41 research outputs found

    Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron-derived outer membrane vesicles promote regulatory dendritic cell responses in health but not in inflammatory bowel disease

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    BACKGROUND: Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron (Bt) is a prominent member of the human intestinal microbiota that, like all gram-negative bacteria, naturally generates nanosized outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) which bud off from the cell surface. Importantly, OMVs can cross the intestinal epithelial barrier to mediate microbe-host cell crosstalk involving both epithelial and immune cells to help maintain intestinal homeostasis. Here, we have examined the interaction between Bt OMVs and blood or colonic mucosa-derived dendritic cells (DC) from healthy individuals and patients with Crohn's disease (CD) or ulcerative colitis (UC). RESULTS: In healthy individuals, Bt OMVs stimulated significant (p < 0.05) IL-10 expression by colonic DC, whereas in peripheral blood-derived DC they also stimulated significant (p < 0.001 and p < 0.01, respectively) expression of IL-6 and the activation marker CD80. Conversely, in UC Bt OMVs were unable to elicit IL-10 expression by colonic DC. There were also reduced numbers of CD103+ DC in the colon of both UC and CD patients compared to controls, supporting a loss of regulatory DC in both diseases. Furthermore, in CD and UC, Bt OMVs elicited a significantly lower proportion of DC which expressed IL-10 (p < 0.01 and p < 0.001, respectively) in blood compared to controls. These alterations in DC responses to Bt OMVs were seen in patients with inactive disease, and thus are indicative of intrinsic defects in immune responses to this commensal in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). CONCLUSIONS: Overall, our findings suggest a key role for OMVs generated by the commensal gut bacterium Bt in directing a balanced immune response to constituents of the microbiota locally and systemically during health which is altered in IBD patients. Video Abstract

    Реструктуризация как инструмент повышения эффективности функционирования предприятий регионального инвестиционно-строительного комплекса (на примере Республики Татарстан): автореферат диссертации на соискание ученой степени кандидата экономических наук: специальность 08.00.05 - Экономика и управление народным хозяйством (региональная экономика)

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    One innovative solution to traffic congestion is to use real-time data and Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITSs) to optimize the existing transportation system. To address this need, we propose an algorithm for real-time automatic congestion identification that uses speed probe data and the corresponding weather and visibility to build a unified model. Based on traffic flow theory, the algorithm assumes three traffic states: congestion, speed-at-capacity, and free-flow. Our algorithm assumes that speed is drawn from a mixture of three components, whose means are functions of weather and visibility and defined using a linear regression of their predictors. The parameters of the model were estimated using three empirical datasets from Virginia, California, and Texas. The fitted model was used to calculate the speed cut-off between congestion and speed-at-capacity by minimizing either the Bayesian classification error or the false positive (congestion) rate. The test results showed promising congestion identification performance.</p

    A macrophage-based screen identifies antibacterial compounds selective for intracellular Salmonella Typhimurium.

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    Salmonella Typhimurium (S. Tm) establishes systemic infection in susceptible hosts by evading the innate immune response and replicating within host phagocytes. Here, we sought to identify inhibitors of intracellular S. Tm replication by conducting parallel chemical screens against S. Tm growing in macrophage-mimicking media and within macrophages. We identify several compounds that inhibit Salmonella growth in the intracellular environment and in acidic, ion-limited media. We report on the antimicrobial activity of the psychoactive drug metergoline, which is specific against intracellular S. Tm. Screening an S. Tm deletion library in the presence of metergoline reveals hypersensitization of outer membrane mutants to metergoline activity. Metergoline disrupts the proton motive force at the bacterial cytoplasmic membrane and extends animal survival during a systemic S. Tm infection. This work highlights the predictive nature of intracellular screens for in vivo efficacy, and identifies metergoline as a novel antimicrobial active against Salmonella
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