نتایج جستجو برای: entrococcus faecium

تعداد نتایج: 3437  

Journal: :The Journal of infectious diseases 2010
Masja Leendertse Rob J L Willems Roelof Flierman Alex F de Vos Marc J M Bonten Tom van der Poll

BACKGROUND Infections with multidrug-resistant enterococci are a growing problem worldwide. Little is known about the host defense against enterococcal diseases. In vitro studies have demonstrated an important role played by complement proteins in neutrophil-mediated phagocytosis. In this study, we investigated the importance of complement in an in vivo model of Enterococcus faecium peritonitis...

2010
Maristela da Silva do Nascimento Izildinha Moreno Arnaldo Yoshiteru Kuaye

This study investigated the antimicrobial activity of Enterococcus faecium FAIR-E 198 against Bacillus cereus, Listeria monocytogenes and Staphylococcus aureus. Using the critical-dilution method, the bacteriocin produced by E. faecium FAIR-E 198 inhibited all L. monocytogenes strains evaluated (1,600 to 19,200 AU mL(-1)). However, none of the B. cereus and S. aureus strains investigated were i...

2013
Xinglin Zhang Malbert Rogers Damien Bierschenk Marc J. M. Bonten Rob J. L. Willems Willem van Schaik

Enterococcus faecium is a gut commensal of humans and animals. In the intestinal tract, E. faecium will have access to a wide variety of carbohydrates, including maltodextrins and maltose, which are the sugars that result from the enzymatic digestion of starch by host-derived and microbial amylases. In this study, we identified the genetic determinants for maltodextrin utilization of E. faecium...

2016
Donna M Ferguson Ginamary Negrón Talavera Luis A Ríos Hernández Stephen B Weisberg Richard F Ambrose Jennifer A Jay

Most Enterococcus faecalis and E. faecium are harmless to humans; however, strains harboring virulence genes, including esp, gelE, cylA, asa1, and hyl, have been associated with human infections. E. faecalis and E. faecium are present in beach waters worldwide, yet little is known about their virulence potential. Here, multiplex PCR was used to compare the distribution of virulence genes among ...

Journal: :The Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy 2004
Claudia Oancea Ingo Klare Wolfgang Witte Guido Werner

OBJECTIVES The enterococcal surface protein gene, esp, is a major putative pathogenicity marker in clinical isolates of Enterococcus faecium and Enterococcus faecalis. This study demonstrates in vitro conjugative transfer of the esp gene among E. faecium and E. faecalis. MATERIALS AND METHODS Enterococcal isolates from clinical samples, positive for esp, were mated on filters with enterococca...

2015
Ulrike Lodemann Julia Strahlendorf Peter Schierack Shanti Klingspor Jörg R Aschenbach Holger Martens

The aim of this study has been to elucidate the effect of the probiotic Enterococcus faecium NCIMB 10415 on epithelial integrity in intestinal epithelial cells and whether pre- and coincubation with this strain can reproducibly prevent damage induced by enterotoxigenic (ETEC) and enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC). Porcine (IPEC-J2) and human (Caco-2) intestinal epithelial cells were incu...

Journal: :Scientific reports 2015
Ana M Guzmán Prieto Rolf T Urbanus Xinglin Zhang Damien Bierschenk C Arnold Koekman Miranda van Luit-Asbroek Janneke P Ouwerkerk Marieke Pape Fernanda L Paganelli Dominique Wobser Johannes Huebner Antoni P A Hendrickx Marc J M Bonten Rob J L Willems Willem van Schaik

Enterococcus faecium is a commensal of the mammalian gastrointestinal tract, but is also found in non-enteric environments where it can grow between 10 °C and 45 °C. E. faecium has recently emerged as a multi-drug resistant nosocomial pathogen. We hypothesized that genes involved in the colonization and infection of mammals exhibit temperature-regulated expression control and we therefore perfo...

Journal: :PLoS Pathogens 2007
Helen L Leavis Rob J. L Willems Willem J. B van Wamel Frank H Schuren Martien P. M Caspers Marc J. M Bonten

Enterococcus faecium, an ubiquous colonizer of humans and animals, has evolved in the last 15 years from an avirulent commensal to the third most frequently isolated nosocomial pathogen among intensive care unit patients in the United States. E. faecium combines multidrug resistance with the potential of horizontal resistance gene transfer to even more pathogenic bacteria. Little is known about...

Journal: :Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy 2001
F M Aarestrup A M Seyfarth H D Emborg K Pedersen R S Hendriksen F Bager

From 1995 to 2000, a total of 673 Enterococcus faecium and 1,088 Enterococcus faecalis isolates from pigs together with 856 E. faecium isolates from broilers were isolated and tested for susceptibility to four classes of antimicrobial agents used for growth promotion as part of the Danish program of monitoring for antimicrobial resistance. The four antimicrobials were avilamycin, erythromycin, ...

2013
Benjamin P. Howden Kathryn E. Holt Margaret M. C. Lam Torsten Seemann Susan Ballard Geoffrey W. Coombs Steven Y. C. Tong M. Lindsay Grayson Paul D. R. Johnson Timothy P. Stinear

UNLABELLED Nosocomial outbreaks of vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium (VREfm) are thought to occur by transmission of VREfm between patients, predicting that infection control interventions will limit cross-transmission. Despite implementation of such strategies, the incidence of VREfm infections continues to rise. We aimed to use genomics to better understand the epidemiology of E. faec...

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