The phenomenon of pathogen co-infection detected in a half-fed tick taken from a human in the south of the Far East was studied. Research was carried out on , , and cell lines, outbred mice, and chicken embryos using ELISA, PCR, IMFA, plaque formation, and electron microscopy. The tick contained an antigen and a genetic marker of the tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPseudotuberculosis in humans until the 1950s was found in different countries of the world as a rare sporadic disease that occurred in the form of acute appendicitis and mesenteric lymphadenitis. In Russia and Japan, the () infection often causes outbreaks of the disease with serious systemic inflammatory symptoms, and this variant of the disease has been known since 1959 as Far Eastern Scarlet-like Fever (FESLF). Russian researchers have proven that the FESLF pathogen is associated with a concrete clonal line of characterized by a specific plasmid profile (pVM82, pYV 48 MDa), sequence (2ST) and gene allele (1st allele).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe paper discusses the issues of morphofunctional variability of causative agents of sapronoses under stressful environmental conditions. In the current century, sapronoses infections attract more and more attention. Under unfavorable habitat conditions, their pathogens use a strategy for the formation of resting (stable) states: viable but non-cultured cell forms and the persistence of bacteria, which are characterized by reduced metabolism, changes in the morphology and physiology of microorganisms, and termination of their replication.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn interepidemic periods, causative agents of sapronoses typically employ a variety of mechanisms for maintaining the viability in terrestrial parasitic systems, associated with different adaptive strategies and utilized by their populations to survive. Unlike spore-forming bacteria, causative agents of sapronoses form resistant cell forms: viable but nonculturable (VBNC) cells and persistence (dormant) cells. The implementation of these strategies is mediated by the influence of various stressors of the environment and is characterized by a decrease in metabolism, a change in the morphology and physiology of the bacterial cell, and also the cessation of its replication.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHelicobacter pylori possesses a broad spectrum of pathogenic factors that allow it to survive and colonize the gastric mucosa, and thus, the pathogenetic targets, which have the same diversity, require search for and the development of alternative, effective, and innocuous means for the eradication of H. pylori. In recent years, fucoidans have been extensively studied due to the numerous interesting biological activities, including the anti-adhesive, anti-oxidative, antitoxic, immunomodulatory, anticoagulant, and anti-infection effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn important problem of treating patients with endotoxemia is to find drugs to reduce the negative effects of endotoxin on the organism. We tested fucoidan (sulfated polysaccharide) from the brown alga Fucus evanescens as a potential drug in a mouse model of endotoxemia inducted by lipopolysaccharide (LPS). The survival time of mice injected with LPS increased under fucoidan treatment compared with the group of mice injected with LPS only.
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