A 205–210 bases long, small RNA (MP200RNA) of
Mycoplasma pneumoniae encodes an open reading frame (ORF
pmp200) that has the potential to be translated into a 29 amino acids long peptide with nine ...cysteines. The expression of this peptide in
M. pneumoniae was proven indirectly by constructing a gene fusion between the ORF
pmp200 and
mrfp1, the gene encoding the monomeric red fluorescent protein. The fusion construct was translated in
M. pneumoniae. The corresponding fusion protein, with a molecular mass of approximately 35,000
Da, was isolated and the correct sequence was proven by Edman degradation and by mass spectrometry
Applying microarray technology, we have investigated the transcriptome of the small bacterium Mycoplasma pneumoniae grown at three different temperature conditions: 32, 37 and 32°C followed by a heat ...shock for 15 min at 43°C, before isolating the RNA. From 688 proposed open‐reading frames, 676 were investigated and 564 were found to be expressed (P < 0.001; 606 with P < 0.01) and at least 33 (P < 0.001; 77 at P < 0.01) regulated. By quantitative real‐time PCR of selected mRNA species, the expression data could be linked to absolute molecule numbers. We found M.pneumoniae to be regulated at the transcriptional level. Forty‐seven genes were found to be significantly up‐regulated after heat shock (P < 0.01). Among those were the conserved heat shock genes like dnaK, lonA and clpB, but also several genes coding for ribosomal proteins and 10 genes of unassigned functions. In addition, 30 genes were found to be down‐regulated under the applied heat shock conditions. Further more, we have compared different methods of cDNA synthesis (random hexamer versus gene‐specific primers, different RNA concentrations) and various normalization strategies of the raw microarray data.
Up to 7% of term and late-preterm neonates in high-income countries receive antibiotics during the first 3 days of life because of suspected early-onset sepsis. The prevalence of culture-proven ...early-onset sepsis is 0·1% or less in high-income countries, suggesting substantial overtreatment. We assess whether procalcitonin-guided decision making for suspected early-onset sepsis can safely reduce the duration of antibiotic treatment.
We did this randomised controlled intervention trial in Dutch (n=11), Swiss (n=4), Canadian (n=2), and Czech (n=1) hospitals. Neonates of gestational age 34 weeks or older, with suspected early-onset sepsis requiring antibiotic treatment were stratified into four risk categories by their treating physicians and randomly assigned 1:1 using a computer-generated list stratified per centre to procalcitonin-guided decision making or standard care-based antibiotic treatment. Neonates who underwent surgery within the first week of life or had major congenital malformations that would have required hospital admission were excluded. Only principal investigators were masked for group assignment. Co-primary outcomes were non-inferiority for re-infection or death in the first month of life (margin 2·0%) and superiority for duration of antibiotic therapy. Intention-to-treat and per-protocol analyses were done. This trial was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00854932.
Between May 21, 2009, and Feb 14, 2015, we screened 2440 neonates with suspected early-onset sepsis. 622 infants were excluded due to lack of parental consent, 93 were ineligible for reasons unknown (68), congenital malformation (22), or surgery in the first week of life (3). 14 neonates were excluded as 100% data monitoring or retrieval was not feasible, and one neonate was excluded because their procalcitonin measurements could not be taken. 1710 neonates were enrolled and randomly assigned to either procalcitonin-guided therapy (n=866) or standard therapy (n=844). 1408 neonates underwent per-protocol analysis (745 in the procalcitonin group and 663 standard group). For the procalcitonin group, the duration of antibiotic therapy was reduced (intention to treat: 55·1 vs 65·0 h, p<0·0001; per protocol: 51·8 vs 64·0 h; p<0·0001). No sepsis-related deaths occurred, and 9 (<1%) of 1710 neonates had possible re-infection. The risk difference for non-inferiority was 0·1% (95% CI −4·6 to 4·8) in the intention-to-treat analysis (5 0·6% of 866 neonates in the procalcitonin group vs 4 0·5% of 844 neonates in the standard group) and 0·1% (−5·2 to 5·3) in the per-protocol analysis (5 0·7% of 745 neonates in the procalcitonin group vs 4 0·6% of 663 neonates in the standard group).
Procalcitonin-guided decision making was superior to standard care in reducing antibiotic therapy in neonates with suspected early-onset sepsis. Non-inferiority for re-infection or death could not be shown due to the low occurrence of re-infections and absence of study-related death.
The Thrasher Foundation, the NutsOhra Foundation, the Sophia Foundation for Scientific research.
Annexins are a family of Ca(2+)- and phospholipid-binding proteins that have been implicated in exocytosis. In the present study, we investigated the participation of selected annexins in exocytosis ...of lamellar bodies by examining their liposome aggregation property and ability to reconstitute surfactant secretion from permeabilized rat lung alveolar type II cells. Annexins I, II, III, and VI were demonstrated in type II cells by immunoblot analysis, but annexin IV and V were not found. Annexins I-IV mediated liposome aggregation in the presence of 1 mM Ca2+. However, only annexin II tetramer had aggregation activity at 10 microM Ca2+. Annexins V and VI had negligible aggregation activity at any Ca2+ concentrations (up to 1 mM Ca2+). To study reconstitution of secretion by annexins, isolated type II cells were permeabilized with 40 microM beta-escin. Under these conditions, the permeabilized cells released approximately 30-40% lactic acid dehydrogenase into the medium. An underestimated fraction of cellular annexin content was lost during permeabilization. However, lamellar bodies in the permeabilized type II cells stained appropriately with the fluorescent dyes Nile red and quinacrine, indicating that they were intact. These permeabilized cells were secretion competent, since phosphatidylcholine (PC) secretion was stimulated by 0.2-1.0 microM Ca2+. Addition of an exogenous annexin mixture enhanced PC secretion from the permeabilized type II cells with maximal stimulation at 0.5 microM Ca2+. Of six purified annexins (I-VI) tested for their ability to reconstitute secretion from permeabilized cells, only annexin II was effective. Our results suggest that annexin II is not necessary for exocytosis of lamellar bodies.
The sensitivity of culturing Brachyspira hyodysenteriae was determined after sampling with swabs from porcine fecal specimens inoculated with tenfold dilutions of a field strain of these microbes. ...After storage of swabs, Brachyspira hyodysenteriae was recovered throughout the first 3 weeks after inoculation from feces with more than 140 cells/g. Viable spirochetes could still be recovered after up to 83 days of storage from feces, with 1.4 x 10(6) cells or more per gram. Culture for Brachyspira spp. was performed on 285 rectal swabs, which were pooled in batches of five. The number of pooled samples positive for B. hyodysenteriae corresponded with the sum results of individual analysis of the corresponding collections of five samples. A PCR system based on the tlyA gene of B. hyodysenteriae was developed and tested on primary cultures of pooled samples. The results of the PCR assay showed a 97% correlation with the culture results. The prevalence of Brachyspira spp. was determined in five swine herds and found to be highest among breeding gilts and boars aged 13-16 weeks and among 6-12-week-old weaned pigs. In contrast, Brachyspira spp. were only rarely found in sows, which may reflect the development of immunity by adult pigs to all species of the genus.
Although several signal transduction pathways, including activation of specific protein kinases have been proposed and studied for the secretory processes of lung surfactant from alveolar epithelial ...type II cells, the role of proteolytic processing by calpains (calcium-activated neutral proteases) in secretion has not been investigated. Therefore, we examined the effect of cell permeable calpain inhibitor I (N-acetyl-leucyl-leucyl-norleucinal) and II (N-acetyl-leucyl-leucyl-methioninal) on secretion to test the hypothesis that calpains participate in the secretory processes of alveolar epithelial type 11 cells. Calpain inhibitor I preferentially inhibits micro (μ)-calpain while inhibitor II inhibits milli (m)-calpain. Isolated type II cells were prelabelled with
3H-choline for 18–24 h. To measure secretion,
3H-labelled disaturated phosphatidylcholine (DSPC) released in the medium was monitored. Basal secretion of DSPC was maximally (87%) depressed by the presence of 10 μM inhibitor II. Secretagogue-stimulated secretion was also modulated by inhibitor 11 treatment. Stimulation with calcium ionophore A23187 enhanced secretion 3-fold. However, cells pre-exposed to inhibitor II displayed a 90% reduction of calcium-stimulated secretion. Terbutaline (10 μM) and ATP (1 mM) each increased secretion 2- and 4-fold, respectively. However, the inhibitor-treated cells, exposed to the same stimuli, attained only 53 or 62% of these increases. Calpain inhibitor I, on the other hand, inhibited neither basal nor stimulated secretion. The results suggest that m-calpain, the major isozyme of lung calpain requiring mM calcium for activity in vitro, is involved in the secretory pathways of alveolar epithelial type II cells.
Brachyspira spp. were isolated from 21 of 32 sampled dogs (66%) in a colony of Swedish beagle dogs with a history of diarrhea and from 3 of 17 Swedish pet dogs (17%) with diarrhea. All Swedish ...isolates were weakly beta-hemolytic and gave a negative indole reaction. Eighty-eight percent showed negative alpha-galactosidase and hippurate reactions, but a positive beta-glucosidase reaction. Two isolates were hippurate positive with a negative beta-glucosidase reaction. One additional German isolate diverged by showing a positive indole reaction in combination with a positive hippurate reaction. Sequencing of 16S rDNA indicated that the hippurate-positive isolates belonged to the species Brachyspira pilosicoli. Four representative isolates were examined using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) and compared with six reference strains and five porcine isolates of Brachyspira spp. The canine isolates clustered together in the PFGE analysis. Necropsy examination of a culture-positive B. pilosicoli colony-raised beagle dog revealed macro- and microscopical lesions of colitis with numerous spiral-shaped bacteria in the lumens of the crypts, in goblet cells and within the colonic epithelium.
The degradation of neurofilament (NF) proteins was examined by immunoblot methods to identify, characterize, and monitor the appearance of immunoreactive breakdown products during the loss of NF ...triplet proteins. Individual NF proteins and their breakdown products were identified using polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies to NF proteins. NF degradation was compared during calcium-activated proteolysis of isolated rat NF, during an experimental influx of calcium into excised rat spinal nerve roots, and during NF breakdown in transected rat peripheral nerve. These different experimental conditions produced similar patterns of NF fragmentation, including the transient appearance of NF immunobands between Mr 150,000-200,000 and 110,000-120,000 as well as the appearance and accumulation of NF immunobands between Mr 45,000 and 65,000. Most immunoreactive NF fragments remained Triton-insoluble. Low levels of the same immunoreactive fragments were present in control neural tissues, suggesting that calcium-activated proteolysis may be operative in the turnover and/or processing of NF proteins in vivo. Very similar patterns of NF degradation during experimental calcium influxes into different CNS and PNS tissues are indicative of the widespread distribution of calcium-activated NF protease in neural tissues.