نتایج جستجو برای: ژن tcdb

تعداد نتایج: 16071  

2015
Glen P Carter Anjana Chakravorty Tu Anh Pham Nguyen Steven Mileto Fernanda Schreiber Lucy Li Pauline Howarth Simon Clare Bliss Cunningham Susan P Sambol Adam Cheknis Iris Figueroa Stuart Johnson Dale Gerding Julian I Rood Gordon Dougan Trevor D Lawley Dena Lyras

UNLABELLED Clostridium difficile is a leading cause of antibiotic-associated diarrhea, a significant animal pathogen, and a worldwide public health burden. Most disease-causing strains secrete two exotoxins, TcdA and TcdB, which are considered to be the primary virulence factors. Understanding the role that these toxins play in disease is essential for the rational design of urgently needed new...

2017
Lara Macchioni Magdalena Davidescu Katia Fettucciari Maya Petricciuolo Leonardo Gatticchi Davide Gioè Vincenzo Villanacci Massimo Bellini Pierfrancesco Marconi Rita Roberti Gabrio Bassotti Lanfranco Corazzi

Enteric glial cells (EGCs) are components of the intestinal epithelial barrier essential for regulating the enteric nervous system. Clostridium difficile is the most common cause of antibiotic-associated colitis, toxin B (TcdB) being the major virulence factor, due to its ability to breach the intestinal epithelial barrier and to act on other cell types. Here we investigated TcdB effects on EGC...

2014
Michael Maynard-Smith Helen Ahern Joanna McGlashan Philip Nugent Roger Ling Harriet Denton Ruth Coxon John Landon April Roberts Clifford Shone

Infection with the bacterium Clostridium difficile causes symptoms ranging from mild to severe diarrhoea with life-threatening complications and remains a significant burden to healthcare systems throughout the developed world. Two potent cytotoxins, TcdA and TcdB are the prime mediators of the syndrome and rapid neutralisation of these would afford significant benefits in disease management. I...

2007
Sanmay Das Milton H. Saier Charles Elkan

The number of specialized databases in molecular biology is growing fast, as is the availability of molecular data. These trends necessitate the development of automatic methods for finding relevant information to include in specialized databases. We show how to use a comprehensive database (SwissProt) as a source of new entries for a specialized database (TCDB, the Transport Classification Dat...

2012
Rory N. Pruitt D. Borden Lacy

Clostridium difficile is a toxin-producing bacterium that is a frequent cause of hospital-acquired and antibiotic-associated diarrhea. The incidence, severity, and costs associated with C. difficile associated disease are substantial and increasing, making C. difficile a significant public health concern. The two primary toxins, TcdA and TcdB, disrupt host cell function by inactivating small GT...

2013
Hercules Moura Rebecca R. Terilli Adrian R. Woolfitt Yulanda M. Williamson Glauber Wagner Thomas A. Blake Maria I. Solano John R. Barr

Clostridium difficile is the leading cause of antibiotic-associated diarrhea in hospitals worldwide, due to hypervirulent epidemic strains with the ability to produce increased quantities of the large toxins TcdA and TcdB. Unfortunately, accurate quantification of TcdA and TcdB from different toxinotypes using small samples has not yet been reported. In the present study, we quantify C. diffici...

2015
Zachary Chiang Åke Västermark Marco Punta Penny C. Coggill Jaina Mistry Robert D. Finn Milton H. Saier

Transport systems comprise roughly 10% of all proteins in a cell, playing critical roles in many processes. Improving and expanding their classification is an important goal that can affect studies ranging from comparative genomics to potential drug target searches. It is not surprising that different classification systems for transport proteins have arisen, be it within a specialized database...

Journal: :The Journal of infectious diseases 2013
Jennifer Steele Jean Mukherjee Nicola Parry Saul Tzipori

BACKGROUND A dramatic increase in morbidity and mortality from Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) due to the recent emergence of virulent, antibiotic-resistant strains has led to a search for alternatives to antibiotics, including vaccines and immune-based therapy that target the 2 key toxins-TcdA and TcdB. METHODS We investigated the efficacy of specific human monoclonal antibodies (HuMab...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 2001
A Nusrat C von Eichel-Streiber J R Turner P Verkade J L Madara C A Parkos

The anaerobic bacterium Clostridium difficile is the etiologic agent of pseudomembranous colitis. C. difficile toxins TcdA and TcdB are UDP-glucosyltransferases that monoglucosylate and thereby inactivate the Rho family of GTPases (W. P. Ciesla, Jr., and D. A. Bobak, J. Biol. Chem. 273:16021-16026, 1998). We utilized purified reference toxins of C. difficile, TcdA-10463 (TcdA) and TcdB-10463 (T...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 2001
L M Spyres M Qa'Dan A Meader J J Tomasek E W Howard J D Ballard

TcdB from Clostridium difficile glucosylates small GTPases (Rho, Rac, and Cdc42) and is an important virulence factor in the human disease pseudomembranous colitis. In these experiments, in-frame genetic fusions between the genes for the 255 amino-terminal residues of anthrax toxin lethal factor (LFn) and the TcdB(1-556) coding region were constructed, expressed, and purified from Escherichia c...

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