41 research outputs found

    Global gene-expression analysis of the response of Salmonella Enteritidis to egg-white exposure reveals multiple egg-white-imposed stress responses

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    Chicken egg white protects the embryo from bacterial invaders by presenting an assortment of antagonistic activities that combine together to both kill and inhibit growth. The key features of the egg-white anti-bacterial system are iron restriction, high pH, antibacterial peptides and proteins, and viscosity. Salmonella enterica serovar Enteritidis is the major pathogen responsible for egg-borne infection in humans, which is partly explained by its exceptional capacity for survival under the harsh conditions encountered within egg white. However, at temperatures up to 42 ËšC, egg white exerts a much stronger bactericidal effect on S. Enteritidis than at lower tempertaures, although the mechanism of egg-white-induced killing is only partly understood. Here, for the first time, the impact of exposure of S. Enteritidis to egg white under bactericidal conditions (45 ËšC) is explored by global-expression analysis. A large-scale (18.7% of genome) shift in transcription is revealed suggesting major changes in specific aspects of S. Enteritidis physiology: induction of egg-white related stress-responses (envelope damage, exposure to heat and alkalinity, and translation shutdown); shift in energy metabolism from respiration to fermentation; and enhanced micronutrient provision (due to iron and biotin restriction). Little evidence of DNA damage or redox stress was obtained. Instead, data are consistent with envelope damage resulting in cell death by lysis. A surprise was the high degree of induction of hexonate/hexuronate utilisation genes, despite no evidence indicating the presence of these substrates in egg white

    Egg white versus Salmonella Enteritidis! A harsh medium meets a resilient pathogen

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    Salmonella enterica serovar Enteritidis is the prevalent egg-product-related food-borne pathogen. The egg-contamination capacity of S. Enteritidis includes its exceptional survival capability within the harsh conditions provided by egg white. Egg white proteins, such as lysozyme and ovotransferrin, are well known to play important roles in defence against bacterial invaders. Indeed, several additional minor proteins and peptides have recently been found to play known or potential roles in protection against bacterial contamination. However, although such antibacterial proteins are well studied, little is known about their efficacy under the environmental conditions prevalent in egg white. Thus, the influence of factors such as temperature, alkalinity, nutrient restriction, viscosity and cooperative interactions on the activities of antibacterial proteins in egg white remains unclear. This review critically assesses the available evidence on the antimicrobial components of egg white. In addition, mechanisms employed by S. Enteritidis to resist egg white exposure are also considered along with various genetic studies that have shed light upon egg white resistance systems. We also consider how multiple, antibacterial proteins operate in association with specific environmental factors within egg white to generate a lethal protective cocktail that preserves sterility

    The anti-bacterial iron-restriction defence mechanisms of egg white; the potential role of three lipocalin-like proteins in resistance against Salmonella

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    Salmonella enterica serovar Enteritidis (SE) is the most frequently-detected Salmonella in foodborne outbreaks in the European Union. Among such outbreaks, egg and egg products were identified as the most common vehicles of infection. Possibly, the major antibacterial property of egg white is iron restriction, which results from the presence of the iron-binding protein, ovotransferrin. To circumvent iron restriction, SE synthesise catecholate siderophores (i.e. enterobactin and salmochelin) that can chelate iron from host iron-binding proteins. Here, we highlight the role of lipocalin-like proteins found in egg white that could enhance egg-white iron restriction through sequestration of certain siderophores, including enterobactin. Indeed, it is now apparent that the egg-white lipocalin, Ex-FABP, can inhibit bacterial growth via its siderophore-binding capacity in vitro. However, it remains unclear whether ex-FABP performs such a function in egg white or during bird infection. Regarding the two other lipocalins of egg white (Cal-γ and α-1-glycoprotein), there is currently no evidence to indicate that they sequester siderophores

    Due testi a confronto

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    The two parallel biographies, the Syriac Life of Peter the Iberian, the Georgian prince who converted to Christianity, and the Life of Melania the Younger, the Roman patrician, have come down to us through a manuscript tradition and attest to the spread of monastic practices in Palestine around the 5th century. The texts allow us to investigate this phenomenon through the interpretation of selected passages which show how the common narrative of some certain significant events attests to the existence (and the fervent activity) of monastic circuits in Gaza, marked by particular lifestyles and guided by doctrinal choices. This inquiry, as well as providing important information on a certain kind of monasticism, offers the chance to make useful comparisons with the other forms of monasticism that enlivened the East in Late Antiquity

    Transport of Particles in Intestinal Mucus under Simulated Infant and Adult Physiological Conditions: Impact of Mucus Structure and Extracellular DNA

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    The final boundary between digested food and the cells that take up nutrients in the small intestine is a protective layer of mucus. In this work, the microstructural organization and permeability of the intestinal mucus have been determined under conditions simulating those of infant and adult human small intestines. As a model, we used the mucus from the proximal (jejunal) small intestines of piglets and adult pigs. Confocal microscopy of both unfixed and fixed mucosal tissue showed mucus lining the entire jejunal epithelium. The mucus contained DNA from shed epithelial cells at different stages of degradation, with higher amounts of DNA found in the adult pig. The pig mucus comprised a coherent network of mucin and DNA with higher viscosity than the more heterogeneous piglet mucus, which resulted in increased permeability of the latter to 500-nm and 1-µm latex beads. Multiple-particle tracking experiments revealed that diffusion of the probe particles was considerably enhanced after treating mucus with DNase. The fraction of diffusive 500-nm probe particles increased in the pig mucus from 0.6% to 64% and in the piglet mucus from ca. 30% to 77% after the treatment. This suggests that extracellular DNA can significantly contribute to the microrheology and barrier properties of the intestinal mucus layer. To our knowledge, this is the first time that the structure and permeability of the small intestinal mucus have been compared between different age groups and the contribution of extracellular DNA highlighted. The results help to define rules governing colloidal transport in the developing small intestine. These are required for engineering orally administered pharmaceutical preparations with improved delivery, as well as for fabricating novel foods with enhanced nutritional quality or for controlled calorie uptake

    Cisaillements, création d'interfaces et traitements thermiques : effet sur la dénaturation des protéines du blanc d'œuf et leurs propriétés fonctionnelles

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    Les ovoproduits sont utilisés comme ingrédients dans de nombreux secteurs agroalimentaires pour leur techno-fonctionnalité unique. Les industriels de la filière ovoproduits doivent fournir un produit alliant fonctionnalité et sécurité sanitaire. Les traitements de stabilisation appliqués au blanc d'œuf permettent une bonne maîtrise de l'hygiène mais entraînent aussi une altération des propriétés fonctionnelles. L'objectif de cette étude est donc d'identifier les étapes des procédés industriels les plus dénaturantes pour la fonctionnalité du blanc d'œuf et d'élucider les mécanismes moléculaires responsables de ces dénaturations. La première partie de cette étude est consacrée à la cartographie des lignes industrielles de transformation du blanc d'œuf. Les effets de chaque étape sur les propriétés fonctionnelles du produit et la conformation de ses protéines sont analysés. Outre l'effet connu des traitements thermiques, les interfaces avec l'air et les cisaillements s'avèrent aussi responsables de pertes de fonctionnalité. Par ailleurs, ces modifications ont pu être corrélées avec des changements de conformation de protéines. La seconde partie de cette étude est consacrée à l'effet de l'interface air-eau sur la structure de 3 protéines majeures du blanc d'œuf : ovalbumine, ovotransferrine et lysozyme. Seules en solution, l'ovalbumine se dénature et s'agrège à l'interface, l'ovotransferrine subit d'importants changements de structure tertiaire et secondaire, alors que le lysozyme ne subit aucune modification irréversible de sa structure. En mélange ternaire, ces protéines forment des agrégats covalents. Enfin, la troisième partie de ce travail constitue une première approche de l'effet des cisaillements sur la fonctionnalité et la structure des protéines de blanc d'œuf. Des interactions importantes avec les traitements thermiques, les variations de pH ou de force ionique ont été démontrées.RENNES-Agrocampus-CRD (352382323) / SudocSudocFranceF
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