Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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RDEC-1 is a piliated strain of Escherichia coli that was isolated from and produces diarrhea in rabbits without invading the mucosa or synthesizing one of the classical enterotoxins. Previous histological and fluorescent-antibody studies of RDEC-1 diarrhea revealed an acute inflammatory response and large numbers of RDEC-1 associated with (adhering to) the mucosal surface of the ileum, cecum, and colon. The purpose of the present investigation was to further elucidate the histopathology by scanning (SEM) and transmission (TEM) electron microscopy. SEM revealed aggregates of bacteria on the surface of the gut; their distribution was patchy in the ileum and diffuse in the cecum and colon. Bacteria were in contact with each other and appeared to be closely associated with the epithelial surface. TEM showed that the brush border region of the epithelial cells was found to be in varying stages of degeneration, and the bacteria could not be seen adhering to the mucosal cells unless the brush border was absent. Bacteria were in close contact only with epithelial cells that had lost their brush border. The space between the bacteria and the epithelial cells was 11 nm, and it appeared to be filled, in most cases, with densely stained material. This E. coli rarely penetrated epithelial cells, but when it did; it was found in the supranuclear region and never reached the lamina propria. From previous and present studies, it seems probable that RDEC-1 produces diarrhea in rabbits by a mechanism that may be cytotoxic and differs from the classic mechanisms by which E. coli produces diarrhea.
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PMID:Scanning and transmission electron microscopic study of Escherichia coli O15 (RDEC-1) enteric infection in rabbits. 34 19

The polymicrobial aetiology of travellers's diarrhoea in 356 tourists travelling in Thailand and Burma was investigated. Besides enterotoxigenic E. coli, Salmonella sp. and Campylobacter fetus ssp. jejuni were identified as the most important enteric pathogens. Minimal inhibitory concentrations of several commonly used antibiotics were determined to reveal the percentage of enteric pathogens being resistant. 36.2% E. coli strains were found to be resistant to ampicillin and 14.3% of the Campylobacter isolates were considered to be resistant to erythromycin. Furthermore, the occurrence of some plasmid-borne beta-lactamases causing resistance to beta-lactam antibiotics was investigated, and the TEM-1 enzyme was found to be the most common one in enteric pathogens. Also a PSE-2-beta-lactamase (which is said to be Pseudomonas-specific) was identified in two strains of E. coli. Finally, the influence of antibiotic misuse on development of resistance was discussed by comparing the conditions in Bangkok and Rangoon.
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PMID:[Antibiotic resistance and distribution of plasmid-encoded beta- lactamases among agents of traveller's diarrhea]. 294 94

The primary aim of this work was to investigate the ultrastructural morphology of the small intestinal mucosa in children affected by selective IgA deficiency (SIgAD). Absorptive tests and intestinal biopsies were performed in a group of nine children with SIgAD, none of them presenting with diarrhea. Biopsy specimens were processed for routine histology and scanning or transmission electron microscopy (SEM and TEM). By light microscopy, the jejunal mucosa appeared normal in all but one patient with patchy villous atrophy. By SEM, two further biopsies showed small areas of flat mucosa surrounded by villous ridges of nearly normal height. By TEM, four out of the nine mucosal specimens showed degenerative changes of the surface epithelium, including enlargement of the mitochondria, apical accumulation of primary and secondary lysosomes, and shortening and branching of the microvilli. These findings suggest that the small intestinal mucosa of children with SIgAD often shows pathological changes, some of which are recognizable only at the ultrastructural level. The study of biopsy specimens by SEM seems to be a useful diagnostic tool when patchy mucosal damage may occur, as in some of our patients with SIgAD.
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PMID:Ultrastructural findings in the jejunal mucosa of children with IgA deficiency. 379 7

We studied the plasmid and antibiotic resistance characteristics of 35 strains of Enterobacteriaceae recovered from faecal specimens of children with diarrhoea in Central General Hospital, Bandung, Indonesia. Twenty three Escherichia coli, three Providencia, three Proteus, three Klebsiella, two Enterobacter and one Citrobacter were examined. All strains were multiply resistant, many carrying six to nine antibiotic resistances. Most of these resistances were transferable to a laboratory E. coli strain and were carried on large-sized plasmids. All recently-described tetracycline resistance determinants (Classes A----D) were represented; the most common was the Class B, or TN10 type. The TEM-1 beta-lactamase was detected in 17 out of 21 ampicillin-resistant strains examined. The OXA-1, PSE-1, and SHV-1 enzymes were also found. Of 23 plasmids tested, all could be classified into one of eight different incompatibility groups: IncFII, IncN, IncB, IncF1, IncI1, IncI2, IncH2 and IncT. These studies demonstrate the existence of large multiresistant transferable plasmids representing common incompatibility groups and bearing common tetracycline and ampicillin resistance determinants in enteric strains isolated from children hospitalized in Indonesia.
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PMID:Multiple antibiotic resistance plasmids in Enterobacteriaceae isolated from diarrhoeal specimens of hospitalized children in Indonesia. 387 28

This paper deals with the clinical history, the histopathological and TEM features of a case of intestinal spirochaetosis associated with ulcerative colitis and tubular adenomas of the colon. It is the fifth described case of intestinal spirochaetosis in Sweden, and the first in the literature in which a complete colonoscopy with multiple biopsies has been performed. Intestinal spirochaetosis might lead to minor complaints as distension and vague abdominal discomfort, as in this case, but also to more prominent symptoms such as diarrhoea. Heavy infestation of the gut surface epithelium by spirochaetes was seen in the total colon, but was not found in the distal ileum.
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PMID:Intestinal spirochaetosis of the colon diagnosed with colono-ileoscopy and multiple biopsies. 398 41

A strain of Salmonella senftenberg resistant to ceftazidime, gentamicin, chloramphenicol and ciprofloxacin was isolated from burn wounds of eight patients on a burns ward of a hospital in Delhi, India. The organism, which had probably been spread from patient to patient on staff hands, produced the extended-spectrum beta-lactamase SHV-5 and the aminoglycoside-modifying enzymes AAC(3)II + AAC(6'). The strain was not isolated from stool cultures of any of the patients or staff, apart from the index patient who had a history of diarrhoea and fever before admission. The outbreak ended in three weeks, after the implementation of strict handwashing. This is the first report of SHV-5 beta-lactamase in Salmonella spp. and also the first report of SHV-5 in India. The extended-spectrum beta-lactamases that have been reported in Salmonella spp. now include the Group 2 be enzymes SHV-2, SHV-5, TEM-3, TEM-25, TEM-27, CTX-M2, PER-1 and PER-2, and the Group 1 enzymes DHA-1 and CMY-2. The types of extended-spectrum beta-lactamases produced by salmonellas, their association with aminoglycoside resistance and their geographical distribution are now similar to those seen in klebsiella. Increasing antibiotic resistance in these organisms is reducing therapeutic options for the treatment of invasive disease.
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PMID:An outbreak of extended-spectrum, beta-lactamase-producing Salmonella senftenberg in a burns ward. 986 22

Eighty-six strains of Shigella spp. were isolated during the dry season from stool samples of children under 5 years of age in Ifakara, Tanzania. The epidemiological relationship as well as the antimicrobial susceptibility and mechanisms of resistance to ampicillin, chloramphenicol, and co-trimoxazole were investigated. Four different epidemiological tools, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), repetitive extragenic palindromic (REP)-PCR, plasmid analysis, and antibiogram, were compared for typing Shigella strains. Seventy-eight (90%) strains were Shigella flexneri and were distributed into four groups, by either PFGE or REP-PCR, with 51, 17, 7, and 3 strains. The four strains of Shigella dysenteriae belonged to the same group, and the four strains of Shigella sonnei were distributed in two groups with three and one strain each. Plasmid analysis showed a high level of heterogeneity among strains belonging to the same PFGE group, while the antibiogram was less discriminative. REP-PCR provided an alternative, rapid, powerful genotyping method for Shigella spp. Overall, antimicrobial susceptibility testing showed a high level of resistance to ampicillin (81.8%), chloramphenicol (72.7%), tetracycline (96.9%), and co-trimoxazole (87.9%). Ampicillin resistance was related to an integron-borne OXA-1-type beta-lactamase in 85.1% of the cases and to a TEM-1-type beta-lactamase in the remaining 14.8%. Resistance to co-trimoxazole was due to the presence of a dhfr Ia gene in all groups except one of S. flexneri, where a dhfr VII gene was found within an integron. Chloramphenicol resistance was associated in every case with positive chloramphenicol acetyltransferase activity. All strains were susceptible to nalidixic acid, ciprofloxacin, ceftazidime, cefotaxime, and cefoxitin. Therefore, these antimicrobial agents may be good alternatives for the treatment of diarrhea caused by Shigella in Tanzania.
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PMID:Typing and characterization of mechanisms of resistance of Shigella spp. isolated from feces of children under 5 years of age from Ifakara, Tanzania. 1048 63

Salmonella enterica serovar Choleraesuis generally causes systemic human salmonellosis without diarrhea, and therefore, antimicrobial treatment is essential for such patients. The drug resistance information on this organism is thus of high value. Serovar Choleraesuis usually harbors a virulence plasmid (pSCV) of 50 kb in size. Of the 16 clinical isolates identified to be serovar Choleraesuis, all except one harbored a pSCV and seven of them carried a pSCV of more than 125 kb in size. A pSCV was defined as a plasmid carrying spvC and characteristic deletions detected by PCR and by DNA-DNA hybridization (for the former criterion). The results of PCR, restriction fragment profiles, and Southern DNA-DNA hybridizations of the profiles all indicated that such larger pSCVs were derived from the 50-kb plasmid recombined with non-pSCVs found in some clinical isolates. Fifteen of the 17 strains, including a laboratory strain, were then tested for drug resistance against 16 antibiotics with E-test and the dilution method. The laboratory strain, which harbored a 50-kb pSCV and a 6-kb non-pSCV, was resistant only to sulfonamides (SUL), and its resistance gene, sulII, checked with PCR and DNA-DNA hybridization, was located on the 6-kb non-pSCV. All 14 clinical strains were resistant to multiple drugs. Of the 14, 7 were resistant to SUL, and the resistance gene was located on a plasmid. The sulII gene, but not bla(TEM-1), was carried only on the 6-kb non-pSCV. Of the remaining six large plasmids, three of 90 kb, two of 136 kb, and one of 140 kb, the last three were pSCVs and carried the other SUL gene (sulI) and the bla(TEM-1) gene. The six strains were also resistant to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. None of the 50-kb pSCVs carried resistance genes. These drug resistance genes on the large pSCVs were apparently also acquired through recombination.
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PMID:Large drug resistance virulence plasmids of clinical isolates of Salmonella enterica serovar Choleraesuis. 1145 88

Enteroinvasive Escherichia coli (EIEC) O164 strain RIMD05091045 was isolated from a travelling patient suffering from diarrhoea at the Osaka airport quarantine facility in Japan. The strain showed multidrug resistance against streptomycin, spectinomycin, co-trimoxazole (trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole) and ampicillin, and reduced susceptibility to ciprofloxacin. Molecular characterization of the multidrug-resistance phenotype revealed the presence of a class 1 integron containing three genes, a dihydrofolate reductase type XII gene, dfrXII, which confers resistance to trimethoprim, an aminoglycoside adenyltransferase gene, aadA2, which confers resistance to streptomycin and spectinomycin, and an ORF of unknown function. Southern blot hybridization and conjugation experiments showed that the class 1 integron was located on a transferable plasmid that was less than 90 kb in size. The resistance of EIEC O164 to ampicillin was found to be due to the presence of TEM-1 beta-lactamase. On the other hand, a single mutation that has not previously been described, P158-to-S, was detected downstream of the quinolone-resistance-determining region of parC of topoisomerase IV and may be responsible for the reduced susceptibility to ciprofloxacin in this strain.
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PMID:Molecular characterization of a multidrug-resistant strain of enteroinvasive Escherichia coli O164 isolated in Japan. 1571 11

New hybrid nanostructures based on inorganic matrices of hydrotalcite-like anionic clays (HT) incorporated with oxacillin are obtained by using calcinations-restructure method. XRD and TEM analyses are used to study the structural and textural characteristics of the clay containing hybrids. When nanoparticles of iron oxides are loaded on the layered anionic clay matrix a more effective delivery system of the drug is obtained. The results can be used to reduce the toxic side effects of oxacillin (e.g. upset stomach, diarrhea, cholestastic hepatitis), its aggregation process in aqueous solutions and also can open new perspectives for targeted the drug delivery.
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PMID:New hybrid nanostructures based on oxacillin-hydrotalcite-like anionic clays and their textural properties. 1824 52


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