Bacterial toxins induce changes in membrane transport which underlie the loss of electrolyte homeostasis associated with diarrhea. Bacterial- and their secreted toxin-types which have been linked with diarrhea include: (a) Vibrio cholerae (cholera toxin, E1 Tor hemolysin and accessory cholera enterotoxin); (b) Escherichia coli (heat stable enterotoxin, heat-labile enterotoxin and colicins); (c) Shigella dysenteriae (shiga-toxin); (d) Clostridium perfringens (C. perfringens enterotoxin, alpha-toxin, beta-toxin and theta-toxin); (e) Clostridium difficile (toxins A and B); (f) Staphylococcus aureus (alpha-haemolysin); (g) Bacillus cereus (cytotoxin K and haemolysin BL); and (h) Aeromonas hydrophila (aerolysin, heat labile cytotoxins and heat stable cytotoxins).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe amyloidoses consist of human and animal chronic, progressive, and sometimes fatal diseases that are characterized by the deposition of insoluble proteinaceous amyloid fibrils in various tissues. Despite the biochemical diversity of amyloids, they share certain properties. The amphipathic and the charged nature of many amyloid-forming peptides point to their intrinsic ability to form diverse beta-sheet-based aggregates and channel types in negatively charged membranes.
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