• Title/Summary/Keyword: host-associated bacteria

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IL-6 and IL-10 in experimentally induced rat pulpal inflammation

  • Chang, Seok-Woo;Lim, Sung-Sam
    • Proceedings of the KACD Conference
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    • 2001.11a
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    • pp.582.1-582
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    • 2001
  • IL-6 and IL-10 are known to be inflammatory cytokines that mediate host response to invading microorganisms or pathogenic antigen. But the roles of these cytokines in pulpal inflammation are not well established. The objective of this study was to investigate the concentrations and the roles of IL-6 and IL-10 in the pulpal inflammation associated with gram-negative bacteria, P. nigrescens. We exposed the pulps of rat mandibular incisors and inserted sterile cotton in control groups and inoculated P. nigrescens in experimental groups.(omitted)

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High-throughput sequencing-based metagenomic and transcriptomic analysis of intestine in piglets infected with salmonella

  • KyeongHye, Won;Dohyun, Kim;Donghyun, Shin;Jin, Hur;Hak-Kyo, Lee;Jaeyoung, Heo;Jae-Don, Oh
    • Journal of Animal Science and Technology
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    • v.64 no.6
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    • pp.1144-1172
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    • 2022
  • Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium isolate HJL777 is a virulent bacterial strain in pigs. The high rate of salmonella infection are at high risk of non-typhoidal salmonella gastroenteritis development. Salmonellosis is most common in young pigs. We investigated changes in gut microbiota and biological function in piglets infected with salmonella via analysis of rectal fecal metagenome and intestinal transcriptome using 16S rRNA and RNA sequencing. We identified a decrease in Bacteroides and increase in harmful bacteria such as Spirochaetes and Proteobacteria by microbial community analysis. We predicted that reduction of Bacteroides by salmonella infection causes proliferation of salmonella and harmful bacteria that can cause an intestinal inflammatory response. Functional profiling of microbial communities in piglets with salmonella infection showed increasing lipid metabolism associated with proliferation of harmful bacteria and inflammatory responses. Transcriptome analysis identified 31 differentially expressed genes. Using gene ontology and Innate Immune Database analysis, we identified that BGN, DCN, ZFPM2 and BPI genes were involved in extracellular and immune mechanisms, specifically salmonella adhesion to host cells and inflammatory responses during infection. We confirmed alterations in gut microbiota and biological function during salmonella infection in piglets. Our findings will help prevent disease and improve productivity in the swine industry.

RECONSIDERATION OF TREATMENT PROTOCOL ON THE REDUCTION OF ENTEROCOCCUS FAECALIS ASSOCIATED WITH FAILED ROOT CANAL TREATMENT (근관치료 실패와 관련된 Enterococcus faecalis 제거를 위한 치료 protocol의 재고찰)

  • Lee, Woo-Cheol;Hong, Seong-Tae;Shon, Won-Jun
    • Restorative Dentistry and Endodontics
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    • v.33 no.6
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    • pp.560-569
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    • 2008
  • Microorganism survived in the root canal after root canal cleaning and shaping procedure is a main cause of root canal treatment failure. There are several mechanisms for the bacteria to survive in the root canal after chemomechanical preparation and root canal irrigation. Bacteria organized as biofilm has been suggested as an etiology of persistent periapical lesion. Recent studies were focus on removal of Enterococcus faecalis biofilm due to the report that the persistence of this bacteria after root canal treatment may be associated with its ability to form biofilm. Several investigations demonstrated that current root canal treatment protocol including use of NaOCl, EDTA and Chlorhexidine as irrigants is quite effective in eliminating E. faecalis biofilm. However, this microorganism still can survive in inaccessible areas of root canal system and evade host immune response, suppress immune activity and produce biofilm. Up to date, there is no possible clinical method to completely get rid of bacteria from the root canal. Once the root canal treatment failure occurred, and conventional treatment incorporating current therapeutic protocol has failed, periapical surgery or extraction should be considered rather than prolong the in effected retreatment procedure.

Integrated analysis of transcriptome and milk metagenome in subclinical mastitic and healthy cows

  • Jinning Zhang;Xueqin Liu;Tahir Usman;Yongjie Tang;Siyuan Mi;Wenlong Li;Mengyou Yang;Ying Yu
    • Animal Bioscience
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    • v.37 no.4
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    • pp.709-717
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    • 2024
  • Objective: Abnormally increased somatic cell counts (SCCs) in milk is usually a sign of bovine subclinical mastitis. Mutual interaction between the host and its associated microbiota plays an important role in developing such diseases. The main objective of this study was to explore the difference between cows with elevated SCCs and healthy cattle from the perspective of host-microbe interplay. Methods: A total of 31 milk samples and 23 bovine peripheral blood samples were collected from Holstein dairy cattle to conduct an integrated analysis of transcriptomic and metagenomics. Results: The results showed that Ralstonia and Sphingomonas were enriched in cows with subclinical mastitis. The relative abundance of the two bacteria was positively correlated with the expression level of bovine transcobalamin 1 and uridine phosphorylase 1 encoding gene. Moreover, functional analysis revealed a distinct alternation in some important microbial biological processes. Conclusion: These results reveal the relative abundance of Ralstonia and Sphingomonas other than common mastitis-causing pathogens varied from healthy cows to those with subclinical mastitis and might be associated with elevated SCCs. Potential association was observed between bovine milk microbiota composition and the transcriptional pattern of some genes, thus providing new insights to understand homeostasis of bovine udder.

Effects of the Antibiotics Growth Promoter Tylosin on Swine Gut Microbiota

  • Kim, Jungman;Guevarra, Robin B.;Nguyen, Son G.;Lee, Ji-Hoon;Jeong, Dong Kee;Unno, Tatsuya
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.26 no.5
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    • pp.876-882
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    • 2016
  • Tylosin has been used as a livestock feed additive and antibiotic growth promoter for many years. However, the mode of action by which tylosin enhances animal growth is unclear. We used high-throughput sequencing of 16S rRNA genes to investigate the effects of tylosin as a feed additive on swine gut microbiota. No significant difference in the rate of weight increase was observed between control and tylosin-treated pigs during a 10-week feeding trial. However, tylosin-treated pigs showed rapid increases in the relative abundance of the phylum Firmicutes. Increases in Firmicutes species are associated with (so-called) obese-type gut microbiota. The abundance of species of four families of the phylum Firmicutes (Streptococcaceae, Peptococcaceae, Peptostreptococcaceae, and Clostridiaceae) correlated positively with host weight gain. The abundance of Streptococcaceae family bacteria was least affected by tylosin treatment. Distribution analysis of operational taxonomic units (OTUs) showed that both control and tylosin-treated pigs exhibited similar OTU alterations during growth. However, the tylosin-treated group showed distinctive alterations in gut microbiota when the host weighed approximately 60 kg, whereas similar alterations occurred at around 80 kg in the control group. Our results suggest that use of tylosin accelerates maturation of swine gut microbiota rather than altering its composition.

Identification of an Entomopathogenic Bacterium, Serratia sp. ANU101, and Its Hemolytic Activity

  • Kim, Yong-Gyun;Kim, Keun-Seob;Seo, Ji-Ae;Shrestha, Sony;Kim, Hosanna-H.;Nalini, Madanagopal;Yi, Young-Keun
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.19 no.3
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    • pp.314-322
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    • 2009
  • Four different bacterial colonies were isolated from an old stock of an entomopathogenic nematode, Steinernema monticolum. They all showed entomopathogenicity to final instar larvae of beet armyworm, Spodoptera exigua, by hemocoelic injection. However, they varied in colony form, susceptibility to antibiotics, and postmortem change of the infected host insects. Biolog microbial identification and 16S rDNA sequence analyses indicate that these are four different species classified into different bacterial genera. Owing to high entomopathogenicity and a cadaver color of infected insect host, Serratia sp. was selected as a main symbiotic bacterial species and analyzed for its pathogenicity. Although no virulence of Serratia sp. was detected at oral administration, the bacteria gave significant synergistic pathogenicity to fifth instar S. exigua when it was treated along with a spore-forming entomopathogenic bacterium, Bacillus thuringiensis. The synergistic effect was explained by an immunosuppressive effect of Serratia sp. by its high cytotoxic effect on hemocytes of S. exigua, because Serratia sp. caused septicemia of S. exigua when the bacterial cells were injected into S. exigua hemocoel. The cytotoxic factor(s) was present in the culture medium because the sterilized culture broth possessed high potency in the cytotoxicity, which was specific to granular cells and plasmatocytes, two main immune-associated hemocytes in insects.

Associated Nitrogen Fixation in the Rhizosphere of Rice in Saline and Reclaimed Saline Paddy Soil -III. Inoculation of several associative N2-fixing bacteria on the rice spermospher axenic culture media (간척지토양(干拓地土壤)의 수도근권(水稻根圈)에서 협생질소고정(協生窒素固定)에 관(關)한 연구(硏究) -제(第)III보(報) 순수배양기내(純粹培養器內)에서 수도종자권(水稻種子圈)의 협생질소고정균(協生窒素固定菌) 접종효과(接種效果))

  • Lee, Sang-Kyu;Suh, Jang-Sun;Ko, Jae-Young
    • Korean Journal of Soil Science and Fertilizer
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    • v.20 no.3
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    • pp.269-274
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    • 1987
  • A laboratory experiment was conducted to find out the effect of inoculation with plant growth of associative $N_2$-fixing bacteria on the combination of eight different rice seedling with seven different associative $N_2$-fixing bacteria in which were isolated and identified from grasses and rice in saline and reclaimed saline paddy soil. Those were examined in N-free axenic culture medium. The result of this experiment exemplified the contribution of associative $N_2$-fixing bacteria to their host plant were varied much by the combination of rice cultivars and bacterial strains. Acetylene reduction ($N_2$-fixation) activity seems to be more variable with respect to the combination of rice cultivars and bacterial strains. The relationship between acetylene reduction activity and rice performance such as dry matter weight, plant height, root length, and number of root were statistically insignificant. However, in comparision with the control, the dry matter yield of Annapuruna was increased by inoculation of all the seven bacteria strains. Among the seven rice cultivars, the average acetylene reducing activity was the highest in Annapuruna, and Shingwang, and the lowest in IR-8 inoculated with Pseudomonas sp H8. Among the seven bacterial strains the highest acetylene reducing activity was obtained by the combination of Shingwang with Pseudomonas sp H8.

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Growth promoting effect on Tricholoma matsutake mycelium by bacteria from fairy Ring in Bonghwa-gun, Korea (국내 봉화 송이 자생지 내 균환 유래 토양세균의 송이균사체 생장촉진 효과)

  • Doo-Ho Choi;Eunji Lee;Kang-Hyo Lee;Gi-Hong An
    • Journal of Mushroom
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    • v.22 no.1
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    • pp.27-30
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    • 2024
  • As a member of ectomycorrhizal fungi, Tricholoma matsutake has a symbiotic relationship with its host, Pinus densiflora. To cultivate T. matsutake artificially, the co-cultivation of T. matsutake mycelia and bacteria from shiro was introduced. In this study, bacteria were isolated from soil samples in Bonghwa-gun, and seven bacterial isolates (B22_7_B05, B22_7_B06, B22_7_B07, B22_7_B08, B22_7_B10, B22_7_B13, and B22_7_B14) promoted the growth of T. matsutake mycelia (147.48, 232.11, 266.72, 211.43, 175.17, 154.62, and 177.92%, respectively). Sequencing of the 16S rRNA region of the isolated bacteria was performed. B22_7_B05 and B22_7_B10 were identified as Bacillus toyonensis, B22_7_B06 and B22_7_B08 as Paenibacillus taichungensis, B22_7_B07 and B22_7_B14 as P. gorilla, and B22_7_B13 as P. odorifer. These bacterial isolates were associated with the shiro community and are expected to contribute to the cultivation of T. matsutake.

Molecular Phylogeny and Modular Structure of Hybrid NRPS/PKS Gene Fragment of Pseudoalteromonas sp. NJ6-3-2 Isolated From Marine Sponge Hymeniacidon perleve

  • Zhu, Peng;Zheng, Yanling;You, Yurong;Yan, Xiaojun;Shao, Jianzhong
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.19 no.3
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    • pp.229-237
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    • 2009
  • Among 12 marine bacterial strains from the China coast that exhibited interesting bioactivity (positive for both antimicrobial and cytotoxic activities), only four strains, namely, NJ6-3-1, NJ6-3-2, NB-6, and YTHM-17, had a KS domain or A domain when screened for PKS and NRPS genes using a PCR. Interestingly, two of these strains belonging to Pseudoalteromonas and associated with the marine sponge Hymeniacidon perleve were positive for both PKS and NRPS, whereas the other two strains of Pseudoalteromonas did not have a PKS or NRPS gene. A molecular phylogeny analysis and DGGE analysis of the Pseudoalteromonas sp. indicated that they had a specific affinity with the host marine sponge Hymeniacidon perleve. Furthermore, an analysis of a partial sequence of Pseudoalteromonas sp. NJ6-3-2 isolated from the marine sponge Hymeniacidon perleve obtained from genomic walking using a computational approach indicated a relatively complete PKS module including auxiliary domains (DH, KR, and Cy).

Description of ten unrecorded bacterial species isolated from Ostrea denselamellosa and Eriocheir japonica from the Seomjin River

  • Choi, Ahyoung;Han, Ji-Hey;Kim, Eui-Jin;Cho, Ja Young;Hwang, Sun-I
    • Korean Journal of Environmental Biology
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    • v.37 no.4
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    • pp.592-599
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    • 2019
  • Ostrea denselamellosa and Eriocheir japonica samples were collected from the Seomjin River in 2019 as part of the "Research of Host-Associated Bacteria" research program. Almost 200 bacterial strains were isolated from the O. denselamellosa and E. japonica samples and subsequently identified by 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Among the bacterial isolates, ten strains possessed greater than 98.7% sequence similarity with published bacterial species that had not previously been recorded in Korea. These species were phylogenetically diverse, belonging to three phyla, four classes, seven orders, and eight genera. At the genus and class level, the previously unrecorded species belonged to Pseudoalteromonas, Aliivibrio, Rheinheimera, Leucothrix, and Shewanella of the class Gamma-proteobacteria, Olleya of the class Flavobacteriia, Algoriphagus of the class Cytophagia, and Lactococcus of the class Bacilli. The previously unrecorded species were further characterized by examining their Gram staining, colony and cell morphology, biochemical properties, and phylogenetic positions.