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1.
mBio ; 10(4)2019 07 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31363025

RESUMO

Despite antibiotics and sterile technique, postoperative infections remain a real and present danger to patients. Recent estimates suggest that 50% of the pathogens associated with postoperative infections have become resistant to the standard antibiotics used for prophylaxis. Risk factors identified in such cases include obesity and antibiotic exposure. To study the combined effect of obesity and antibiotic exposure on postoperative infection, mice were allowed to gain weight on an obesogenic Western-type diet (WD), administered antibiotics and then subjected to an otherwise recoverable sterile surgical injury (30% hepatectomy). The feeding of a WD alone resulted in a major imbalance of the cecal microbiota characterized by a decrease in diversity, loss of Bacteroidetes, a bloom in Proteobacteria, and the emergence of antibiotic-resistant organisms among the cecal microbiota. When WD-fed mice were administered antibiotics and subjected to 30% liver resection, lethal sepsis, characterized by multiple-organ damage, developed. Notable was the emergence and systemic dissemination of multidrug-resistant (MDR) pathobionts, including carbapenem-resistant, extended-spectrum ß-lactamase-producing Serratia marcescens, which expressed a virulent and immunosuppressive phenotype. Analysis of the distribution of exact sequence variants belonging to the genus Serratia suggested that these strains originated from the cecal mucosa. No mortality or MDR pathogens were observed in identically treated mice fed a standard chow diet. Taken together, these results suggest that consumption of a Western diet and exposure to certain antibiotics may predispose to life-threating postoperative infection associated with MDR organisms present among the gut microbiota.IMPORTANCE Obesity remains a prevalent and independent risk factor for life-threatening infection following major surgery. Here, we demonstrate that when mice are fed an obesogenic Western diet (WD), they become susceptible to lethal sepsis with multiple organ damage after exposure to antibiotics and an otherwise-recoverable surgical injury. Analysis of the gut microbiota in this model demonstrates that WD alone leads to loss of Bacteroidetes, a bloom of Proteobacteria, and evidence of antibiotic resistance development even before antibiotics are administered. After antibiotics and surgery, lethal sepsis with organ damage developed in in mice fed a WD with the appearance of multidrug-resistant pathogens in the liver, spleen, and blood. The importance of these findings lies in exposing how the selective pressures of diet, antibiotic exposure, and surgical injury can converge on the microbiome, resulting in lethal sepsis and organ damage without the introduction of an exogenous pathogen.


Assuntos
Antibacterianos/uso terapêutico , Dieta Ocidental/efeitos adversos , Sepse/tratamento farmacológico , Sepse/cirurgia , Animais , Proteína C-Reativa/metabolismo , Farmacorresistência Bacteriana/genética , Microbioma Gastrointestinal/efeitos dos fármacos , Marcação In Situ das Extremidades Cortadas , Interleucina-6/sangue , Masculino , Camundongos , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , RNA Ribossômico 16S/genética , Sepse/sangue , Sepse/microbiologia
2.
Adv Parasitol ; 73: 327-71, 2010.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20627147

RESUMO

Helminths are the cause of some of the major infectious diseases of humanity in what is still a "wormy" world. There is, in East and Southeast Asia, a high prevalence of several helminthiases which occur primarily in rural, impoverished areas of low-income and developing countries throughout the tropics and subtropics. Subsequent to various parasite genome projects that commenced in the early 1990s, under the aegis of the World Health Organization (WHO), the draft genomes of three major helminth species (Schistosoma japonicum, S. mansoni and Brugia malayi) have been sequenced, and many other helminth parasites have now been targeted for intensive genomics investigation. The continuing release of genome sequences has catalyzed the emergence of transcriptomics, proteomics and related "-omics" analyses of helminth parasites, which provide unprecedented approaches to understanding their biology that will result in new clues for the development of novel control interventions. In this review, we present a summary of current approaches employed in helminth "-omics" studies and review recent advances in helminth genomics and post-genomics in the Southeast Asian setting.


Assuntos
Pesquisa Biomédica/tendências , Perfilação da Expressão Gênica , Genoma , Helmintíase/epidemiologia , Helmintos/patogenicidade , Proteoma , Animais , Sudeste Asiático/epidemiologia , Ásia Oriental/epidemiologia , Helmintíase/parasitologia , Helmintos/química , Helmintos/genética , Humanos
3.
J Basic Microbiol ; 50(3): 299-301, 2010 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20143353

RESUMO

Streptomyces sp. AM-7161 is a producer of an aromatic polyketide medermycin with strong antibacterial and antitumor activity. It has been inefficient to perform genetic manipulations in this strain, which heavily hinders the genetic analysis of some interesting problems concerning tailoring modifications in medermycin biosynthesis. Here, condition optimizations of sporulation and mycelium growth of this strain as well as protoplast preparation and regeneration were conducted systematically. Based on these results, protoplast transformation system was established, and two types of foreign plasmids (integrative and auto-replicating) were efficiently introduced into this strain. Additionally, a conjugation system to mediate plasmid transfer between Escherichia coli and Streptomyces sp. AM-7161 was also optimized and established. These results provide the practical procedures to perform more convenient genetic analysis of medermycin biosynthesis in this strain.


Assuntos
Antibacterianos/metabolismo , Engenharia Genética/métodos , Genética Microbiana/métodos , Biologia Molecular/métodos , Streptomyces/genética , Streptomyces/metabolismo , Conjugação Genética , Escherichia coli/genética , Transferência Genética Horizontal , Vetores Genéticos , Naftoquinonas/metabolismo , Plasmídeos , Protoplastos , Transformação Bacteriana
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