scholarly journals Clostridium Spore Attachment to Human Cells

1997 ◽  
Vol 3 (S2) ◽  
pp. 1251-1252
Author(s):  
B. Panessa-Warren ◽  
G. Tortora ◽  
J. Warren

This paper uses high resolution scanning electron microscopy (SEM) with a LaB6 gun and the newest commercial field emission guns, to obtain high magnification images of intact clostridial spores throughout the activation/germination/outgrowth process. by high resolution SEM, the clostridial exosporial membrane can be seen to produce numerous delicate projections (following activation), that extend from the exosporial surface to a nutritive substrate (agar), or cell surface when anaerobically incubated in the presence of human cells (embryonic fibroblasts and colon carcinoma cells). Magnifications of 20,000 to 200,000Xs at accelerating voltages low enough to minimize or eliminate specimen damage (1-5 kV) have permitted the entire surface of C.sporogenes and C.difficile endospores to be examined during all stages of germination. The relationships between the spore and the agar or human cell surface were also clearly visible.Clostridium sporogenes ATCC 3584 and C.difficile ATCC 43594 and 9689 were grown in cooked meat media, filtered and cleaned.

1996 ◽  
Vol 134 (4) ◽  
pp. 1089-1096 ◽  
Author(s):  
A R Günthert ◽  
J Sträter ◽  
U von Reyher ◽  
C Henne ◽  
S Joos ◽  
...  

Ligation of CD95 (APO-1/Fas) cell surface receptors induces death in apoptosis-sensitive cells. Induction of apoptosis in adherent gamma interferon-stimulated HT-29 and COLO 205 colon carcinoma cells by cross-linking CD95 with anti-APO-1 monoclonal antibody resulted in detachment of the cells from hyaluronate starting about 1 h after antibody exposure. Loss of adhesion was paralleled by a substantial reduction of the multifunctional cell surface adhesion molecule CD44. As evidenced by cycloheximide treatment, this effect was not caused by impaired protein synthesis. Depletion of surface CD44 was also not due to membrane blebbing, since cytochalasin B failed to inhibit ascension from hyaluronate. Instead, ELISA and time kinetics showed increasing amounts of soluble CD44 in the supernatant of CD95-triggered cells. SDS-PAGE revealed that soluble CD44 had an apparent molecular mass of about 20 kD less than CD44 immunoprecipitated from intact cells. Thus, CD95-triggering induced shedding of CD44. Shedding is a novel mechanism operative in early steps of CD95-mediated apoptosis. Shedding surface molecules like CD44 might contribute to the active disintegration of dying epithelial cells in vivo.


Author(s):  
Robin L. Stears

Clostridium sporogenes has been designated as a test species for the closely related but pathogenic Cl. perfringens. Cl. sporogenes possess a unique morphology. High resolution EM has not been applied and little is known about its calcium distribution, thus this study presents a morphological evaluation as well as data on calcium localization, which is considered important for endospore resistance.Cl. Sporogenes was grown on cooked meat/media. Sporulation was monitered using the malachite green method. After maximum sporulation the spores were harvested in deionized distilled water, heated for 20 minutes at 80°C to kill any remaining vegetative cells, washed 3 times with sterile deionized water and the stock suspension was stored at 2-8°C until needed. Aliquots of the spores were placed momentarily in warm agar prior to fixation then fixed in 3% gluteraldehyde (GCHO) in 0.1 M cacodylate buffer pH 7.4 to which Ca was deleted or with 1% CaCl.


1984 ◽  
Vol 99 (2) ◽  
pp. 403-417 ◽  
Author(s):  
R V Iozzo

After 24 h of continuous labeling with radioactive precursors, a high molecular weight heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HS-PG) was isolated from both the medium and cell layer of human colon carcinoma cells (WiDr) in culture. The medium HS-PG eluted from a diethylaminoethyl anion exchange column with 0.45-0.50 M NaCl, had an average density of 1.46-1.49 g/ml on dissociative CsCl density-gradient ultracentrifugation, and eluted from Sepharose CL-2B with a Kav = 0.57. This proteoglycan had an estimated Mr of congruent to 8.5 X 10(5), with glycosaminoglycan chains of Mr = 3 X 10(4) which were all susceptible to HNO2 deaminative cleavage. Deglycosylation of the HS-PG with polyhydrogen fluoride resulted in a 3H-core protein with Mr congruent to 2.4 X 10(5). The cell layer contained a population of HS-PG with characteristics almost identical to that released into the medium but with a larger Mr = 9.5 X 10(5). Furthermore, an intracellular pool contained smaller heparan sulfate chains (Mr congruent to 1 X 10(4)) which were mostly devoid of protein core. In pulse chase experiments, only the large cell-associated HS-PG was released (approximately 58%) into the medium as intact proteoglycan and/or internalized and degraded (approximately 42%), with a t1/2 = 6 h. However, the small intracellular component was never released into the medium and was degraded at a much slower rate. When the cells were subjected to mild proteolytic treatment, only the large cell-associated HS-PG, but none of the small component, was displaced. Addition of exogenous heparin did not displace any HS-PG into the medium. Both light and electron microscopic immunocytochemistry revealed that the cell surface reacted with antibody against an HS-PG isolated from a basement membrane-producing tumor. Electron microscopic histochemistry using ruthenium red and/or cuprolinic blue revealed numerous 10-50-nm diam granules and 70-220-nm-long electron-dense filaments, respectively, on the surface of the tumor cells. The results indicate that colon carcinoma cells synthesize HS-PGs with distinct structural and metabolic characteristics: a large secretory pool with high turnover, which appears to be synthesized as an integral membrane component and localized primarily at the cell surface, and a small nonsecretory pool with low turnover localized predominantly within the cell interior. This culture system offers an opportunity to investigate in detail the mechanisms involved in the regulation of proteoglycan metabolism, and in the establishment of the neoplastic phenotype.


2000 ◽  
Vol 6 (S2) ◽  
pp. 660-661
Author(s):  
B.J. Panessa-Warren ◽  
G.T. Tortora ◽  
J.B. Warren

The small (0.5-0.75 um) Clostridial endospores are highly resistant to solvents, acids, bases, radiation, heat, cold, pressure, vacuum and most sporicides. C.difficile causes antibiotic induced pseudomembranous colitis, and is responsible for almost 20% of nosocomial diarrheas in todays hospitals. These endospores have been found on hospital floors, sheets and bedding, as well as on the hands and white coats of hospital personnel.Our previous studies revealed that these endospores attach to agar by using a two phase attachment process. To examine if this mechanism for spore attachment is also responsible for C.difficile pathogenesis in the human colon, spore attachment and invasion of monolayers of human colon carcinoma cells (Caco-2 cells) using two strains of C.difficile,(ATCC 43594 an isolate from a patient with pseudomembranous colitis [FIG.1A] and ATCC 9689 a clinical microbology laboratory quality control strain) was studied. Cell monolayers grown on 6mm coverslips were inoculated with 10 ul of spore suspension (0.5 McFarland turbidity in sterile water),


Planta Medica ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 80 (16) ◽  
Author(s):  
R Paduch ◽  
M Tomczyk ◽  
A Wiater ◽  
A Dudek ◽  
M Pleszczynska ◽  
...  

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