نتایج جستجو برای: anthrax spore

تعداد نتایج: 13072  

Journal: :Infection and immunity 2007
Trupti N Brahmbhatt Stephen C Darnell Humberto M Carvalho Patrick Sanz Tae J Kang Robert L Bull Susan B Rasmussen Alan S Cross Alison D O'Brien

Bacillus collagen-like protein of anthracis (BclA) is an immunodominant glycoprotein located on the exosporium of Bacillus anthracis. We hypothesized that antibodies to this spore surface antigen are largely responsible for the augmented immunity to anthrax that has been reported for animals vaccinated with inactivated spores and protective antigen (PA) compared to vaccination with PA alone. To...

2010
Matthew A. Crawford Marie D. Burdick Ian J. Glomski Anne E. Boyer John R. Barr Borna Mehrad Robert M. Strieter Molly A. Hughes

Chemokines have been found to exert direct, defensin-like antimicrobial activity in vitro, suggesting that, in addition to orchestrating cellular accumulation and activation, chemokines may contribute directly to the innate host response against infection. No observations have been made, however, demonstrating direct chemokine-mediated promotion of host defense in vivo. Here, we show that the m...

Journal: :FEMS microbiology letters 2008
Michael Mallozzi Joel Bozue Rebecca Giorno Krishna-Sulayman Moody Alex Slack Christopher Cote Dengli Qiu Rong Wang Peter McKenney Erh-Min Lai Janine R Maddock Arthur Friedlander Susan Welkos Patrick Eichenberger Adam Driks

Bacterial spores are encased in a multilayered proteinaceous shell, called the coat. In many Bacillus spp., the coat protects against environmental assault and facilitates germination. In Bacillus anthracis, the spore is the etiological agent of anthrax, and the functions of the coat likely contribute to virulence. Here, we characterize a B. anthracis spore protein, called Cotbeta, which is enc...

Journal: :Journal of wildlife diseases 2018
Zoe R Barandongo John K E Mfune Wendy C Turner

:  Anthrax in herbivorous wildlife and livestock is generally assumed to be transmitted via ingestion or inhalation of Bacillus anthracis spores. Although recent studies have highlighted the importance of the ingestion route for anthrax transmission, little is known about the inhalational route in natural systems. Dust bathing could aerosolize soilborne pathogens such as B. anthracis, exposing ...

Journal: :Analytical chemistry 1999
P Belgrader D Hansford G T Kovacs K Venkateswaran R Mariella F Milanovich S Nasarabadi M Okuzumi F Pourahmadi M A Northrup

Concerns about the use of anthrax spores as a weapon of mass destruction have motivated the development of portable instruments capable of detecting and monitoring a suspected release of the agent. Optimal detection of bacterial spores by PCR requires that the spores be disrupted to make the endogenous DNA available for amplification. The entire process of spore lysis, PCR, and detection can ta...

Journal: :Microbial pathogenesis 2005
C K Cote C A Rossi A S Kang P R Morrow J S Lee S L Welkos

The protective antigen (PA) component of the anthrax toxins is an essential virulence factor of Bacillus anthracis and is the major protective immunogen. The kinetics of PA production during growth of B. anthracis, and the roles of anti-PA antibody in host immunity are not clearly defined. Production of PA by the vegetative organisms peaks during the shift from exponential to stationary phase o...

Journal: :Protein expression and purification 2006
Zhiping Ding Kenneth A Bradley M Amin Arnaout Jian-Ping Xiong

Anthrax is caused by the gram-positive, spore-forming bacterium, Bacillus anthracis. Anthrax receptors play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of the anthrax disease. Anthrax toxin receptor ATR/TEM8 VWA domain is responsible for the binding of protective antigen (PA) of B. anthracis, and thus an attractive target for structure-based drug therapies. However, the production of soluble and functio...

2015
Paul Keim Roland Grunow Richard Vipond Gregor Grass Alex Hoffmaster Dawn N. Birdsell Silke R. Klee Steven Pullan Markus Antwerpen Brittany N. Bayer Jennie Latham Kristin Wiggins Crystal Hepp Talima Pearson Tim Brooks Jason Sahl David M. Wagner

BACKGROUND Anthrax is a rare disease in humans but elicits great public fear because of its past use as an agent of bioterrorism. Injectional anthrax has been occurring sporadically for more than ten years in heroin consumers across multiple European countries and this outbreak has been difficult to trace back to a source. METHODS We took a molecular epidemiological approach in understanding ...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 2009
Jean-Nicolas Tournier Aurélie Cleret Anne Quesnel-Hellmann

A recent paper published by Russell et al. suggests that Bacillus anthracis spores can be taken up by lung epithelial cells that then participate in the transport and diffusion of pathogens (6). In a model of BALB/c mice infected by the Sterne strain, the authors focus on data from 2 and 4 h after infection, which limits their analysis to the very early stages of infection. They analyzed spore-...

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