is a facultative intracellular bacterium that causes a non-zoonotic ovine brucellosis mainly characterized by male genital lesions and is responsible for important economic losses in sheep farming areas. Studies about the virulence mechanisms of have been mostly performed with smooth (bearing O-polysaccharide in lipopolysaccharide) zoonotic species, and those performed with have revealed similarities but also relevant differences. Except for few strains recently isolated from unconventional hosts, species are non-motile but contain the genes required to assemble a flagellum, which are organized in three main loci of about 18.5, 6.4, and 7.8 kb. Although these loci contain different pseudogenes depending on the non-motile species, smooth 16M builds a sheathed flagellum under particular culture conditions and requires flagellar genes for virulence. However, nothing is known in this respect regarding other strains. In this work, we have constructed a panel of PA mutants defective in one, two or the three flagellar loci in order to assess their role in virulence of this rough (lacking O-polysaccharide) species. No relevant differences in growth, outer membrane-related properties or intracellular behavior in cellular models were observed between flagellar mutants and the parental strain, which is in accordance with previous results with 16M single-gene mutants. However, contrary to these mutants, unable to establish a chronic infection in mice, removal of the three flagellar loci in did not affect virulence in the mouse model. These results evidence new relevant differences between and , two species highly homologous at the DNA level and that cause ovine brucellosis, but that exhibit differences in the zoonotic potential, pathogenicity and tissue tropism.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2020.00441 | DOI Listing |
Q Rev Biophys
December 2024
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, University of Virginia Medical School, Charlottesville, VA, USA.
Helices are one of the most frequently encountered symmetries in biological assemblies. Helical symmetry has been exploited in electron microscopic studies as a limited number of filament images, in principle, can provide all the information needed to do a three-dimensional reconstruction of a polymer. Over the past 25 years, three-dimensional reconstructions of helical polymers from cryo-EM images have shifted completely from Fourier-Bessel methods to single-particle approaches.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPentacentrus rectangulus sp. nov. is the twelfth Pentacentrus species we have found in China.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Pharmacol
November 2024
School of Medicine and Pharmacy, Ocean University of China, Qingdao, Shandong, China.
Background: Triphala, is a composite of three individual botanical drugs: , , and . It exhibits properties such as heatclearing, anti-inflammatory, anti-fatigue, antioxidant, and antibacterial effects,making it extensively utilized in India and Tibet. It has been found to exhibitinhibitory effects on (); however, further comprehensive research is still needed to elucidate its specific antibacterial mechanism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFReproduction
December 2024
S Vijayaraghavan, Biological Sciences, Kent State University, Kent, 44242, United States.
The serine-threonine phosphatase has four paralogs - PP1α, PP1β, PP1γ1 and PP1γ2 - encoded by three genes, Ppp1ca, Ppp1cb, and Ppp1cc. Protein phosphatase PP1γ2, one of two isoforms of the gene Ppp1cc, is expressed in spermatogenic cells in testis and sperm, while PP1γ1 is found in somatic cells. The two PP1γ isoforms, formed by alternate splicing which occurs only in mammals, are identical except at their C-termini.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFmSphere
December 2024
Department of Biological Sciences, Graduate School of Science, Osaka University, Osaka, Japan.
Unlabelled: Motile flagella (also called "motile cilia") play a variety of important roles in lower and higher eukaryotes, including cellular motility and fertility. Flagellar motility is driven by several species of the gigantic motor-protein complexes, flagellar dyneins, that reside within these organelles. Among the flagellar-dynein species, a hetero-dimeric dynein called "IDA f/I1" has been shown to be particularly important in controlling the flagellar waveform, and defects in this dynein species in humans cause ciliopathies such as multiple morphological abnormalities of the flagella and asthenoteratozoospermia.
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