Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0740441 (acute diarrhea)
2,275 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

During a recent clinical trial of ciprofloxacin in the therapy of acute diarrhea, two subjects infected with Campylobacter jejuni who received ciprofloxacin failed microbiologically and one also failed clinically. Although both pretreatment isolates were susceptible to ciprofloxacin, the posttreatment isolates were resistant to ciprofloxacin (MIC = 32 micrograms/ml) and to other quinolones. The posttreatment isolates remained susceptible to nonquinolone antimicrobials. DNA gyrase holoenzyme was isolated from one of the resistant posttreatment isolates and was 8- to 16-fold less sensitive to inhibition by ciprofloxacin than was the gyrase from the paired pretreatment susceptible isolate. Ciprofloxacin accumulation was diminished in the two resistant posttreatment isolates. These results show that mutation in C. jejuni can occur in vivo and is associated with clinically significant resistance to the newer quinolones.
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PMID:High-level quinolone resistance in clinical isolates of Campylobacter jejuni. 131 69

Pathogens causing acute diarrhea include a large variety of species from Enterobacteriaceae and Vibrionaceae. A method based on pyrosequencing was used here to differentiate bacteria commonly associated with diarrhea in China; the method is targeted to a partial amplicon of the gyrB gene, which encodes the B subunit of DNA gyrase. Twenty-eight specific polymorphic positions were identified from sequence alignment of a large sequence dataset and targeted using 17 sequencing primers. Of 95 isolates tested, belonging to 13 species within 7 genera, most could be identified to the species level; O157 type could be differentiated from other E. coli types; Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica could be identified at the serotype level; the genus Shigella, except for S. boydii and S. dysenteriae, could also be identified. All these isolates were also subjected to conventional sequencing of a relatively long ( approximately1.2 kb) region of gyrB DNA; these results confirmed those with pyrosequencing. Twenty-two fecal samples were surveyed, the results of which were concordant with culture-based bacterial identification, and the pathogen detection limit with simulated stool specimens was 10(4) CFU/ml. DNA from different pathogens was also mixed to simulate a case of multibacterial infection, and the generated signals correlated well with the mix ratio. In summary, the gyrB-based pyrosequencing approach proved to have significant reliability and discriminatory power for enteropathogenic bacterial identification and provided a fast and effective method for clinical diagnosis.
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PMID:Pyrosequencing analysis of the gyrB gene to differentiate bacteria responsible for diarrheal diseases. 1832 28