نتایج جستجو برای: h marinum

تعداد نتایج: 531781  

Journal: :Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America 2005
Hsin-Yun Sun Sung-Pin Tseng Po-Ren Hsueh Chien-Ching Hung Szu-Min Hsieh Lee-Jene Teng Shen-Wu Ho

2. Wolinsky E. State of the art: nontuberculous mycobacteria and associated disease. Am Rev Respir Dis 1979; 119:107–59. 3. Turenne CY, Tschetter L, Wolfe J, Kabani A. Necessity of quality-controlled 16S rRNA sequence database: identify nontuberculous Mycobacterium species. J Clin Microbiol 2001; 39: 3637–48. 4. Sato T, Shibuya H, Ohba S, Nokiri T, Shirai W. Mycobacteriosis in two captive Flori...

Journal: :Acta orthopaedica Belgica 2004
Peter Van Seymortier Karl Verellen Inge De Jonge

Mycobacterium marinum is an unusual atypical mycobacterium with low pathogenicity for humans in comparison with Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Among the non-tuberculous mycobacterial pathogens, Mycobacterium marinum is the most common pathogen to cause skin infections. Mycobacterium marinum infection causes chronic cutaneous lesions and in some cases deeper infections such as tenosynovitis, septic...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 2012
Vincent Broutin Anne-Laure Bañuls Alexandra Aubry Nicolas Keck Marc Choisy Jean-François Bernardet Christian Michel Jean-Christophe Raymond Cédric Libert Antoine Barnaud Pieter Stragier Françoise Portaels Dominique Terru Claudine Belon Olivier Dereure Cristina Gutierrez Maria-Laura Boschiroli Philippe Van De Perre Emmanuelle Cambau Sylvain Godreuil

Mycobacterium marinum causes a systemic tuberculosis-like disease in fish and skin infections in humans that can spread to deeper structures, resulting in tenosynovitis, arthritis, and osteomyelitis. However, little information is available concerning (i) the intraspecific genetic diversity of M. marinum isolated from humans and animals; (ii) M. marinum genotype circulation in the different eco...

Journal: :Journal of bacteriology 2005
Pieter Stragier Anthony Ablordey Wayne M Meyers Françoise Portaels

A novel category of variable tandem repeats (VNTR) called mycobacterial interspersed repetitive units (MIRUs) has been identified for Mycobacterium ulcerans (n = 39), M. marinum (n = 27), and one related organism. Fifteen MIRU loci were identified in the genome of M. marinum and were used to genotype M. ulcerans, M. marinum, and an M. marinum-like organism that is considered a possible missing ...

2012
Yingxue Huang Xiulian Xu Yi Liu Kan Wu Wei Zhang Pai Liu Xuesi Zeng Jianfang Sun Yiqun Jiang Hongsheng Wang

BACKGROUND The incidence of Mycobacterium marinum infection has been increasing. First-line antituberculous drugs and other common antibiotics are effective for most cutaneous M. marinum infections; however, treatment failure still occurs in some rare cases. We report a case of a 70-year-old man with refractory cutaneous infection caused by M. marinum. Reasons for delayed diagnosis and related ...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 2003
Marc S Dionne Nafisa Ghori David S Schneider

Mycobacterium marinum is a pathogenic mycobacterial species that is closely related to Mycobacterium tuberculosis and causes tuberculosis-like disease in fish and frogs. We infected the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster with M. marinum. This bacterium caused a lethal infection in the fly, with a 50% lethal dose (LD(50)) of 5 CFU. Death was accompanied by widespread tissue damage. M. marinum ini...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2005
Luisa M Stamm Melissa A Pak J Hiroshi Morisaki Scott B Snapper Klemens Rottner Silvia Lommel Eric J Brown

Mycobacterium marinum, a natural pathogen of fish and frogs and an occasional pathogen of humans, is capable of inducing actin tail formation within the cytoplasm of macrophages, leading to actin-based motility and intercellular spread. Actin tail formation by M. marinum is markedly reduced in macrophages deficient in the Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein (WASP), which still contain the closely ...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 2001
S H El-Etr L Yan J D Cirillo

Mycobacterium marinum, a relatively rapid-growing fish and human pathogen, has become an important model for the investigation of mycobacterial pathogenesis. M. marinum is closely related to the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex and causes a disease in fish and amphibians with pathology similar to tuberculosis. We have developed an in vitro model for the study of M. marinum virulence mechanism...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 2008
Jennifer Smith Joanna Manoranjan Miao Pan Amro Bohsali Junjie Xu Jun Liu Kent L McDonald Agnieszka Szyk Nicole LaRonde-LeBlanc Lian-Yong Gao

The ESX-1 secretion system plays a critical role in the virulence of M. tuberculosis and M. marinum, but the precise molecular and cellular mechanisms are not clearly defined. Virulent M. marinum is able to escape from the Mycobacterium-containing vacuole (MCV) into the host cell cytosol, polymerize actin, and spread from cell to cell. In this study, we have examined nine M. marinum ESX-1 mutan...

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