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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Lactoferrin is an
iron
-binding glycoprotein found in exocrine secretions of mammals and released from neutrophilic granules during inflammation. This review describes the biological roles of lactoferrin in host defence. Secreted lactoferrin exerts antimicrobial action either by chelation of
iron
or by destabilization of bacterial membranes. Furthermore, lactoferrin modulates the inflammatory process, mainly by preventing the release of cytokines from monocytes and by regulating the proliferation and differentiation of immune cells. Some of these activities are related to the ability of lactoferrin to bind lipopolysaccharides (LPS) with high affinity. Indeed, recent in vitro studies indicate that lactoferrin is able to compete with the LPS-binding protein for LPS binding and therefore to prevent the transfer of LPS to CD14 present at the surface of monocytes. Moreover, the prophylactic properties of lactoferrin against
septicemia
in vivo have been demonstrated. Taken as a whole, these observations strongly suggest that lactoferrin is one of the key molecules which modulate the inflammatory response.
...
PMID:Lactoferrin: a multifunctional glycoprotein involved in the modulation of the inflammatory process. 1035 73
Avian pathogenic Escherichia coli (APEC) cause aerosacculitis, polyserositis,
septicemia
and other mainly extraintestinal diseases in chickens, turkeys and other avian species. APEC are found in the intestinal microflora of healthy birds and most of the diseases associated with them are secondary to environmental and host predisposing factors. APEC isolates commonly belong to certain serogroups, O1, O2 and O78, and to a restricted number of clones. Several experimental models have been developed, permitting a more reliable evaluation of the pathogenicity of E. coli for chickens and turkeys. Hence, virulence factors identified on APEC are adhesins such as the F1 and P fimbriae, and curli, the aerobactin
iron
sequestering system, K1 capsule, temperature-sensitive hemagglutinin (Tsh), resistance to the bactericidal effects of serum and cytotoxic effects. Experimental infection studies have shown that the air-exchange regions of the lung and the airsacs are important sites of entry of E. coli into the bloodstream of birds during the initial stages of infection and that resistance to phagocytosis may be an important mechanism in the development of the disease. They have also demonstrated that F1 fimbriae are expressed in the respiratory tract, whereas P fimbriae are expressed in the internal organs of infected chickens. The role of these fimbrial adhesins in the development of disease is not yet, however, fully understood. The more recent use of genetic approaches for the identification of new virulence factors will greatly enhance our knowledge of APEC pathogenic mechanisms. Diagnosis of APEC infections is based on the clinical picture, lesions and isolation of E. coli. This may be strengthened by serotyping and identification of virulence factors using immunological or molecular methods such as DNA probes and PCR. Approaches for the prevention and control of APEC infections include the control of environmental contamination and environmental parameters such as humidity and ventilation. Antibiotherapy is widely used, although APEC are frequently resistant to a wide range of antibiotics. Vaccines containing killed or attenuated virulent bacteria protect against infection with the homologous strain but are less efficient against heterologous strains. Hence, vaccination for colibacillosis is not widely practised because of the large variety of serogroups involved in field outbreaks.
...
PMID:Avian pathogenic Escherichia coli (APEC). 1036 60
The Brazilian purpuric fever (BPF) clone of Haemophilus influenzae biogroup aegyptius causes a fatal septicaemic disease, resembling fulminant meningococcal
sepsis
, in children. When isolate F3031 was grown under
iron
-limiting conditions, the presence of several
iron
-regulated proteins of 38-110 kDa was revealed by electrophoretic analysis and a Fur homologue was shown by immunoblotting. Dot-blot assays and immunoblotting indicated that BPF cells bound human transferrin and contained transferrin-binding proteins in the outer membrane. However, the binding activity and the biosynthesis of these proteins were detected even under
iron
-rich conditions. Immunoblot analysis demonstrated the presence of a periplasmic protein related to the ferric
iron
-binding protein A (FbpA), the major
iron
-binding protein described in Neisseria spp. However, the FbpA homologue in strain F3031 was constitutively expressed and was smaller than the periplasmic protein detected in H. influenzae type b strain Eagan. The periplasm of strain F3031 also contained a protein related to the Streptococcus parasanguis FimA protein which recently has been shown to be involved in
iron
acquisition in Yersinia pestis. Although the Eagan and F3031 FimA homologues had a similar mol. wt, of 31 kDa, the expression of the BPF fimA-like gene was not regulated by the
iron
concentration of the culture medium.
...
PMID:Fur and iron transport proteins in the Brazilian purpuric fever clone of Haemophilus influenzae biogroup aegyptius. 1040 13
We describe a technique that utilizes electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) to measure NO(*) and pO(2) directly, and non-invasively, from tissue in vivo. Diethyldithiocarbamate (DETC) was injected with
iron
so as to complex with NO(*) in the tissue. Gloxy (an oxygen-sensitive, paramagnetic material) was also implanted into the tissue of interest (brain or liver). Because the signals arising from gloxy and NO-Fe-(DETC)(2) did not overlap, they could be monitored and measured simultaneously in vivo. The gloxy was not responsive to NO(*) and/or DETC. As model systems we either injected SNP (an NO(*) donor) into animals and monitored NO(*) and pO(2) simultaneously from brain, or endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide; LPS) was injected in order to induce a septic episode and NO(*) and pO(2) measured from liver. We found a close correlation between levels of SNP-derived NO(*) and brain pO(2) in vivo. During
sepsis
, liver pO(2) decreased dramatically at 300-360 min after endotoxin injection, and this coincided with decreases in mean arterial blood pressure and increased tissue NO(*) detected. These studies demonstrate the potential usefulness of this technique for making direct in vivo measurements of NO(*) and pO(2) simultaneously from tissue.
...
PMID:Simultaneous measurement of NO(*) and PO(2) from tissue by in vivo EPR. 1044 68
Patients with hepatic iron overload who undergo orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) have a worse 1-year survival than those who undergo transplantation for other indications; the long-term outcome in this population is unknown. The purpose of this study is to report long-term follow-up after OLT in a cohort of patients with hepatic iron overload. Five liver transplant centers in the United States reported follow-up data on 37 patients receiving a first liver transplant who had severe hepatic iron overload in their native livers. Kaplan-Meier 5-year survival among these patients was compared with survival data from all age-matched liver transplantations reported to the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) over the same time period (1987 to 1993). The 5-year survival rate after OLT was 40% in the hepatic iron overload group compared with an overall survival rate of 62% for all patient groups from the UNOS registry (P =.0009). Although
sepsis
was the cause of 53% of all deaths occurring within the first year after OLT, cardiac complications accounted for 50% of the late mortality in patients with hepatic iron overload. In conclusion, long-term survival after OLT is significantly decreased in patients with hepatic iron overload. Infectious and cardiac complications are the most common causes of death in these patients. Further studies are needed to define the relationship between hepatic iron overload and mortality and to examine the effect of
iron
depletion on outcome after OLT in this patient population.
...
PMID:Long-term follow-up after liver transplantation in patients with hepatic iron overload. 1047 37
The
iron
chelator desferrioxamine (DFO) B is widely used in the therapy of patients with iron overload. As a side effect, DFO may favor the occurrence of fulminant Yersinia infections. Previous work from our laboratory showed that this might be due to a dual role of DFO: growth promotion of the pathogen and immunosuppression of the host. In this study, we sought to determine whether conjugation of DFO to hydroxyethyl starch (HES-DFO) may prevent exacerbation of Yersinia infection in mice. We found HES-DFO to promote neither growth of Yersinia enterocolitica nor mitogen-induced T-cell proliferation and gamma interferon production by T cells in vitro. Nevertheless, in vivo HES-DFO promoted growth of Y. enterocolitica possibly due to cleavage of HES and release of DFO. The pretreatment of mice with DFO resulted in death of all mice 2 to 5 days after application of a normally sublethal inoculum of Y. enterocolitica, while none of the mice pretreated with HES-DFO died within the first 7 days postinfection. However, some of the HES-DFO-treated mice died 8 to 14 days postinfection. Thus, due to the delayed in vivo effect HES-DFO failed to trigger Yersinia-induced septic shock, which accounts for early mortality in DFO-associated
septicemia
. Moreover, our data suggest that DFO needs to be taken up by host cells in order to exert its immunosuppressive action. These results strongly suggest that HES-DFO might be a favorable drug with fewer side effects than DFO in terms of DFO-promoted fulminant infections.
...
PMID:Conjugation of hydroxyethyl starch to desferrioxamine (DFO) modulates the dual role of DFO in Yersinia enterocolitica infection. 1079 61
Sepsis
is a global problem which is exacerbated by increasing bacterial resistance to antibiotics. However, mechanisms of natural resistance can be extremely effective, and need to be exploited, but the availability of
iron
is critical for controlling bacterial growth. The diagnosis of
sepsis
and possible strategies for limiting
iron
availability are discussed.
...
PMID:Sepsis: the critical role of iron. 1081 43
Vibrio vulnificus is an opportunistic gram-negative pathogen that commonly contaminates oysters. Predisposed individuals who consume raw oysters can die within days from
sepsis
, and even otherwise healthy people are susceptible to serious wound infection after contact with contaminated seafood or seawater. Numerous secreted and cell-associated virulence factors have been proposed to account for the fulminating and destructive nature of V. vulnificus infections. Among the putative virulence factors is an elastolytic metalloprotease. We cloned and sequenced the vvpE gene encoding an elastase of V. vulnificus ATCC 29307. The functions of the elastase were assessed by constructing vvpE insertional knockout mutants and evaluating phenotypic changes in vitro and in mice. Although other types of protease activity were still observed in vvpE mutants, elastase activity was completely absent in the mutants and was restored by reintroducing the recombinant vvpE gene. In contrast to previous characterization of elastase as a potential virulence factor, which was demonstrated by injecting the purified protein into animals, inactivation of the V. vulnificus vvpE gene did not affect the ability of the bacteria to infect mice and cause damage, either locally in subcutaneous tissues or systemically in the liver, in both
iron
-treated and normal mice. Furthermore, a vvpE mutant was not affected with regard to cytolytic activity toward INT407 epithelial cells or detachment of INT407 cells from culture dishes in vitro. Therefore, it appears that elastase is less important in the pathogenesis of V. vulnificus than would have been predicted by examining the effects of administering purified proteins to animals. However, V. vulnificus utilizes a variety of virulence factors; hence, the effects of inactivation of elastase alone could be masked by other compensatory virulence factors.
...
PMID:Construction and phenotypic evaluation of a Vibrio vulnificus vvpE mutant for elastolytic protease. 1094 31
The molecular mechanism of the participation of carnosine in the functioning of soluble guanylate cyclase is discussed. It is shown that carnosine inhibits the activation of soluble guanylate cyclase by sodium nitroprusside and a derivative of furoxan--1,2,5-oxadiazolo-trioxide (an NO donor). However, carnosine has no effect on stimulation of the enzyme by a structural analog of the latter compound, a furazan derivative (1,2,5-oxadiazolo-dioxide) that is not an NO donor; nor was carnosine involved in the enzyme activation by protoporphyrin IX, whose stimulatory effect is not associated with the guanylate cyclase heme. The inhibition by carnosine of guanylate cyclase activation by an NO donor is due to the interaction of carnosine with heme
iron
with subsequent formation of a chelate complex. It was first demonstrated that carnosine is a selective inhibitor of NO-dependent activation of guanylate cyclase and may be used for suppression of activity of the intracellular signaling system NO-soluble guanylate cyclase-cGMP, whose sharp increase is observed in malignant tumors,
sepsis
, septic shock, asthma, and migraine.
...
PMID:Carnosine as a regulator of soluble guanylate cyclase. 1095 Oct 96
We studied the effect of deferoxamine (DFX), an
iron
chelator, which can also act as a free radical scavenger, in an experimental murine model of
sepsis
. In vivo studies demonstrated that pretreatment of mice with DFX reduces tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) serum levels and increases the rate of survival of mice inoculated with lethal doses of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or Escherichia coli O111:B4. By using the
iron
chelated form of DFX (ferrioxamine) the same results were obtained, suggesting that in this model, DFX could act as a free radical scavenger. On the other hand, DFX prevents mortality induced either by LPS or murine recombinant TNF-alpha in D(+)-galactosamine (GalN)-sensitized mice. These protective actions of DFX correlate with an attenuated tissue damage observed in lungs, livers and kidneys of LPS-treated animals and GalN-sensitized mice inoculated with TNF-alpha.
...
PMID:Deferoxamine reduces tissue injury and lethality in LPS-treated mice. 1098 58
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