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Volume 44,
Issue 4,
1996
Volume 44, Issue 4, 1996
- Editorial
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- Review Article
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Transferrin receptors of Neisseria meningitidis: promising candidates for a broadly cross-protective vaccine
More LessSummaryProduction of a meningococcal vaccine capable of generating long-lasting immunity in all age groups is still a high priority worldwide. Iron-regulated outer-membrane proteins have attracted considerable attention in recent years and it has become increasingly evident that the meningococcal transferrin-binding proteins, TBP1 and TBP2, have characteristics compatible with a safe and broadly cross-reactive vaccine candidate. Both TBPs are surface-exposed and immunogenic in man and animals, and antibodies to their native structure are bactericidal to homologous and many heterologous strains. These include strains from various serogroups, serotypes and serosubtypes, with no obvious correlation between bactericidal activity and the identity of the strains or the molecular mass of the heterogeneous TBP2 molecule. A meningococcal vaccine based on, or enriched with, undenatured TBPs from one or more strains, in combination with conventional polysaccharide-based vaccines, might increase the spectrum of strains against which protection can be achieved to include serogroup B strains. In this review, the structure-function and immunological properties of TBP1 and TBP2 are discussed.
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- Diagnostic Microbiology
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An evaluation of pre-poured selective media for the isolation of Neisseria gonorrhoeae
More LessFourteen commercial media supplied as pre-poured plates were compared with an ‘in-house’ selective medium for their ability to support the growth of 105 gonococcal isolates (representing a wide variety of serovars encountered in natural infection), 25 meningococcal and 20 Neisseria lactamica isolates, and to inhibit the growth of 71 isolates of non-pathogenic neisseriae and miscellaneous organisms. Only two of the prepoured plate media and the in-house selective medium yielded growth of duplicate cultures of all 105 gonococcal isolates after incubation for 24 h: one other medium provided growth of all the isolates after incubation for 48 h. The ability of the various media to suppress the growth of the 71 isolates of non-pathogenic neisseriae and miscellaneous organisms ranged from 97.2 to 71.8% of isolates inhibited. Of the four media that enabled growth of all the gonococcal strains, inhibition was 94.4% for the in-house medium, 85.9% and 80.3% for the two media on which all gonococci grew after 24 h and 71.8% for the medium on which all of the gonococci grew after 48 h. Failure of growth of gonococci was associated with: serogroup IA isolates (p < 0.001), AHU auxotype (p < 0.001) and the presence of vancomycin rather than lincomycin in the selective medium (p < 0.02). The use of 10% blood and a highly nutritious medium based on the original New York City (NYC) or modified New York City (MNYC) formulation were also important in supporting growth of gonococci. One of the main problems in lack of selectivity was a failure to inhibit the growth of yeasts. As effective inhibition of yeasts was obtained with other media containing the same concentration of amphotericin, failure may be due to batch variation of supplement, media preparation, or reduced shelf life of the media. None of the commercially available pre-poured media performed as well as the in-house medium despite the fact that some of the media were prepared to a very similar formula.
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Polymerase chain reaction for the detection of Bordetella pertussis in clinical nasopharyngeal aspirates
More LessA PCR procedure for the detection of Bordetella pertussis in nasopharyngeal aspirates (NPAs) was developed with primers derived from the pertussis toxin promoter region. The amplification resulted in a 191-bp PCR product specific for B. pertussis. A total of 681 NPAs collected from children with cough lasting >7 days was evaluated by PCR and culture; 104 aspirates were positive by PCR and 93 by culture. Sixteen cases were positive only by PCR and five culture positive aspirates were negative by PCR. An internal control was included in the assay to monitor the performance of the PCR and to identify possible inhibitory components in clinical samples. The PCR method was more efficient than culture in detecting B. pertussis in samples collected late in the disease, in antibiotic-treated children and in patients with mild disease.
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A comparison of immunomagnetic separation and direct culture for the isolation of verocytotoxin-producing Escherichia coli O157 from cases of bloody diarrhoea, non-bloody diarrhoea and asymptomatic contacts
More Less1058 Enrichment culture in modified buffered peptone water followed by immunomagnetic separation (IMS) with magnetic beads coated with an antibody against Escherichia coli O157 was compared with direct culture on cefixime rhamnose sorbitol MacConkey agar (CR-SMAC) and cefixime tellurite sorbitol MacConkey agar (CT-SMAC) for the isolation of E. coli O157 from human faeces. In total, 690 samples were examined; E. coli O157 was isolated from 25 samples by IMS but from only 15 and 12 by direct culture on CT-SMAC and CR-SMAC, respectively. The difference in sensitivity of detection was at its most marked on screening repeat faecal samples from known cases and samples from asymptomatic contacts, when of 12 strains of E. coli O157 isolated by IMS, only five were isolated by direct culture. IMS is a sensitive and simple technique for the isolation of E. coli O157 from human faecal samples and should prove useful in elucidating further the epidemiology of this micro-organism.
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The detection of verocytotoxins in bacterial cultures from human diarrhoeal samples with monoclonal antibody-based ELISAs
H. J. Ball, D. Finlay, A. Zafar and T. WilsonBacterial cultures from 1801 human diarrhoeal faecal specimens were examined for verocytotoxins I and II by monoclonal antibody-based sandwich ELISAs. Of the 68 ELISA-positive cultures selected from initial screening, 32 were positive by ELISA on repeat or from freshly grown cultures. ELISA-positive pure cultures were obtained from 13 of these, of which seven were confirmed as verocytotoxin positive by cytotoxicity assay. These seven strains were typed as O26 (5) and O146 (2). The six false positive results were from isolates of Enterobacter sp. (1), Citrobacter freundii (1) and Escherichia coli (4), one each of types O1, O18ac and O98 and an untypable strain. Despite the occurrence of false positive reactions, sandwich ELISA was a useful method for the rapid screening of samples, and detected verocytotoxin-positive E. coli strains, other than O157, from patients with clinical conditions in which they could be implicated.
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- Antimicrobial Activity
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The killing of Helicobacter pylori by low-power laser light in the presence of a photosensitiser
More LessHelicobacter pylori is associated with various gastrointestinal disorders. Lethal photosensitisation was investigated as a possible technique for killing H. pylori which might offer a better alternative to antibiotics. The susceptibility of H. pylori to lethal photosensitisation was determined by mixing suspensions of H. pylori with various photosensitisers and plating out on blood agar before irradiation with low-power laser light. Five sensitisers were studied further by mixing them with H. pylori in a tissue-culture plate and counting survivors after irradiation as a function of laser exposure time, dye concentration and pre-irradiation time. Crystal violet and thionin were ineffective as sensitisers, but zones of inhibition appeared with methylene blue (MB), protoporphyrin IX (PPIX), haematoporphyrin derivative (HPD), toluidine blue O (TBO) and disulphonated aluminium phthalocyanine (S2). Laser light or sensitiser alone did not affect bacterial viability. S2 (100 μg/ml) with a laser light energy density of 16 J/cm2, HPD (100 μ/ml) with 160 J/cm2, MB (100 μg/ml) with 21 J/cm2, PPIX (150 μg/ml) with 320 J/cm2 and TBO (50 μg/ml) with 160 J/cm2 all reduced bacterial viability by > 99%. The killing of sensitised H. pylori by laser light offers a new approach to the treatment of localised infections when all colonised areas are accessible to light.
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- Hospital Infection
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Epidemiological study of an outbreak of infection with Staphylococcus aureus resistant to lincosamides and streptogramin A in a French hospital
More LessA significant increase in the incidence of isolates of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), that were also resistant to lincosamides and streptogramin A (LS A -MRSA), was observed in a French university hospital. Twenty-seven isolates from the outbreak were characterised, including 17 isolates from a plastic surgery ward and six control strains of MRSA. The strains were examined by antibiotyping and biotyping, and by three molecular methods: plasmid analysis, ribotyping and insertion sequence (IS) typing with IS256 sequence as a probe. Antibiotyping (five antibiotypes) was discriminatory because of the uncommon resistance phenotype of the epidemic strain. Biotyping (three biotypes), DNA plasmid analysis (four profiles) and ribotyping (two profiles) were poorly sensitive, in contrast to IS-typing (12 profiles). By the latter method, a coefficient of similarity (percentage similarity) compared to the predominant IS profile was calculated. Strains with a coefficient of similarity ⩾ 82% were considered as highly related to the epidemic strain, while those with a coefficient of similarity ⩽ 40% were regarded as distant. Results obtained with the five markers confirmed that an outbreak of hospital infection had occurred in the plastic surgery ward, with spread of the epidemic strain throughout the hospital.
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- Microbial Pathogenicity
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Immune responsiveness in a rat model for type II diabetes (Zucker rat, fa/fa): susceptibility to Candida albicans infection and leucocyte function
More LessThere is a causal relationship between obesity-associated diabetes and an increased risk of infection. The ability of obese (fa/fa) Zucker rats, a model for non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM), to clear Candida albicans from the circulation and tissues was compared to that of lean (Fa/fa, Fa/Fa) Zucker rat controls as a measure of immune function. The ID50 necessary to establish tissue colonisation in lean Zucker rats was 1.18 log10 times greater than that determined for the obese Zucker rats. Nine days after intravenous (i.v.) injection of a yeast suspension, the organs of obese rats had a 10-fold greater yeast/g organ burden than did lean rats. The kidney was determined to be the primary target organ for colonisation. Germ-tube formation by C. albicans occurred at a rate 1.5 times faster in serum from obese rats than in serum from lean rats. Peritoneal polymorphonuclear leucocytes, resident macrophages and thioglycollateelicited macrophages from lean Zucker rats displayed a significantly higher ability to kill ingested yeast cells than analogous cell populations from obese Zucker rats.
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Penetration of M cells and destruction of Peyer’s patches by Yersinia enterocolitica: an ultrastructural and histological study
More LessYersinia enterocolitica is enteropathogenic for man and rodents. Previous studies provided evidence that Y. enterocolitica invades the lymphoid follicles of the Peyer’s patches (PP) of the small intestine. In this study Y. enterocolitica-induced tissue alterations of the follicle-associated epithelium (FAE) and the underlying PP tissue were analysed by scanning (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) as well as by conventional histological examination. For this purpose, an experimental mouse infection model including orogastric infections as well as ileal loop experiments were used. A rapid and selective colonisation of the FAE after orogastric yersinia infection was observed by SEM. TEM studies confirmed that Y. enterocolitica adhered closely to the FAE including M cells and enterocytes. Histological studies and TEM revealed that Y. enterocolitica selectively invaded the PP via M cells but not via other cells of the FAE. One day after Y. enterocolitica infection the FAE as altered and small micro-abscesses comprising yersiniae expressing the major outer-membrane protein YadA were observed immediately beneath the FAE. Adjacent villi were dilated from lymphangiectasis and transmigrating polymorphonuclear leucocytes (PMNL) were found within the epithelium. At 5–7 days after infection the FAE and parts of PP were destroyed. Profound alterations of the cyto-architecture of the PP were due to the enormous recruitment of PMNL. By day 5 after infection, abscesses were found in the mesenteric lymph nodes. However, TEM studies revealed evidence that Y. enterocolitica may disseminate from the PP not only via the lymphatics but also by invasion of blood vessels. Taken together, the results of this study demonstrate that the FAE is the primary site of host-pathogen interaction in Y. enterocolitica infection and that this pathogen penetrates M cells and subsequently induces destruction of the PP.
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Early pathogenesis of Listeria monocytogenes infection in the mouse spleen
More LessHistological observations suggested that in the spleen, blood-borne Listeria monocytogenes bacteria were preferentially ingested by two morphologically distinct mononuclear phagocyte populations present in the marginal zone of the white pulp. The morphologies of these phagocytes corresponded to those of marginal zone macrophages or marginal zone dendritic cells. Moreover, during the first day of infection, the same phagocytes containing listeria apparently translocated from the marginal zone into the white pulp where they established secondary infectious foci. This event was associated with a large influx of neutrophil polymorphonuclear leucocytes (PMNLs) into infected white pulp, and with the disappearance of lymphocytes from this compartment. White pulp lymphocytopenia also occurred in the spleens of listeria-infected mice selectively depleted of neutrophil PMNLs, indicating that these phagocytes were not responsible for displacing or destroying lymphocytes. The implications of these findings for explaining the virulence and immunogenicity of L. monocytogenes are discussed.
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- Mycology
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In-vitro proteinase production by oral Candida albicans isolates from individuals with and without HIV infection and its attenuation by antimycotic agents
More LessIn-vitro proteinase production by oral Candida albicans isolates from patients with and without HIV infection (18 isolates from each group) was assessed by image analysis of a plate assay, with bovine serum albumin (BSA) as a substrate. The effect of sub-minimal inhibitory concentrations (sub-MICs) of nystatin, amphotericin B, clotrimazole and miconazole on in-vitro proteinase production by these yeast isolates was also investigated. Proteinase production by C. albicans isolates from patients with HIV infection was significantly greater than production by those from individuals without infection. All 18 isolates from HIV-infected individuals produced proteinase, in comparison to 56% of isolates from uninfected individuals. Pre-exposure of C. albicans isolates (seven proteinase producers from each group) to 1/4 and 1/16 MICs of nystatin, amphotericin B, clotrimazole and miconazole resulted in decreased proteinase production in all isolates tested. However, after exposure to the four antimycotic agents, proteinase production was decreased to a significantly greater extent in isolates from uninfected individuals than in those with HIV disease. Furthermore, when the relative concentration effect of antimycotic agents on proteinase production was compared, C. albicans isolates from the HIV-free group demonstrated a salient dose-response relationship compared with the HIV-infected group. These results indicate that C. albicans from patients with HIV infection are significantly more proteolytic than those from individuals without the infection, and that polyenes and imidazoles curtail the proteolytic activity of all C. albicans isolates, albeit to a lesser extent in those from HIV-infected patients. It appears that HIV disease favours oral colonisation by more proteolytic C. albicans isolates, with resilient proteolytic activity.
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- Proceedings Of The Pathological Society Of Great Britain And Ireland
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Volumes and issues
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Volume 74 (2025)
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Volume 73 (2024)
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Volume 72 (2023 - 2024)
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Volume 71 (2022)
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Volume 70 (2021)
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Volume 69 (2020)
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Volume 68 (2019)
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Volume 67 (2018)
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Volume 66 (2017)
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Volume 65 (2016)
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Volume 64 (2015)
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Volume 63 (2014)
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Volume 62 (2013)
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Volume 60 (2011)
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Volume 49 (2000)
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Volume 48 (1999)
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Volume 47 (1998)
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Volume 46 (1997)
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Volume 45 (1996)
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Volume 44 (1996)
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Volume 43 (1995)
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Volume 42 (1995)
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Volume 41 (1994)
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Volume 40 (1994)
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Volume 39 (1993)
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Volume 38 (1993)
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Volume 37 (1992)
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Volume 36 (1992)
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Volume 35 (1991)
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Volume 34 (1991)
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Volume 33 (1990)
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Volume 32 (1990)
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Volume 31 (1990)
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Volume 30 (1989)
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Volume 29 (1989)
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Volume 28 (1989)
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Volume 27 (1988)
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Volume 26 (1988)
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Volume 25 (1988)
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Volume 24 (1987)
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Volume 23 (1987)
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Volume 22 (1986)
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Volume 21 (1986)
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Volume 20 (1985)
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Volume 19 (1985)
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Volume 18 (1984)
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Volume 17 (1984)
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Volume 16 (1983)
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Volume 15 (1982)
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Volume 14 (1981)
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Volume 13 (1980)
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Volume 12 (1979)
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Volume 11 (1978)
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Volume 10 (1977)
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Volume 9 (1976)
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Volume 8 (1975)
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Volume 7 (1974)
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Volume 6 (1973)
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Volume 5 (1972)
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Volume 4 (1971)
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Volume 3 (1970)
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Volume 2 (1969)
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Volume 1 (1968)
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