surface cell
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barbara L. Dutrow

Animation flies through the mineral structure of analcime, a mineral with ionic to superionic conductivity. Structure is represented by a ball (showing atoms) and stick (showing bonds) model. The beginning view is a “surface cell” perpendicular to the channel axis looking down <111> to view the pseudo-trigonal representation. Channel axes is 273 Angstroms wide. First image is about 23 times the channel width or 1288 unit cells. Courtesy of David Palmer, CrystalMaker.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barbara L. Dutrow

Animation flies through the mineral structure of analcime, a mineral with ionic to superionic conductivity. Structure is represented by a ball (showing atoms) and stick (showing bonds) model. The beginning view is a “surface cell” perpendicular to the channel axis looking down <111> to view the pseudo-trigonal representation. Channel axes is 273 Angstroms wide. First image is about 23 times the channel width or 1288 unit cells. Courtesy of David Palmer, CrystalMaker.


Author(s):  
Nicholas A. Stella ◽  
Kimberly M. Brothers ◽  
Robert M. Q. Shanks

Introduction. Serratia marcescens is a bacterial pathogen that causes ventilator-associated pneumonia and ocular infections. The FlhD and FlhC proteins complex to form a heteromeric transcription factor whose regulon, in S. marcescens , regulates genes for the production of flagellum, phospholipase A and the cytolysin ShlA. The previously identified mutation, scrp-31, resulted in highly elevated expression of the flhDC operon. The scrp-31 mutant was observed to be more cytotoxic to human airway and ocular surface epithelial cells than the wild-type bacteria and the present study sought to identify the mechanism underlying the increased cytotoxicity phenotype. Hypothesis/Gap Statement. Although FlhC and FlhD have been implicated as virulence determinants, the mechanisms by which these proteins regulate bacterial cytotoxicity to different cell types remains unclear. Aim. This study aimed to evaluate the mechanisms of FlhDC-mediated cytotoxicity to human epithelial cells by S. marcescens . Methodology. Wild-type and mutant bacteria and bacterial secretomes were used to challenge airway and ocular surface cell lines as evaluated by resazurin and calcein AM staining. Pathogenesis was further tested using a Galleria mellonella infection model. Results. The increased cytotoxicity of scrp-31 bacteria and secretomes to both cell lines was eliminated by mutation of flhD and shlA. Mutation of the flagellin gene had no impact on cytotoxicity under any tested condition. Elimination of the phospholipase gene, phlA, had no effect on bacteria-induced cytotoxicity to either cell line, but reduced cytotoxicity caused by secretomes to airway epithelial cells. Mutation of flhD and shlA, but not phlA, reduced bacterial killing of G. mellonella larvae. Conclusion. This study indicates that the S. marcescens FlhDC-regulated secreted proteins PhlA and ShlA, but not flagellin, are cytotoxic to airway and ocular surface cells and demonstrates differences in human epithelial cell susceptibility to PhlA.


2020 ◽  
Vol 167 (2) ◽  
pp. 020524 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alastair Hales ◽  
Mohamed Waseem Marzook ◽  
Laura Bravo Diaz ◽  
Yatish Patel ◽  
Gregory Offer

2018 ◽  
Vol 43 (9) ◽  
pp. 1097-1101 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alison M McDermott ◽  
Hasna Baidouri ◽  
Ashley M Woodward ◽  
Wendy R Kam ◽  
Yang Liu ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 115 (17) ◽  
pp. 4471-4476 ◽  
Author(s):  
Calvin K. Lee ◽  
Jaime de Anda ◽  
Amy E. Baker ◽  
Rachel R. Bennett ◽  
Yun Luo ◽  
...  

Using multigenerational, single-cell tracking we explore the earliest events of biofilm formation byPseudomonas aeruginosa. During initial stages of surface engagement (≤20 h), the surface cell population of this microbe comprises overwhelmingly cells that attach poorly (∼95% stay <30 s, well below the ∼1-h division time) with little increase in surface population. If we harvest cells previously exposed to a surface and direct them to a virgin surface, we find that these surface-exposed cells and their descendants attach strongly and then rapidly increase the surface cell population. This “adaptive,” time-delayed adhesion requires determinants we showed previously are critical for surface sensing: type IV pili (TFP) and cAMP signaling via the Pil-Chp-TFP system. We show that these surface-adapted cells exhibit damped, coupled out-of-phase oscillations of intracellular cAMP levels and associated TFP activity that persist for multiple generations, whereas surface-naïve cells show uncorrelated cAMP and TFP activity. These correlated cAMP–TFP oscillations, which effectively impart intergenerational memory to cells in a lineage, can be understood in terms of a Turing stochastic model based on the Pil-Chp-TFP framework. Importantly, these cAMP–TFP oscillations create a state characterized by a suppression of TFP motility coordinated across entire lineages and lead to a drastic increase in the number of surface-associated cells with near-zero translational motion. The appearance of this surface-adapted state, which can serve to define the historical classification of “irreversibly attached” cells, correlates with family tree architectures that facilitate exponential increases in surface cell populations necessary for biofilm formation.


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