Publications by authors named "L P Michailova"

Objective: To investigate morphological changes in the thymus, the subpopulation composition of lymphocytes and its non-lymphoid cells in dextran-induced experimental acute ulcerative colitis and in different periods of chronic ulcerative colitis.

Material And Methods: Acute and chronic ulcerative colitis was simulated in C57BL/6 mice, by replacing drinking water with a 1% aqueous dextran sulfate sodium solution. Thymic changes were morphometrically assessed; the number and absolute area of thymic corpuscles and epithelial cells were calculated; and the subpopulation composition of lymphocytes and thymic stromal cells was determined using flow cytofluorimetry; the Kruskal-Wallis test and the Mann-Whitney test were used to compare the groups.

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Objective/background: Cell wall-deficient bacterial forms (L-forms) may occur along with resistance to factors that trigger their appearance. It is of interest to study the relationship between the L-form transformation of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and the exhibition of drug tolerance to ethambutol (EMB), an inhibitor of cell wall synthesis.

Methods: L-form variant was produced from a sensitive EMB strain of M.

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Possible persistence of bacteria in human blood as cell wall deficient forms (L-forms) represents a top research priority for microbiologists. Application of live BCG vaccine and L-form transformation of vaccine strain may display a new intriguing aspect concerning the opportunity for occurrence of unpredictable colonization inside the human body by unusual microbial life forms. L-form cultures were isolated from 141 blood samples of people previously vaccinated with BCG, none with a history of exposure to tuberculosis.

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This study addressed the ability of Mycobacterium bovis to produce unusual extreme morphologic forms (cell wall-deficient or L-forms) under stress conditions. Models using nutrient starvation and cryogenic stress treatments of Mycobacterium bovis, as well as the filtration technique followed by cultivation in semisolid medium, were used for isolation of L-form variants. Morphological transformations and developmental stages, typical for the bacterial L-cycle were observed by electron microscopy.

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Bacteria can, under certain conditions, enter into a cell-less state known as L-form conversion. This phenomenon is universal, but also recognized with difficultly by microbiologists. The current study addresses several aspects concerning the ability of tubercle bacilli to use L-form conversion as a unique adaptive strategy to survive and reproduce under unfavorable conditions.

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