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1.
Cocultivation of Legionella pneumophila and free-living amoebae.   总被引:30,自引:11,他引:19       下载免费PDF全文
Studies of the interaction of Legionella pneumophila with free-living amoebae showed that Naegleria lovaniensis and Acanthamoeba royreba could use L. pneumophila as a sole food source. However, growth of the amoebae on nonnutrient agar plates seeded with L. pneumophila was slower than growth on nonnutrient agar plates seeded with Escherichia coli. On inoculation of L. pneumophila into axenic cultures of N. lovaniensis and A. royreba, 99.9% of the L. pneumophila was destroyed within 24 h. After several weeks, however, some amoeba cultures became chronically infected and supported the growth of L. pneumophila. Amoebae exposed to L. pneumophila and containing adhered L. pneumophila, L. pneumophila antigens, or both, showed no increased pathogenic potential on intranasal inoculation of weanling mice. Similarly, L. pneumophila propagated in chronically infected amoeba cultures showed no increase in virulence on intraperitoneal inoculation of guinea pigs relative to L. pneumophila grown in yeast extract broth.  相似文献   

2.
The need for protozoa for the proliferation of Legionella pneumophila in aquatic habitats is still not fully understood and is even questioned by some investigators. This study shows the in vivo growth of L. pneumophila in protozoa in aquatic biofilms developing at high concentrations on plasticized polyvinyl chloride in a batch system with autoclaved tap water. The inoculum, a mixed microbial community including indigenous L. pneumophila originating from a tap water system, was added in an unfiltered as well as filtered (cellulose nitrate, 3.0-microm pore size) state. Both the attached and suspended biomasses were examined for their total amounts of ATP, for culturable L. pneumophila, and for their concentrations of protozoa. L. pneumophila grew to high numbers (6.3 log CFU/cm2) only in flasks with an unfiltered inoculum. Filtration obviously removed the growth-supporting factor, but it did not affect biofilm formation, as determined by measuring ATP. Cultivation, direct counting, and 18S ribosomal DNA-targeted PCR with subsequent sequencing revealed the presence of Hartmannella vermiformis in all flasks in which L. pneumophila multiplied and also when cycloheximide had been added. Fluorescent in situ hybridization clearly demonstrated the intracellular growth of L. pneumophila in trophozoites of H. vermiformis, with 25.9% +/- 10.5% of the trophozoites containing L. pneumophila on day 10 and >90% containing L. pneumophila on day 14. Calculations confirmed that intracellular growth was most likely the only way for L. pneumophila to proliferate within the biofilm. Higher biofilm concentrations, measured as amounts of ATP, gave higher L. pneumophila concentrations, and therefore the growth of L. pneumophila within engineered water systems can be limited by controlling biofilm formation.  相似文献   

3.
Isothermal nucleic acid sequence-based amplification (NASBA) was applied to detect Legionella 16S rRNA. The assay was originally developed as a Legionella pneumophila conventional NASBA assay with electrochemiluminescence (ECL) detection and was subsequently adapted to a L. pneumophila real-time NASBA format and a Legionella spp. real-time NASBA using molecular beacons. L. pneumophila RNA prepared from a plasmid construct was used to assess the analytical sensitivity of the assay. The sensitivity of the NASBA assay was 10 molecules of in vitro wild type L. pneumophila RNA and 0.1-1 colony-forming units (CFU) of L. pneumophila. In spiked respiratory specimens, the sensitivity of the NASBA assays was 1-10000 CFU of L. pneumophila serotype 1 depending on the background. After dilution of the nucleic acid extract prior to amplification, 1-10 CFU of L. pneumophila serotype 1 could be detected with both detection methods. Finally, 27 respiratory specimens, well characterized by culture and PCR, collected during a L. pneumophila outbreak, were tested by conventional and real-time NASBAs. All 11 PCR positive samples were positive by conventional NASBA, 9/11 and 10/11 were positive by L. pneumophila real-time NASBA and Legionella spp. real-time NASBA, respectively.  相似文献   

4.
We have examined the interaction between interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma)-activated human monocytes and Legionella pneumophila, the agent of Legionnaires' disease. Human monocytes activated with human recombinant IFN-gamma inhibit the intracellular multiplication of L. pneumophila. The degree of inhibition is proportional to the concentration of IFN-gamma, and maximal inhibition consistently occurs with greater than or equal to 2 micrograms/ml. Monoclonal anti-IFN-gamma antibody completely neutralizes the capacity of IFN-gamma to activate monocytes. Monocytes infected 24 hr after explantation maximally inhibit L. pneumophila multiplication if treated with IFN-gamma before infection or up to 2 hr after infection; treatment 6 hr or more after infection results in submaximal inhibition. Monocytes infected 48 hr after explantation inhibit L. pneumophila multiplication maximally if treated with IFN-gamma up to 12 hr before infection, but submaximally if treated at the time of infection. Once activated, monocytes inhibit L. pneumophila multiplication in the absence of IFN-gamma in the culture. Strikingly, monocytes maximally inhibit L. pneumophila multiplication after treatment with IFN-gamma for as briefly as 1 hr before infection. In the absence of anti-L. pneumophila antibody, neither IFN-gamma-activated monocytes nor nonactivated monocytes kill L. pneumophila. In the presence of specific antibody and complement, IFN-gamma-activated monocytes kill a proportion (0.5 log) of an inoculum but not more than nonactivated monocytes. L. pneumophila forms a specialized phagosome in IFN-gamma-activated monocytes that does not differ ultrastructurally from the L. pneumophila phagosome in nonactivated monocytes. These results demonstrate that IFN-gamma can activate human monocytes to exert a potent antimicrobial effect against a highly virulent intracellular bacterial pathogen. These findings extend previous observations on interactions between activated mononuclear phagocytes and L. pneumophila, and additionally support the hypothesis that cell-mediated immunity plays a major role in host defense against L. pneumophila.  相似文献   

5.
With the mutagenesis of specific, virulence-associated genes of Legionella pneumophila as the eventual goal, methods for gene transfer to these bacteria were developed. Following the observations of others that conjugative, broad-host-range plasmids could be transferred from Escherichia coli to L. pneumophila at low frequency, we constructed a small mobilizable vector, pTLP1, which carries oriV from pBR322, oriT from pRK2, Kmr from Tn5, and an L. pneumophila-derived fragment to permit chromosomal integration. In triparental matings including an E. coli with a conjugative (Tra+) helper plasmid, kanamycin-resistance was transferred from E. coli to L. pneumophila. Southern hybridization of L. pneumophila transconjugants showed that pTLP1 was replicated autonomously. Additional matings of plasmids having deletions or substitutions of pTLP1 sequences confirmed that replication in L. pneumophila requires oriV only. pTLP1 was maintained in L. pneumophila with passage on medium containing kanamycin but was rapidly lost after passage on nonselective medium. This plasmid instability in L. pneumophila is most likely due to rapid generation of plasmid-free segregants because of plasmid multimerization and low plasmid copy number. We conclude that mobilizable pBR322-derived plasmids can be used as shuttle vectors to transfer cloned genes to L. pneumophila, a feature that can be exploited for the purposes of mutagenesis or genetic complementation.  相似文献   

6.
A water culture containing naturally occurring Legionella pneumophila and associated microbiota was maintained in the laboratory by serially transferring the culture in tap water which had been sterilized by membrane filtration. Successful maintenance of the water culture depended upon transferring the culture when the growth of L. pneumophila was in the late-exponential to early-stationary phase. The water culture was used as a source of naturally occurring bacteria to determine some of the parameters which affect the multiplication of L. pneumophila in tap water. Naturally occurring L. pneumophila multiplied at a temperature between 25 and 37 degrees C, at pH levels of 5.5 to 9.2, and at concentrations of dissolved oxygen of 6.0 to 6.7 mg/liter. Multiplication did not occur in tap water which contained less than 2.2 mg of dissolved oxygen per liter. An association was observed between the multiplication of L. pneumophila and the non-Legionellaceae bacteria which were also present in the water culture. The method of preserving naturally occurring L. pneumophila and associated microbiota may facilitate studies on the symbiosis of L. pneumophila with other microorganisms.  相似文献   

7.
A naturally occurring suspension of Legionella pneumophila and associated microbiota contained three unidentified non-Legionellaceae bacteria which supported satellite growth of a subculture of L. pneumophila on an L-cysteine-deficient medium and another bacterium which did not support growth of the subculture. Washed suspensions containing 10(3), 10(5), 10(7), or 10(8) CFU of a mixture of isolates of these non-Legionellaceae bacteria failed to support the multiplication of an isolate of agar-grown L. pneumophila which had been washed and seeded into the suspensions. The suspensions which contained 10(3), 10(5), or 10(7) CFU of the non-Legionellaceae bacteria per ml appeared to enhance survival or cryptic growth of agar-grown L. pneumophila. A decline of 1.3 log CFU of L. pneumophila per ml occurred within the first week of incubation in the sample which contained 10(8) CFU of the non-Legionellaceae bacteria per ml. In contrast to these results, naturally occurring L. pneumophila multiplied in the presence of associated microbiota. The necessity to subculture L. pneumophila and the non-Legionellaceae bacteria on artificial medium to obtain pure cultures may have affected the multiplication of L. pneumophila in tap water. Alternatively, other microorganisms may be present in the naturally occurring suspension which support the growth of this bacterium.  相似文献   

8.
A naturally occurring suspension of Legionella pneumophila and associated microbiota contained three unidentified non-Legionellaceae bacteria which supported satellite growth of a subculture of L. pneumophila on an L-cysteine-deficient medium and another bacterium which did not support growth of the subculture. Washed suspensions containing 10(3), 10(5), 10(7), or 10(8) CFU of a mixture of isolates of these non-Legionellaceae bacteria failed to support the multiplication of an isolate of agar-grown L. pneumophila which had been washed and seeded into the suspensions. The suspensions which contained 10(3), 10(5), or 10(7) CFU of the non-Legionellaceae bacteria per ml appeared to enhance survival or cryptic growth of agar-grown L. pneumophila. A decline of 1.3 log CFU of L. pneumophila per ml occurred within the first week of incubation in the sample which contained 10(8) CFU of the non-Legionellaceae bacteria per ml. In contrast to these results, naturally occurring L. pneumophila multiplied in the presence of associated microbiota. The necessity to subculture L. pneumophila and the non-Legionellaceae bacteria on artificial medium to obtain pure cultures may have affected the multiplication of L. pneumophila in tap water. Alternatively, other microorganisms may be present in the naturally occurring suspension which support the growth of this bacterium.  相似文献   

9.
This study examined whether Legionella pneumophila is able to thrive on heat-killed microbial cells (necrotrophy) present in biofilms or heat-treated water systems. Quantification by means of plate counting, real-time PCR, and flow cytometry demonstrated necrotrophic growth of L. pneumophila in water after 96 h, when at least 100 dead cells are available to one L. pneumophila cell. Compared to the starting concentration of L. pneumophila, the maximum observed necrotrophic growth was 1.89 log units for real-time PCR and 1.49 log units for plate counting. The average growth was 1.57 +/- 0.32 log units (n = 5) for real-time PCR and 1.14 +/- 0.35 log units (n = 5) for plate counting. Viability staining and flow cytometry showed that the fraction of living cells in the L. pneumophila population rose from the initial 54% to 82% after 96 h. Growth was measured on heat-killed Pseudomonas putida, Escherichia coli, Acanthamoeba castellanii, Saccharomyces boulardii, and a biofilm sample. Gram-positive organisms did not result in significant growth of L. pneumophila, probably due to their robust cell wall structure. Although necrotrophy showed lower growth yields compared to replication within protozoan hosts, these findings indicate that it may be of major importance in the environmental persistence of L. pneumophila. Techniques aimed at the elimination of protozoa or biofilm from water systems will not necessarily result in a subsequent removal of L. pneumophila unless the formation of dead microbial cells is minimized.  相似文献   

10.
A study was conducted to determine the bactericidal effects of ozone and hydrogen peroxide relative to that of free chlorine on Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1. In laboratory batch-type experiments, organisms seeded at various densities were exposed to different concentrations of these biocides in demand-free buffers. Bactericidal effects were measured by determining the ability of L. pneumophila to grow on buffered charcoal-yeast extract agar supplemented with alpha-ketoglutarate. Ozone was the most potent of the three biocides, with a greater than 99% kill of L. pneumophila occurring during a 5-min exposure to 0.10 to 0.30 micrograms of O3 per ml. The bactericidal action of O3 was not markedly affected by changes in pH or temperature. Concentrations of 0.30 and 0.40 micrograms of free chlorine per ml killed 99% of the L. pneumophila after 30- and 5-min exposures, respectively. A 30-min exposure to 1,000 micrograms of H2O2 per ml was required to effect a 99% reduction of the viable L. pneumophila population. However, no viable L. pneumophila could be detected after a 24-h exposure to 100 or 300 micrograms of H2O2 per ml. Attempts were made to correlate the biocidal effects of O3 and H2O2 with the oxidation of L. pneumophila fatty acids. These tests indicated that certain biocidal concentrations of O3 and H2O2 resulted in a loss or severe reduction of L. pneumophila unsaturated fatty acids.  相似文献   

11.
Alveolar macrophage activation in experimental legionellosis.   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
Legionella pneumophila is a facultative intracellular parasite of alveolar macrophages. In vitro studies have shown that lymphokine-activated mononuclear phagocytes inhibit intracellular replication of L. pneumophila. To determine if recovery from legionellosis is associated with activation of alveolar macrophages in vivo to resist L. pneumophila, we studied an animal model of Legionnaires' disease. Rats were exposed to aerosolized L. pneumophila and alveolar macrophages were harvested during the recovery phase of infection. We compared these alveolar exudate macrophages with normal resident alveolar macrophages for the capacity to support or inhibit the intracellular growth of L. pneumophila. We also measured Ia expression as a marker of immunologic activation, and studied binding of bacteria, superoxide release, and the expression of transferrin receptors as potential mechanisms of resistance to L. pneumophila. For perspective on the specificity of these responses, we also studied alveolar exudate cells elicited by inhalation of heat-killed L. pneumophila, live Listeria monocytogenes, and live Escherichia coli. We found that alveolar exudate macrophages elicited by live L. pneumophila, but not heat-killed L. pneumophila, resisted the intracellular growth of L. pneumophila. Exudate macrophages in resolving legionellosis exhibited increased Ia expression, diminished superoxide production, and downregulation of transferrin receptors. Binding of L. pneumophila to exudate macrophages was indistinguishable from that to resident macrophages in the presence of normal serum, and augmented in the presence of immune serum. Alveolar exudate macrophages elicited by E. coli also inhibited growth of L. pneumophila, and exhibited a modest increase in Ia expression without change in transferrin receptors. Exudate cells induced by L. monocytogenes exhibited up-regulation of Ia without diminution of superoxide release. Alveolar cells harvested after inhalation of heat-killed L. pneumophila did not differ from resident alveolar macrophages in the expression of surface markers. These findings suggest that alveolar macrophages are immunologically activated in vivo to serve as effector cells in resolving legionellosis, and that live bacteria are required to induce this expression of immunity. The mechanism of resistance to parasitism by L. pneumophila may entail restriction of the intracellular availability of iron, but does not involve diminished bacterial binding or an augmented respiratory burst.  相似文献   

12.
A water culture containing naturally occurring Legionella pneumophila and associated microbiota was maintained in the laboratory by serially transferring the culture in tap water which had been sterilized by membrane filtration. Successful maintenance of the water culture depended upon transferring the culture when the growth of L. pneumophila was in the late-exponential to early-stationary phase. The water culture was used as a source of naturally occurring bacteria to determine some of the parameters which affect the multiplication of L. pneumophila in tap water. Naturally occurring L. pneumophila multiplied at a temperature between 25 and 37 degrees C, at pH levels of 5.5 to 9.2, and at concentrations of dissolved oxygen of 6.0 to 6.7 mg/liter. Multiplication did not occur in tap water which contained less than 2.2 mg of dissolved oxygen per liter. An association was observed between the multiplication of L. pneumophila and the non-Legionellaceae bacteria which were also present in the water culture. The method of preserving naturally occurring L. pneumophila and associated microbiota may facilitate studies on the symbiosis of L. pneumophila with other microorganisms.  相似文献   

13.
Interspecific complementation of an Escherichia coli recA mutant with a Legionella pneumophila genomic library was used to identify a recombinant plasmid encoding the L. pneumophila recA gene. Recombinant E. coli strains harbouring the L. pneumophila recA gene were isolated by replica-plating bacterial colonies on medium containing methyl methanesulphonate (MMS). MMS-resistant clones were identified as encoding the L. pneumophila recA analogue by their ability to protect E. coli HB101 from UV exposure and promote homologous recombination. Subcloning of selected restriction fragments and Tn5 mutagenesis localized the recA gene to a 1.7 kb Bg/II-EcoRI fragment. Analysis of minicell preparations harbouring a 1.9 kb EcoRI fragment containing the recA coding segment revealed a single 37.5 kDa protein. Insertional inactivation of the cloned recA gene by Tn5 resulted in the disappearance of the 37.5 kDa protein, concomitant with the loss of RecA function. The L. pneumophila recA gene product did not promote induction of a lambda lysogen; instead, the presence of the heterologous recA gene caused a significant reduction in spontaneous and mitomycin-C-induced prophage induction in recA+ and recA E. coli backgrounds. Despite the lack of significant genetic homology between the L. pneumophila recA gene and the E. coli counterpart, the L. pneumophila RecA protein was nearly identical to that of E. coli in molecular mass, and the two proteins showed antigenic cross-reactivity. Western blot analysis of UV-treated L. pneumophila revealed a significant increase in RecA antigen in irradiated versus control cells, suggesting that the L. pneumophila recA gene is regulated in a manner similar to that of E. coli recA.  相似文献   

14.
Ecology of Legionella pneumophila within water distribution systems   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The reservoir for hospital-acquired Legionnaires disease has been shown to be the potable water distribution system. We investigated the influence of the natural microbial population and sediment (scale and organic particulates) found in water systems as growth-promoting factors for Legionella pneumophila. Our in vitro experiments showed that: (i) water from hot-water storage tank readily supported the survival of L. pneumophila, (ii) the concentration of sediment was directly related to the survival of L. pneumophila, (iii) the presence of environmental bacteria improved the survival of L. pneumophila via nutritional symbiosis, (iv) the combination of sediment and environmental bacteria acted synergistically to improve the survival of L. pneumophila, and (v) the role of sediment in this synergistic effect was determined to be nutritional. Sediment was found to stimulate the growth of environmental microflora, which in turn stimulated the growth of L. pneumophila. These findings confirm the empiric observations of the predilection of L. pneumophila for growth in hot-water tanks and its localization to sediment. L. pneumophila occupies an ecological niche within the potable water system, with interrelationships between microflora, sediment, and temperature.  相似文献   

15.
The population structure of Legionella pneumophila was studied by using partial RNA polymerase gene (rpoB) and DotA gene (dotA) sequences. Trees inferred from rpoB sequences showed that two subspecies of L. pneumophila, Legionella pneumophila subsp. pneumophila and Legionella pneumophila subsp. fraseri, were clearly separated genetically. In both rpoB and dotA trees, 79 Korean isolates used in this study constituted six clonal populations, four of which (designated subgroups P-I to P-IV) were identified in L. pneumophila subsp. pneumophila and two of which (designated subgroups F-I and F-II) were identified in L. pneumophila subsp. fraseri. Although the relationships among subgroups were not identical, such subgrouping was congruent between the rpoB and dotA trees. Type strains of several serogroups did not belong to any subgroup, presumably because isolates similar to these strains were not present among our local sample of the population. There was evidence that horizontal gene transfer or recombination had occurred within L. pneumophila. Contrary to the phylogeny from rpoB and the taxonomic context, subgroups P-III and P-IV of L. pneumophila subsp. pneumophila proved to be closely related to those of L. pneumophila subsp. fraseri or showed a distinct clustering in the dotA tree. It can be inferred that dotA of subgroups P-III and P-IV has been transferred horizontally from other subspecies. The diverse distribution of serogroup 1 strains through the gene trees suggests that surface antigen-coding genes that determine serogroup can be exchanged. Thus, it can be inferred that genetic recombination has been important in the evolution of L. pneumophila.  相似文献   

16.
We have recently described the expression of two pili of different lengths on the surface of Legionella pneumophila (B. J. Stone and Y. Abu Kwaik, Infect. Immun. 66:1768-1775, 1998). Production of long pili requires a functional pilEL locus, encoding a type IV pilin protein. Since type IV pili in Neisseria gonorrhoeae are associated with competence for DNA transformation, we examined the competence of L. pneumophila for DNA transformation under conditions that allowed the expression of type IV pili. We show that L. pneumophila is naturally competent for DNA transformation by isogenic chromosomal DNA and by plasmid DNA containing L. pneumophila DNA. Many different L. pneumophila loci are able to transform L. pneumophila after addition of plasmid DNA, including gspA, ppa, asd, and pilEL. The transformation frequency is reduced when competing DNA containing either L. pneumophila DNA or vector sequences is added to the bacteria, suggesting that uptake-specific sequences may not be involved in DNA uptake. Competence for DNA transformation correlates with expression of the type IV pili, and a pilEL mutant defective in expression of type IV pili is not competent for DNA transformation. Complementation of the mutant for competence is restored by the reintroduction of a cosmid that restores production of type IV pili. Minimal competence is restored to the mutant by introduction of pilEL alone. We conclude that competence for DNA transformation in L. pneumophila is associated with expression of the type IV pilus and results in recombination of L. pneumophila DNA into the chromosome. Since expression of type IV pili also facilitates attachment of L. pneumophila to mammalian cells and protozoa, we designated the type IV pili CAP (for competence- and adherence-associated pili).  相似文献   

17.
A study was conducted to determine the bactericidal effects of ozone and hydrogen peroxide relative to that of free chlorine on Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1. In laboratory batch-type experiments, organisms seeded at various densities were exposed to different concentrations of these biocides in demand-free buffers. Bactericidal effects were measured by determining the ability of L. pneumophila to grow on buffered charcoal-yeast extract agar supplemented with alpha-ketoglutarate. Ozone was the most potent of the three biocides, with a greater than 99% kill of L. pneumophila occurring during a 5-min exposure to 0.10 to 0.30 micrograms of O3 per ml. The bactericidal action of O3 was not markedly affected by changes in pH or temperature. Concentrations of 0.30 and 0.40 micrograms of free chlorine per ml killed 99% of the L. pneumophila after 30- and 5-min exposures, respectively. A 30-min exposure to 1,000 micrograms of H2O2 per ml was required to effect a 99% reduction of the viable L. pneumophila population. However, no viable L. pneumophila could be detected after a 24-h exposure to 100 or 300 micrograms of H2O2 per ml. Attempts were made to correlate the biocidal effects of O3 and H2O2 with the oxidation of L. pneumophila fatty acids. These tests indicated that certain biocidal concentrations of O3 and H2O2 resulted in a loss or severe reduction of L. pneumophila unsaturated fatty acids.  相似文献   

18.
The beta-lactamases of six Legionella species were characterized by isoelectric focusing, gel filtration, and substrate profiles. Fifteen strains of L. bozemanii, L. dumoffii, L. gormanii, L. longbeachae, and L. pneumophila produced beta-lactamases active against nitrocefin. L. micdadei enzymes previously reported to be beta-lactamase negative caused a very slow pH-dependent breakdown of nitrocefin and degraded penicillin G at high substrate concentrations. The bioassay revealed predominantly penicillinase activity for all species except L. micdadei, which had no activity in this assay. The apparent molecular weights of enzymes of L. bozemanii, L. gormanii, and L. pneumophila were in the range of 15,000 to 32,000, and those of L. micdadei and L. longbeachae were greater than 250,000. The isoelectric focusing of extracts of Legionella strains in polyacrylamide gels showed beta-lactamase types specific for species (L. bozemanii, L. gormanii, and L. pneumophila) and serotype (L. pneumophila). It demonstrated four different beta-lactamase types in L. pneumophila and revealed close relationships among L. pneumophila serotypes 1, 3, and 6. L. pneumophila enzymes formed band patterns only in polyacrylamide gels containing 6 M urea, whereas L. dumoffii and L. longbeachae enzymes did not form bands in any of the gels. None of the band patterns resembled those of known plasmid-mediated beta-lactamases. These experiments suggest that isoelectric focusing of chromosomal beta-lactamases may be a valuable tool for taxonomic studies.  相似文献   

19.
目的:建立针对嗜肺军团菌Mip基因的实时荧光定量TaqMan PCR检测方法,并进行自来水和空调冷却水模拟标本的检测评价。方法:根据嗜肺军团菌Mip基因的特异性序列设计引物和TaqMan探针,建立嗜肺军团菌的实时荧光定量TaqMan PCR快速检测方法,对方法进行灵敏度及特异性评价,并对自来水和空调冷却水模拟标本中的嗜肺军团菌进行检测。结果:建立的方法对嗜肺军团菌的检测具有高度特异性,与3种非嗜肺军团菌和6种其他呼吸道病原均没有交叉反应;基因组DNA的检测灵敏度为1.6pg/μL,模拟自来水和空调冷却水标本的检测灵敏度为10CFU/mL。结论:建立的TaqMan荧光定量PCR方法特异、灵敏、快速,适于嗜肺军团菌的日常监测和暴发疫情的应急诊断。  相似文献   

20.
Legionella pneumophila is the causative pathogen of Legionnaires' disease, which is characterized by severe pneumonia. In regard to the pathophysiology of Legionella infection, the role of inflammatory phagocytes such as macrophages has been well documented, but the involvement of dendritic cells (DCs) has not been clarified. In this study, we have investigated the immune responses that DCs generate in vitro and in vivo after contact with L. pneumophila. Heat- and formalin-killed L. pneumophila, but not live L. pneumophila, induced immature DCs to undergo similar phenotypic maturation, but the secreted proinflammatory cytokines showed different patterns. The mechanisms of the DC maturation by heat- or formalin-killed L. pneumophila depended, at least in part, on Toll-like receptor 4 signaling or on Legionella LPS, respectively. After transfer to naive mice, DCs pulsed with dead Legionella produced serum Ig isotype responses specific for Legionella, leading to protective immunity against an otherwise lethal respiratory challenge with L. pneumophila. The in vivo immune responses required the Ag presentation of DCs, especially that on MHC class II molecules, and the immunity yielded cross-protection between clinical and environmental strains of L. pneumophila. Although the DC maturation was impaired by live Legionella, macrophages were activated by live as well as dead L. pneumophila, as evidenced by the up-regulation of MHC class II. Finally, DCs, but not macrophages, exhibited a proliferative response to live L. pneumophila that was consistent with their cell cycle progression. These findings provide a better understanding of the role of DCs in adaptive immunity to Legionella infection.  相似文献   

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