• Title/Summary/Keyword: shigella

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Antibacterial, Anti-Diarrhoeal, Analgesic, Cytotoxic Activities, and GC-MS Profiling of Sonneratia apetala (Buch.-Ham.) Seed

  • Hossain, Sheikh Julfikar;Islam, M Rabiul;Pervin, Tahmina;Iftekharuzzaman, M;Hamdi, Omer AA;Mubassara, Sanzida;Saifuzzaman, M;Shilpi, Jamil Ahmad
    • Preventive Nutrition and Food Science
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    • v.22 no.3
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    • pp.157-165
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    • 2017
  • Fruits of Sonneratia apetala (Buch.-Ham.), (English: mangrove apple, Bengali: keora) both seeds and pericarps, are largely consumed as food besides their enormous medicinal application. The fruit seeds have high content of nutrients and bioactive components. The seeds powder of S. apetala was successively fractionated using n-hexane, diethyl ether, chloroform, ethyl acetate, and methanol. The fractions were used to evaluate antibacterial, anti-diarrhoeal, analgesic, and cytotoxic activities. Methanol fraction of seeds (MeS) stronly inhibited Escherichia coli strains, Salmonella Paratyphi A, Salmonella Typhi, Shigella dysenteriae, and Staphylococcus aureus except Vibrio cholerae at $500{\mu}g/disc$. All the fractions strongly inhibited castor oil induced diarrhoeal episodes and onset time in mice at 500 mg extract/kg body weight (P<0.001). At the same concentration, MeS had the strongest inhibitory activity on diarrhoeal episodes, whereas the n-hexane fraction (HS) significantly (P<0.05) prolonged diarrhoeal onset time as compared to positive control. Similarly, HS (P<0.005) inhibited acetic acid induced writhing in mice at 500 mg extract/kg, more than any other fraction. HS and diethyl ether fractions of seed strongly increased reaction time of mice in hot plate test at 500 mg extract/kg. All the fractions showed strong cytotoxic effects in brine shrimp lethality tests. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis of HS led to the identification of 23 compounds. Linoleic acid (29.9%), palmitic acid (23.2%), ascorbyl palmitate (21.2%), and stearic acid (10.5%) were the major compounds in HS. These results suggest that seeds of S. apetala could be of great use as nutraceuticals.

A Waterborne Outbreak and Detection of Cryptosporidium Oocysts in Drinking Water of an Older High-Rise Apartment Complex in Seoul

  • Cho, Eun-Joo;Yang, Jin-Young;Lee, Eun-Sook;Kim, Se-Chul;Cha, So-Yang;Kim, Sung-Tek;Lee, Man-Ho;Han, Sun-Hee;Park, Young-Sang
    • Parasites, Hosts and Diseases
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    • v.51 no.4
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    • pp.461-466
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    • 2013
  • From May to June 2012, a waterborne outbreak of 124 cases of cryptosporidiosis occurred in the plumbing system of an older high-rise apartment complex in Seoul, Republic of Korea. The residents of this apartment complex had symptoms of watery diarrhea and vomiting. Tap water samples in the apartment complex and its adjacent buildings were collected and tested for 57 parameters under the Korean Drinking Water Standards and for additional 11 microbiological parameters. The microbiological parameters included total colony counts, Clostridium perfringens, Enterococcus, fecal streptococcus, Salmonella, Shigella, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Cryptosporidium oocysts, Giardia cysts, total culturable virus, and Norovirus. While the tap water samples of the adjacent buildings complied with the Korean Drinking Water Standards for all parameters, fecal bacteria and Cryptosporidium oocysts were detected in the tap water samples of the outbreak apartment complex. It turned out that the agent of the disease was Cryptosporidium parvum. The drinking water was polluted with sewage from a septic tank in the apartment complex. To remove C. parvum oocysts, we conducted physical processes of cleaning the water storage tanks, flushing the indoor pipes, and replacing old pipes with new ones. Finally we restored the clean drinking water to the apartment complex after identification of no oocysts.

Bacterial Removal Efficiencies by Unit Processes in a Sewage Treatment Plant using Activated Sludge Process (활성슬러지공정 하수종말처리장의 단위공정별 세균 제거효율)

  • Lee, Dong-Geun;Jung, Mira;Sung, Gi Moon;Park, Seong Joo
    • Journal of Korean Society on Water Environment
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    • v.26 no.5
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    • pp.871-879
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    • 2010
  • To figure out the removal efficiency of indicator and pathogenic bacteria by unit processes of a sewage treatment plant using activated sludge process, analyses were done for incoming sewage, influent and effluent of primary clarifier, aeration tank, secondary clarifier and final discharge conduit of the plant. A matrix of bacterial items (average of bacterial reduction [log/ml], p value of paired t-test, number of decreased cases of twenty analyses, removal percentage only for decreased cases) between incoming sewage and final effluent of the plant were heterotrophic plate counts (1.54, 0.000, 20, 95.01), total coliforms (1.38, 0.000, 19, 83.94), fecal coliforms (0.90, 0.000, 20, 94.84), fecal streptococci (0.90, 0.000, 20, 98.08), presumptive Salmonella (0.23, 0.561, 7, 99.09), and presumptive Shigella (1.02, 0.002, 15, 92.98). Total coliforms, fecal coliforms, heterotrophic plate counts, and fecal streptococci showed highest decrease through secondary clarifier about 1-log (p<0.001) between 88% and 96%, and primary clarifier represented the significant (p<0.05) decrease. However, final effluent through discharge conduit showed higher total coliforms and fecal streptococci than effluent of secondary clarifier (p<0.05). In addition, final effluent once violated the water quality standard while effluent of secondary clarifier satisfied the standard. Hence some control measures including elimination of deposits in discharge conduit or disinfection of final effluent are necessary.

Studies on Antibacterial Substance from Lactobacillus bulgaricus (Lactobacillus bulgaricus가 생산한 항균물질(抗菌物質)에 관한 연구)

  • Kim, Dong Shin;Jung, Sung In
    • Current Research on Agriculture and Life Sciences
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    • v.7
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    • pp.109-116
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    • 1989
  • This study was carried out to confirm the agent responsible for the antibacterial activity in milk culture or Lactobacillus bulgaricus to extract and purify it. The following results were summarized as followings : The antibacterial agent was extracted from the cultured skim milk with methanol and acetone and was purified by Sephadex G-50 gel filteration and thin layer chromatography on silica gel. The antibacterial substance other than lactic acid was confirmed by turbidimetric technique using the neutralized culture filtrate which inhibited the growth of Bacillus subtilis. The purified agent showed inhibitory activity against Bacillus subtilis, Escherichica coli, Pseudomonas fluorescens Staphylococcus aureus, Proteus vulgaris and Shigells $dysenteria^2$. The agent obtained from thin layer chromatography was free from $H_2O_2$ or lactic acid.

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Microbiological Safety of Commercial Salt-fermented Shrimp during Storage (새우젓 저장 유통 중 위해 미생물학적인 안전성 연구)

  • Oh, Sang-Hee;Heo, Ok-Soon;Bang, Ok-Kyun;Chang, Hae-Choon;Shin, Hyun-Soo;Kim, Mee-Ree
    • Korean Journal of Food Science and Technology
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    • v.36 no.3
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    • pp.507-513
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    • 2004
  • Microbiological safety investigation of 36 commercial salt-fermented shrimps revealed presence of coliform and Gram(+) cocci, whereas pathogenic bacteria such as Escherichia coli O26, Salmonella, Shigella, Staphylococcus aureus, Vibrio parahaemolyticus, and V. cholerae were not detected. When pathogenic bacteria were inoculated into 9, 18, and 27% salted shrimps, Salmonella so., E. coli O26, and S. aureus were not detected up to 13, 80, and 90 days of fermentation at $20^{\circ}C$, respectively, whereas up to 15 day in commercial salt-fermented shrimps.

Studies on the Enhancing Effect of Polymyxin B on the Antibodies Response of Enterobacterial Antigens (Pomyxin B의 장계세균항원(腸系細菌抗原)에 대(對)한 항체산생(抗體産生) 증강작용(增强作用)에 관(關)한 연구(硏究))

  • Lee, Jae-Koo
    • The Journal of the Korean Society for Microbiology
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    • v.6 no.1
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    • pp.29-40
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    • 1971
  • Various kinds of antibiotics are generally believed to have inhibitory effects on the antibody response. However, as polymyxin B which belongs to the cyclic polypeptide group of antibiotic was found to have some enhancing effects on the antibody response of rabbits to enterobacterial common antigen(CA) under specified conditions, experiments were carried out on this problem with the following results. 1. When mixture of polymyxin B and CA derived from Salmonella typhimurium(STM) was treated 30 minutes at $37^{\circ}C$ and injected three times into rabbits by intravenous route, the antibody response to CA was weaker than rabbits injected CA only. 2. Mixture of polymyxin B and CA showed a marked antibody production when injected into rabbits primed with small amounts of heat-extracted antigen of STM, while the injection of CA alone showed low titers of response. 3. Mixture of polymyxin B and heat-extracted CA-containing antigen of Escherichia coli 014 also showed a increased antibody production than CA alone in rabbits primed with antigen of STM. 4. The effect of polymyxin B appeared in different ways. This antibiotic did not enhance the CA antibody response in rabbits primed with small amounts of E. coli 0111 and 055, but enhance in rabbits primed with Shigella flexneri. 5. No enhancing effect on the antibody response was observed by polymyxin B in rabbits primed with CA. 6. No enhancing effect on the antibody response was also noted in rabbits primed with STM antigen in case polymyxin B and CA were administered simultaneously but in veins of different places. 7. Bacitracin did not enhance the CA antibody response in primed rabbits with STM antigen, but neomycin slightly enhance the response. 8. Lipopolysaccharide showed no priming effect on the CA antibody response, and no enhancement of the CA antibody response in rabbits printed with STM. 9. The priming effect of STM antigen against CA antibody response was very weak as compared with the effect of CA derived from STM antigen.

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Experimental In Vivo Models of Bacterial Shiga Toxin-Associated Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome

  • Jeong, Yu-Jin;Park, Sung-Kyun;Yoon, Sung-Jin;Park, Young-Jun;Lee, Moo-Seung
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.28 no.9
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    • pp.1413-1425
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    • 2018
  • Shiga toxins (Stxs) are the main virulence factors expressed by the pathogenic Stx-producing bacteria, namely, Shigella dysenteriae serotype 1 and certain Escherichia coli strains. These bacteria cause widespread outbreaks of bloody diarrhea (hemorrhagic colitis) that in severe cases can progress to life-threatening systemic complications, including hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) characterized by the acute onset of microangiopathic hemolytic anemia and kidney dysfunction. Shiga toxicosis has a distinct pathogenesis and animal models of Stx-associated HUS have allowed us to investigate this. Since these models will also be useful for developing effective countermeasures to Stx-associated HUS, it is important to have clinically relevant animal models of this disease. Multiple studies over the last few decades have shown that mice injected with purified Stxs develop some of the pathophysiological features seen in HUS patients infected with the Stx-producing bacteria. These features are also efficiently recapitulated in a non-human primate model (baboons). In addition, rats, calves, chicks, piglets, and rabbits have been used as models to study symptoms of HUS that are characteristic of each animal. These models have been very useful for testing hypotheses about how Stx induces HUS and its neurological sequelae. In this review, we describe in detail the current knowledge about the most well-studied in vivo models of Stx-induced HUS; namely, those in mice, piglets, non-human primates, and rabbits. The aim of this review is to show how each human clinical outcome-mimicking animal model can serve as an experimental tool to promote our understanding of Stx-induced pathogenesis.

Evaluation of the Bacteriological Safety for the Shellfish Growing Area in Hansan.Geojeman, Korea (한산.거제만해역 패류양식장에 대한 세균학적 위생안전성 평가)

  • Ha, Kwang-Soo;Shim, Kil-Bo;Yoo, Hyun-Duk;Kim, Ji-Hoe;Lee, Tae-Seek
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.42 no.5
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    • pp.449-455
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    • 2009
  • In Hansan Geojeman area, 2,050 ha of shellfish growing area has been designated as shellfish production area for export. The main shellfish species from the designated area is oysters. For the sanitary management of the designated area established in Hansan Geojeman area, bacteriological examination of sea water and shellfish at the sampling stations inside and outside of the designated area were performed from January 2006 to December 2008. The range of fecal coliform of 756 sea water samples at 21 stations located in the designated area were <1.8~>1,600 MPN/100mL. And the range of geometric mean and the estimated 90th percentile of fecal coliform were 1.8~2.9 and 2.7~15.8 MPN/100mL, respectively. Sanitary conditions of the current designated area in Hansan Geojeman meets the required standards of the Fisheries Product Quality Control and National Shellfish Sanitation Program (NSSP, USA) criteria for the approved area. Also, the sanitary status of the shellfish harvested from the designated area met the Korean Shellfish Sanitation Program (KSSP) fecal coliform criterion (<230 MPN/100g). And the human pathogen such as Salmonella spp. and Shigella spp. were not detected from the examined shellfish samples.

Antimicrobial Activity against Food-hazardous Microorganisms, Dermatophytes, and Pytopathogens and Antioxidative Activity of Sancho Oil (식품위해성균, 피부사상균 및 식물성 병원균에 대한 산초유의 항균 활성 및 항산화 활성)

  • Kim, Hak Gon;Kang, Seung Mi;Yong, Seong Hyeon;Seol, Yu Won;Choi, Eun Ji;Park, Jun Ho;Yu, Chan Yeol;Solomon, Tamirat;Choi, Myung Suk
    • Korean Journal of Medicinal Crop Science
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    • v.28 no.1
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    • pp.38-46
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    • 2020
  • Background: Although Sancho (Zanthoxylum schinifolium Siebold & Zucc) oil has traditionally been used for its antibiotics properties, there is currently a lack of scientific evidence regarding its biological activities. In this study, we investigated the antimicrobial and antioxidant activities of Sancho oil against food-hazardous microorganisms, phytopathogens, and dermatophytes. Methods and Results: We investiated the antimicrobial activity of Sancho oil against 11 food-hazardous microorganisms, nine phytopathogens, and six dermatophytes. The Sancho oil was found to show the strongest antibacterial activity against Shigella flexneri and Listeria spp. Sancho oil also showed high antifungal activity against plant pathogens, particularly Fusarium oxysporum, and showed antimicrobial activity against dermatophytes such as Trichophyton rubrum, Microsporum canis and Candida albicans. The antioxidant activity of Sancho oil was measured using the DPPH method, and was found to be stronger than that of unrefined oil. Moreover, this activity increased with increasing oil concentration. Conclusions: We found that Sancho oil showed differing antimicrobial activities against food-hazardous microorganisms, dermatophytes, and plant pathogens. The antimicrobial activity spectrum of Sancho oil was not broad and varied among microbial strains. On the basis of our findings, we consider that Sancho oil could be used an antibacterial material for food-borne S. flexneri and Listeria spp., a biopesticide for Fusarium spp., and a treatment for dermatophytes such as T. rubrum.

Anti-Salmonella activity of a flavonone from Butea frondosa bark in mice

  • Mishra, Uma Shankar;Dutta, Noton Kumar;Mazumdar, Kaushiki;Mahapatra, Santosh Kumar;Chakraborty, Pronobesh;Dastidar, Sujata G
    • Advances in Traditional Medicine
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    • v.8 no.4
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    • pp.339-348
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    • 2008
  • Butea frondosa has been used traditionally as a topical formulation in the treatment of many diseases and disorders. Two compounds [BF-1 (crystalline flavonol quercetin) and BF-2 (tannin) from ethyl acetate fraction of ethanolic extract] were isolated from the bark of Butea frondosa. The stereostructures of the compounds were determined on the basis of chemical and physicochemical evidence. BF-1 and BF-2 were screened in vitro for possible antibacterial property against 112 bacteria comprising 3 genera of Gram-positive and 12 genera of Gram-negative types. It was found that both BF-1 and BF-2 exhibited inhibitory activity against several bacteria. Most of these strains were inhibited by BF-1 at $50-200\;{\mu}g/ml$, while BF-2 ($MIC_{50}$ $400\;{\mu}g/ml$) was much less active. The bacteria could be arranged in the decreasing order of sensitivity towards BF-1 in the following manner: S. aureus, Bacillus spp., Salmonella spp., Vibrio spp., Shigella spp., E. coli and Pseudomonas spp. The $MIC_{50}$ of the compound was $50\;{\mu}g/ml$ while the $MIC_{90}$ was $100\;{\mu}g/ml$. The decreasing order of sensitivity towards BF-2 was V. cholerae, Bacillus spp., S. aureus, V. parahaemolyticus, Salmonella spp. and Proteus spp. BF-1 was bactericidal in action. In vivo studies with this extract showed that it could offer statistically significant protection (p < 0.01) to mice challenged with a virulent bacterium. The inhibitory activity of Butea frondosa against Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria indicates its usefulness in the treatment of common bacterial infections. The potentiality of BF-1 as an antibacterial agent may be confirmed further by pharmacological studies.