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Clostridioides difficile toxin B alone and with pro-inflammatory cytokines induces apoptosis in enteric glial cells by activating three different signalling pathways mediated by caspases, calpains and cathepsin B
Clostridioides difficile toxin B alone and with pro-inflammatory cytokines induces apoptosis in enteric glial cells by activating three different signalling pathways mediated by caspases, calpains and cathepsin B
Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) causes nosocomial/antibiotic-associated gastrointestinal diseases with dramatically increasing global incidence and mortality rates. The main C. difficile virulence factors, toxins A and B (TcdA/TcdB), cause cytopathic/cytotoxic effects and inflammation. We d …
·pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov·
Clostridioides difficile toxin B alone and with pro-inflammatory cytokines induces apoptosis in enteric glial cells by activating three different signalling pathways mediated by caspases, calpains and cathepsin B
The Gut Bacterial Community Potentiates Clostridioides difficile Infection Severity
The Gut Bacterial Community Potentiates Clostridioides difficile Infection Severity
The severity of Clostridioides difficile infections (CDI) has increased over the last few decades. Patient age, white blood cell count, and creatinine levels as well as C. difficile ribotype and toxin genes have been associated with disease severity. However, it is unclear whether specific members o …
·pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov·
The Gut Bacterial Community Potentiates Clostridioides difficile Infection Severity
The Gut Bacterial Community Potentiates Clostridioides difficile Infection Severity - PubMed
The Gut Bacterial Community Potentiates Clostridioides difficile Infection Severity - PubMed
The severity of Clostridioides difficile infections (CDI) has increased over the last few decades. Patient age, white blood cell count, and creatinine levels as well as C. difficile ribotype and toxin genes have been associated with disease severity. However, it is unclear whether specific members o …
·pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov·
The Gut Bacterial Community Potentiates Clostridioides difficile Infection Severity - PubMed
Influence of Binary Toxin Gene Detection and Decreased Susceptibility to Antibiotics among Clostridioides difficile Strains on Disease Severity: a Single-Center Study
Influence of Binary Toxin Gene Detection and Decreased Susceptibility to Antibiotics among Clostridioides difficile Strains on Disease Severity: a Single-Center Study
Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) is the fifth leading cause of death from nonmalignant gastrointestinal disease in the United States. The contribution of resistance to C. difficile-active antibiotics to the outcomes of CDI is unclear. We evaluated the antimicrobial susceptibility of C. diffi …
·pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov·
Influence of Binary Toxin Gene Detection and Decreased Susceptibility to Antibiotics among Clostridioides difficile Strains on Disease Severity: a Single-Center Study
Clostridioides difficile bile salt hydrolase activity has substrate specificity and affects biofilm formation | bioRxiv
Clostridioides difficile bile salt hydrolase activity has substrate specificity and affects biofilm formation | bioRxiv
The Clostridioides difficile pathogen is responsible for nosocomial infections. Germination is an essential step for the establishment of C. difficile infection (CDI) because toxins that are secreted by vegetative cells are responsible for the symptoms of CDI. Germination can be stimulated by the combinatorial actions of certain amino acids and either conjugated or deconjugated cholic acid-derived bile salts. During synthesis in the liver, cholic acid- and chenodeoxycholic acid-class bile salts are conjugated with either taurine or glycine at the C24 carboxyl. During GI transit, these conjugated bile salts are deconjugated by microbes that express bile salt hydrolases (BSHs). Here, we surprisingly find that several C. difficile strains have BSH activity. We observed this activity in both C. difficile vegetative cells and in spores and that the observed BSH activity was specific to taurine-derived bile salts. Additionally, we find that this BSH activity can produce cholate for metabolic conversion to deoxycholate by C. scindens . The C. scindens -produced deoxycholate signals to C. difficile to initiate biofilm formation. Our results show that C. difficile BSH activity has the potential to influence the interactions between microbes and this could extend to the GI setting. Importance Both primary and secondary bile salts are well-established to impact C. difficile spore germination and vegetative growth. Here, we find that C. difficile vegetative cells, and spores, have bile salt hydrolase activity that is specific to taurine-derived bile salts. When grown in co-culture with the secondary bile salt-producing bacterium, C. scindens , we find that C. difficile -mediated deconjugation of taurocholate, ‘feeds’ C. scindens cholate. C. scindens 7α-dehydroxylates cholate to deoxycholate. The C. scindens- produced deoxycholate then stimulates biofilm formation by C. difficile cells. Thus, this suggests that the bile salt hydrolase activity expressed by several C. difficile strains could be responsible for modulating in vivo biofilm formation and maintenance in a host.
·biorxiv.org·
Clostridioides difficile bile salt hydrolase activity has substrate specificity and affects biofilm formation | bioRxiv
Clostridioides difficile toxin B alone and with pro-inflammatory cytokines induces apoptosis in enteric glial cells by activating three different signalling pathways mediated by caspases, calpains and cathepsin B
Clostridioides difficile toxin B alone and with pro-inflammatory cytokines induces apoptosis in enteric glial cells by activating three different signalling pathways mediated by caspases, calpains and cathepsin B
Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) causes nosocomial/antibiotic-associated gastrointestinal diseases with dramatically increasing global incidence and mortality rates. The main C. difficile virulence factors, toxins A and B (TcdA/TcdB), cause cytopathic/cytotoxic effects and inflammation. We d …
·pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov·
Clostridioides difficile toxin B alone and with pro-inflammatory cytokines induces apoptosis in enteric glial cells by activating three different signalling pathways mediated by caspases, calpains and cathepsin B
Influence of Binary Toxin Gene Detection and Decreased Susceptibility to Antibiotics among Clostridioides difficile Strains on Disease Severity: a Single-Center Study
Influence of Binary Toxin Gene Detection and Decreased Susceptibility to Antibiotics among Clostridioides difficile Strains on Disease Severity: a Single-Center Study
Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) is the fifth leading cause of death from nonmalignant gastrointestinal disease in the United States. The contribution of resistance to C. difficile-active antibiotics to the outcomes of CDI is unclear. We evaluated the antimicrobial susceptibility of C. diffi …
·pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov·
Influence of Binary Toxin Gene Detection and Decreased Susceptibility to Antibiotics among Clostridioides difficile Strains on Disease Severity: a Single-Center Study
Differential Overlap in Human and Animal Fecal Microbiomes and Resistomes in Rural versus Urban Bangladesh
Differential Overlap in Human and Animal Fecal Microbiomes and Resistomes in Rural versus Urban Bangladesh
Low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) bear the largest mortality burden of antibiotic-resistant infections. Small-scale animal production and free-roaming domestic animals are common in many LMICs, yet data on zoonotic exchange of gut bacteria and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in low-income …
·pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov·
Differential Overlap in Human and Animal Fecal Microbiomes and Resistomes in Rural versus Urban Bangladesh
d-Proline Reductase Underlies Proline-Dependent Growth of Clostridioides difficile
d-Proline Reductase Underlies Proline-Dependent Growth of Clostridioides difficile
Clostridioides difficile is a nosocomial pathogen that colonizes the gut and causes diarrhea, colitis, and severe inflammation. Recently, C. difficile has been shown to use toxin-mediated inflammation to promote host collagen degradation, which releases several amino acids into the environment. Amin …
·pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov·
d-Proline Reductase Underlies Proline-Dependent Growth of Clostridioides difficile
The Gut Bacterial Community Potentiates Clostridioides difficile Infection Severity
The Gut Bacterial Community Potentiates Clostridioides difficile Infection Severity
The severity of Clostridioides difficile infections (CDI) has increased over the last few decades. Patient age, white blood cell count, and creatinine levels as well as C. difficile ribotype and toxin genes have been associated with disease severity. However, it is unclear whether specific members o …
·pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov·
The Gut Bacterial Community Potentiates Clostridioides difficile Infection Severity
Raoultibacter phocaeensis sp. nov., A New Bacterium Isolated from a Patient with Recurrent Clostridioides difficile Infection
Raoultibacter phocaeensis sp. nov., A New Bacterium Isolated from a Patient with Recurrent Clostridioides difficile Infection
Strain Marseille-P8396T is a new species isolated from a patient with recurrent Clostridioides difficile infection. Its optimal growth condition was observed at pH of 7.5, at a temperature of 37 °C after 72 h of incubation on Columbia agar (BioMérieux, France) with 5% sheep blood, under a …
·pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov·
Raoultibacter phocaeensis sp. nov., A New Bacterium Isolated from a Patient with Recurrent Clostridioides difficile Infection
Microbiome Changes in Patients With Burns Impact C. Difficile Incidence - Physician's Weekly
Microbiome Changes in Patients With Burns Impact C. Difficile Incidence - Physician's Weekly
“Diarrhea is very common among the critically ill, including patients with burns,” Parisa Shoaei, PhD, and Bahareh Vakili, PhD, note. “Following a burn injury, intestinal permeability, displacement of bacteria, and/or endotoxins lead to serious complications, including gut-derived infection, inflammatory bowel disease, colon cancer, obesity, and inflammation in the lungs, liver, and intestines. The gut flora
·physiciansweekly.com·
Microbiome Changes in Patients With Burns Impact C. Difficile Incidence - Physician's Weekly
Brown Journal of Hospital Medicine on Twitter
Brown Journal of Hospital Medicine on Twitter
Clostridium difficile infection @medcomic #BJHM #Cdiff #GItwitter #Medtwitter #MedEd #IDtwitter #Medstudenttwitter pic.twitter.com/Zwth3YbWHh— Brown Journal of Hospital Medicine (@BrownJHM) July 19, 2022
·twitter.com·
Brown Journal of Hospital Medicine on Twitter
Surface layer protein A from hypervirulent Clostridioides difficile ribotype can induce autophagy process in human intestinal epithelial cells
Surface layer protein A from hypervirulent Clostridioides difficile ribotype can induce autophagy process in human intestinal epithelial cells
Clostridioides difficile is the leading cause of nosocomial diarrhea with high morbidity and mortality worldwide. C. difficile strains produce a crystalline surface layer protein A (SlpA), which is an absolute necessity for its pathogenesis. However, its pathogenic mechanisms and its pro-inflammator …
·pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov·
Surface layer protein A from hypervirulent Clostridioides difficile ribotype can induce autophagy process in human intestinal epithelial cells
Coinfection of the intestinal tract with Aeromonas hydrophila, Clostridium difficile and Rotavirus - a case report
Coinfection of the intestinal tract with Aeromonas hydrophila, Clostridium difficile and Rotavirus - a case report
Most cases of acute diarrhea in adults are of infectious etiology, likely viral and self-limited. Among those with severe diarrhea, however, bacterial causes are responsible for most cases.Apart from the standard stool cultures, to increase the positive yield a novel multiplex molecular test can be …
·pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov·
Coinfection of the intestinal tract with Aeromonas hydrophila, Clostridium difficile and Rotavirus - a case report
Response Regulator CD1688 Is a Negative Modulator of Sporulation in Clostridioides difficile
Response Regulator CD1688 Is a Negative Modulator of Sporulation in Clostridioides difficile
Two-component signal transduction systems (TCSs), consisting of a sensor histidine kinase (HK) and a response regulator (RR), sense environmental stimuli and then modulate cellular responses, typically through changes in gene expression. Our previous work identified the DNA binding motif of CD1586, …
·pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov·
Response Regulator CD1688 Is a Negative Modulator of Sporulation in Clostridioides difficile
Host and microbial-derived metabolites for Clostridioides difficile infection: Contributions, mechanisms and potential applications - PubMed
Host and microbial-derived metabolites for Clostridioides difficile infection: Contributions, mechanisms and potential applications - PubMed
Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI), which mostly occurs in hospitalized patients, is the most common and costly health care-associated disease. However, the biology of C. difficile remains incompletely understood. Current therapeutics are still challenged by the frequent recurrence of CDI. Adv …
·pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov·
Host and microbial-derived metabolites for Clostridioides difficile infection: Contributions, mechanisms and potential applications - PubMed
Clostridioides difficile: Characterization of the circulating toxinotypes in an Argentinean public hospital - PubMed
Clostridioides difficile: Characterization of the circulating toxinotypes in an Argentinean public hospital - PubMed
Clostridioides difficile is a spore-forming anaerobe microorganism associated to nosocomial diarrhea. Its virulence is mainly associated with TcdA and TcdB toxins, encoded by their respective tcdA and tcdB genes. These genes are part of the pathogenicity locus (PaLoc). Our aim was to characterize re …
·pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov·
Clostridioides difficile: Characterization of the circulating toxinotypes in an Argentinean public hospital - PubMed
8 Must-Read GI Studies for the Primary Care Physician
8 Must-Read GI Studies for the Primary Care Physician
Gastroenterologist Vivek Kaul, MD, reviews his top picks for primary care clinicians from the 2022 Digestive Disease Week, the premier meeting for the GI specialty.
·medscape.com·
8 Must-Read GI Studies for the Primary Care Physician
Carriage of three plasmids in a single human clinical isolate of Clostridioides difficile | bioRxiv
Carriage of three plasmids in a single human clinical isolate of Clostridioides difficile | bioRxiv
A subset of clinical isolates of Clostridioides difficile contains one or more plasmids and these plasmids can harbor virulence and antimicrobial resistance determinants. Despite their potential importance, C. difficile plasmids remain poorly characterized. Here, we describe a human clinical isolate that carries three plasmids from three different plasmid families that are therefore compatible. For two of these, we identify a region capable of sustaining plasmid replication in C. difficile . Together, our data advance our understanding of C. difficile plasmid biology. ### Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.
·biorxiv.org·
Carriage of three plasmids in a single human clinical isolate of Clostridioides difficile | bioRxiv
Sarah Revitt-Mills, PhD on Twitter
Sarah Revitt-Mills, PhD on Twitter
Next we have Ashleigh Rogers (@AshleighPRogers) from @MonashUni who asks how does infection-associated damage from #Clostridoides difficile alters the colons ability to regenerate?They have found that #Cdiff infection resulted in sustained damage to the #GI tract.— Sarah Revitt-Mills, PhD (@Sci_Sez) July 13, 2022
·twitter.com·
Sarah Revitt-Mills, PhD on Twitter