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1.
Vet Sci ; 11(8)2024 Aug 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39195821

RESUMEN

ß-Nerve growth factor (ß-NGF) is a protein produced in the reproductive tract of camelids (camels, llamas, and alpacas) that has been identified as the ovulation inducing factor in seminal plasma. ß-NGF from seminal plasma deposited into the reproductive tract of the female camelid acts systemically to stimulate the secretion of luteinizing hormone (LH) from the anterior pituitary, which in turn induces follicle maturation and ovulation. The objectives of the present study were to determine if ß-NGF is present in the reproductive tract of the stallion and identify the specific site(s) of production. The hypotheses were that ß-NGF would be present in the stallion reproductive tract and would primarily be localized in Sertoli cells of the testes and the prostate gland. Immunohistochemistry on paraffin-embedded paraformaldehyde-fixed tissues was performed using a rabbit polyclonal anti-ß-NGF antibody on a total of six male equine reproductive tracts, including a one-day old colt, a one-year-old colt, and four adult stallion tracts. Strong immunostaining was observed in the efferent ducts of the testes and the epithelial cells of the prostate, seminal vesicles, bulbourethral glands, and ampullae. Weaker ß-NGF staining was noted in Leydig cells, Sertoli cells, and spermatogonia within the testes and in epithelial cells of the epididymis. In conclusion, immunohistochemistry revealed that ß-NGF is present in the stallion reproductive tract, and the protein is primarily present in the efferent ducts of the testes and in all accessory sex glands.

2.
Eng Life Sci ; 23(3): e2200037, 2023 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36874611

RESUMEN

There is an unmet need for delivery platforms that realize the full potential of next-generation nucleic acid therapeutics. The in vivo usefulness of current delivery systems is limited by numerous weaknesses, including poor targeting specificity, inefficient access to target cell cytoplasm, immune activation, off-target effects, small therapeutic windows, limited genetic encoding and cargo capacity, and manufacturing challenges. Here we characterize the safety and efficacy of a delivery platform comprising engineered live, tissue-targeting, non-pathogenic bacteria (Escherichia coli SVC1) for intracellular cargo delivery. SVC1 bacteria are engineered to specifically bind to epithelial cells via a surface-expressed targeting ligand, to allow escape of their cargo from the phagosome, and to have minimal immunogenicity. We describe SVC1's ability to deliver short hairpin RNA (shRNA), localized SVC1 administration to various tissues, and its minimal immunogenicity. To validate the therapeutic potential of SVC1, we used it to deliver influenza-targeting antiviral shRNAs to respiratory tissues in vivo. These data are the first to establish the safety and efficacy of this bacteria-based delivery platform for use in multiple tissue types and as an antiviral in the mammalian respiratory tract. We expect that this optimized delivery platform will enable a variety of advanced therapeutic approaches.

3.
Vet Pathol ; 59(5): 787-791, 2022 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35400242

RESUMEN

Three dogs under 12 months old were diagnosed with atypical multiple myeloma (MM), having an aggressive multifocal anaplastic round cell sarcoma in bone marrow, viscera, and/or peripheral blood, which were confirmed by cytology and immunohistochemistry to be of plasma cell origin. The intramedullary sarcomas caused myelophthisis, osteolysis, and hypercalcemia. Complete or free light chain monoclonal gammopathy in the serum and/or urine was demonstrated by protein electrophoresis and immunofixation. The polymerase chain reaction for antigen receptor rearrangement assay performed on 2 cases identified a clonally rearranged immunoglobulin gene. Neoplastic cells lacked expression of CD45, CD3, CD18, CD21, CD34, and MHCII by flow cytometry. Immunohistochemistry revealed MUM1 immunoreactivity of the neoplastic cells. Combining all data, the diagnosis was MM. An aggressive form of MM in young dogs should be a differential diagnosis for patients with an immunoglobulin-productive, B cell-clonal, CD45-negative, MUM1-positive discrete cell neoplasm arising from the bone marrow.


Asunto(s)
Enfermedades de los Perros , Mieloma Múltiple , Animales , Linfocitos B , Médula Ósea , Enfermedades de los Perros/diagnóstico , Perros , Citometría de Flujo/veterinaria , Mieloma Múltiple/diagnóstico , Mieloma Múltiple/veterinaria , Células Plasmáticas
4.
PLoS One ; 16(6): e0252214, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34061884

RESUMEN

Borrelia burgdorferi (Bb), the etiological agent of Lyme disease, produces a series of simple glycolipids where diacylglycerol and cholesterol serve as the precursor. The cholesterol-based glycolipids, cholesteryl 6-O-acyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside (ACGal) and cholesteryl-ß-D-galactopyranoside (CGal) are immunogenic and proposed to contribute to the pathogenesis of Lyme disease. Detailed studies of CGal and ACGal in Bb have been hampered by a lack of knowledge of their underlying biosynthetic processes. The genome of Bb encodes four putative glycosyltransferases, and only one of these, BB0572, was predicted to be an inverting family 2 glycosyltransferase (GT2 enzyme) capable of using UDP-galactose as a substrate and forming a ß-glycosidic bond. Comparison of the 42 kDa BB0572 amino acid sequence from Bb with other Borrelia spp demonstrates that this protein is highly conserved. To establish BB0572 as the galactosyltransferase capable of cholesterol glycolipid formation in Bb, the protein was produced as a recombinant product in Escherichia coli and tested in a cell-free assay with 14C-cholesterol and UDP-galactose as the substrates. This experiment resulted in a radiolabeled lipid that migrated with the cholesterol glycolipid standard of CGal when evaluated by thin layer chromatography. Additionally, mutation in the predicted active site of BB0572 resulted in a recombinant protein that was unable to catalyze the formation of the cholesterol glycolipid. These data characterize BB0572 as a putative cholesterol galactosyltransferase. This provides the first step in understanding how Bb cholesterol glycolipids are formed and will allow investigations into their involvement in pathogen transmission and disease development.


Asunto(s)
Borrelia burgdorferi/metabolismo , Colesterol/metabolismo , Galactosiltransferasas/metabolismo , Glucolípidos/metabolismo , Enfermedad de Lyme/microbiología , Borrelia burgdorferi/fisiología
5.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32429479

RESUMEN

Traditionally, iodine has been delivered as a solution, tablet or resin to disinfect water. In this study we evaluated the "I2 vapor infusion" (I2VP) technology which passes an airstream through a matrix containing elemental iodine (I2) to produce I2 vapor as an innovative method of iodine delivery for water disinfection. Pressured air was provided either by a compressor or hand pump. Testing was performed with water inoculated with either Gram-negative (Escherichia, Salmonella) or Gram-positive (Enterococcus) bacteria or with pre-formed Acinetobacter or Staphylococcus biofilms. Bacterial colony forming units were used to assess efficacy of the device. In distilled water all bacteria and biofilms were eliminated after brief exposures (<90 s). Culturable bacteria were also eliminated from pond and municipal sewer water, but the technology was mostly ineffective against dairy lagoon water with high turbidity and organic particulate. Longer duration infusion and higher air volumes used to overcome interference from organic matter were also associated with higher concentrations of residual iodine. We conclude that I2 vapor infusion has the potential to be useful for emergency water treatment and potentially for reducing microbiological contamination of some waste streams.


Asunto(s)
Yodo , Purificación del Agua , Biopelículas , Desinfección , Agua
6.
Sci Rep ; 10(1): 6047, 2020 04 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32269234

RESUMEN

Efforts to develop effective and safe drugs for treatment of tuberculosis require preclinical evaluation in animal models. Alongside efficacy testing of novel therapies, effects on pulmonary pathology and disease progression are monitored by using histopathology images from these infected animals. To compare the severity of disease across treatment cohorts, pathologists have historically assigned a semi-quantitative histopathology score that may be subjective in terms of their training, experience, and personal bias. Manual histopathology therefore has limitations regarding reproducibility between studies and pathologists, potentially masking successful treatments. This report describes a pathologist-assistive software tool that reduces these user limitations, while providing a rapid, quantitative scoring system for digital histopathology image analysis. The software, called 'Lesion Image Recognition and Analysis' (LIRA), employs convolutional neural networks to classify seven different pathology features, including three different lesion types from pulmonary tissues of the C3HeB/FeJ tuberculosis mouse model. LIRA was developed to improve the efficiency of histopathology analysis for mouse tuberculosis infection models, this approach has also broader applications to other disease models and tissues. The full source code and documentation is available from https://Github.com/TB-imaging/LIRA.


Asunto(s)
Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador/métodos , Pulmón/diagnóstico por imagen , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/fisiología , Tuberculosis Pulmonar/diagnóstico por imagen , Algoritmos , Animales , Modelos Animales de Enfermedad , Humanos , Pulmón/patología , Ratones , Ratones Endogámicos C3H , Redes Neurales de la Computación , Programas Informáticos , Tuberculosis Pulmonar/patología
7.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 82(15): 4715-4731, 2016 08 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27235428

RESUMEN

UNLABELLED: Tick-borne transmission of bacterial pathogens in the order Rickettsiales is responsible for diverse infectious diseases, many of them severe, in humans and animals. Transmission dynamics differ among these pathogens and are reflected in the pathogen-vector interaction. Anaplasma marginale has been shown to establish and maintain infectivity within Dermacentor spp. for weeks to months while escaping the complex network of vacuolar peptidases that are responsible for digestion of the tick blood meal. How this prolonged maintenance of infectivity in a potentially hostile environment is achieved has been unknown. Using the natural vector Dermacentor andersoni, we demonstrated that A. marginale-infected tick vacuoles (AmVs) concurrently recruit markers of the early endosome (Rab5), recycling endosome (Rab4 and Rab11), and late endosome (Rab7), are maintained near neutral pH, do not fuse with lysosomes, exclude the protease cathepsin L, and engage the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus for up to 21 days postinfection. Maintenance of this safe vacuolar niche requires active A. marginale protein synthesis; in its absence, the AmVs mature into acidic, protease-active phagolysosomes. Identification of this bacterially directed modeling of the tick midgut endosome provides a mechanistic basis for examination of the differences in transmission efficiency observed among A. marginale strains and among vector populations. IMPORTANCE: Ticks transmit a variety of intracellular bacterial pathogens that cause significant diseases in humans and animals. For successful transmission, these bacterial pathogens must first gain entry into the tick midgut digestive cells, avoid digestion, and establish a replicative niche without harming the tick vector. Little is known about how this replicative niche is established and maintained. Using the ruminant pathogen A. marginale and its natural tick vector, D. andersoni, this study characterized the features of the A. marginale niche in the tick midgut and demonstrates that A. marginale protein synthesis is required for the maintenance of this niche. This work opens a new line of inquiry about the pathogen effectors and their targets within the tick that mediate tick-pathogen interactions and ultimately serve as the determinants of pathogen success.


Asunto(s)
Anaplasma marginale/fisiología , Vectores Arácnidos/microbiología , Dermacentor/microbiología , Anaplasma marginale/genética , Anaplasma marginale/aislamiento & purificación , Animales , Vectores Arácnidos/metabolismo , Proteínas Bacterianas/genética , Proteínas Bacterianas/metabolismo , Citoplasma/metabolismo , Citoplasma/microbiología , Dermacentor/metabolismo , Vacuolas/metabolismo , Vacuolas/microbiología
8.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26973816

RESUMEN

The genus Anaplasma consists of tick-transmitted obligate intracellular bacteria that invade white or red blood cells to cause debilitating and potentially fatal infections. A. phagocytophilum, a human and veterinary pathogen, infects neutrophils to cause granulocytic anaplasmosis. A. marginale invades bovine erythrocytes. Evidence suggests that both species may also infect endothelial cells in vivo. In mammalian and arthropod host cells, A. phagocytophilum and A. marginale reside in host cell derived pathogen-occupied vacuoles (POVs). While it was recently demonstrated that the A. phagocytophilum-occupied vacuole (ApV) intercepts membrane traffic from the trans-Golgi network, it is unclear if it or the A. marginale-occupied vacuole (AmV) interacts with other secretory organelles. Here, we demonstrate that the ApV and AmV extensively interact with the host endoplasmic reticulum (ER) in endothelial, myeloid, and/or tick cells. ER lumen markers, calreticulin, and protein disulfide isomerase, and the ER membrane marker, derlin-1, were pronouncedly recruited to the peripheries of both POVs. ApV association with the ER initiated early and continued throughout the infection cycle. Both the ApV and AmV interacted with the rough ER and smooth ER. However, only derlin-1-positive rough ER derived vesicles were delivered into the ApV lumen where they localized with intravacuolar bacteria. Transmission electron microscopy identified multiple ER-POV membrane contact sites on the cytosolic faces of both species' vacuoles that corresponded to areas on the vacuoles' lumenal faces where intravacuolar Anaplasma organisms closely associated. A. phagocytophilum is known to hijack Rab10, a GTPase that regulates ER dynamics and morphology. Yet, ApV-ER interactions were unhindered in cells in which Rab10 had been knocked down, demonstrating that the GTPase is dispensable for the bacterium to parasitize the ER. These data establish the ApV and AmV as pathogen-host interfaces that directly engage the ER in vertebrate and invertebrate host cells and evidence the conservation of ER parasitism between two Anaplasma species.


Asunto(s)
Anaplasma marginale/patogenicidad , Anaplasma phagocytophilum/patogenicidad , Anaplasmosis/patología , Retículo Endoplásmico/patología , Vacuolas/microbiología , Anaplasma marginale/inmunología , Anaplasma phagocytophilum/inmunología , Anaplasmosis/microbiología , Animales , Calreticulina/metabolismo , Línea Celular Tumoral , Retículo Endoplásmico/microbiología , Células Endoteliales/microbiología , Células HEK293 , Células HL-60 , Interacciones Huésped-Patógeno/inmunología , Humanos , Ixodes/microbiología , Proteínas de la Membrana/metabolismo , Microscopía Electrónica de Transmisión , Células Mieloides/microbiología , Proteína Disulfuro Isomerasas/metabolismo , Transporte de Proteínas , Interferencia de ARN , ARN Interferente Pequeño , Proteínas de Unión al GTP rab/genética , Proteínas de Unión al GTP rab/metabolismo
9.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 81(6): 2206-14, 2015 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25595772

RESUMEN

Anaplasma marginale is the causative agent of anaplasmosis in cattle. Transposon mutagenesis of this pathogen using the Himar1 system resulted in the isolation of an omp10 operon insertional mutant referred to as the omp10::himar1 mutant. The work presented here evaluated if this mutant had morphological and/or growth rate defects compared to wild-type A. marginale. Results showed that the morphology, developmental cycle, and growth in tick and mammalian cell cultures are similar for the mutant and the wild type. Tick transmission experiments established that tick infection levels with the mutant were similar to those with wild-type A. marginale and that infected ticks successfully infected cattle. However, this mutant exhibited reduced infectivity and growth in cattle. The possibility of transforming A. marginale by transposon mutagenesis coupled with in vitro and in vivo assessment of altered phenotypes can aid in the identification of genes associated with virulence. The isolation of deliberately attenuated organisms that can be evaluated in their natural biological system is an important advance for the rational design of vaccines against this species.


Asunto(s)
Anaplasma marginale/patogenicidad , Anaplasmosis/microbiología , Proteínas de la Membrana Bacteriana Externa/genética , Anaplasma marginale/citología , Anaplasma marginale/genética , Anaplasma marginale/crecimiento & desarrollo , Animales , Bovinos , Línea Celular , Elementos Transponibles de ADN , Mutagénesis Insercional , Garrapatas
10.
Infect Immun ; 82(1): 43-51, 2014 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24101694

RESUMEN

Antiserum to the Borrelia burgdorferi arthritis-related protein, Arp, has been shown to prevent or reduce arthritis in immunodeficient mice. To directly investigate the requirement for this lipoprotein in the generation of Lyme arthritis, we utilized targeted deletion to generate a B. burgdorferi clone that lacked only the arp gene locus. Infection of Lyme disease-susceptible C3H/HeN mice with the arp deletion mutant demonstrated significantly reduced tibiotarsal joint swelling during the first 6 weeks of infection compared to a wild-type control. The severity of joint swelling was restored to wild-type levels in mice infected with an arp mutant clone complemented in cis. Interestingly, the reduced swelling of joint tissues exhibited by mice infected with the arp deletion mutant did not directly correspond to reduced underlying arthritis. Histopathology data at 2 weeks postinfection showed some reduction in arthritis severity caused by the arp mutant clone; however, by 8 weeks, no significant difference was observed between joint tissues infected by the wild-type or arp mutant clones. The spirochete load in the joint tissues of mice infected with the arp mutant was found to be greater than that exhibited by the wild-type control. Our findings demonstrate that this lipoprotein contributes to the generation of early-onset joint swelling and suggests that arp expression has a negative secondary effect on total spirochete numbers in joint tissues.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas Bacterianas/genética , Borrelia burgdorferi/genética , Artropatías/etiología , Enfermedad de Lyme/genética , Edad de Inicio , Análisis de Varianza , Animales , Carga Bacteriana , Proteínas Bacterianas/metabolismo , Borrelia burgdorferi/patogenicidad , Modelos Animales de Enfermedad , Edema/patología , Eliminación de Gen , Artropatías/microbiología , Artropatías/patología , Enfermedad de Lyme/microbiología , Enfermedad de Lyme/patología , Enfermedad de Lyme/fisiopatología , Ratones , Ratones Endogámicos C3H , Articulaciones Tarsianas/microbiología , Tibia
11.
Onderstepoort J Vet Res ; 80(1): 578, 2013 May 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23718258

RESUMEN

A study of the prevalence of African horse sickness in horses was conducted, using records from two private equine practices in Harare for the period 1998-2004. Results indicated a higher prevalence of the disease in horses in Zimbabwe in the late rainy season (March - May). Age of the horse was found to be a significant risk factor, with foals or yearlings appearing to be 1.80 times more likely to contract the disease compared with horses older than two years. The case fatality rate in foals or yearlings was also higher than in older age groups, but this difference was not significant. The vaccination status was an important risk factor, with vaccinated horses 0.12 times less likely to die from the disease compared with unvaccinated horses. Young, unvaccinated horses therefore seem to be the most susceptible to the disease and have greater chances of fatality. This study highlights the importance of adequately protecting horses against African horse sickness by providing immunisation through vaccination and discusses the need to review current vaccination strategies being practiced in Zimbabwe.


Asunto(s)
Enfermedad Equina Africana/epidemiología , Enfermedad Equina Africana/inmunología , Enfermedad Equina Africana/prevención & control , Virus de la Enfermedad Equina Africana/patogenicidad , Factores de Edad , Animales , Femenino , Caballos , Masculino , Factores Sexuales , Vacunación/veterinaria , Zimbabwe/epidemiología
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