Large Doses of Major Surface Glycoprotein-Sensitized Donor Splenocytes Transferred to Corticosteroid Treated Rats with Pneumocystis Pneumonia Result in Successful Reduction of Organism Burden

2003 ◽  
Vol 50 (s1) ◽  
pp. 666-667
Author(s):  
TIMOTHY D. THULLEN ◽  
PETER D. WALZER
2019 ◽  
Vol 58 (6) ◽  
pp. 779-788 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maud Gits-Muselli ◽  
P Lewis White ◽  
Carlo Mengoli ◽  
Sharon Chen ◽  
Brendan Crowley ◽  
...  

Abstract Quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) is increasingly used to detect Pneumocystis jirovecii for the diagnosis of Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP), but there are differences in the nucleic acids targeted, DNA only versus whole nucleic acid (WNA), and also the target genes for amplification. Through the Fungal PCR Initiative, a working group of the International Society for Human and Animal Mycology, a multicenter and monocenter evaluation of PCP qPCR assays was performed. For the multicenter study, 16 reference laboratories from eight different countries, performing 20 assays analyzed a panel consisting of two negative and three PCP positive samples. Aliquots were prepared by pooling residual material from 20 negative or positive- P. jirovecii bronchoalveolar lavage fluids (BALFs). The positive pool was diluted to obtain three concentrations (pure 1:1; 1:100; and 1:1000 to mimic high, medium, and low fungal loads, respectively). The monocenter study compared five in-house and five commercial qPCR assays testing 19 individual BALFs on the same amplification platform. Across both evaluations and for all fungal loads, targeting WNA and the mitochondrial small sub-unit (mtSSU) provided the earliest Cq values, compared to only targeting DNA and the mitochondrial large subunit, the major surface glycoprotein or the beta-tubulin genes. Thus, reverse transcriptase-qPCR targeting the mtSSU gene could serve as a basis for standardizing the P. jirovecii load, which is essential if qPCR is to be incorporated into clinical care pathways as the reference method, accepting that additional parameters such as amplification platforms still need evaluation.


2000 ◽  
Vol 68 (1) ◽  
pp. 80-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
De-Qiao Chen ◽  
Bala Krishna Kolli ◽  
Nagendra Yadava ◽  
Hong Gang Lu ◽  
Alice Gilman-Sachs ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The major surface glycoprotein (gp63) of Leishmania amazonensis is a metalloprotease implicated in the infection of mammalian macrophages. The expression of gp63 and its participation in this infection were further examined by modulating the level of this molecule in a virulent gp63-abundant wild-type clone. Promastigotes were transfected with gp63 genes cloned into aLeishmania-specific vector in two different orientations, leading to the expression of gp63 sense and antisense RNAs. With increasing selective pressure, cell surface gp63 was increasingly augmented in the transfectants with sense transcripts and suppressed to a very low level in those with antisense transcripts. Thus, the expression of gp63 from chromosomal, repetitive genes is not stringently regulated at the protein level and can be substantially reduced by episomal antisense transcription of a single copy. The transfectants differed significantly only in the level of gp63, thereby allowing specific evaluation of this molecule in leishmanial infection of macrophages in vitro. Kinetic studies of infection in vitro indicate that gp63 plays a role not only in the binding of this parasite to these macrophages but also in its intramacrophage survival and replication.


2002 ◽  
Vol 277 (50) ◽  
pp. 48899-48904 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lynn M. Thomson ◽  
Douglas J. Lamont ◽  
Angela Mehlert ◽  
J. David Barry ◽  
Michael A. J. Ferguson

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