Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.2.1.31 (beta-glucuronidase)
7,680 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A severe outbreak of hemorrhagic colitis occurred in London, Ontario, during the month of September 1985. A total of 55 residents and 18 employees of a nursing home developed diarrhea, and 17 residents (age range, 78 to 99 years) died. Specimens from 38 patients, 37 employees and contacts, and 10 autopsies were investigated for all enteric pathogens. Specimens were also planted on MacConkey-sorbitol agar. Fecal extracts were tested on Vero cells for cytotoxin (FVT). Escherichia coli isolates were serotyped and tested for verotoxin and beta-glucuronidase production. Of the 38 symptomatic patients, 26 were positive for FVT, verotoxin-producing E. coli (VTEC), or both. Of the 105 specimens that were examined from these 38 patients, FVT and VTEC were both positive in 30 specimens, FVT only was positive in 13 specimens, and VTEC only was positive in 4 specimens. None of the 27 specimens from 10 autopsies was positive for FVT or VTEC. No other enteric pathogen was found in any of the cases. All asymptomatic individuals were negative for both FVT and VTEC. Of 19 VTEC strains that were isolated, 18 belonged to serotype O157:H7. These 18 strains and 2 more strains that were obtained from sporadic cases that had occurred within the 2 previous months were found to give similar biochemical reactions in a 36-test identification system. All isolates of serotype O157:H7 were beta-glucuronidase negative and susceptible to the antimicrobial agents that are used to treat E. coli infections. Testing for FVT and VTEC was found to be the most sensitive and specific technique for the laboratory diagnosis of this disease. Negative sorbitol, positive raffinose, and negative beta-glucuronidase tests appeared to be consistent markers for aiding in the detection of E. coli O157:H7.
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PMID:Laboratory investigation of outbreak of hemorrhagic colitis caused by Escherichia coli O157:H7. 329 10

The contribution of activated macrophages to protection against Escherichia coli was studied in mice treated intravenously with Corynebacterium parvum 7 days before infection. C. parvum-treated mice showed increased phagocytic activity and enhanced resistance to Listeria infection. In contrast, these mice showed increased susceptibility to a subsequent challenge with E. coli that correlated closely with a reduction in the LD50 of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in these mice. The peritoneal macrophages obtained from C. parvum-treated mice had a strong ability to phagocytize and kill E. coli in in vitro experiments. A rapid decline in the number of bacteria in the liver of C. parvum-treated mice was observed in the early period of infection. However, the number of bacteria in liver and spleen increased progressively to a lethal dose from 6 hr after infection. At this time, a significant increase in beta-glucuronidase, a lysosomal acid hydrolase, was found in the serum of these mice. In vitro experiments revealed that the peritoneal macrophages from C. parvum-treated mice were highly susceptible to the cytotoxic effect of LPS after 6 hr of incubation with LPS. It is suggested that the hypersensitivity of activated macrophages to the cytotoxic effect of endotoxin derived from E. coli may be partly responsible for the increased susceptibility of C. parvum-treated mice to E. coli infection.
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PMID:Increased susceptibility to Escherichia coli infection in mice pretreated with Corynebacterium parvum. 634 89