EARSS (European Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance System) is the biggest antimicrobial resistance surveillance project in the world financed from public finds, aiming to provide validated and comparable official data on antimicrobial resistance of invasive microbial strains (isolated from blood and CSF), belonging to 6 indicator bacterial species, i.e.: S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVibrio (V.) parahaemolyticus is an aquatic halophilic bacteria which produces gastroenteritis and in rare cases septicaemia after the consumption of raw or under-cooked contaminated seafood.The severity of diarrheal illness caused by this bacterium is closely related to the presence of two types of hemolysins (the thermostable direct hemolysin-TDH and TDH related hemolysin-TRH) and also of type III secretion system (TTSS) proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRoum Arch Microbiol Immunol
July 2009
The discovery of intra- and intercellular communication systems (quorum sensing systems) regulating bacterial virulence has afforded a novel opportunity to control infectious bacteria, without interfering with their growth. In this study, we investigated the ability of subinhibitory concentrations (sIC) of phenyl lactic acid (PLA), known to be produced by Lactobacillus probiotic strains, to attenuate the virulence and pathogenicity of Pseudomonas aeruginosa (as experimental model of intercellular bacterial communication in Gram-negative bacteria) and Staphylococcus aureus (as experimental model of intercellular bacterial communication in Gram-positive bacteria) by interfering with the coordinated expression of different virulence factors implicated in the pathogenicity of these opportunistic strains. Our results showed that sIC of PLA decreased the ability of the tested strains to adhere both to the cellular and inert substrata and induced changes in the adherence patterns as well as in the cell morphology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe purpose of this study was to evaluate in vitro, by means of qualitative and quantative methods, the antimicrobial activity of some new synthesized chemical compounds previously solubilized in DMF (Dimethyl formamide). The qualitative screening of the susceptibility spectra of different microbial strains versus these compounds was performed by three adaptated diffusion methods: paper filter disk impregnation with the tested substances solutions, the disposal of tested solutions in agar wells and the spotting of tested solutions on solid medium previously inoculated with microbial suspension. The quantitative assay of the antimicrobial activity was performed by broth microdilution method in 96-well microplates in order to establish the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn order to survive in changing environments, bacteria possess enormous adaptive capabilities that allow them to modulate their behavior and reprogram gene expression in response to environmental cues. Vibrios are inhabitants of estuarine and fresh waters and some species are pathogenic to humans, and marine vertebrates and invertebrates. Surface attachment is believed to be essential for colonization of all of these natural environments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe virulence and resistance (R) features of 37 Aeromonas strains from diarrheal cases and 150 from the aquatic environment (isolated during cold and warm season) were tested at different incubation temperatures (4 degrees C, 28 degrees C and 37 degrees C). When incubated at 4 degrees C temperature, the Aeromonasstrains isolated during the cold season expressed the highest number of virulence factors by comparison with the strains isolated during warm season and from diarrhoeal cases, the virulence spectrum increasing simultaneously with the incubation temperature (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBacteriol Virusol Parazitol Epidemiol
August 2006
Roum Arch Microbiol Immunol
December 2005
The purpose of this work was to characterize the toxin profile and the presence of other virulence factors involved in the pathogenesis and biology of 13 V. cholerae O1 (11 clinical cases and 2 waters) and 6 V. cholerae non O1 strains (4 clinical cases and 2 waters) using genetic (PCR), immunological (RPLA), biochemical (NAD degradation, haemolysis, Kanagawa phenomenon, caseinase, lecithinase, mucinase, amylase, esculine hydrolysis) and cell culture (Vero E6, HEp-2) assays.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOver the last three decades, the literature pointed out the implications of Aeromonas species in human pathology. These species were described as being involved in intestinal (several outbreaks of acute gastroenteritis of choleric/dysenteric form or chronic diarrhoea, ulcerative colitis, etc.) in normal adults or children, as well as in extraintestinal infections in immunocompromised hosts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFour hundred ninety seven strains of Vibrio cholerae selected from isolates in Romania in the last decade 1990-1999 were investigated for antibiotic resistance and for classical and putative virulence factors. V. cholerae O1 strains predominated in clinical cases and non O1 strains in the environment, excepting in 1992 when non O1 strains were frequent in clinical and environmental sources.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBacteriol Virusol Parazitol Epidemiol
October 2004
Iron is an essential element for the great majority of microorganisms, which developed transport systems for iron acquisition, because during the colonization and invasion processes the microorganisms encounter iron-limiting conditions. The bacterial genes implicated in the iron transport and those codifying for other virulence factors are simultaneously depressed. The purpose of this study was to investigate the role of transferrin on the virulence factors expression in food isolated Listeria monocytogenes strains.
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