Publications by authors named "Robert J. Zakarian"

Malacosoma disstria larvae are a pest of deciduous trees. Little is known on the interaction of bacteria with the immediate hemocytic antimicrobial responses of these insects. Incubating dead Xenorhabdus nematophila and Bacillus subtilis with a mixture of serum-free granular cells and plasmatocytes in vitro revealed differential bacterial-hemocyte adhesion and differential discharge of lysozyme and phenoloxidase but not total protein.

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Culture medium affected the virulence of a strain of Candida albicans toward Galleria mellonella larvae, but the yeast growth rates in yeast extract - peptone - dextrose broth and synthetic Galleria serum were not correlated with yeast virulence. Virulent C. albicans grew rapidly in larval serum, whereas, it limited nodulation and continued development in vivo, producing toxins that damaged the hemocytes and fat body.

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Based on the results from the use of selective inhibitors and activators, active protein kinase A, protein tyrosine kinase, and protein kinase C (PKC) isoforms decreased the adhesion of larval Galleria mellonella hemocytes to glass slides. The protein kinase A inhibitor at all concentrations increased granular cell adhesion only whereas protein tyrosine kinase elevated both granular and plasmatocyte attachment at the lowest concentration. Active, Ca(2+)- and lipid-dependent PKC isoforms limited plasmatocyte and granular cell adhesion whereas PKC that was inhibited by selected compounds (with differed modes of PKC inhibition) enhanced hemocyte attachment.

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Apolipophorin-III (apoLp-III) impaired the adhesion of plasmatocytes and a granular cell-subpopulation of larval Galleria mellonella to glass slides. The protein bound to haemocytes, limited the responses of the plasmatocytes to Bacillus subtilis and increased the percentage of a subgroup of granular cells with adhering bacteria. The total number of bacteria adhering to all the haemocytes on the slides declined.

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Antibacterial proteins are produced in the reproductive tracts of some insect species. The advent of a pupal ovarian cell line of the lepidopteran Galleria mellonella offered an opportunity for exploring the use of ovarian tissue culture to induce antimicrobial proteins in lieu of the larvae. The ovarian cell growth rates and cell yields were maximized by adjusting Grace's medium to pH 6.

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