Background: Both lactoferrin (LF) and bacteriophages are potent antibacterial agents. LF is contained in the secretory fluids of mammals and bacteriophages are specific bacterial viruses.
Objectives: The aim of this investigation was to determine whether combined treatment of infected mice may allow lowering the therapeutic dose of specific bacteriophages for Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus.
Bacteriophages in eukaryotic hosts may behave as particulate antigens able to activate the innate immune system and generate adaptive immunity. Dendritic cells (DCs) play a key role in the initiation of the immune response, mainly by priming T cell-mediated immunity. For this reason, they are increasingly applied as an adjuvant for effective anti-tumor therapies in animal models as well as in a few clinical trials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA growing number of studies suggest that CD4(+)CD25(+) T regulatory (Treg) cells play a significant role to downregulate the immune response to alloantigens. In this study, we investigated the possible influence of immunosuppressive therapy, including cyclosporine (CsA) or rapamycin (sirolimus), on the level of CD4(+)CD25(+), CD4(+)CD25(+)FOXP3(+), and CD4(+)CD25(+)CTLA-4(+) T cells in the peripheral blood of renal allograft recipients. The study was performed on renal allograft recipients who displayed uneventful stable courses (RAR-S; n = 15) versus biopsy-proven chronic rejection (RAR-CH; n = 12).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt has been known that administration of antibiotics may lead to excessive release of bacterial endotoxins and complicate clinical course of patients with Gram-negative infections. This concern may also apply to phages. Endotoxin may in turn activate neutrophils to produce reactive oxygen species (ROS) that are believed to play an important role in the pathogenesis of multiple organ dysfunction in the course of sepsis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPreviously we investigated the anticancer activity of bacteriophage preparations in various murine tumor models. We demonstrated the antimetastatic activity of purified and nonpurified bacteriophage preparations injected intraperitoneally (IP). However, in solid tumors we observed antitumor activity of purified bacteriophages, but the lysates (raw preparations obtained by culturing phages with bacteria) stimulated tumor growth.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPostepy Hig Med Dosw (Online)
August 2007
The current drama of antibiotic resistance has revived interest in phage therapy. In response to this challenge, a phage therapy center was established at our Institute in 2005 which accepts patients from Poland and abroad with antibiotic-resistant infections. We now present data showing that efficient phage therapy of staphylococcal infections is no longer a treatment of last resort (when all antibiotics fail), but allows for significant savings in the costs of healthcare.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Warsaw Transplant Center comprises 3 programs for transplantation of kidney, pancreas and liver. At the end of 2005, 3,616 kidney, 131 simultaneous pancreas kidney and 592 liver transplants had been performed. The one-year patient and graft survival rates were 92.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Hypoparathyroidism is a well-known consequence of extensive thyroid and parathyroid surgery. Allotransplantation of cultured parathyroid cells can be considered as an alternative to vitamin D3 and calcium supplementation in treatment of hypoparathyroidism. We present the long-term allotransplant activity in 85 patients who had undergone cellular allotransplantation for surgical hypoparathyroidism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe previously investigated the biological, non-antibacterial effects of bacteriophage T4 in mammals (binding to cancer cells in vitro and attenuating tumour growth and metastases in vivo); we selected the phage mutant HAP1 that was significantly more effective than T4. In this study we describe a non-sense mutation in the hoc gene that differentiates bacteriophage HAP1 and its parental strain T4. We found no substantial effects of the mutation on the mutant morphology, and its effects on electrophoretic mobility and hydrodynamic size were moderate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBacteriophages are widely distributed throughout the environment as well as in the bodies of humans and animals (feces, urine, saliva, sputum). Higher presence of Escherichia coli phages compared with Bacteroides fragilis and Salmonella phages was noticed in the feces of healthy human individuals and patients, mainly those with gastro-intestinal tract diseases. A strict correlation exists between the number of bacteria and of phages in the feces of healthy individuals as well as of patients with different diseases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe paper discusses the provision of targeted health care to nuclear workers in Russia based on radiation-epidemiological estimates of cancer risks. Cancer incidence rates are analysed for the workers of the Institute of Physical Power Engineering (the first nuclear installation in the world) who were subjected to individual dosimetric monitoring from 1950 to 2002. The value of excess relative risk for solid cancers was found to be ERR Gy(-1) = 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe describe bacteriophage therapy in the case of a healthcare worker whose gastrointestinal tract was colonized by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) with subsequent urinary tract infection caused by the same pathogen. Oral treatment with anti-MRSA phages resulted in eradication of the carrier status.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExp Biol Med (Maywood)
April 2006
Endolysins are double-stranded DNA bacteriophage-encoded peptidoglycan hydrolases produced in phage-infected bacterial cells toward the end of the lytic cycle. They reach the peptidoglycan through membrane lesions formed by holins and cleave it, thus, inducing lysis of the bacterial cell and enabling progeny virions to be released. Endolysins are also capable of degrading peptidoglycan when applied externally (as purified recombinant proteins) to the bacterial cell wall, which also results in a rapid lysis of the bacterial cell.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe occurrence of phages in the human body, especially in the gastrointestinal tract, raises the question of their potential role in the physiology and pathology of this system. Especially important is the issue of whether phages can pass the intestinal wall and migrate to lymph, peripheral blood, and internal organs and, if so, the effects such a phenomenon could have (such passage by bacteria, known as bacterial translocation, has been shown to cause various disturbances in humans, from immune defects to sepsis). Available data from the literature support the assumption that phage translocation can take place and may have some immunomodulatory effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this study, thyroid cancer incidence (follow-up period: 1991-2001) has been analyzed, including persons who were exposed as children at an age between 0 and 17 years and who are living in the Bryansk oblast, the worst contaminated area of Russia after the Chernobyl accident. According to the census of 1989, the population of this oblast comprises 375 thousand people. Thyroid doses from incorporated radioiodine isotopes -- both for the thyroid cancer cases and the study population -- were determined based on the official methodology approved by the Russian Scientific Commission on Radiation Protection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe fractal exponents used to quantify the complexity of cranial sutures were computed for 17 coronal and 17 sagittal sutures of adults from different populations, using the box-counting algorithm. This paper discusses the main sources of error for the fractal exponents, and gives the error estimates. We then compare our results with those obtained by other authors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecent studies emphasize the paramount significance of beta 3 integrin in cell adhesion and homing, which may be particularly relevant in cancer progression and metastasis. In contrast, the presence and potential role of beta 3 on human T cells is practically unknown. We show that T cells can express significant amounts of alpha-beta 3 integrin (CD41/CD61), and the expression of alpha(v)-beta 3 (CD51/CD61) remains very low.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOur recent findings suggest that bacteriophages (phages) may not only eliminate bacteria, but also modulate immune functions. In this communication, we demonstrate that phages may strongly inhibit human T-cell activation and proliferation as well as activation of the nuclear transcription factor NF-kappaB in response to a viral pathogen. Phage administration in vivo can diminish cellular infiltration of allogeneic skin allografts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) has an established role in interstitial damage of renal transplants during chronic rejection (CR). However, its involvement in transplant vasculopathy is not clear. The aim of the study was to assess TGF-beta gene expression in the walls of large-caliber arteries within chronically rejecting renal allografts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen 4 (CTLA-4) molecule is an important inhibitor of T-lymphocyte response. Polymorphisms in the CTLA-4 gene have been described to be associated with numerous autoimmune diseases. However, similar studies in solid organ transplantation have been scarce.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Microbiol Immunol
September 2006
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) play a major role in mediating antibacterial functions of phagocytic cells. However, excessive ROS production may cause oxidative stress and tissue damage. Uncompensated ROS release has been implicated in a variety of disorders.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPostepy Hig Med Dosw (Online)
May 2006
Mammals have become "an environment" for enterobacterial phage life cycles. Therefore it could be expected that bacteriophages adapt to them. This adaptation must comprise bacteriophage proteins.
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