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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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
Vibrio vulnificus is an opportunistic human pathogen causing wound infection and
septicemia
, characterized by hemorrhagic and edematous damage to the skin of limbs. When injected into the dorsal skin, an extracellular
metalloprotease
from this vibrio (V. vulnificus protease: VVP) enhanced the vascular permeability through activation of the Hageman factor-plasma kallikrein-kinin cascade and/or stimulation of exocytotic histamine release. Additionally, VVP caused the hemorrhagic skin lesion through disorganization of the vascular basement membrane layer due to specific degradation of type IV collagen, which is known to form the backbone structure of the basement membrane. However, injected VVP was quickly inactivated by a plasma glycoprotein, alpha-macroglobulin, at a molar ratio of 1:1. This glycoprotein was leaked from the capillaries by the actions of VVP, which resulted in in situ inactivation by physical entrapment. When VVP (45,000 Da) was incubated at 37 degrees C, a 35,000 Da fragment was generated by the autocatalytic removal of a 10,000 Da C-terminal polypeptide. This N-terminal fragment showed significant proteolytic activity, however, because of a markedly decreased affinity to the protein substrates, its permeability-enhancing and hemorrhagic activity was reduced to less than 50%. These findings indicate that the C-terminal polypeptide is not essential for but promotes skin reactions caused by VVP.
...
PMID:[Effects of Vibrio vulnificus metalloprotease on the capillaries: pathological actions and inactivation by alpha-macroglobulin]. 1119 Feb
Anthrax is a severe bacterial infection that occurs when Bacillus anthracis spores gain access into the body and germinate in macrophages, causing
septicemia
and toxemia. Anthrax toxin is a binary A-B toxin composed of protective antigen (PA), lethal factor (LF), and edema factor (EF). PA mediates the entry of either LF or EF into the cytosol of host cells. LF is a zinc
metalloprotease
that inactivates mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase inducing cell death, and EF is an adenylyl cyclase impairing host defences. Inhibitors targeting different steps of toxin activity have recently been developed. Anthrax toxin has also been exploited as a therapeutic agent against cancer.
...
PMID:Anthrax toxin: a tripartite lethal combination. 1243 80
A zinc
metalloprotease
secreted by Vibrio vulnificus, an opportunistic human pathogen causing
septicemia
and wound infection, stimulates exocytotic histamine release from rat mast cells. This protease consists of two functional domains: the N-terminal domain that catalyzes proteolytic reaction and the C-terminal domain that promotes the association with a protein substrate or cell membrane. Like the intact protease, the N-terminal domain alone also induced histamine release from rat peritoneal mast cells in a dose- and time-dependent manner. However, the reaction induced was apparently weak and went on more slowly. The nickel-substituted protease or its N-terminal domain, each of which has the reduced proteolytic activity due to decreased affinity to a substrate, showed much less histamine-releasing activity. When injected into the rat dorsal skin, the N-terminal domain also evoked enhancement of the hypodermic vascular permeability, while the activity was comparable to that of the protease. Taken together, the protease may stimulate histamine release through the action of the catalytic center of the N-terminal domain on the target substance(s) on the mast cell membrane. The C-terminal domain may support the in vitro action of the N-terminal domain by coordination of the association of the protease with the membrane, but it may not modulate the in vivo action.
...
PMID:Histamine-releasing reaction induced by the N-terminal domain of Vibrio vulnificus metalloprotease. 1262 43
Inflammation is a prominent feature of Streptococcus pneumoniae infection in both humans and animal models. Indeed, an intense host immune response to infection is thought to contribute significantly to the pathology of pneumococcal pneumonia and meningitis. Previously, induction of the inflammatory response following infection with S. pneumoniae has been attributed to certain cell wall constituents and the toxin pneumolysin. Here we present data implicating a putative zinc
metalloprotease
, ZmpB, as having a role in inflammation. Null mutations were created in the zmpB gene of the virulent serotype 2 strain D39 and analyzed in a murine model of infection. Isogenic mutants were attenuated in pneumonia and
septicemia
models of infection, as determined by levels of bacteremia and murine survival. Mutants were not attenuated in colonization of murine airways or lung tissue. Examination of cytokine profiles within the lung tissue revealed significantly lower levels of the proinflammatory cytokine tumor necrosis factor alpha following challenge with the Delta zmpB mutant (Delta 739). These data identify ZmpB as a novel virulence factor capable of inducing inflammation in the lower respiratory tract. The possibility that ZmpB was involved in inhibition of complement activity was examined, but the data indicated that ZmpB does not have a significant effect on this important host defense. The regulation of ZmpB by a two-component system (TCS09) located immediately upstream of the zmpB gene was examined. TCS09 was not required for the expression of zmpB during exponential growth in vitro.
...
PMID:ZmpB, a novel virulence factor of Streptococcus pneumoniae that induces tumor necrosis factor alpha production in the respiratory tract. 1293 34
Vibrio vulnificus biotype 1, a causative agent of fatal
septicemia
or wound infection in humans, is known to produce a toxic
metalloprotease
as an important virulence determinant. V. vulnificus biotype 2 (serovar E), a primary eel pathogen, was found to elaborate an extracellular
metalloprotease
that was indistinguishable from that of biotype 1. The potential of V. vulnificus biotype 1 for production of the
metalloprotease
was compared with biotype 2 and other human non-pathogenic Vibrio species (Vibrio anguillarum and Vibrio proteolyticus). When cultivated at 25 degrees C in tryptone-yeast extract broth supplemented with 0.9% NaCl, all bacteria multiplied sufficiently and secreted significant amounts of the
metalloprotease
. However, at 37 degrees C with 0.9% NaCl, V. anguillarum neither grew nor produced the
metalloprotease
. In human serum, only V. vulnificus biotype 1 revealed a steady multiplication accompanied with production of the extracellular
metalloprotease
. This prominent ability of biotype 1 in growth and protease production may contribute to cause serious systemic diseases in humans.
...
PMID:High growing ability of Vibrio vulnificus biotype 1 is essential for production of a toxic metalloprotease causing systemic diseases in humans. 1472 28
Vibrio vulnificus is an opportunistic human pathogen causing
septicemia
, and the infection is characterized by formation of the edematous skin lesions on limbs. This pathogenic species secretes a thermolysin-like
metalloprotease
as a virulence determinant. The
metalloprotease
was confirmed to activate human factor XII-plasma kallikrein-kinin cascade that results in liberation of bradykinin, a chemical mediator enhancing the vascular permeability, from high-molecular weight kininogen. Namely, the
metalloprotease
showed to generate active fragments by cleavage of Arg-Ile, Arg-Val or Gly-Leu peptide bond in human zymogens (plasma prekallikrein and factor XII). In spite of induction of the sufficient vascular permeability-enhancing and edema-forming reaction in the guinea pig model, a serine protease from V. parahaemolyticus, a human pathogen causing primarily watery diarrhea, showed far less ability to activate and to cleave the human zymogens. These results in part may explain why only V. vulnificus often causes serious edematous skin damages in humans.
...
PMID:Generation of active fragments from human zymogens in the bradykinin-generating cascade by extracellular proteases from Vibrio vulnificus and V. parahaemolyticus. 1553 Sep 71
Bacteria of the genus Vibrio are normal habitants of the aquatic environment and play roles for biocontrole of aquatic ecosystem, but some species are believed to be human pathogens. These species can be classified into two groups according to the types of diseases they cause: the gastrointestinal infections and the extraintestinal infections. The pathogenic species produce various pathogenic factors including enterotoxin, hemolysin, cytotoxin, protease, siderophore, adhesive factor, and hemagglutinin. We studied various pathogenic factors of vibrios with special emphasis on protease and hemolysin of V. vulnificus. V. vulnificus is now recognized as being among the most rapidly fatal of human pathogens, although the infection is appeared in patients having underlying disease(s) such as liver dysfunction, alcoholic cirrhosis or haemochromatosis. V. vulnificus protease (VVP) is thought to be a major toxic factor causing skin damage in the patients having
septicemia
. VVP is a
metalloprotease
and degrades a number of biologically important proteins including elastin, fibrinogen, and plasma proteinase inhibitors of complement components. VVP causes skin damages through activation of the Factor XII-plasma kallikrein-kinin cascade and/or exocytotic histamine release from mast cells, and a haemorrhagic lesion through digestion of the vascular basement membrane. Thus, the protease is the most probable candidate for tissue damage and bacterial invasion during an infection. Pathogenic roles and functional mechanism of other factors including hemolysins of V. vulnificus and V. mimicus are also shown in this review article.
...
PMID:[Pathogenic factors of vibrios with special emphasis on Vibrio vulnificus]. 1599 10
Vibrio vulnificus is ubiquitous in aquatic environments; however, it occasionally causes serious and often fatal infections in humans. These include invasive
septicemia
contracted through consumption of raw seafood, as well as wound infections acquired through contact with brackish or marine waters. In most cases of
septicemia
, the patients have underlying disease(s), such as liver dysfunction or alcoholic cirrhosis, and the secondary skin lesions including cellulitis, edema and hemorrhagic bulla appear on the limbs. Although V. Vul produces various virulent factors including polysaccharide capsule, type IV pili, hemolysin and proteolytic enzymes, the 45-kDa
metalloprotease
may be a causative factor of the skin lesions, because the purified protease enhances vascular permeability through generation of chemical mediators and also induces serious hemorrhagic damage through digestion of the vascular basement membrane. As well as other bacteria, V. Vul can regulate the protease production through the quorum-sensing system depending on bacterial cell density. However, this system operates efficiently at 25 degrees C, but not at 37 degrees C. Therefore, V. vulnificus may produce sufficient amounts of the protease only in the interstitial tissue of the limbs, in which temperature is lower than the internal temperature of the human body.
...
PMID:Vibrio vulnificus infection and metalloprotease. 1695 2
Aeromonas hydrophila is a ubiquitous Gram-negative bacterium which can cause motile aeromonad
septicemia
in both fish and humans. A. hydrophila secretes many extracellular proteins associated with pathogenicity and environmental adaptability. In this study, an extracellular proteome map of A. hydrophila AH-1 was constructed. The major extracellular virulence factors were characterized by comparing the proteomes of various deletion mutants with that of the wild type. The results suggested that serine protease was involved in the processing of a toxin and secreted enzymes such as hemolysin, glycerophospholipid-cholesterol acyltransferase and
metalloprotease
. We also showed that expressions of polar and lateral flagellins were under the control of temperature, FlhA, LafK, and RpoN. In addition, three novel proteins (potential effector proteins including one ExoT-like protein) were revealed to be secreted via the type III secretion system (TTSS) of A. hydrophila AH-1. Another novel finding was the demonstration of a crosstalk between the lateral flagellar system and the TTSS in A. hydrophila. These results showed that proteomics is a powerful tool for characterizing virulence factors. The construction of proteome maps will provide a valuable means of finding potential candidates for developing suitable diagnostics and therapeutics for this emerging pathogen.
...
PMID:Characterization of extracellular proteins produced by Aeromonas hydrophila AH-1. 1720 9
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