Fermentative degradation of acetone by an enrichment culture in membrane-separated culture devices and in cell suspensions |
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Authors: | Harald Platen Peter H. Janssen Bernhard Schink |
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Affiliation: | Equipe de Pathogénie Microbienne Cellulaire et Moléculaire Intestinale, Département de Microbiologie et Immunologie, UFR Sciences Pharmaceutiques Paris XI, 92296 Châtenay-Malabry, France; Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Texas Medical Brance, Galveston, TX 77550, USA |
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Abstract: | Abstract We have recently demonstrated that cultured human intestinal HT-29 and Caco-2 cell lines express receptors for the F1845 fimbrial adhesin harbored by the diarrheagenic C1845 Escherichia coli (Kernéis et al., Infect. Immun. 59 (1991) 4013–4018). This adhesinn belongs to a family of adhesins including the Dr hemagglutinin and the afimbrial adhesin AFA-1 harbored by uropathogenic E. coli . Here we investigated the cell association of laboratory E. coli strains expressing the Dr hemagglutinin and the afimbrial adhesin AFA-I with human cultured enterocyte-like or mucosecreting cells. We observed that the E. coli strains bearing these adhesins adhere both to human intestinal undifferentiated and differentiated fluid-transporting cells, and to mucus-secreting cells. This result strongly suggests a high capacity of intestinal colonization for the uropathogenic E. coli harboring adhesive factors belonging to the Dr adhesin family. These results further corroborate the intestinal colonization by uropathogenic E. coli of the Dr family related to the fecal-perineal-urethral hypothesis of urinary tract infection pathogenesis. |
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Keywords: | Uropathogenic bacteria Escherichia coli Diarrhea Urinary tract infection Cultured human intestinal cells Intestinal colonization |
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