MICROBIOLOGY and IMMUNOLOGY
Online ISSN : 1348-0421
Print ISSN : 0385-5600
ISSN-L : 0385-5600
Volume 42, Issue 11
Displaying 1-10 of 10 articles from this issue
  • Yumi Saito, Keiko Seki, Tomoko Ohara, Chieko Shimauchi, Yoko Honma, Mu ...
    1998 Volume 42 Issue 11 Pages 723-729
    Published: 1998
    Released on J-STAGE: March 17, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    To elucidate the mode of dissemination of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in neonate intensive care units (NICUs), a total of 223 isolates from 3 separate hospitals were investigated between 1994 and 1996 by a DNA fingerprinting technique with pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). Exoprotein profiles of some strains were also examined using SDS-polyacrylamide gel-electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and the assessment of enzyme/toxin production such as coagulase, enterotoxin and TSST-1. Judging from the strain typing data from PFGE results and the epidemiological data, 2 different types of PFGE patterns (A and B) and their subtypes (A', A" and B') were identified. The A type including A' and A" (comprising approximately 95% of the isolates) was markedly dominant. Only 5% of the isolates belonged to type B and subtype B'. On the other hand, MRSA isolated from adult patients admitted to the same hospital showed many different PFGE patterns. The results strongly suggested that some strain(s) with specific PFGE pattern(s) is prevalent in NICUs. Furthermore, isolates which expressed the same PFGE pattern did not always express the same SDS-PAGE pattern. There were some isolates with different abilities to produce coagulase, enterotoxin C and toxic-shock syndrome toxin (TSST)-1, and the abilities had no relation with a particular type of PFGE pattern. Therefore, a combination of PFGE analysis and biochemical analyses of coagulase, enterotoxin C and TSST-1 may provide us with more detailed information for the epidemiological study of MRSA in NICUs.
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  • Stitaya Sirisinha, Narisara Anuntagool, Pakamas Intachote, Vanaporn Wu ...
    1998 Volume 42 Issue 11 Pages 731-737
    Published: 1998
    Released on J-STAGE: March 17, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Burkholderia pseudomallei is a free-living organism that causes the potentially lethal tropical infection melioidosis. The disease is endemic in many parts of eastern Asia and northern Australia. The presence of two distinct biotypes in soil can be reliably distinguished by their ability to assimilate L-arabinose. Whereas some soil isolates could utilize this substrate (Ara+), the remaining soil isolates and all clinical isolates tested so far could not (Ara-). Only the Ara- isolates were virulent in animal models. We have raised a murine monoclonal antibody (MAb) that can readily distinguish Ara- from Ara+ biotypes. The MAb reacted with a high molecular weight component present only on the Ara- biotype. With this MAb, clinical and soil Ara- isolates gave identical positive reactions in agglutination, immunofluorescence, ELISA and immunoblot assays. Using these same assay systems, the soil Ara+ biotype did not react with the MAb. Similar but distinct immunoblot patterns were also noted when these two Ara biotypes were probed with sera from patients with melioidosis or with polyclonal immune rabbit sera. These data showed that the Ara- biotype from both clinical and environmental isolates is antigenically different from its Ara+ environmental counterpart. The SDS-PAGE protein and lectin-binding profiles of both groups of Ara- isolates were also found to be different from those of the Ara+ biotype.
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  • Yasuo Nakatomi, Junichi Sugiyama
    1998 Volume 42 Issue 11 Pages 739-743
    Published: 1998
    Released on J-STAGE: March 17, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    A simple and rapid slide latex agglutination assay was developed to detect penicillin-binding protein 2' (PBP2') from isolates of staphylococi. PBP2' present in the membranes of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) or methicillin-resistant coagulase negative staphylococci (MRCNS) was rapidly extracted by alkaline treatment and, by combining with a slide agglutination reaction using latex particles sensitized with monoclonal antibodies raised against it, PBP2' could be detected from a single loopful of cells taken from agar plates not containing beta-lactum antibiotics within 15min. In a study of clinical isolates previously characterized as either MRSA or methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA) by antibiotic susceptibility testing, 231 specimens of 232 MRSA were PBP2' positive by latex agglutination, and the 87 specimens of MSSA were all negative. One specimen identified as MRSA by susceptibility testing but PBP2' negative by latex agglutination was confirmed as mecA gene negative by PCR. This simple and rapid slide latex reagent should be useful in clinical diagnostics.
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  • Shan Ruo Bing, Takemi Kinouchi, Keiko Kataoka, Tomomi Kuwahara, Yoshin ...
    1998 Volume 42 Issue 11 Pages 745-753
    Published: 1998
    Released on J-STAGE: March 17, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Ileal ulcers and thiobarbituric acid (TBA)-reactive substances in the ileal mucosa were induced in rats treated with a nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug, 5-bromo-2-(4-fluorophenyl)-3-(4-methylsul-fonylphenyl)thiophene (BFMeT), at a dose of 1, 000mg/kg administered with tap water as drinking water. However, the formation of ileal ulcers and TBA-reactive substances in the ileal mucosa was repressed by giving the animals a culture supernatant of Lactobacillus acidophilus as drinking water. We measured the antioxidative activity of the culture supernatant and found that the supernatant inhibited the formation of t-butyl hydroperoxide-induced TBA-reactive substances in erythrocyte membrane ghosts. Therefore, the effects of various known antioxidative compounds on the ileal ulcer formation induced by BFMeT were investigated. While α-tocopherol, t-butyl-1, 4-hydroxyanisole and allopurinol did not repress ulcer formation after BFMeT treatment, ascorbic acid, dimethyl sulfoxide, glutathione and β-carotene significantly inhibited formation. Among these compounds, ascorbic acid was the most effective. Accumulation of TBA-reactive substances in the ileal mucosa after BFMeT treatment also decreased significantly in rats treated with ascorbic acid. In addition, the percentage of Gram-negative rods in the ileal contents of rats treated with BFMeT and tap water was dramatically increased, but it was not increased in rats treated with BFMeT and these antioxidants. A positive correlation between the percentage of Gram-negative rods and the number of ileal ulcers was also observed. These results suggest that lipid peroxidation mediated by oxygen radicals plays an important role in the induction of ileal ulcers by BFMeT in rats, and that lipopolysaccharide-activated neutrophils probably produce highly reactive hypochlorous acid and hydrogen peroxide, which are inactivated by ascorbic acid and glutathione, respectively.
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  • Eriko Ohgitani, Kappei Kobayashi, Kazushige Takeshita, Jiro Iimanishi
    1998 Volume 42 Issue 11 Pages 755-760
    Published: 1998
    Released on J-STAGE: March 17, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The expression and subcellular localization of cellular heat-shock protein hsp70 were examined in varicella-zoster virus (VZV)-infected human diploid fibroblasts. Infection with VZV elevated the steady-state levels of hsp70 mRNA by 24hr post-infection (hpi). Western blotting analysis revealed an increase in accumulation of hsp70 from 24hpi. Subcellular localization of the hsp70 in VZV-infected cells was examined by indirect immunofluorescence. In most VZV-infected cells, hsp70 was localized to inclusion bodies induced in the cell nucleus by infection with VZV. In some cells, however, the remaining parts of the cell nucleus and the cytoplasm were also stained with anti-hsp70 antibody. These results indicate that infection with VZV induces the expression of hsp70 and its localization to VZV-specific inclusion bodies, which suggests the involvement of hsp70 in molecular events within inclusion bodies.
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  • Fumihiko Takamatsu, Naoki Asakawa, Kinjiro Morimoto, Kenji Takeuchi, Y ...
    1998 Volume 42 Issue 11 Pages 761-771
    Published: November 20, 1998
    Released on J-STAGE: March 17, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    We investigated the relationship between the two forms of rabies virus P protein, a non-catalytic subunit of rabies virus RNA polymerase. The two displayed different electrophoretic mobilities as 37- and 40-kDa polypeptides, hence termed as p37 and p40, respectively. Double labeling experiments with [3H] leucine and [32P] orthophosphate demonstrated that p40 was much more phosphorylated than p37. Treatment of the virion proteins with alkaline phosphatase eliminated only p40, and not 37-kDa polypeptide. The p37 was a major product of the P gene, and was accumulated in the infected cell and incorporated into the virion. On the other hand, p40 was apparently detected only in the virion, and little detected in the cells. Treatment of infected cells with okadaic acid, however, resulted in significant accumulation of p40 in the cell, suggesting that p40 was continuously produced in the cell but dephosphorylated quickly. We detected both 37- and 40-kDa products in P cDNA-transfected animal cells, while only a 37-kDa product was produced in Escherichia coli. Incubation of 37-kDa products from E. coli with the lysates of animal cells in vitro resulted in the production of a 40-kDa product, which was also shown to be suppressed by the heparin. From these results, it is suggested that p40 is produced by the hyperphosphorylation of a 37-kDa polypeptide, which depends on certain heparin-sensitive cellular enzyme (s) and occurs even in the absence of the other viral gene products, and that p40 is reverted quickly to p37 in the infected cells, probably being dependent on some virus-induced factor (s).
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  • A Comparison of Two Sibling Viruses Isolated from Different Lobes of an SSPE Brain
    Minoru Ayata, Kaoru Hayashi, Toshiyuki Seto, Ryosuke Murata, Hisashi O ...
    1998 Volume 42 Issue 11 Pages 773-780
    Published: 1998
    Released on J-STAGE: March 17, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The Fr/V and Oc/V sibling viruses of the Osaka-1 strain of the subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE) virus were defective in cell-free virus production. By radioimmunoprecipitation assay, the matrix (M) protein was not detected in cells persistently infected with the Osaka-1 strain. This undetectable expression was consistent with the selective reduction of antibody response to the M protein in the patient from whom the Osaka-1 strain was isolated. The sequence of the M gene, however, predicted that the protein could be synthesized because the translational start and stop codons for the protein were not altered. Northern blot hybridization demonstrated the selective defect of the monocistronic mRNAs for the M protein and the phosphoprotein (P) together with the dominant presence of the P-M bicistronic mRNA. This absence of the M mRNA was further confirmed by primer extension analysis. Therefore, the undetectable expression of the M protein in the infected cells was proved to be caused by a transcriptional defect. The two sibling viruses, isolated from remote portions of an SSPE brain, were indistinguishable in their viral characters, including the M gene sequences, which indicates the possibility of clonal expansion of the strain in the brain.
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  • María Silvia Di Genaro, María Esther Escudero, Estela Mu ...
    1998 Volume 42 Issue 11 Pages 781-788
    Published: 1998
    Released on J-STAGE: March 17, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Yersinia enterocolitica is enteropathogenic for humans and rodents. Immune protection from oral and respiratory pathogens may be most effectively elicited following intranasal (i.n.) vaccination. An experimental murine intranasal challenge model was used to evaluate the immunogenicity of a Y. enterocolitica O:8 cellular extract (CE) in mucosa. This antigenic preparation has demonstrated to induce protection by subcutaneous immunization. Mice were immunized intranasally with two doses of CE. Immunized and non-immunized animals were challenged with 5×106 colony-forming units (CFU) by nasal infection. Antibodies in serum and bronchoalveolar lavage (b.a.l.) fluid were assessed before and 48hr after challenge. The CFU were determined by analysis of lung homogenate samples. The CE immunization induced significant b.a.l.-specific IgA and IgG, and serum-specific IgG, IgA and IgM. Histopathological studies 24 and 48hr postchallenge demonstrated that immunization protected against progressive lesions resulting from Y. enterocolitica invasion of the pulmonary mucosa. The CFU in the lungs showed that CE immunization led to significant clearance as compared to the bacterial level in nonimmunized controls. From the results obtained, it can be concluded that CE can induce local and systemic immunity and protect against nasal infection.
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  • Takafumi Okutomi, Takashi Tanaka, Satoru Yui, Masaaki Mikami, Masatosh ...
    1998 Volume 42 Issue 11 Pages 789-793
    Published: 1998
    Released on J-STAGE: March 17, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The effect of an anti-microbial protein, calprotectin, in combination with neutrophils on the growth of Candida albicans was investigated. The growth inhibition of C. albicans by murine neutrophils was augmented by the addition of a low concentration of calprotectin prepared from rat peritoneal exudate cells. The concentrations of calprotectin causing 50% inhibition of growth of C. albicans in the absence or presence of neutrophils at an effector-to-target (E/T) ratio of 30 and 60 were estimated to be 0.45, 0.34 and 0.28U/ml, respectively. The anti-Candida activity of calprotectin was completely inhibited by 2μM of zinc ion, while it only partially lowered the activity of the combination of calprotectin and neutrophils. Lactoferrin, which is an anti-microbial protein released from neutrophils, strongly inhibited the growth of C. albicans in combination with calprotectin. These results suggest that calprotectin and lactoferrin released from neutrophils may cooperate to inhibit the growth of C. albicans at a local lesion of the infection where there is an accumulation of neutrophils.
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  • Rescue of Anti-Leishmanial CMI by Providing Th1-Specific Bystander Costimulation
    Gobardhan Das, Harpreet Vohra, Bhaskar Saha, Javed N. Agrewala, Gyan C ...
    1998 Volume 42 Issue 11 Pages 795-801
    Published: 1998
    Released on J-STAGE: March 17, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    A protective immune response against Leishmania donovani infection is mediated by T-helper type 1(Th1) cells. Th1 induced cell-mediated immunity (CMI), as assessed by anti-leishmanial DTH response, is lost in a susceptible host such as BALB/c mice. Although the impaired Th1 function eventuates in unhindered parasite growth and in manifestation of the susceptible phenotype, the mechanism of down-regulation of the Th1 function is yet to be elucidated. Here, we provide evidence that the parasite down-regulates the expression of a Th1-specific costimulatory molecule, M150, on the surface of infected BALB/c micederived macrophages. Th cells are rendered unresponsive to anti-CD3 Ab-mediated stimulation after interaction with infected macrophages. The anergized T cells produce much less IL-2, IL-4 and IFN-γ compared to those T cells which were costimulated using normal macrophages. The defect in proliferation, anti-CD3 Ab induced unresponsiveness and IFN-γ but not IL-4 production can be restored by providing bystander costimulation through M150. These results not only unfold a novel immune evasion strategy used by the parasite but also clarify the mechanism of Th1 cell debilitation during the disease. Recovery of Th1 cytokine production by bystander costimulation through M150 may help in formulating a new strategy for the elimination of intracellular parasites.
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