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International Journal of Food Microbiology, 2000
Staphylococcus aureus is a major human pathogen that produces a wide array of toxins, thus causing various types of disease symptoms. Staphylococcal enterotoxins (SEs), a family of nine major serological types of heat stable enterotoxins, are a leading cause of gastroenteritis resulting from consumption of contaminated food.
N, Balaban, A, Rasooly
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Staphylococcus aureus is a major human pathogen that produces a wide array of toxins, thus causing various types of disease symptoms. Staphylococcal enterotoxins (SEs), a family of nine major serological types of heat stable enterotoxins, are a leading cause of gastroenteritis resulting from consumption of contaminated food.
N, Balaban, A, Rasooly
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The Staphylococcal Enterotoxins and Their Relatives
Science, 1990Staphylococcal enterotoxins and a group of related proteins made by Streptococci cause food poisoning and shock in man and animals. These proteins share an ability to bind to human and mouse major histocompatibility complex proteins.
Philippa Marrack, John W. Kappler
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Immunogenicity and antigenic relationship of Salmonella Enterotoxin with other Enterotoxins*
Zentralblatt für Bakteriologie, 1995The immunogenicity and antigenic relationship of Salmonella enterotoxin with other enterotoxins were studied. The purified enterotoxin of Salmonella typhimurium strains was immunogenic in rabbits and antiserum produced against it completely neutralized the enterotoxic activity of purified as well as crude enterotoxins.
H. Rahman, V.D. Sharma
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EcoSal Plus, 2006
Heat-labile enterotoxins (LTs) of Escherichia coli are closely related to cholera toxin (CT), which was originally discovered in 1959 in culture filtrates of the gram-negative bacterium Vibrio cholerae . Several other gram-negative bacteria also produce enterotoxins related to CT and LTs, and
Randall K. Holmes, Michael G. Jobling
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Heat-labile enterotoxins (LTs) of Escherichia coli are closely related to cholera toxin (CT), which was originally discovered in 1959 in culture filtrates of the gram-negative bacterium Vibrio cholerae . Several other gram-negative bacteria also produce enterotoxins related to CT and LTs, and
Randall K. Holmes, Michael G. Jobling
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Enterotoxins and ion transport [PDF]
Throughout the world and especially in developing countries acute diarrhoea1 diseases are the single major cause of morbidity and mortality both in humans and farm animals. Bacteria are among the chief causal agents of acute diarrhoeas and although fluid secretion can result from an increase in luminal osmolarity or hydrostatic pressure, the majority ...
Michael Field, Mrinalini C. Rao
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An Enterotoxin of Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1971Pseudomonas aeruginosa has been implicated in diarrheal conditions, and descriptions of these diseases date back as far as 1894 [1]. Some of these diseases have been described as 5-day or Shanghai fever [2], The use of ligated rabbit intestines for the demonstration of the accumulation of fluid by cultures of Vibrio cholerae was described as early as ...
Pinghui V. Liu, Yoshiyuki Kubota
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2010
Diarrhea determined by enterotoxins is an important public health problem worldwide. A number of microorganisms can cause diarrhea by producing and secreting enterotoxins that affect the absorptive and/or secretory processes of the enterocyte without causing considerable acute inflammation or mucosal destruction.
Terrin G., BERNI CANANI, ROBERTO
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Diarrhea determined by enterotoxins is an important public health problem worldwide. A number of microorganisms can cause diarrhea by producing and secreting enterotoxins that affect the absorptive and/or secretory processes of the enterocyte without causing considerable acute inflammation or mucosal destruction.
Terrin G., BERNI CANANI, ROBERTO
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Cholera enterotoxin (choleragen)
Pharmacology & Therapeutics, 1985Slightly over a century ago, during the period from 1883 to 1885, Robert Koch summarized his masterful studies on the etiology of cholera in a series of reports1–8 which presented the first convincing evidence that a particular distinctive microorganism, which he isolated in pure culture and called “comma-bacillus” (now known as Vibrio cholerae O group
Friedrich Dorner, Richard A. Finkelstein
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Clostridium perfringens enterotoxin
Microbial Pathogenesis, 1988Current knowledge of CPE action is briefly summarized in Figure 1. After specific binding to a protein receptor(s), the entire CPE molecule rapidly inserts into membranes forming a complex of 150,000 Mr. Almost simultaneously with insertion, there is a sudden change in ion fluxes.
Bruce A. McClane +2 more
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