Fruth Andreas Bauwens Georg Peters Helge Karch

BACKGROUND In an ongoing outbreak of haemolytic uraemic syndrome and bloody diarrhoea caused by a virulent Escherichia coli strain O104:H4 in Germany (with some cases elsewhere in Europe and North America), 810 cases of the syndrome and 39 deaths have occurred since the beginning of May, 2011. We analysed virulence profiles and relevant phenotypes of outbreak isolates recovered in our laborator...

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 2007
Evelyn Fuchs Alexander K. Haas Robert A. Spooner Shin-ichiro Yoshimura J. Michael Lord Francis A. Barr

Rab family guanosine triphosphatases (GTPases) together with their regulators define specific pathways of membrane traffic within eukaryotic cells. In this study, we have investigated which Rab GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs) can interfere with the trafficking of Shiga toxin from the cell surface to the Golgi apparatus and studied transport of the epidermal growth factor (EGF) from the cell s...

Journal: :Iranian journal of allergy, asthma, and immunology 2011
Mana Oloomi Saeid Bouzari

Shiga toxin (Stx) is the principal virulence factor of Shigatoxigenic Escherichia coli (STEC), a food-born pathogen associated disease with uncomplicated diarrhea or the hemolytic-uremic syndrome. In this study, rabbit polyclonal anti recombinant A, B subunits of Shiga toxin and holotoxin antisera were raised and employed for immunological purpose. By immunoblotting, these antisera recognized r...

Journal: :International journal of food microbiology 2010
Reuven Rasooly Paula M Do

Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli have been associated with food-borne illnesses. Pasteurization is used to inhibit microbial growth in milk, and an open question is whether milk pasteurization inactivates Shiga toxins. To answer this question we measured Shiga toxin's inhibition effect on Vero cell dehydrogenase activity and protein synthesis. Our data demonstrate that Shiga toxin 2 (Stx2...

2015
Guillaume Martin-Blondel Xavier Iriart Fouad El Baidouri Stéphane Simon Deborah Mills Magalie Demar Thierry Pistone Thomas Le Taillandier Denis Malvy Jean-Pierre Gangneux Pierre Couppie Wendy Munckhof Bruno Marchou Christophe Ravel Antoine Berry

References 1. Schmidt H. Shiga-toxin-converting bacteriophages. Res Microbiol. 2001;152:687–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/ S0923-2508(01)01249-9 2. Melton-Celsa A, Mohawk K, Teel L, O’Brien A. Pathogenesis of Shiga-toxin producing Escherichia coli. Curr Top Microbiol Immunol. 2012;357:67–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/82_2011_176 3. Manning SD, Motiwala AS, Springman AC, Qi W, Lacher DW, Ouelle...

Journal: :Journal of bacteriology 2012
Byung Kwon Kim Geun Cheol Song Gun Hyong Hong Won-Keun Seong Seon-Young Kim Haeyoung Jeong Sung Gyun Kang Soon-Kyeong Kwon Choong Hoon Lee Ju Yeon Song Dong Su Yu Mi-Sun Park Seung-Hak Cho Jihyun F Kim

Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli causes bloody diarrhea and hemolytic-uremic syndrome and serious outbreaks worldwide. Here, we report the draft genome sequence of E. coli NCCP15657 isolated from a patient. The genome has virulence genes, many in the locus of enterocyte effacement (LEE) island, encoding a metalloprotease, the Shiga toxin, and constituents of type III secretion.

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 1994
M Samadpour J E Ongerth J Liston N Tran D Nguyen T S Whittam R A Wilson P I Tarr

Fresh meat, poultry, and seafood purchased from Seattle area grocery stores were investigated for the presence of Shiga-like toxin-producing Escherichia coli by using DNA probes for Shiga-like toxin (SLT) genes I and II. Of the 294 food samples tested, 17% had colonies with sequence homology to SLT I and/or SLT II genes.

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