نتایج جستجو برای: shiga toxin producing e coli

تعداد نتایج: 1280580  

2008
R. Serra - Moreno J. Jofre M. Muniesa

Shiga toxins (Stx) are the main virulence factors associated with a form of Escherichia coli known as Shiga toxin-producing E. coli (STEC). They are encoded in temperate lambdoid phages located on the chromosome of STEC. STEC strains can carry more than one prophage. Consequently, toxin and phage production might be influenced by the presence of more than one Stx prophage on the bacterial chrom...

Journal: :Journal of bacteriology 2008
R Serra-Moreno J Jofre M Muniesa

Shiga toxins (Stx) are the main virulence factors associated with a form of Escherichia coli known as Shiga toxin-producing E. coli (STEC). They are encoded in temperate lambdoid phages located on the chromosome of STEC. STEC strains can carry more than one prophage. Consequently, toxin and phage production might be influenced by the presence of more than one Stx prophage on the bacterial chrom...

2012
Tadasuke Ooka Kazuko Seto Kimiko Kawano Hideki Kobayashi Yoshiki Etoh Sachiko Ichihara Akiko Kaneko Junko Isobe Keiji Yamaguchi Kazumi Horikawa Tânia A.T. Gomes Annick Linden Marjorie Bardiau Jacques G. Mainil Lothar Beutin Yoshitoshi Ogura Tetsuya Hayashi

Discriminating Escherichia albertii from other Enterobacteriaceae is difficult. Systematic analyses showed that E. albertii represents a substantial portion of strains currently identified as eae-positive Escherichia coli and includes Shiga toxin 2f-producing strains. Because E. albertii possesses the eae gene, many strains might have been misidentified as enterohemorrhagic or enteropathogenic ...

2012
Wan-Fu Yue Min Du Mei-Jun Zhu

BACKGROUND Shiga toxin (stx) genes have been transferred to numerous bacteria, one of which is E. coli O157:H7. It is a common belief that stx gene is transferred by bacteriophages, because stx genes are located on lambdoid prophages in the E. coli O157:H7 genome. Both E. coli O157:H7 and non-pathogenic E. coli are highly enriched in cattle feedlots. We hypothesized that strong UV radiation in ...

2013
Carla Tironi-Farinati Patricia A. Geoghegan Adriana Cangelosi Alipio Pinto C. Fabian Loidl Jorge Goldstein

Infection by Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli causes hemorrhagic colitis, hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS), acute renal failure, and also central nervous system complications in around 30% of the children affected. Besides, neurological deficits are one of the most unrepairable and untreatable outcomes of HUS. Study of the striatum is relevant because basal ganglia are one of the brain are...

Journal: :American journal of physiology. Gastrointestinal and liver physiology 2009
Irina Malyukova Karen F Murray Chengru Zhu Edgar Boedeker Anne Kane Kathleen Patterson Jeffrey R Peterson Mark Donowitz Olga Kovbasnjuk

Shiga toxin 1 and 2 production is a cardinal virulence trait of enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli infection that causes a spectrum of intestinal and systemic pathology. However, intestinal sites of enterohemorrhagic E. coli colonization during the human infection and how the Shiga toxins are taken up and cross the globotriaosylceramide (Gb3) receptor-negative intestinal epithelial cells remain...

Journal: :Communicable diseases intelligence quarterly report 2004
Robyn Doyle Kieda Watson Leanne E Unicomb Janice A Lanser Rolf Wise Rod Ratcliff Barry Combs John Ferguson

To estimate the prevalence of Shiga toxin producing Escherichia coli in Australia, bloody stool samples from two Australian locations were screened for the presence of Shiga toxin genes, stx1 and stx2. Four of 126 (3.2%) and 139 of 5,829 (2.4%) patients from the two locations had a positive polymerase chain reaction for Shiga toxin genes.

Journal: :Canadian journal of microbiology 2005
Pina M Fratamico Chitrita DebRoy Terence P Strobaugh Chin-Yi Chen

Escherichia coli serogroup O103 has been associated with gastrointestinal illness and hemolytic uremic syndrome. To develop PCR-based methods for detection and identification of this serogroup, the DNA sequence of the 12,033-bp region containing the O antigen gene cluster of Escherichia coli O103 was determined. Of the 12 open reading frames identified, the E. coli O103 wzx (O antigen flippase)...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 1983
A D O'Brien G D LaVeck

A toxin from an enteropathogenic strain of Escherichia coli (E. coli H30) was purified to apparent homogeneity from cell lysates. The steps used to isolate the E. coli H30 toxin included French pressure-cell disruption of bacteria grown in iron-depleted media. Affi-Gel Blue chromatography, chromatofocusing, and anti-Shiga toxin affinity chromatography. The mobilities of the subunits of radioiod...

Aram Mokarizadeh Mohammad Tabatabaei, Nasim Foad-Marashi

Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) are food-borne pathogens primarily associated with the consumption of contaminated ground beef and are an important food safety concern worldwide. STEC has been found to produce a family of related cytotoxins known as Shiga toxins (Stxs). Shiga toxins have been classified into two major classes, Stx1 and Stx2. A single strains of STEC can produce St...

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