نتایج جستجو برای: pathogenicity island

تعداد نتایج: 72467  

Journal: :British medical bulletin 1998
P R Reeves R Lan

Two strains of Vibrio cholerae are currently significant in cholera: a remnant from the sixth pandemic (1899-1923) still present in South Asia and the seventh pandemic strain which emerged in 1961. The 1990s were marked by spread of the seventh pandemic to South America in 1991 and appearance of an O139 form of the seventh pandemic strain in 1992 (or possibly 1991), which in 1993 predominated i...

Journal: :Current Biology 2004
Jennifer L Tenor Beth A McCormick Frederick M Ausubel Alejandro Aballay

A Caenorhabditis elegans-Salmonella enterica host-pathogen model was used to identify both novel and previously known S. enterica virulence factors (HilA, HilD, InvH, SptP, RhuM, Spi4-F, PipA, VsdA, RepC, Sb25, RfaL, GmhA, LeuO, CstA, and RecC), including several related to the type III secretion system (TTSS) encoded in Salmonella pathogenicity island 1 (SPI-1). Mutants corresponding to presum...

Journal: :Journal of bacteriology 2002
Tomoko Kubori Jorge E Galán

Salmonella enterica encodes a type III secretion system (TTSS) within a pathogenicity island located at centisome 63 (SPI-1), which is essential for its pathogenicity. This system mediates the transfer of a battery of bacterial proteins into the host cell with the capacity to modulate cellular functions. The transfer process is dependent on the function of protein translocases SipB, SipC, and S...

Journal: :Genetics and molecular research : GMR 2011
W Wei F-B Guo

We adopted the method of Zhang and Zhang (the Z-Island method) to identify genomic islands in seven human pathogens, analyzing their chromosomal DNA sequences. The Z-Island method is a theoretical method for predicting genomic islands in bacterial genomes; it consists of determination of the cumulative GC profile and computation of codon usage bias. Thirty-one genomic islands were found in...

Journal: :PLoS Pathogens 2009
Sören Schubert Pierre Darlu Olivier Clermont Andreas Wieser Giuseppe Magistro Christiane Hoffmann Kirsten Weinert Olivier Tenaillon Ivan Matic Erick Denamur

Horizontal gene transfer is a key step in the evolution of bacterial pathogens. Besides phages and plasmids, pathogenicity islands (PAIs) are subjected to horizontal transfer. The transfer mechanisms of PAIs within a certain bacterial species or between different species are still not well understood. This study is focused on the High-Pathogenicity Island (HPI), which is a PAI widely spread amo...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 2010
Garry B Coulson Shruti Agarwal Mary K Hondalus

Rhodococcus equi, a facultative intracellular pathogen of macrophages, causes severe, life-threatening pneumonia in young foals and in people with underlying immune deficiencies. R. equi virulence is dependent on the presence of a large virulence plasmid that houses a pathogenicity island (PAI) encoding a novel family of surface-localized and secreted proteins of largely unknown function termed...

Journal: :Molecular microbiology 2007
Verena Pfeiffer Alexandra Sittka Raju Tomer Karsten Tedin Volker Brinkmann Jörg Vogel

The Salmonella pathogenicity island (SPI-1) encodes approximately 35 proteins involved in assembly of a type III secretion system (T3SS) which endows Salmonella with the ability to invade eukaryotic cells. We have discovered a novel SPI-1 gene, invR, which expresses an abundant small non-coding RNA (sRNA). The invR gene, which we identified in a global search for new Salmonella sRNA genes, is a...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 2003
M Aaron Baxter Thomas F Fahlen Rebecca L Wilson Bradley D Jones

The ability of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium to traverse the intestinal mucosa of a host is an important step in its ability to initiate gastrointestinal disease. The majority of the genes required for this invasive characteristic are encoded on Salmonella pathogenicity island 1 (SPI1), and their expression is controlled by the transcriptional activator HilA, a member of the OmpR/ToxR...

Journal: :Journal of bacteriology 2007
Inge M V Thijs Sigrid C J De Keersmaecker Abeer Fadda Kristof Engelen Hui Zhao Michael McClelland Kathleen Marchal Jos Vanderleyden

The Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium HilA protein is the key regulator for the invasion of epithelial cells. By a combination of genome-wide location and transcript analysis, the HilA-dependent regulon has been delineated. Under invasion-inducing conditions, HilA binds to most of the known target genes and a number of new target genes. The sopB, sopE, and sopA genes, encoding effector pr...

Journal: :Journal of medical microbiology 2006
Bixing Huang Zheng Yuan Brett A Heron Bruce R Gray Sofroni Eglezos John R Bates John Savill

The distribution of 19 major virulence genes and the presence of plasmids were surveyed in 141 Legionella pneumophila serogroup (SG) 1 isolates from patients and water in Queensland, Australia. The results showed that 16 of the virulence genes examined were present in all isolates, suggesting that they are life-essential genes for isolates in the environment and host cells. The 65 kb pathogenic...

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