scholarly journals Editorial: Venoms, Animal and Microbial Toxins

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhijian Cao ◽  
Jing-Lin Wang ◽  
Patrick Michael McNutt ◽  
Yuri N. Utkin ◽  
Delavar Shahbazzadeh ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (14) ◽  
pp. 7657
Author(s):  
Subbaiah Chalivendra

Invertebrate pests, such as insects and nematodes, not only cause or transmit human and livestock diseases but also impose serious crop losses by direct injury as well as vectoring pathogenic microbes. The damage is global but greater in developing countries, where human health and food security are more at risk. Although synthetic pesticides have been in use, biological control measures offer advantages via their biodegradability, environmental safety and precise targeting. This is amply demonstrated by the successful and widespread use of Bacillusthuringiensis to control mosquitos and many plant pests, the latter by the transgenic expression of insecticidal proteins from B. thuringiensis in crop plants. Here, I discuss the prospects of using bacterial and fungal toxins for pest control, including the molecular basis of their biocidal activity.


1984 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 273-298 ◽  
Author(s):  
John W. Foster ◽  
Dennis Michael Kinney ◽  
Barbara H. Iglewski
Keyword(s):  

Toxicon ◽  
1968 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 154-155
Author(s):  
F.E.R.
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Amaranath Govindan ◽  
Elamparithi Jayamani ◽  
Victor Lelyveld ◽  
Jack Szostak ◽  
Gary Ruvkun

AbstractMicrobial toxins and virulence factors often target the eukaryotic translation machinery. Caenorhabditis elegans surveils for such microbial attacks by monitoring translational competence, and if a deficit is detected, particular drug detoxification and bacterial defense genes are induced. The bacteria Kocuria rhizophila has evolved countermeasures to animal translational surveillance and defense pathways. Here, we used comprehensive genetic analysis of Kocuria rhizophila to identify the bacterial genetic pathways that inhibit C. elegans translational toxin surveillance and defense. Kocuria rhizophila mutations that disrupt its ability to disable animal immunity and defense map to multiple steps in the biosynthesis of a 50-carbon bacterial carotenoid from 5 carbon precursors. Extracts of the C50 carotenoid from wild type K. rhizophila could restore this bacterial anti-immunity activity to K. rhizophila carotenoid biosynthetic mutant. Corynebacterium glutamicum, also inhibits the C. elegans translation detoxification response by producing the C50 carotenoid decaprenoxanthin, and C. glutamicum carotenoid mutants are defective in this suppression of C. elegans detoxification. Consistent with the salience of these bacterial countermeasures to animal drug responses, bacterial carotenoids sensitize C. elegans to drugs that target translation and inhibit food aversion behaviors normally induced by protein translation toxins or mutations. The surveillance and response to toxins is mediated by signaling pathways conserved across animal phylogeny, suggesting that these bacterial carotenoids may also suppress such human immune and toxin responses.


Cancers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (20) ◽  
pp. 5159
Author(s):  
Janani Panneerselvam ◽  
Venkateshwar Madka ◽  
Rajani Rai ◽  
Katherine T. Morris ◽  
Courtney W. Houchen ◽  
...  

Obesity-associated chronic inflammation predisposes colon cancer risk development. Interleukin-23 (IL-23) is a potential inflammatory mediator linking obesity to chronic colonic inflammation, altered gut microbiome, and colon carcinogenesis. We aimed to elucidate the role of pro-inflammatory eicosanoids and gut bacterial toxins in priming dendritic cells and macrophages for IL-23 secretion to promote colon tumor progression. To investigate the association of IL-23 with obesity and colon tumorigenesis, we utilized TCGA data set and colonic tumors from humans and preclinical models. To understand IL-23 production by inflammatory mediators and gut microbial toxins, we performed several in vitro mechanistic studies to mimic the tumor microenvironment. Colonic tumors were utilized to perform the ex vivo experiments. Our findings showed that IL-23 is elevated in obese individuals, colonic tumors and correlated with reduced disease-free survival. In vitro studies showed that IL-23 treatment increased the colon tumor cell self-renewal, migration, and invasion while disrupting epithelial barrier permeability. Co-culture experiments of educated dendritic cells/macrophages with colon cancer cells significantly increased the tumor aggression by increasing the secretory levels of IL-23, and these observations are further supported by ex vivo rat colonic tumor organotypic experiments. Our results demonstrate gut microbe toxins and eicosanoids facilitate IL-23 production, which plays an important role in obesity-associated colonic tumor progression. This newly identified nexus represents a potential target for the prevention and treatment of obesity-associated colon cancer.


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