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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Bartonella quintana, an emerging gram-negative pathogen, may cause trench fever,
endocarditis
, cerebral abscess and bacillary angiomatosis usually with the absence of septic shock in humans. B. quintana lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a deep rough endotoxin with strong reactivity in the limulus amebocyte lysate (LAL)-assay, was studied in human whole blood and in a rat model. A significant (P<0.05) increase of interleukin-8 (IL-8) concentration, comparable to the level induced by enterobacterial LPS, was stimulated in the human whole blood by B. quintana LPS. Isolated human neutrophils delayed their apoptotic behavior in the presence of B. quintana LPS. In the rat, B. quintana LPS induced a significant (P<0.001) increase in white blood cell count, both 30 and 60 min after intravenous injection. Such leukocytosis was inhibited by pretreatment with prazosin, an alpha-adrenergic antagonist. B. quintana LPS did not significantly change heart rate (HR), hematocrit (HCT) and platelet count in the above reported in vivo model, and regarding mean blood pressure (MAP) only a very early (5 min after LPS) and mild (yet significant) hypotension was observed. In contrast, a long-lasting decrease of MAP was found in Salmonella minnesota R595 LPS-treated animals. Blood TNFalpha levels did not change significantly from the baseline in rats injected with either saline or with B. quintana LPS, on the contrary S. minnesota R595 LPS-injected animals showed substantial increase of TNFalpha levels up to 2924 pg/ml at 60 min after LPS injection. B. quintana LPS as well as Salmonella LPS-injected rats exhibited an increase of the blood levels of
GRO
/CINC-1, particularly at 240 min after LPS administration. Apical part of rat gut villi showed several TUNEL-positive cells in tissue sections from B. quintana LPS-treated animals. Taken together, our data demonstrates that B. quintana LPS is able to selectively stimulate some inflammatory mediators. B. quintana LPS-induced leukocytosis appears mediated by an alpha-adrenergic receptor. The delayed apoptotic process of leukocytes and the chemokine increase may explain the apoptotic cells found in the rat gut and the inflammatory reactions in some human Bartonella diseases. This peculiar inflammatory pattern induced by B. quintana LPS, may partially account for the lack of severe septic shock, observed in human B. quintana infections.
...
PMID:Bartonella quintana lipopolysaccharide effects on leukocytes, CXC chemokines and apoptosis: a study on the human whole blood and a rat model. 1278 2
Several studies reported linkage between bacterial infections and carcinogenesis. Streptococcus bovis was traditionally considered as a lower grade pathogen frequently involved in bacteremia and
endocarditis
. This bacterium became important in human health as it was shown that 25-80% of patients who presented a S.bovis bacteremia had also a colorectal tumor. Moreover, in previous experiments, we demonstrated that S.bovis or S.bovis wall extracted antigens (WEA) were able to promote carcinogenesis in rats. The aim of the present study was: (i) to identify the S.bovis proteins responsible for in vitro pro-inflammatory properties; (ii) to purify them; (iii) to examine their ability to stimulate in vitro IL-8 and COX-2 expression by human colon cancer cells; and (iv) to assess in vivo their pro-carcinogenic potential in a rat model of colon carcinogenesis. The purified S300 fraction, as determined by proteomic analysis, contained 72 protein spots in two-dimensional gel electrophoresis representing 12 different proteins able to trigger human epithelial colonic Caco-2 cells and rat colonic mucosa to release CXC chemokines (human IL-8 or rat CINC/
GRO
) and prostaglandins E2, correlated with an in vitro over-expression of COX-2. Moreover, these proteins were highly effective in the promotion of pre-neoplastic lesions in azoxymethane-treated rats. In the presence of these proteins, Caco-2 cells exhibited enhanced phosphorylation of the three classes of MAP kinases. Our results show a relationship between the pro-inflammatory potential of S.bovis proteins and their pro-carcinogenic properties, confirming the linkage between inflammation and colon carcinogenesis. These data support the hypothesis that colonic bacteria can contribute to cancer development particularly in chronic infection/inflammation diseases where bacterial components may interfere with cell function.
...
PMID:Carcinogenic properties of proteins with pro-inflammatory activity from Streptococcus infantarius (formerly S.bovis). 1474 16