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Query: UNIPROT:P43026 (
lipopolysaccharide
)
62,215
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The aetiologic agent of avian
colibacillosis
is Escherichia coli.
Colibacillosis
is a disease that causes mortality and production performance problems in chickens which results in economic losses for the poultry industry. It will be increasingly important for scientists to identify novel solutions that can be implemented which will provide poultry producers with a tool to manage this economically important disease. The purpose of this investigation was to determine whether
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) could be used as a positive control to evaluate novel chemistries for immunopotentiator activity in battery or floor-pen avian
colibacillosis
models in chickens. In the battery study, subcutaneous administration of
LPS
to one-day-old broiler cockerels caused a significant reduction (P < 0.003) in all parameters of
colibacillosis
evaluated, i.e. mean air sac lesion scores, per cent air sac lesions, E. coli re-isolation and per cent mortality. However, in the floor-pen study, subcutaneous administration to one-day-old broiler chicks resulted in a numerical, but not statistically significant reduction (P < 0.1) in mortality associated with
colibacillosis
. These data indicate that
LPS
can be used as a positive control to evaluate the efficacy of immunopotentiator drug candidates in avian
colibacillosis
models.
...
PMID:Use of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) as a positive control for the evaluation of immunopotentiating drug candidates in experimental avian colibacillosis models. 1008 9
The contribution of nitric oxide to host resistance to experimental pyelonephritis is not well understood. We examined whether the inhibition of nitric oxide synthesis alters the sensitivity of
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) responder (C3H/HeN) and nonresponder (C3H/HeJ) mice to experimental Escherichia coli pyelonephritis. C3H/HeJ and C3H/HeN mice were implanted subcutaneously with minipumps containing an inhibitor of nitric oxide, NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME), or a corresponding vehicle. Ascending urinary tract infection by bladder catheterization with two strains of E. coli, an O75 strain bearing Dr fimbriae and an O75 strain bearing P fimbriae, was developed in tested animals. Twenty-four hours following bladder infection, the kidneys of C3H/HeN and C3H/HeJ mice were colonized at a similar rate. However, 5 weeks postinoculation, C3H/HeN mice cleared infection while C3H/HeJ mice showed persistent colonization. Twenty-four hours following infection, C3H/HeN mice treated with L-NAME showed no significant increase of renal tissue infection compared to the saline-treated control group. However, L-NAME-treated C3H/HeJ mice showed an approximately 100-fold increase in
E. coli infection
rate compared to the saline-treated controls in the Dr+ group but showed no change compared to those in the P+ group. Dissemination of Dr+ E. coli but not P+ E. coli to the liver and uterus was significantly enhanced with L-NAME treatment in C3H/HeJ mice only. Nitric oxide had no direct killing effect on E. coli in vitro. Nitrite production by various organs was found to be significantly lower in C3H/HeJ mice than in C3H/HeN mice. Alteration of nitric oxide and
LPS
responsiveness was significantly associated with the increased sensitivity of C3H/HeJ mice to experimental Dr+ but not to P+ E. coli pyelonephritis. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that nitric oxide synthase activity in concert with
LPS
responsiveness may participate in the antibacterial defense mechanisms of the C3H mouse urinary tract. This phenomenon is strain dependent and possibly related to the invasive properties of E. coli.
...
PMID:Inverse relationship between severity of experimental pyelonephritis and nitric oxide production in C3H/HeJ mice. 1022 4
Many proteins, including antibacterial peptides in the hemolymph, are induced by bacterial infections. We found two bacterially inducible carboxylesterases (CEs) in the hemolymph of the silkworm, Bombyx mori. CEs Est-1 and 2 were induced by
lipopolysaccharide
injection after 6 hours as well as
E. coli infection
. We found that bacterially inducible CEs clearly differed from noninducible CEs, including juvenile hormone esterases, in pI values, migration on analytical native PAGE, and inhibitor sensitivity. We are now studying the features and functions of these CEs.
...
PMID:Induction of carboxylesterase isozymes in Bombyx mori by E. coli infection. 1045 24
Septicemic strains of Escherichia coli cause systemic infection in chickens after the intra-airsac inoculation. We have investigated whether levels of immunity can be determined by the viable organism count in the internal organs of infected birds. The intra-airsac inoculation of O1:K1 strain caused acute systemic infection in 6 hr. The viable count was highest in the lung followed by the liver, spleen, and blood. The count was significantly (P < 0.05) lower in the liver or spleen of vaccinated birds at 6, 12, or 24 hr after inoculation than in controls. Vaccines containing various adjuvants were tested in this system, and three oil-based adjuvants demonstrated significant (P < 0.05) immunity, whereas an alum-precipitated vaccine or one without an adjuvant failed to do so compared with nonvaccinated controls. An oil-adjuvanted vaccine showed some deterioration in its immunogenicity after prolonged storage or heating at 100 C. The acute phase response induced by intravenous injection of killed O1: K1 cells or
lipopolysaccharide
purified from Salmonella typhimurium in aqueous suspension induced significant immunity against the
E. coli infection
. These results indicate that the method referred to as "in vivo viable count method" produces quantitative results in a reproducible manner and suggest that it may be used as an alternative method to mortality measurement.
...
PMID:Immunity against Escherichia coli infection in chickens assessed by viable bacterial counts in internal organs. 1049 15
Prostaglandin E series (PGEs) are known to protect against
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
)-induced liver injury by down-regulating the production of inflammatory cytokines. We show here a novel mechanism whereby prostaglandin E(1) protects mice against liver injury after
Escherichia coli infection
. Prostaglandin E(1) administration suppressed circulating interleukin 12 (IL-12) levels but increased the IL-10 production after E. coli challenge. Furthermore, prostaglandin E(1)-alpha-cyclodextrin (PGE(1)) shifted the Th1/Th2 balance of CD3(intermediate) IL-2Rbeta(+) T cells in the liver to a dominant Th2-like response. Neutralization of endogenous IL-4 by administration of anti-IL-4 monoclonal antibody (mAb) diminished the inhibitory effect of prostaglandin E(1) on liver injury after E. coli challenge. These results suggested that the Th2-like response of liver T cells may be at least partly involved in the mechanism whereby prostaglandin E(1) protects against E. coli-induced liver injury.
...
PMID:Prostaglandin E(1) protects against liver injury induced by Escherichia coli infection via a dominant Th2-like response of liver T cells in mice. 1057 26
Intraperitoneal infection of mice with Escherichia coli induced activated TCR gamma delta T cells in the peritoneal cavity. We provide evidence that the E. coli-induced gamma delta T cells are derived only from the fetal thymus on the following grounds. The gamma delta T cells were not induced in athymic nude mice and irradiated bone marrow-transferred mice which lack fetal thymus-derived T cells. However,
E. coli infection
of fetal thymus-grafted nude mice did induce fetal thymus-derived gamma delta T cells. These results suggest that the fetal thymus-derived gamma delta T cells colonize the periphery during early ontogeny, and are maintained until adult age. The E. coli-induced gamma delta T cells express only the Vdelta1 gene. Vgamma6 was predominantly expressed whereas anti-Vgamma1 and anti-Vgamma4 monoclonal antibodies stained less than 3 % of the cells. Direct sequencing of PCR products revealed that Vgamma6 and Vdelta1 genes expressed by the E. coli-induced gamma delta T cells were invariant sequences identical to those expressed in the fetal thymus. The antigen (Ag) specificity of a T cell hybridoma expressing the fetal type Vgamma6 / Vdelta1(+) TCR could not be identified as the cells failed to respond to
lipopolysaccharide
, E. coli Ag, mycobacterial heat shock protein 65, or isopentenyl pyrophosphate. These results suggest that the Vgamma6 / Vdelta1(+) gamma delta T cells derived from fetal thymus can participate in immune responses against bacterial infection through recognition of a novel class of Ag which is not yet identified.
...
PMID:Escherichia coli infection induces only fetal thymus-derived gamma delta T cells at the infected site. 1060 95
Treatment of human uterine cervical fibroblasts with commercial
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) preparations from different serotypes of Escherichia coli effectively augmented the processing of mammalian progelatinase A/promatrix metalloproteinase (proMMP)-2 to a 62-kDa form of MMP-2. When purified proMMP-2 was incubated with
LPS
preparations, the proenzyme was similarly processed into the 62-kDa active MMP-2 in a time- and dose-dependent manner. By contrast, progelatinase B/proMMP-9 and prostromelysin 1/proMMP-3 were not activated. A serine proteinase inhibitor, phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, completely interfered with this
LPS
-mediated activation of proMMP-2. This is novel evidence that E. coli serine proteinase is a specific activator of proMMP-2. Thus, it is very likely that
E. coli infection
plays a crucial role in the degradation of connective tissues via the activation of proMMP-2, and the resultant active MMP-2 participates in the dysfunction of connective tissues such as in the preterm rupture of fetal membranes.
...
PMID:Activation of human progelatinase A/promatrix metalloproteinase 2 by Escherichia coli-derived serine proteinase. 1065 25
In this study, 294 Escherichia coli isolates from birds with
colibacillosis
were collected from disease outbreaks throughout the United States and were compared with 75 fecal E. coli isolates of apparently healthy chickens by their possession of several purported virulence genes, resistance to rough-
lipopolysaccharide
-specific bacteriophages (rLPSr), and elaboration of capsule. Traits were selected for study on the basis of their association with complement resistance. The genes targeted in this study included those encoding colicin V (cvaC) and the outer membrane proteins TraT (traT), OmpA (ompA), and Iss (iss). No significant differences were found between the two groups of isolates in the occurrence of cvaC-, traT-, or ompA-homologous sequences or in rLPSr. Only a few isolates were encapsulated, and the isolates of healthy birds were significantly more likely to be encapsulated than were the isolates of sick birds. However, iss, whether detected through hybridization or amplification, was found in more of the disease-associated isolates than in those of healthy birds. This difference was highly significant. Further, iss sequences were widely distributed among isolates of different serotypes from various avian host species and sites within these hosts. Such results suggest that possession of the iss sequence by an avian E. coli isolate may be a good indicator of that isolate's potential to cause disease. This association warrants further study because iss and the protein it encodes may be useful targets of future
colibacillosis
control efforts.
...
PMID:Complement resistance-related traits among Escherichia coli isolates from apparently healthy birds and birds with colibacillosis. 1073 41
In the Danish Salmonella Control Program, eggs from broiler parent flocks are surveyed by serologic analysis every 4 wk for antibodies against Salmonella
lipopolysaccharide
O-antigens 1, 4, 5, 9, and 12 (Mix-enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay [ELISA]) and 6 and 7 (Infantis-ELISA). The antibody response is measured in percentage optical density (OD%) of a strong positive reaction, and the cutoff value has been determined to be 40 OD%. Two or more reactors above 40 OD% will place the parent flock under suspicion. There has been concern about possible cross-reactions between Salmonella spp. and other Enterobacteriaceae, e.g., Escherichia coli, because a high specificity of a Salmonella antibody test is desirable. Moreover, false-positive Salmonella results have economic consequences and impede planning the production. A case-control study based on cases of clinical
E. coli infections
(
colibacillosis
) from two Danish hatcheries, supplying about 62% of the Danish broiler production, is described. In order to eliminate a possible bias from age and season, the controls were matched on age of the birds and on time of submitting the samples. This study shows that flocks with preceding
colibacillosis
did not have higher salmonella reactions than matched flocks without a preceding
colibacillosis
. This observation was confirmed in longitudinal studies.
...
PMID:Serologic reactions against Salmonella in samples from broiler parent stock with and without preceding colibacillosis: a case-control study. 1141 33
Convulsions and encephalopathy are common complications of Shiga toxin (Stx)-producing Shigella and enterohemorrhagic
Escherichia coli infections
. In previous studies, we demonstrated that Stx and
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) act in concert to enhance mice sensitivity to pentylenetetrazole (PTZ)-induced seizures via mechanisms involving tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha), interleukinl beta and nitric oxide. To further elucidate the role of the host response in Shigella-related seizures, we studied the ability of Shigella dysenteriae and its products to modulate seizures in C3H/HeJ (lps(d/d)) and in C3H/HeN (lps(n/n) mice. Injection of S. dysenteriae 60R sonicate elevated plasma TNFalpha and enhanced the convulsive response to PTZ in both mouse strains. Induced TNFalpha levels were markedly lower in
LPS
-hyporesponsive C3H/HeJ mice than in
LPS
- responsive C3H/HeN mice: 7.4 ng/ml vs 44 ng/ml (induced by 4LD50). Accordingly, a higher dose of S. dysenteriae sonicate was needed to sensitize the C3H/HeJ mice to seizures. Stx or
LPS
alone did not enhance seizures in either strain. Stx together with
LPS
enhanced seizures in
LPS
-responsive mice, but not in
LPS
-hyporesponsive mice in which they induced only a minor elevation in TNFalpha levels (1.5 ng/ml). As compared to
LPS
-responsive mice, the
LPS
-hyporesponsive mice were less susceptible to the lethal effects of Shigella sonicate and were resistant to the lethal effect of purified Stx with
LPS
. These results demonstrate the crucial role of the host response with regard to the sensitivity to to
LPS
, and specifically TNFalpha production, in Shigella lethality and Shigella-related seizures.
...
PMID:Enhancement of pentylenetetrazole-induced seizures by Shigella dysenteriae in LPS-resistant C3H/HeJ mice: role of the host response. 1200 30
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