Publications by authors named "Lynn Olinger"

The hypothesis that host cell surface heparan sulfate is required to promote chlamydial infection was tested using a cell line (CHO-18.4) containing a single retroviral insertion and the concomitant loss of heparan sulfate biosynthesis. Tests of chlamydial infectivity of heparan sulfate-deficient CHO-18.

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Purpose: To describe the relationship between the clinical exam for trachoma and the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for ocular chlamydia.

Methods: One hundred children in a trachoma-endemic area of Ethiopia were examined three times and swabbed twice for PCR analysis. The assays were compared, and an analysis of the variance between exam and PCR was performed.

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Background: Considerable variation in the outer membrane protein (ompA) of Chlamydia trachomatis has been uncovered by immunotyping and, more recently, by genotyping. This diversity may assist Chlamydia in evading the human immune system; organisms may have a competitive advantage if they infect a host who has previously been infected only by other strains. If so, a diverse set of strains may attain a higher prevalence in a community than a single strain.

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Distinct morphological changes associated with the complex development cycle of the obligate intracellular bacterial pathogen Chlamydia trachomatis have been historically well characterized by microscopy. A number of temporally regulated genes have been characterized previously, suggesting that the chlamydial developmental cycle is regulated at the transcriptional level. This hypothesis was tested by microarray analysis in which the entire C.

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The lytic outcome of natural infection by Chlamydia trachomatis was exploited to select CHO (Chinese hamster ovary) cells, following chemical mutagenesis, that were deficient in their ability to sustain productive chlamydial infection. Four distinct mutant cell phenotypes with defects in either attachment or postattachment mechanisms that are required for infection by C. trachomatis and Chlamydia pneumoniae were characterized.

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