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Query: UMLS:C0276640 (
TEM
)
20,729
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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.
...
PMID:Scanning and transmission electron microscopic study of Escherichia coli O15 (RDEC-1) enteric infection in rabbits. 34 19
Organisms that form an essential extra inner lining of selected areas of the stomach mucosa occur in mice, rats and some other animals. The yeast Cyniclomyces guttulatus (Saccharomycopsis guttulata) was shown in this study to line the stomach of domestic and feral rabbits, guinea pigs, and chinchillas. The layer of yeast cells formed a loose barrier between lumen contents and mucosal surface. A rapid rate of multiplication in the stomach provided yeast cells that blended in with stomach lumen contents, passed through the
gut
, and were finally excreted in large numbers in fecal pellets. Ascospore formation occurred during passage through the large intestine. The layer of yeast cells lining the stomach had no evident salubrious nor deleterious effect on the animal. C. guttulatus grew rapidly from stomach contents or single fecal pellets in a new enriched semisolid medium. Growth was good at pH 1 through 8 on the solidified enriched medium. A very unusual characteristic of C. guttulatus is optimal growth at 38 degrees C, and growth at 42 degrees C, with failure to grow below 30 degrees C.
TEM
demonstrated a very thick, laminated cell wall which had a thick, filamentous external coating. There were mitochondria, polyribosomes, lipid droplets, and an unusually large central nucleus. The developing spore nucleus became extremely electron dense and encapsulated, along with condensed mitochondria, ribosomes, short membrane sections and other organelles, in a dense lamellar covering.
...
PMID:Cyniclomyces guttulatus (Saccharomycopsis guttulata)--culture, ultrastructure and physiology. 317 89
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.
...
PMID:Intestinal spirochaetosis of the colon diagnosed with colono-ileoscopy and multiple biopsies. 398 41
A new giant Gram-negative non-cultivatable symbiotic endospore-forming bacterium was found in the
gut
of the European hamster. This "Metabacterium" sp., provisionally named "Metabacterium criceti", sp. n., has a length of approximately 20 microns and thickness of 4 microns. It forms 1 to 2 cylindrical endospores, approximately 9 microns long and 1.4 microns thick.
TEM
-micrographs show a cell wall structure characteristic of Gram-negative bacteria. Vegetative cells are filled with granules 0.3 micron in diameter which resemble starch granules. The reproduction occurs with binary fission and by formation of two endospores. Of thirteen biochemical components sought, four, i.e. glycogen, triacylglycerols, peroxidase and alkaline phosphatase, were not found. Starch, acid mucosubstances, DNA, RNA, lipids, proteins, adenosine triphosphatase and acid phosphatase were found in different patterns, depending on the developmental stage of the bacterium. In the vegetative cell stage all these components, with the exception of starch, were found. In the endospore-bearing cell stage, only the starch-like cell component granules could be detected. In free endospores only DNA, RNA and acid phosphatase were found. Some of the components, i.e. DNA, lipids, starch-like granules, were linked to certain cell substructures, the distribution of others, viz. polysaccharides, RNA, adenosine triphosphatase and proteins was diffuse. The lipids, found only in vegetative cells, were associated with the cell wall.
...
PMID:Characterization of two Metabacterium sp. from the gut of rodents. 1. Morphology and histochemical examination of a new Metabacterium sp. from the gut of the European hamster (Cricetus cricetus) 769 4
This review illustrates the use of experimental approaches combined with microscopy to study the biology of monogenean parasites. Studies of feeding, development, reproduction, and systematics have been based on gyrodactylids, flatworms infecting teleost fishes. In a contrasting system involving an amphibian host in a desert environment, analysis of adaptations to extreme conditions has focused on Pseudodiplorchis americanus. The unusual reproductive strategies, particularly the interactions between mother and offspring, are highlighted for both monogeneans. Species of Gyrodactylus are viviparous, maintaining up to three generations of embryos simultaneously in utero, and many of their reproductive specializations are related to progenesis. Embryo nutrition takes place via a metabolically-active syncytial uterine lining that has close association with the parental
gut
. Microscopy has also proved an essential adjunct to molecular studies of speciation and host specificity. P. americanus is ovoviviparous and the adaptations for embryo maintenance are unique. The primary keratin-type eggshell is replaced by a flexible secondary elastin capsule produced by the uterus; parental nutrients are transferred through cytoplasmic connections to the developing embryo.
TEM
has demonstrated unique adaptations of P. americanus to its micro-environments, including secretion of tegumental vesicles that provide protection from digestive enzymes during migration through the host
gut
. This paper highlights the potential of monogeneans for studies of fundamental biological principles.
...
PMID:Life history specializations of monogenean flatworms: a review of experimental and microscopical studies. 976 19
The epithelial basement membrane of intestinal villi is perforated with numerous small pores, through which free cells in the lamina propria communicate with the enterocytes. This study was a comparative analysis of the pores in the basement membrane by SEM after removal of the
gut
epithelium with OsO4 maceration. The porosity as represented by the area fraction of the pores varied along the baso-apical axis of villi in patterns specific for each animal species examined: consistent scantiness along the entire length of villi in mice, acute elevation in the second and third distal one-sixths of villi in rats, and gradual augmentation toward the villus tips in guinea pigs. Size distribution analyses of the pores indicated their heterogeneous enlargement in the regions of elevated porosity. Concomitant observation of lamina propria macrophages by histochemical labelings and by conventional
TEM
showed that the cells specifically clustered beneath the hyperporous basement membrane, with their thick processes penetrating it. The spatially-regulated patterns of perforation of the epithelial basement membrane indicate phase-specific interventions of lamina propria macrophages in the maturation or aging of enterocytes, which steadily proliferate in crypts and exfoliate at the villus tips.
...
PMID:Porosity of the epithelial basement membrane as an indicator of macrophage-enterocyte interaction in the intestinal mucosa. 1067 76
Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium is an important intestinal pathogen in swine. This study was performed to document the early cellular invasion of Salmonella serovar Typhimurium in swine ileum. Ileal
gut
-loops were surgically prepared in ten 4- to 5-week-old mixed-breed pigs and inoculated for 0-60 minutes. Loops were harvested and prepared for both scanning and transmission electron microscopy (SEM and
TEM
, respectively). Preferential bacterial adherence to microfold cells (M cells) was seen within 5 minutes, and by 10 minutes bacterial invasion of the apical membrane was seen in M cells, goblet cells, and enterocytes. This multicellular invasion was observed throughout the course of infection. In addition, SEM revealed a specific affinity of Salmonella serovar Typhimurium to sites of cell extrusion. Using
TEM
, bacteria in these areas were focused in the crevices formed by the extruding cell and the adjacent cells and in the cytoplasm immediately beneath the extruding cell. Our results suggest that early cellular invasion by Salmonella serovar Typhimurium is nonspecific and rapid in swine. Furthermore, the combination of SEM and
TEM
data suggests that Salmonella serovar Typhimurium may use sites of cell extrusion as an additional mechanism for early invasion.
...
PMID:Early epithelial invasion by Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium DT104 in the swine ileum. 1245 Feb 2
Antibiotics that are excreted into the intestinal tract promote antibiotic resistance by exerting selective pressure on the
gut
microbiota. Using a beagle dog model, we show that an orally administered targeted recombinant beta-lactamase enzyme eliminates the portion of parenteral ampicillin that is excreted into the small intestine, preventing ampicillin-induced changes to the fecal microbiota without affecting ampicillin levels in serum. In dogs receiving ampicillin, significant disruption of the fecal microbiota and the emergence of ampicillin-resistant Escherichia coli and
TEM
genes were observed, whereas in dogs treated with ampicillin in combination with an oral beta-lactamase, these did not occur. These results suggest a new strategy for reducing antimicrobial resistance in humans.
...
PMID:Orally administered targeted recombinant Beta-lactamase prevents ampicillin-induced selective pressure on the gut microbiota: a novel approach to reducing antimicrobial resistance. 1469 21
We have previously shown the existence of ICLC in human resting mammary gland stroma by means of methylene blue (vital) staining and c-kit immunopositivity (immunofluorescence and immunohistochemistry). In addition, we reported the phenotype characteristics of these ICLC in vitro (primary cell cultures). Since the identification of ICLC outside the
gut
requires, at this moment, the obligatory use of
TEM
, we used this technique and provide unequivocal evidence for the presence of ICLC in the intralobular stroma of human resting mammary gland. According to the 'platinum standard' (10
TEM
criteria for the certitude diagnosis of ICLC), we found interstitial cells with the following characteristics: 1. location: among the tubulo-alveolar structures, in the non-epithelial space; 2. caveolae: approximately 2.5% of cell volume; 3. mitochondria: approximately 10% of cell volume; 4. endoplasmic reticulum: either smooth or rough, approximately 2-3% of cell volume; 5. cytoskeleton: intermediate and thin filaments, as well as microtubules are present; 6. myosin thick filaments: undetectable; 7. basal lamina: occasionally found; 8. gap junctions: occasionally found; 9. close contacts with targets: nerve fibers, capillaries, immunoreactive cells by 'stromal synapses'; 10. characteristic cytoplasmic processes: i) number: frequently 2-3; ii) length: several tens of mum; iii) thickness: uneven caliber, 0.1-0.5 microm, with dilations, but very thin from the emerging point; iv) aspect: moniliform, usually with mitochondria located in dilations; v) branching: dichotomous pattern; vi) Ca(2+) release units: are present; vii) network labyrinthic system: overlapping cytoplasmic processes. It remains to be established which of the possible roles that we previously suggested for ICLC (e.g. juxta- and/or paracrine secretion, uncommited progenitor cells, immunological surveillance, intercellular signaling, etc.) are essential for the epithelium/stroma equilibrium in the mammary gland under normal or pathological conditions.
...
PMID:Interstitial Cajal-like cells (ICLC) in human resting mammary gland stroma. Transmission electron microscope (TEM) identification. 1636 98
Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are a diverse group of proteinaceous compounds ranging in size, complexity and antimicrobial spectrum. The activity of AMPs against
gut
pathogens warrants the study of the interaction of AMPs with the mammalian gastrointestinal tract. In particular, the investigation of the in vitro cytotoxicity of these peptides is critical before they can be considered in clinical infections. The cytotoxicity of gallidermin, nisin A, natural magainin peptides, and melittin was investigated in two gastrointestinal cell models (HT29 and Caco-2) with the MTT conversion assay, neutral red dye uptake assay and compared with that of vancomycin. The hemolytic activities were also investigated in sheep erythrocytes and the effect of AMPs on paracellular permeability was examined by transepithelial resistance (TEER) and
TEM
. Gallidermin was the least cytotoxic AMP followed by nisin A, magainin I, magainin II and melittin. Melittin and nisin were the only peptides to result in significant hemolysis. However, while nisin caused hemolysis at concentrations which were 1000-fold higher than those required for antimicrobial activity, melittin was hemolytic at concentrations in the same order of magnitude as its antimicrobial activity. Melittin was the only AMP to affect paracellular permeability. Long term melittin treatment also resulted in loss of microvilli, an increase in cell debris and destruction of intestinal tight junctions and cell-cell adhesion. Gallidermin shows most promise as a therapeutic agent, with relatively low cytotoxicity and potent antimicrobial activities. Melittin, while showing little potential as an antimicrobial agent, may have potential in delivery of poorly bioavailable drugs.
...
PMID:Investigation of the cytotoxicity of eukaryotic and prokaryotic antimicrobial peptides in intestinal epithelial cells in vitro. 1653 Jul 33
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