• Title/Summary/Keyword: Commensal

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Fibrinous pleuritis associated with Streptococcus canis in a leopard cat (Prionailurus bengalensis euptilurus)

  • Min-Gyeong Seo;Kook-Young Han;Sang-Hyun Kim;Chang Keun Kang;Jong-Hyun, Kim;Il-Hwa Hong
    • Journal of Veterinary Science
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    • v.24 no.5
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    • pp.68.1-68.6
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    • 2023
  • Leopard cat (Prionailurus bengalensis euptilurus) is a small wild cat assessed as an endangered wildlife in Korea. There have been very few reports of their diseases. Herein, we describe fibrinous pleuritis caused by Streptococcus canis infection with excessive pleural effusion, hydropericardium, mild ascites, and liver fibrosis in a leopard cat. S. canis is a commensal microflora in domestic cats and often affects the upper respiratory tract inducing chronic and severe respiratory diseases. However, there is no literature regarding the S. canis in leopard cats. Therefore, we first report fibrinous pleuritis associated with an S. canis infection in a leopard cat.

IL-17 and IL-21: Their Immunobiology and Therapeutic Potentials

  • Choong-Hyun Koh;Byung-Seok Kim;Chang-Yuil Kang;Yeonseok Chung;Hyungseok Seo
    • IMMUNE NETWORK
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    • v.24 no.1
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    • pp.2.1-2.24
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    • 2024
  • Studies over the last 2 decades have identified IL-17 and IL-21 as key cytokines in the modulation of a wide range of immune responses. IL-17 serves as a critical defender against bacterial and fungal pathogens, while maintaining symbiotic relationships with commensal microbiota. However, alterations in its levels can lead to chronic inflammation and autoimmunity. IL-21, on the other hand, bridges the adaptive and innate immune responses, and its imbalance is implicated in autoimmune diseases and cancer, highlighting its important role in both health and disease. Delving into the intricacies of these cytokines not only opens new avenues for understanding the immune system, but also promises innovative advances in the development of therapeutic strategies for numerous diseases. In this review, we will discuss an updated view of the immunobiology and therapeutic potential of IL-17 and IL-21.

Symbiobacterium toebii Sp. nov., Commensal Thermophile Isolated from Korean Compost

  • Sung, Moon-Hee;Bae, Jin-Woo;Kim, Joong-Jae;Kim, Kwang;Song, Jae-Jun;Rhee, Sung-Keun;Jeon, Che-Ok;Choi, Yoon-Ho;Hong, Seung-Pyo;Lee, Seung-Goo;Ha, Jae-Suk;Kang, Gwan-Tae
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.13 no.6
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    • pp.1013-1017
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    • 2003
  • A thermophilic nonspore-forming rod isolated from hay compost in Korea was subjected to a taxonomic study. The microorganism, designated as $SC-1^T$, was identified as a nitrate-reducing and nonmotile bacterium. Although the strain was negatively Gram-stained, a KOH test showed that the strain $SC-1^T$ belonged to a Gram-positive species. Growth was observed between 45 and $70^{\circ}C$. The optimal growth temperature and pH were $60^{\circ}C$ and pH 7.5, respectively. The G+C content of the genomic DNA was 65 mol% and the major quinone types were MK-6 and MK-7. A phylogenetic analysis based on 16S rDNA sequences revealed that the strain $SC-1^T$ was most closely related to Symbiobacterium thermophilum. However, the level of DNA-DNA relatedness between strain $SC-1^T$ and the type strain for Symbiobacterium thermophilum was approximately 30%. Accordingly, on the basis of the phenotypic traits and molecular systematic data, the strain $SC-1^T$ would appear to represent a new species within the genus Symbiobacterium. The type strain for the new species is named $SC-1^T$ ($=KCTC\;0307BP^T;\;DSM15906^T$).

Next-generation Probiotics, Parabiotics, and Postbiotics (Next-generation probiotics, parabiotics 및 postbiotics)

  • Cho, Kwang Keun;Lee, Seung Ho;Choi, In Soon;Lee, Sang Won
    • Journal of Life Science
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    • v.31 no.6
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    • pp.595-602
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    • 2021
  • Human intestinal microbiota play an important role in the regulation of the host's metabolism. There is a close pathological and physiological interaction between dysbiosis of the intestinal microflora and obesity and metabolic syndrome. Akkermansia muciniphila, which was recently isolated from human feces, accounts for about 1-4% of the intestinal microbiota population. The use of A. muciniphila- derived external membrane protein Amuc_1100 and extracellular vesicles (EVs) could be a new strategy for the treatment of obesity. A. muciniphila is considered a next-generation probiotic (NGP) for the treatment of metabolic disorders, such as obesity. Faecalibacterium prausnitzii accounts for about 5% of the intestinal microbiota population in healthy adults and is an indicator of gut health. F. prausnitzii is a butyrate-producing bacterium, with anti-inflammatory effects, and is considered an NGP for the treatment of immune diseases and diabetes. Postbiotics are complex mixtures of metabolites contained in the cell supernatant secreted by probiotics. Parabiotics are microbial cells in which probiotics are inactivated. Paraprobiotics and postbiotics have many advantages over probiotics, such as clear chemical structures, safe dose parameters, and a long shelf life. Thus, they have the potential to replace probiotics. The most natural strategy to restore the imbalance of the intestinal ecosystem normally is to use NGPs among commensal bacteria in the gut. Therefore, it is necessary to develop new foods or drugs such as parabiotics and postbiotics using NGPs.

Impact of Microbiota on Gastrointestinal Cancer and Anticancer Therapy (미생물 균총이 위장관암과 항암제에 미치는 영향)

  • Kim, Sa-Rang;Lee, Jung Min
    • Journal of Life Science
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    • v.32 no.5
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    • pp.391-410
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    • 2022
  • Human microbiota is a community of microorganisms, including bacteria, fungi, and viruses, that inhabit various locations of the body, such as the gut, oral, and skin. Along with the development of metabolomic analysis and next-generation sequencing techniques for 16S ribosomal RNA, it has become possible to analyze the population for subtypes of microbiota, and with these techniques, it has been demonstrated that bacterial microbiota are involved in the metabolic and immunological processes of the hosts. While specific bacteria of microbiota, called commensal bacteria, positively affect hosts by producing essential nutrients and protecting hosts against other pathogenic microorganisms, dysbiosis, an abnormal microbiota composition, disrupts homeostasis and thereby has a detrimental effect on the development and progression of various types of diseases. Recently, several studies have reported that oral and gut bacteria of microbiota are involved in the carcinogenesis of gastrointestinal tumors and the therapeutic effects of anticancer therapy, such as radiation, chemotherapy, targeted therapy, and immunotherapy. Studying the complex relationships (bacterial microbiota-cancer-immunity) and microbiota-related carcinogenic mechanisms can provide important clues for understanding cancer and developing new cancer treatments. This review provides a summary of current studies focused on how bacterial microbiota affect gastrointestinal cancer and anticancer therapy and discusses compelling possibilities for using microbiota as a combinatorial therapy to improve the therapeutic effects of existing anticancer treatments.

Isolation of Uncultivable Anaerobic Thermophiles of the Family Clostridiaceae Requiring Growth-Supporting Factors

  • Kim, Joong-Jae;Kim, Hee-Na;Masui, Ryoji;Kuramitsu, Seiki;Seo, Jin-Ho;Kim, Kwang;Sung, Moon-Hee
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.18 no.4
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    • pp.611-615
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    • 2008
  • Novel groups of uncultivable anaerobic thermophiles were isolated from compost by enrichment cultivation in medium with a cell-free extract of Geobacillus toebii. The cell-free extract of G. toebii provided the medium with growth-supporting factors (GSF) needed to cultivate the previously uncultured microorganisms. Twenty-nine GSF-requiring candidates were successfully cultivated, and 16 isolated novel bacterial strains were classified into three different groups of uncultivable bacteria. The similarity among these 16 isolates and a phylogenetic analysis using 16S rRNA gene sequences revealed that these GSF-requiring strains represented novel groups within the family Clostridiaceae.

Maxillary Sinusitis Caused by Mucormycosis

  • Ha, Yong-Yun;Lee, Suk Keun;Park, Young-Wook;Kim, Seong-Gon;Kim, Min Keun;Kim, Hyun-Young
    • Maxillofacial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
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    • v.35 no.6
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    • pp.432-436
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    • 2013
  • A 60-year-old male complained of headache, nasal discharge, and diplopia for over one month with a history of left upper molar extraction, and he had recently experienced severe discharge of purulent exudate from his left antrum. Under the diagnosis of maxillary sinusitis, the Caldwell-Luc operation was performed, and several fragments of amorphous white mucoroid materials were removed. In the histological observation, sinus mucosa was relatively well preserved, but showed diffuse infiltration with eosinophilic polymorphonuclears. Huge molds of mucormycosis were associated with the surface of mucosa. He was treated with amphotericin-B deoxycholate, resulting in the uneventful healing of the antral lesion. The current case of antral mucormycosis was very rare but effectively treated by surgical removal of antral mucosa and the following antibiotic therapy for the strong inhabitants of fungal molds. We also presumed that the patient was superinfected with commensal fungus of mucormycosis during broad spectrum antibiotic therapy for the previous dental infection.

Escherichia coli-Derived Uracil Increases the Antibacterial Activity and Growth Rate of Lactobacillus plantarum

  • Ha, Eun-Mi
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.26 no.5
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    • pp.975-987
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    • 2016
  • Lactobacillus plantarum (L. plantarum) is a representative probiotic. In particular, L. plantarum is the first commensal bacterium to colonize the intestine of infants. For this reason, the initial settlement of L. plantarum can play an important role in determining an infant's health as well as their eventual health status as an adult. In addition, L. plantarum combats pathogenic infections (such as Escherichia coli (E. coli), one of the early pathogenic colonizers in an unhealthy infant gut) by secreting antimicrobial substances. The aim of this research was to determine how L. plantarum combats E. coli infection and why it is a representative probiotic in the intestine. Consequently, this research observed that E. coli releases uracil. L. plantarum specifically recognizes E. coli-derived uracil, which increases the growth rate and production of antimicrobial substance of L. plantarum. In addition, through the inhibitory activity test, this study postulates that the antimicrobial substance is a protein and can be considered a bacteriocin-like substance. Therefore, this research assumes that L. plantarum exerts its antibacterial ability by recognizing E. coli and increasing its growth rate as a result, and this phenomenon could be one of the reasons for L. plantarum settling in the intestine of infants as a beneficial bacterium.

Genomic Tandem Quadruplication is Associated with Ketoconazole Resistance in Malassezia pachydermatis

  • Kim, Minchul;Cho, Yong-Joon;Park, Minji;Choi, Yoojeong;Hwang, Sun Young;Jung, Won Hee
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.28 no.11
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    • pp.1937-1945
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    • 2018
  • Malassezia pachydermatis is a commensal yeast found on the skin of dogs. However, M. pachydermatis is also considered an opportunistic pathogen and is associated with various canine skin diseases including otitis externa and atopic dermatitis, which usually require treatment using an azole antifungal drug, such as ketoconazole. In this study, we isolated a ketoconazole-resistant strain of M. pachydermatis, designated "KCTC 27587," from the external ear canal of a dog with otitis externa and analyzed its resistance mechanism. To understand the mechanism underlying ketoconazole resistance of the clinical isolate M. pachydermatis KCTC 27587, the whole genome of the yeast was sequenced using the PacBio platform and was compared with M. pachydermatis type strain CBS 1879. We found that a ~84-kb region in chromosome 4 of M. pachydermatis KCTC 27587 was tandemly quadruplicated. The quadruplicated region contains 52 protein coding genes, including the homologs of ERG4 and ERG11, whose overexpression is known to be associated with azole resistance. Our data suggest that the quadruplication of the ~84-kb region may be the cause of the ketoconazole resistance in M. pachydermatis KCTC 27587.

Complete genome sequence of Streptococcus mitis KCOM 1350 isolated from a human mandibular osteomyelitis lesion (사람 하악 골수염 병소에서 분리된 Streptococcus mitis KCOM 1350의 유전체 염기서열 해독)

  • Park, Soon-Nang;Lim, Yun Kyong;Shin, Ja Young;Roh, Hanseong;Kook, Joong-Ki
    • Korean Journal of Microbiology
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    • v.53 no.3
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    • pp.225-226
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    • 2017
  • Streptococcus mitis is a Gram-positive, facultative anaerobic, alpha-hemolytic, and nonmotile cocci. S. mitis is a viridans streptococci and a normal commensal of throat, nasopharynx, and mouse and is associated with infective endocarditis, septicemia, and meningitis. S. mitis KCOM 1350 (= ChDC B183) was isolated from a human mandibular osteomyelitis lesion. Here, we present the complete genome sequence of S. mitis KCOM 1350.