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BACTERIAL ENTERIC INFECTIONS AND VACCINE DEVELOPMENT
Gastroenterology Clinics of North America, 1992There is a great need for effective vaccines against the major bacterial enteropathogens. Bacterial enteric infections resulting in diarrhea, dysentery, or enteric fever constitute a huge public health problem, with more than a billion episodes of disease and several million deaths annually in developing countries.
J, Holmgren, A M, Svennerholm
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New Developments in Enteric Bacterial Toxins
1992Publisher Summary Developments since the mid-1950s showing the secretory effects of culture filtrates of Vibrio cholerae and Escherichia coli and the cytotoxic and neurotoxic effects of ShigeIlu and botulinum toxins have increasingly demonstrated the major roles of many bacterial toxins in disease.
D A, Bobak, R L, Guerrant
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Bacterial contributions to mammalian gut development
Trends in Microbiology, 2004Abstract The mammalian gut has coevolved over millions of years with a vast consortium of microbes. From birth, this population is in continuous and intimate contact with intestinal tissues. Recent results indicate that indigenous bacteria play a crucial inductive role in gut development during early postnatal life.
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Development of a Bacterial Nanoparticle Vaccine
2014A simple procedure for obtaining protective antigens from Gram-negative bacteria and their encapsulation into immunomodulatory nanoparticles is described. A heat treatment in saline solution of whole bacteria rendered the release of small membrane vesicles containing outer membrane components and also superficial appendages, such as fractions of ...
Carlos, Gamazo +4 more
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Bacterial Models for Tumor Development
Acta Microbiologica et Immunologica Hungarica, 2004The tumor-inducing effects of Agrobacterium, Bartonella and Helicobacter bacterial species are compared step by step. An analogy for the existence of these individual steps is considered in connection with the development of cancer. The transformations of eukaryotic cells occur in particular in the type IV secretion system, i.e.
Gyémánt, Nóra +5 more
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Development of Bacterial Cellulose Nanocomposites
MRS Proceedings, 2011ABSTRACTThe development of synthetic materials with inherent bone properties would allow the safe restoration of bone function and reduce current risks associated with the use of grafts. This study investigated the development of bacterial cellulose–hydroxyapatite composite (CdHA-BC) as a potential bone substitute material.
Roberto Benson +5 more
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Bacterial endotoxin and impaired fetal development
Experientia, 1976Small doses of E. coli endotoxin given to pregnant mice on the 13th day of pregnancy caused only a mild maternal illness but induced resorption of approximately half the number of fetuses in each mouse. The remaining live fetuses developed normally and showed no evidence of retarded growth or malformations.
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DEVELOPMENT OF BACTERIAL RESISTANCE TO ANTIBIOTICS
Journal of the American Medical Association, 1947The development of resistance to the antibiotics is a phenomenon of great theoretic interest to the bacteriologist, and it may some day become a matter of major concern to the clinician. I shall limit my discussion to penicillin and streptomycin, the two antibiotics which have been most intensively studied clinically and experimentally and about which,
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Bacterial Resistance in Developing Countries
1988The problems of bacterial resistance currently encountered in developing countries are to a certain degree comparable with the conditions met in Europe and the USA in 1950–1970; however, there are also remarkable differences. In developing countries there is usually a nonavailability of bacteriological services.
Sabine Enenkel, Wolfgang Stille
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