Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0023380 (lethargy)
5,697 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A novel helicobacter with the proposed name Helicobacter cetorum, sp. nov. (type strain MIT 99-5656; GenBank accession number AF 292378), was cultured from the main stomach of two wild, stranded Atlantic white-sided dolphins (Lagenorhynchus acutus) and from the feces of three captive cetaceans (a Pacific white-sided dolphin [Lagenorhynchus obliquidens]; an Atlantic bottlenose dolphin [Tursiops truncatus]; and a beluga whale [Delphinapterus leucas]). The infected captive cetaceans were either subclinical, or clinical signs included intermittent regurgitation, inappetance, weight loss, and lethargy. Ulcers were observed in the esophagus and forestomach during endoscopic examination in two of the three captive animals. In the third animal, esophageal linear erosions were visualized endoscopically, and histopathological evaluation of the main stomach revealed multifocal lymphoplasmacytic gastritis with silver-stained spiral-shaped bacteria. Helicobacter cetorum is a fusiform gram-negative bacterium with a single bipolar flagellum. The isolates grow under microaerobic conditions at 37 and 42 degrees C but not at 25 degrees C. H. cetorum is urease, catalase, and oxidase positive, and it is sensitive to cephalothin. The isolates from the wild, stranded dolphins were sensitive to nalidixic acid, whereas the isolates from the collection animals were resistant. By 16S rRNA sequencing it was determined that H. cetorum represented a distinct taxon that clusters most closely with H. pylori. Further studies are necessary to determine the role of H. cetorum in the development of gastric ulcers and gastritis of cetaceans. This is the first description and formal naming of a novel Helicobacter species from a marine mammal.
...
PMID:Helicobacter cetorum sp. nov., a urease-positive Helicobacter species isolated from dolphins and whales. 1245 48

An infection caused by a rickettsia-like organism (RLO) was detected in the blue king crab Paralithodes platypus from the eastern Sea of Okhotsk. The external signs of the disease are lethargy and an empty gastrointestinal tract. Dissection of infected individuals revealed that their hepatopancreas was light yellow in color. The causative agent of infection is Gram-negative rod-shaped bacterium targeted exclusively at hepatopancreas tissues. In the cytoplasm of infected cells, the bacteria are enclosed in parasite vacuoles or located immediately in cytosol. An ultrastructural analysis showed two main morphological types corresponding to the life cycle stages in the RLO: the vegetative stage of intermediate bodies, characterized by growth and division processes, and the infection stage of elementary bodies, which are spore-like non-dividing short rods surrounded by a multilayered membrane and having an osmiophilic inclusion body. At the terminal stage of infection, as a result of lysis of the infected cells, the RLO enters the lumen of the hepatopancreatic tubules which contributes to the spread of infection. According to genetic analysis based on 16S rRNA gene sequences, the RLO from P. platypus is most closely related to the Candidatus Hepatobacter penaei, NCBI #JX981946 (94.7% similarity) and NCBI #KY363553 (94.1% similarity). The high level of genetic differences (more than 5%) of the studied pathogen, along with the structural features, allows characterizing the RLO isolated from P. platypus as a new species of the genus Candidatus Hepatobacter paralithodi nov. sp., NCBI #MK928971.
...
PMID:First record of new rickettsia-like organism in the blue king crab Paralithodes platypus from the Sea of Okhotsk: Distribution, morphological evidence and genetic analysis. 3194 27