نتایج جستجو برای: streptococcus dysgalactiae

تعداد نتایج: 41308  

Journal: :Current topics in microbiology and immunology 2013
D Patric Nitsche-Schmitz Gursharan S Chhatwal

Otherwise uncomplicated infections with Streptococcus pyogenes can cause two insidious immune sequelae known as post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis (PSGN) and acute rheumatic fever (ARF). These diseases follow with a latency of a few weeks or months after primary infection and are responsible for high mortality and morbidity. PSGN has also been linked to infections with group C streptococci o...

2016
Marjan Islam Dennis Karter Jerry Altshuler Diana Altshuler David Schwartz Gianluca Torregrossa

Infections from Streptococcus dysgalactiae ssp. equisimilis (SDSE) can cause a wide variety of infections, ranging from mild cellulitis to invasive disease, such as endocarditis and streptococcal toxic shock-like syndrome (TSLS). Despite prompt and appropriate antibiotics, mortality rates associated with shock have remained exceedingly high, prompting the need for adjunctive therapy. IVIG has b...

2011
Simone Aymanns Stefanie Mauerer Ger van Zandbergen Christiane Wolz Barbara Spellerberg

Fluorescence labeling of bacterial pathogens has a broad range of interesting applications including the observation of living bacteria within host cells. We constructed a novel vector based on the E. coli streptococcal shuttle plasmid pAT28 that can propagate in numerous bacterial species from different genera. The plasmid harbors a promoterless copy of the green fluorescent variant gene egfp ...

Journal: :Journal of bacteriology 2007
Mark R Davies David J McMillan Gary H Van Domselaar Malcolm K Jones Kadaba S Sriprakash

Streptococcus dysgalactiae subsp. equisimilis strains (group G streptococcus [GGS]) are largely defined as commensal organisms, which are closely related to the well-defined human pathogen, the group A streptococcus (GAS). While lateral gene transfers are emerging as a common theme in these species, little is known about the mechanisms and role of these transfers and their effect on the populat...

Journal: :Biochemical Society transactions 2013
Andrew S Waller Carl Robinson

The host-restricted bacterium Streptococcus equi is the causative agent of equine strangles, the most frequently diagnosed infectious disease of horses worldwide. The disease is characterized by abscessation of the lymph nodes of the head and neck, leading to significant welfare and economic cost. S. equi is believed to have evolved from an ancestral strain of Streptococcus zooepidemicus, an op...

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