نتایج جستجو برای: intestinal microsporidia

تعداد نتایج: 132397  

2017
Raquel Martín-Hernández Mariano Higes Soledad Sagastume Ángeles Juarranz Joyce Dias-Almeida Giles E Budge Aránzazu Meana Neil Boonham

Intracellular parasites can alter the cellular machinery of host cells to create a safe haven for their survival. In this regard, microsporidia are obligate intracellular fungal parasites with extremely reduced genomes and hence, they are strongly dependent on their host for energy and resources. To date, there are few studies into host cell manipulation by microsporidia, most of which have foc...

2017
Hua Liu Zhihua Jiang Zhongying Yuan Jianhai Yin Zunfu Wang Bingxue Yu Dongsheng Zhou Yujuan Shen Jianping Cao

BACKGROUND Enterocytozoon bieneusi has been increasingly reported to infect humans and various mammals. Microsporidia cause diarrhea in HIV-infected patients worldwide. PCR amplification and sequencing based on the internal transcribed spacer region have been used to describe the genotypes of E. bieneusi and transmission of microsporidiosis. METHODS In this study, we examined E. bieneusi infe...

Journal: :Molecular and biochemical parasitology 2001
N M Fast P J Keeling

Microsporidia are highly adapted eukaryotic intracellular parasites that infect a variety of animals. Microsporidia contain no recognisable mitochondrion, but recently have been shown to have evolved from fungi and to possess heat shock protein genes derived from mitochondria. These findings make it clear that microsporidian ancestors were mitochondrial, yet it remains unknown whether they stil...

Journal: :Current Biology 1997
Robert P. Hirt Bryan Healy Charles R. Vossbrinck Elizabeth U. Canning T.Martin Embley

Microsporidia are small (1-20 micron) obligate intracellular parasites of a variety of eukaryotes, and they are serious opportunistic pathogens of immunocompromised patients [1]. Microsporidia are often assigned to the first branch in gene trees of eukaryotes [2,3], and are reported to lack mitochondria [2,4]. Like diplomonads and trichomonads, microsporidia are hypothesised to have diverged fr...

Journal: :Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America 1996
C M Coyle M Wittner D P Kotler C Noyer J M Orenstein H B Tanowitz L M Weiss

Microsporidia are emerging as opportunistic pathogens in patients with AIDS. Enterocytozoon bieneusi and Encephalitozoon (Septata) intestinalis have been implicated in enteric infections in AIDS patients with chronic diarrhea, a wasting syndrome, and malabsorption. We used the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and primers that amplify the conserved regions of the small-subunit rRNA (SSU-rRNA) gen...

Journal: :Genome research 2012
Christina A Cuomo Christopher A Desjardins Malina A Bakowski Jonathan Goldberg Amy T Ma James J Becnel Elizabeth S Didier Lin Fan David I Heiman Joshua Z Levin Sarah Young Qiandong Zeng Emily R Troemel

Microsporidia comprise a large phylum of obligate intracellular eukaryotes that are fungal-related parasites responsible for widespread disease, and here we address questions about microsporidia biology and evolution. We sequenced three microsporidian genomes from two species, Nematocida parisii and Nematocida sp1, which are natural pathogens of Caenorhabditis nematodes and provide model system...

Journal: :The Journal of eukaryotic microbiology 2008
Renny C H Lee Bryony A P Williams Amanda M V Brown Martin L Adamson Patrick J Keeling Naomi M Fast

Microsporidia are a large and diverse group of intracellular parasites related to fungi. Much of our understanding of the relationships between microsporidia comes from phylogenies based on a single gene, the small subunit (SSU) rRNA, because only this gene has been sampled from diverse microsporidia. However, SSUrRNA trees are limited in their ability to resolve basal branches and some microsp...

2010
Soo Chan Lee Nicolas Corradi Sylvia Doan Fred S. Dietrich Patrick J. Keeling Joseph Heitman

BACKGROUND Microsporidia are obligate intracellular, eukaryotic pathogens that infect a wide range of animals from nematodes to humans, and in some cases, protists. The preponderance of evidence as to the origin of the microsporidia reveals a close relationship with the fungi, either within the kingdom or as a sister group to it. Recent phylogenetic studies and gene order analysis suggest that ...

Journal: :Current Biology 2008
Paul S. Dyer

The evolutionary origins of the microsporidia, a group of intracellular eukaryotic pathogens, have been unclear. Genome analysis of a sex locus and other gene clusters has now revealed conserved synteny with zygomycete fungi, indicating that microsporidia are true fungi descended from a zygomycete ancestor.

2012
Chusana Suankratay Ekkachai Thiansukhon Voraphoj Nilaratanakul Chaturong Putaporntip Somchai Jongwutiwes

We describe a case of microsporidial myositis in a healthy man from Thailand. The small subunit rRNA sequence of this microsporidium is novel and has a close phylogenetic relationship with Endoreticulatus, a genus of lepidopteran microsporidia. Myositis could be caused by more genera of microsporidia than previously known.

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