Publications
| Title | Abstract | Year Filter | PMID(sorted descending) Filter |
|---|
| reduction of listeria monocytogenes and bacillus cereus in milk by zinc oxide nanoparticles. | direct addition of antimicrobial materials to food during food processing is an effective method for controlling microbial contaminants of food and extending the shelf- life of food products. objective of this research was to study the antimicrobial effect of zinc oxide (zno) nanoparticle and potential applications of zno nanoparticles in terms of controling two food-borne pathogens in milk. | 2015 | 26351469 |
| mosquitocidal properties of bacillus species isolated from mangroves of vellar estuary, southeast coast of india. | samples collected from the mangroves of vellar estuary yielded a mosquitocidal bacterium, whose secondary metabolites exhibited mosquito larvicidal and pupicidal activity. the bacterium was isolated using standard microbiological methods and identified using classical biochemical tests. the mosquitocidal bacterium was identified as bacillus subtilis, bacillus thuringiensis, bacillus sphaericus and bacillus cereus. mosquitocidal metabolite(s) was separated from the culture supernatant of the bact ... | 2013 | 26345039 |
| antibacterial activity of cinnamaldehyde and clove oil: effect on selected foodborne pathogens in model food systems and watermelon juice. | natural additives for the control of microbial growth are in demand because consumers prefer them over synthetic ones. in the present investigation, the antibacterial activity of two natural preservatives, cinnamaldeyde and clove oil alone or in combinations was studied, and their potential as food preservative in model food systems and watermelon juice was evaluated. the cinnamaldehyde and clove essential oil showed minimum inhibitory concentration (mic) at or below 5000 mg/l, and fractional in ... | 2014 | 26344998 |
| a study on characterization of new bacteriocin produced from a novel strain of lactobacillus spicheri g2 isolated from gundruk- a fermented vegetable product of north east india: a novel bacteriocin production from lactobacillus spicheri g2. | bacteriocin producing lactobacillus spicheri g2, isolated from gundruk - a traditional fermented vegetable product of north east india. l. spicheri g2 identified by morphological, biochemical techniques followed by 16s rrna gene technique. the 16sr rna sequence of bacteriocin producer is registered in ncbi under accession no. jx481912. the bacteriocin producing potential of l. spicheri is being reported for the first time in the present investigation. bacteriocin of l. spicheri g2 showed strong ... | 2015 | 26344995 |
| bacteria present in comadia redtenbacheri larvae (lepidoptera: cossidae). | the external and internal culturable bacterial community present in the larvae of comadia redtenbacheri hammerschmidt, an edible insect, was studied. characterization of the isolates determined the existence of 18 morphotypes and phylogenetic analysis of the 16s rrna gene revealed the existence of paenibacillus sp., bacillus safensis, pseudomonas sp., bacillus pseudomycoides, corynebacterium variabile, enterococcus sp., gordonia sp., acinetobacter calcoaceticus, arthrobacter sp., micrococcus sp. ... | 2015 | 26336239 |
| poly(n-isopropylacrylamide)-gated fe3o4/sio2 core shell nanoparticles with expanded mesoporous structures for the temperature triggered release of lysozyme. | core-shell nanoparticles comprised of fe3o4 cores and a mesoporous silica shell with an average expanded pore size of 6.07 nm and coated with a poly(n-isopropylacrylamide) (pnipam) layer (cs-msns-ep-pnipam) were prepared and characterized. the nanoparticles was loaded with (ru(bipy)3(2+)) dye or an antibacterial enzyme, lysozyme, to obtain cs-msns-ep-pnipam-ru(bipy)3(2+) and cs-msns-ep-pnipam-lys, respectively. the lysozyme loading was determined to be 160 mg/g of nanoparticle. it was seen that ... | 2015 | 26335056 |
| synthesis of novel sulfonamide analogs containing sulfamerazine/sulfaguanidine and their biological activities. | sulfamerazine and sulfaguanidine are clenched with p-nitrobenzoyl chloride and the products obtained are reduced to naxs in ethanol-water. novel sulfonamides (6a-g and 9a-g) were synthesized by the reaction of these reduced products (4 and 8) with various sulfonyl chlorides (5a-g). the structures of these compounds were characterized using spectroscopic analysis (ir, (1)h-nmr, (13)c-nmr and hrms) technique. antimicrobial activity of sulfonamides (3, 4, 7, 8, 6a-g and 9a-g) was evaluated by the a ... | 2016 | 26327456 |
| quantitative prevalence and toxin gene profile of bacillus cereus from ready-to-eat vegetables in south korea. | ready-to-eat (rte) foods such as prepared vegetables are becoming an increasingly popular food choice. since rte vegetables are not commonly sterilized by heat treatment, contamination with foodborne pathogens such as bacillus cereus (b. cereus) is a major concern. the objective of this study was to assess the quantitative prevalence and toxin gene profiles of b. cereus strains isolated from rte vegetables. we found that 70 of the 145 (48%) tested retail vegetable salad and sprout samples were p ... | 2015 | 26317539 |
| food sensing: aptamer-based trapping of bacillus cereus spores with specific detection via real time pcr in milk. | aerobic spores pose serious problems for both food product manufacturers and consumers. milk is particularly at risk and thus an important issue of preventive consumer protection and quality assurance. the spore-former bacillus cereus is a food poisoning gram-positive pathogen which mainly produces two different types of toxins, the diarrhea inducing and the emetic toxins. reliable and rapid analytical assays for the detection of b. cereus spores are required, which could be achieved by combinin ... | 2015 | 26306797 |
| analysis of the bacillus cereus spoiis antitoxin-toxin system reveals its three-component nature. | programmed cell death in bacteria is generally associated with two-component toxin-antitoxin systems. the spoiis toxin-antitoxin system, consisting of a membrane-bound spoiisa toxin and a small, cytosolic antitoxin spoiisb, was originally identified in bacillus subtilis. in this work we describe the bacillus cereus spoiis system which is a three-component system, harboring an additional gene spoiisc. its protein product serves as an antitoxin, and similarly as spoiisb, is able to bind spoiisa an ... | 2015 | 26300872 |
| diversity of bacterial communities in the midgut of bactrocera cucurbitae (diptera: tephritidae) populations and their potential use as attractants. | the microbiota plays an important role in insect development and fitness. understanding the gut microbiota composition is essential for the development of pest management strategies. midgut bacteria were isolated from nine wild b. cucurbitae populations collected from different agroecological zones of india. these isolates were further studied for attractant potential of fruit fly adults, and the chemical constituents in the supernatants of gut bacteria were analysed. | 2016 | 26299539 |
| inhibition of quorum sensing-mediated biofilm formation in pseudomonas aeruginosa by a locally isolated bacillus cereus. | quorum sensing has been shown to play a crucial role in pseudomonas aeruginosa pathogenesis where it activates expression of myriad genes that regulate the production of important virulence factors such as biofilm formation. antagonism of quorum sensing is an excellent target for antimicrobial therapy and represents a novel approach to combat drug resistance. in this study, chromobacterium violaceum biosensor strain was employed as a fast, sensitive, reliable, and easy to use tool for rapid scre ... | 2015 | 26288125 |
| toxin profile, biofilm formation, and molecular characterization of emetic toxin-producing bacillus cereus group isolates from human stools. | emetic toxin-producing bacillus cereus group species are an important problem, because the staple food for korean is grains such as rice. in this study, we determined the prevalence (24 of 129 isolates) of emetic b. cereus in 36,745 stool samples from sporadic food-poisoning cases in korea between 2007 and 2008. the toxin gene profile, toxin production, and biofilm-forming ability of the emetic b. cereus isolates were investigated. repetitive element sequence polymorphism polymerase chain reacti ... | 2015 | 26287636 |
| antibacterial effects and action modes of asiatic acid. | in this study, the antibacterial effects and action modes of asiatic acid against the foodborne bacterial pathogens escherichia coli o157:h7, salmonella typhimurium dt104, pseudomonas aeruginosa, listeria monocytogenes, staphylococcus aureus, enterococcus faecalis, and bacillus cereus were examined. minimal inhibitory concentrations (mics) of asiatic acid against these bacteria were in the range of 20-40 μg/ml. minimum bactericidal concentrations of asiatic acid were in the range of 32-52 μg/ml. ... | 2015 | 26280399 |
| comparison of oxytetracycline degradation behavior in pig manure with different antibiotic addition methods. | using manure collected from swine fed with diet containing antibiotics and antibiotic-free swine manure spiked with antibiotics are the two common methods of studying the degradation behavior of veterinary antibiotic in manure in the environment. however, few studies had been conducted to co-compare these two different antibiotic addition methods. this study used oxytetracycline (otc) as a model antibiotic to study antibiotic degradation behavior in manure under the above two otc addition method ... | 2015 | 26278905 |
| bacillus cereus cerebral abscess during induction chemotherapy for childhood acute leukemia. | a 5-year-old boy with standard-risk b-cell acute lymphoblastic anemia developed fever during induction chemotherapy. the patient had no neurological symptoms. blood cultures grew bacillus cereus and neuroimaging studies demonstrated a cerebral abscess. imaging changes resolved after completion of antibiotics. bacillus cereus bacteremia is increasingly implicated as the cause of life-threatening infections, including cerebral abscesses, in compromised patients. positive blood cultures for this or ... | 2015 | 26274034 |
| a type iii protein-rna toxin-antitoxin system from bacillus thuringiensis promotes plasmid retention during spore development. | members of the bacillus cereus sensu lato group of bacteria often contain multiple large plasmids, including those encoding virulence factors in b. anthracis. bacillus species can develop into spores in response to stress. during sporulation the genomic content of the cell is heavily compressed, which could result in counterselection of extrachromosomal genomic elements, unless they have robust stabilization and segregation systems. toxin-antitoxin (ta) systems are near-ubiquitous in prokaryotes ... | 2015 | 26274022 |
| isolation and characterisation of non-anaerobic butanol-producing symbiotic system tsh06. | butanol-producing microorganisms are all obligate anaerobes. in this study, a unique symbiotic system tsh06 was isolated to be capable of producing butanol under non-anaerobic condition. denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (dgge) analysis of 16s ribosomal rna (rrna) revealed that two strains coexist in tsh06. the two strains were identical to clostridium acetobutylicum and bacillus cereus, respectively. they were isolated individually and named as c. acetobutylicum tsh1 and b. cereus tsh2. c ... | 2015 | 26272091 |
| epidemiologic investigation of a cluster of neuroinvasive bacillus cereus infections in 5 patients with acute myelogenous leukemia. | background. five neuroinvasive bacillus cereus infections (4 fatal) occurred in hospitalized patients with acute myelogenous leukemia (aml) during a 9-month period, prompting an investigation by infection control and public health officials. methods. medical records of case-patients were reviewed and a matched case-control study was performed. infection control practices were observed. multiple environmental, food, and medication samples common to aml patients were cultured. multilocus sequenc ... | 2015 | 26269794 |
| reagent-free and portable detection of bacillus anthracis spores using a microfluidic incubator and smartphone microscope. | bacillus anthracis is the causative agent of anthrax and can be contracted by humans and herbivorous mammals by inhalation, ingestion, or cutaneous exposure to bacterial spores. due to its stability and disease potential, b. anthracis is a recognized biothreat agent and robust detection and viability methods are needed to identify spores from unknown samples. here we report the use of smartphone-based microscopy (spm) in combination with a simple microfluidic incubation device (mid) to detect 50 ... | 2015 | 26266749 |
| production and characterization of poly-3-hydroxybutyrate from bacillus cereus ps 10. | usage of renewable raw materials for production of fully degradable bioplastics (bacterial poly-3-hydroxybutyrate, phb) has gained immense research impetus considering recalcitrant nature of petroleum based plastics, dwindling fossil fuel feed stocks, and associated green house gas emissions. however, high production cost of phb is the major bottleneck for its wide range industrial applications. in current study, bacillus cereus ps 10, a recent isolate, efficiently utilized molasses, an abundant ... | 2015 | 26257381 |
| a novel enzyme-based antimicrobial system comprising iodide and a multicopper oxidase isolated from alphaproteobacterium strain q-1. | alphaproteobacterium strain q-1 produces an extracellular multicopper oxidase (iox), which catalyzes iodide (i-) oxidation to form molecular iodine (i2). in this study, the antimicrobial activity of the iox/iodide system was determined. both gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria tested were killed completely within 5 min by 50 mu ml(-1) of iox and 10 mm iodide. the sporicidal activity of the system was also tested and compared with a common iodophor, povidone-iodine (pvp-i). iox (300 mu ml(-1 ... | 2015 | 26254787 |
| genome sequence of bacillus endophyticus and analysis of its companion mechanism in the ketogulonigenium vulgare-bacillus strain consortium. | bacillus strains have been widely used as the companion strain of ketogulonigenium vulgare in the process of vitamin c fermentation. different bacillus strains generate different effects on the growth of k. vulgare and ultimately influence the productivity. first, we identified that bacillus endophyticus hbe603 was an appropriate strain to cooperate with k. vulgare and the product conversion rate exceeded 90% in industrial vitamin c fermentation. here, we report the genome sequencing of the b. e ... | 2015 | 26248285 |
| antiproliferative and antibacterial activity of some glutarimide derivatives. | antiproliferative and antibacterial activities of nine glutarimide derivatives (1-9) were reported. cytotoxicity of compounds was tested toward three human cancer cell lines, hela, k562 and mda-mb-453 by mtt assay. compound 7 (2-benzyl-2-azaspiro[5.11]heptadecane-1,3,7-trione), containing 12-membered ketone ring, was found to be the most potent toward all tested cell lines (ic50 = 9-27 μm). preliminary screening of antibacterial activity by a disk diffusion method showed that gram-positive bacte ... | 2016 | 26247353 |
| bacillus cereus atcc 14579 rpon (sigma 54) is a pleiotropic regulator of growth, carbohydrate metabolism, motility, biofilm formation and toxin production. | sigma 54 is a transcriptional regulator predicted to play a role in physical interaction of bacteria with their environment, including virulence and biofilm formation. in order to study the role of sigma 54 in bacillus cereus, a comparative transcriptome and phenotypic study was performed using b. cereus atcc 14579 wt, a markerless rpon deletion mutant, and its complemented strain. the mutant was impaired in many different cellular functions including low temperature and anaerobic growth, carboh ... | 2015 | 26241851 |
| food-bacteria interplay: pathometabolism of emetic bacillus cereus. | bacillus cereus is a gram-positive endospore forming bacterium known for its wide spectrum of phenotypic traits, enabling it to occupy diverse ecological niches. although the population structure of b. cereus is highly dynamic and rather panmictic, production of the emetic b. cereus toxin cereulide is restricted to strains with specific genotypic traits, associated with distinct environmental habitats. cereulide is an ionophoric dodecadepsipeptide that is produced non-ribosomally by an enzyme co ... | 2015 | 26236290 |
| complete genome sequence analysis and identification of putative metallo-beta-lactamase and spoiiie homologs in bacillus cereus group phage bcp8-2, a new member of the proposed bastille-like group. | bacillus cereus group-specific bacteriophage bcp8-2 exhibits a broad lysis spectrum among food and human isolates (330/364) of b. cereus while not infecting b. subtilis (50) or b. licheniformis (12) strains. its genome is 159,071 bp long with 220 open reading frames, including genes for putative methyltransferases, metallo-beta-lactamase, and a sporulation-related spoiiie homolog, as wells as 18 trnas. comparative genome analysis showed that bcp8-2 is related to the recently proposed bastille-li ... | 2015 | 26234184 |
| response of indigenously developed bacterial consortia in progressive degradation of polyvinyl chloride. | thermoplastic-based materials are recalcitrant in nature, which extensive use affect environmental health. here, we attempt to compare the response of indigenously produced bacterial consortium-i and consortium-ii in degrading polyvinyl chloride (pvc). these consortia were developed by using different combination of bacterial strains of pseudomonas otitidis, bacillus cereus, and acanthopleurobacter pedis from waste disposal sites of northern india after their identification via 16s rdna sequenci ... | 2016 | 26231814 |
| three novel lantibiotics, ticins a1, a3, and a4, have extremely stable properties and are promising food biopreservatives. | lantibiotics are antimicrobial peptides with potential applications as the next generation of antimicrobials in the food industry and/or the pharmaceutical industry. nisin has successfully been used as a food preservative for over 40 years, but its major drawback is its limited stability under neutral and alkaline ph conditions. to identify alternatives with better biochemical properties, we screened more than 100 strains of the bacillus cereus group. three novel lantibiotics, ticins a1 (4,062.9 ... | 2015 | 26231642 |
| starch based biodegradable graft copolymer for the preparation of silver nanoparticles. | the synthesis and characterization of a novel biodegradable graft copolymer based on partially hydrolyzed polymethylacrylate (pma) grafted amylopectin (ap) was reported which was developed for the synthesis of silver nanoparticles from silver nitrate solution by facile green technique. the prepared graft copolymer was biodegradable which was shown by fungal growth. characterization of silver nanoparticles was carried out by uv-vis spectroscopy (417nm), hr-tem, saed and fesem analysis. the tem fi ... | 2015 | 26231330 |
| fatty acid profiles and desaturase-encoding genes are different in thermo- and psychrotolerant strains of the bacillus cereus group. | the bacillus cereus group consists of closely-related bacteria, including pathogenic or harmless strains, and whose species can be positioned along the seven phylogenetic groups of guinebretière et al. (i-vii). they exhibit different growth-temperature ranges, through thermotolerant to psychrotolerant thermotypes. among these, b. cytotoxicus is an atypical thermotolerant and food-poisoning agent affiliated to group vii whose thermotolerance contrasts with the mesophilic and psychrotolerant therm ... | 2015 | 26227277 |
| amplicon sequencing for the quantification of spoilage microbiota in complex foods including bacterial spores. | spoilage of food products is frequently caused by bacterial spores and lactic acid bacteria. identification of these organisms by classic cultivation methods is limited by their ability to form colonies on nutrient agar plates. in this study, we adapted and optimized 16s rrna amplicon sequencing for quantification of bacterial spores in a canned food matrix and for monitoring the outgrowth of spoilage microbiota in a ready-to-eat food matrix. | 2015 | 26217487 |
| lithocholic acid and derivatives: antibacterial activity. | in order to develop bioactive lithocholic acid derivatives, we prepared fifteen semi-synthetic compounds through modification at c-3 and/or c-24. the reactions showed yields ranging from 37% to 100%. the structures of all compounds obtained were identified on the basis of their spectral data (ir, ms, 1d- and 2d-nmr). the activity of lithocholic acid and derivatives was evaluated against the growth of escherichia coli, staphylococcus aureus, bacillus cereus and pseudomonas aeruginosa. the derivat ... | 2015 | 26216208 |
| chitinolytic bacteria-assisted conversion of squid pen and its effect on dyes and pigments adsorption. | the aim of this work was to produce chitosanase by fermenting from squid pen, and recover the fermented squid pen for dye removal by adsorption. one chitosanase induced from squid pen powder (spp)-containing medium by bacillus cereus tku034 was purified in high purification fold (441) and high yield of activity recovery (51%) by ammonium sulfate precipitation and combined column chromatography. the sds-page results showed its molecular mass to be around 43 kda. the tku034 chitosanase used for th ... | 2015 | 26213948 |
| weissella oryzae dc6-facilitated green synthesis of silver nanoparticles and their antimicrobial potential. | nanoparticles and nanomaterials are at the prominent edge of the rapidly developing field of nanotechnology. recently, nanoparticle synthesis using biological resources has been found to be a new area with considerable prospects for development. biological systems are the masters of ambient condition chemistry and are able to synthesize nanoparticles by utilizing metal salts. in the perspective of the current initiative to develop green technologies for the synthesis of nanoparticles, microorgan ... | 2016 | 26212222 |
| the biosynthesis of udp-d-quinac in bacillus cereus atcc 14579. | n-acetylquinovosamine (2-acetamido-2,6-di-deoxy-d-glucose, quinac) is a relatively rare amino sugar residue found in glycans of few pathogenic gram-negative bacteria where it can play a role in infection. however, little is known about quinac-related polysaccharides in gram-positive bacteria. in a routine screen for bacillus glycan grown at defined medium, it was surprising to identify a quinac residue in polysaccharides isolated from this gram-positive bacterium. to gain insight into the biosyn ... | 2015 | 26207987 |
| sol-gel encapsulation of binary zn(ii) compounds in silica nanoparticles. structure-activity correlations in hybrid materials targeting zn(ii) antibacterial use. | in the emerging issue of enhanced multi-resistant properties in infectious pathogens, new nanomaterials with optimally efficient antibacterial activity and lower toxicity than other species attract considerable research interest. in an effort to develop such efficient antibacterials, we a) synthesized acid-catalyzed silica-gel matrices, b) evaluated the suitability of these matrices as potential carrier materials for controlled release of znso4 and a new zn(ii) binary complex with a suitably des ... | 2015 | 26198972 |
| red algae (rhodophyta) from the coast of madagascar: preliminary bioactivity studies and isolation of natural products. | several species of red algae (rhodophyta) from the coastal regions of madagascar have been investigated for their natural products. the most abundant compound was cholesterol (5) in combination with a series of oxidized congeners. the brominated indoles 1-3 along with the sesquiterpene debilone (4) have been isolated from laurencia complanata. for the first time, debilone (4) has been obtained from a marine plant. from the methanol extract of calloseris sp., we have achieved the second isolation ... | 2015 | 26198236 |
| chemical composition of nardostachys grandiflora rhizome oil from nepal--a contribution to the chemotaxonomy and bioactivity of nardostachys. | the essential oil from the dried rhizome of nardostachys grandiflora, collected from jaljale, nepal, was obtained in 1.4% yield, and a total of 72 compounds were identified constituting 93.8% of the essential oil. the rhizome essential oil of n. grandiflora was mostly composed of calarene (9.4%), valerena-4,7(11)-diene (7.1%), nardol a (6.0%), 1(10)-aristolen-9β-ol (11.6%), jatamansone (7.9%), valeranal (5.6%), and cis-valerinic acid (5.7%). the chemical composition of n. grandiflora rhizome oil ... | 2015 | 26197553 |
| unexpected roles for toll-like receptor 4 and trif in intraocular infection with gram-positive bacteria. | inflammation caused by infection with gram-positive bacteria is typically initiated by interactions with toll-like receptor 2 (tlr2). endophthalmitis, an infection and inflammation of the posterior segment of the eye, can lead to vision loss when initiated by a virulent microbial pathogen. endophthalmitis caused by bacillus cereus develops as acute inflammation with infiltrating neutrophils, and vision loss is potentially catastrophic. residual inflammation observed during b. cereus endophthalmi ... | 2015 | 26195555 |
| is cytotoxin k from bacillus cereus a bona fide enterotoxin? | cytotoxin k (cytk) produced by bacillus cereus s.l. has generally been considered to be associated with the foodborne diarrhoeal syndrome. two distinct variants of cytk have been reported: cytk-1 from bacillus cytotoxicus and cytk-2 from b. cereus. in order to determine whether cytk plays a significant role in the diarrhoeal disease, the occurrence of cytk genes was assessed among 390 b. cereus isolates with different origins including clinical and food poisoning samples and was found to be 46%. ... | 2015 | 26186121 |
| antibacterial effect of the red sea soft coral sarcophyton trocheliophorum. | the marine soft corals sarcophyton trocheliophorum crude extracts possessed antimicrobial activity towards pathogenic bacterial strains, i.e. bacillus cereus, salmonella typhi, escherichia coli, staphylococcus aureus and pseudomonas aeruginosa. bioassay-guided fractionation indicated that the antimicrobial effect was due to the presence of terpenoid bioactive derivatives. further biological assays of the n-hexane fractions were carried out using turbidity assay, inhibition zone assay and minimum ... | 2016 | 26186031 |
| mechanistic aspects of biologically synthesized silver nanoparticles against food- and water-borne microbes. | in the present study, silver nanoparticles (agnps) synthesized from aqueous leaves extract of malva crispa and their mode of interaction with food- and water-borne microbes were investigated. formation of agnps was conformed through uv-vis, fe-sem, eds, afm, and hr-tem analyses. further the concentration of silver (ag) in the reaction mixture was conformed through icp-ms analysis. different concentration of nanoparticles (1-3 mm) tested to know the inhibitory effect of bacterial pathogens such a ... | 2015 | 26178241 |
| isolation of bacillus cereus group from the fecal material of endangered wood turtles. | members of the bacillus cereus group are opportunistic human pathogens. they can be found in a broad range of foods. diarrheal food poisoning and/or emetic type syndromes can result from eating contaminated food. in this study, seven b. cereus group members were isolated from the fecal material of wood turtles (glyptemys insculpta). the isolates were then assessed for the presence of enterotoxin genes (nhea, entfm, hblc, and cytk) using pcr. the most prevalent is the nonhemolytic enterotoxin gen ... | 2015 | 26175111 |
| antibacterial δ(1) -3-ketosteroids from the south china sea gorgonian coral subergorgia rubra. | three new δ(1) -3-ketosteroids characterized with a 9-oh, subergosterones a-c (1-3), together with five known analogs 4-8, were obtained from the gorgonian coral subergorgia rubra collected from the south china sea. the structures of 1-3, including their absolute configurations, were determined by comprehensive spectroscopic methods and electronic circular dichroism (ecd) experiments. compounds 2 and 3 exhibited inhibitory antibacterial activities against bacillus cereus with mic values of 1.56 ... | 2015 | 26172327 |
| investigation of an outbreak of vomiting in nurseries in south east england, may 2012. | on 30 may 2012, surrey and sussex health protection unit was called by five nurseries reporting children and staff with sudden onset vomiting approximately an hour after finishing their lunch that day. over the following 24 h 50 further nurseries supplied by the same company reported cases of vomiting (182 children, 18 staff affected). epidemiological investigations were undertaken in order to identify the cause of the outbreak and prevent further cases. investigations demonstrated a nursery-lev ... | 2016 | 26165194 |
| synthesis and in vitro antimicrobial evaluation of piperazine substituted quinazoline-based thiourea/thiazolidinone/chalcone hybrids. | in frames of the search for new biological entities to fight against recent drug-resistant microbial strains, we report a library of quinazoline-based thiourea/4-thiazolidinone/chalcone hybrids. the newly synthesized compounds were studied for efficacy against several bacteria (staphylococcus aureus, bacillus cereus, pseudomonas aeruginosa, and klebsiella pneumoniae) and fungi (candida albicans and aspergillus clavatus) using the broth dilution technique. from the biological evaluation, (e)-3-(3 ... | 2015 | 26165131 |
| multiwavelength resonance raman characterization of the effect of growth phase and culture medium on bacteria. | we examine the use of multiwavelength ultraviolet (uv) resonance-raman signatures to identify the effects of growth phase and growth medium on gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria. escherichia coli (e. coli), citrobacter koseri (c. koseri), citrobacter braakii (c. braakii), and bacillus cereus (b. cereus) were grown to logarithmic and stationary phases in nutrient broth and brain heart infusion broth. resonance raman spectra of bacteria were obtained at multiple wavelengths between 220 and 2 ... | 2015 | 26163518 |
| stability, antimicrobial activity, and effect of nisin on the physico-chemical properties of fruit juices. | heat processing is the most commonly used hurdle for inactivating microorganisms in fruit juices. however, this preservation method could interfere with the organoleptic characteristics of the product. alternative methods have been proposed and bacteriocins such as nisin are potential candidates. however, the approval of bacteriocins as food additives is limited, especially in foods from vegetal origin. we aimed to verify the stability, the effect on physico-chemical properties, and the antimicr ... | 2015 | 26162590 |
| inhibition of pathogenic and spoilage bacteria by a novel biofilm-forming lactobacillus isolate: a potential host for the expression of heterologous proteins. | bacterial biofilms are a preferred mode of growth for many types of microorganisms in their natural environments. the ability of pathogens to integrate within a biofilm is pivotal to their survival. the possibility of biofilm formation in lactobacillus communities is also important in various industrial and medical settings. lactobacilli can eliminate the colonization of different pathogenic microorganisms. alternatively, new opportunities are now arising with the rapidly expanding potential of ... | 2015 | 26150120 |
| chemical composition and antioxidant and antibacterial activities of an essential oil extracted from an edible seaweed, laminaria japonica l. | laminaria japonica l. is among the most commonly consumed seaweeds in northeast asia. in the present study, l. japonica essential oil (ljeo) was extracted by microwave-hydrodistillation and analyzed by gas chromatography and mass spectroscopy. ljeo contained 21 volatile compounds, comprising 99.76% of the total volume of the essential oil, primarily tetradeconoic acid (51.75%), hexadecanoic acid (16.57%), (9z,12z)-9,12-octadecadienoic acid (12.09%), and (9z)-hexadec-9-enoic acid (9.25%). evaluat ... | 2015 | 26147582 |
| reducing environmental toxicity of silver nanoparticles through shape control. | the use of antibacterial silver nanomaterials in consumer products ranging from textiles to toys has given rise to concerns over their environmental toxicity. these materials, primarily nanoparticles, have been shown to be toxic to a wide range of organisms; thus methods and materials that reduce their environmental toxicity while retaining their useful antibacterial properties can potentially solve this problem. here we demonstrate that silver nanocubes display a lower toxicity toward the model ... | 2015 | 26146787 |
| added value of experts' knowledge to improve a quantitative microbial exposure assessment model--application to aseptic-uht food products. | in a previous study, a quantitative microbial exposure assessment (qmea) model applied to an aseptic-uht food process was developed [pujol, l., albert, i., magras, c., johnson, n. b., membré, j. m. probabilistic exposure assessment model to estimate aseptic uht product failure rate. 2015 international journal of food microbiology. 192, 124-141]. it quantified sterility failure rate (sfr) associated with bacillus cereus and geobacillus stearothermophilus per process module (nine modules in total ... | 2015 | 26143288 |
| complete genome sequence and phylogenetic position of the bacillus cereus group phage jbp901. | bacteriophage jbp901, isolated from fermented food, is specific for bacillus cereus group species and exhibits a broad host spectrum among a large number of b. cereus isolates. genome sequence analysis revealed a linear 159,492-bp genome with overall g+c content of 39.7 mol%, and 201 orfs. the presence of a putative methylase, the large number of trnas, and the large number of nucleotide-metabolism- and replication-related genes in jbp901 reflects its broad lytic capacity. most of the orfs showe ... | 2015 | 26141410 |
| application of a molecular beacon based real-time isothermal amplification (mbrtia) technology for simultaneous detection of bacillus cereus and staphylococcus aureus. | a multiplex real-time isothermal amplification assay was developed using molecular beacons for the detection of bacillus cereus and staphylococcus aureus by targeting four important virulence genes. a correlation between targeting highly accessible dna sequences and isothermal amplification based molecular beacon efficiency and sensitivity was demonstrated using phi(φ)29 dna polymerase at a constant isothermal temperature of 30 °c. it was very selective and consistently detected down to 10(1) co ... | 2015 | 26139938 |
| selection of enhanced antimicrobial activity posing lactic acid bacteria characterised by (gtg)5-pcr fingerprinting. | the aim of the study was a detail evaluation of genetic diversity among the lactic acid bacteria (lab) strains having an advantage of a starter culture in order to select genotypically diverse strains with enhanced antimicrobial effect on some harmfull and pathogenic microorganisms. antimicrobial activity of lab was performed by the agar well diffusion method and was examined against the reference strains and foodborne isolates of bacillus cereus, listeria monocytogenes, escherichia coli, staphy ... | 2014 | 26139877 |
| a rapid, sensitive, simple plate assay for detection of microbial alginate lyase activity. | screening of microorganisms capable of producing alginate lyase enzyme is commonly carried out by investigating their abilities to grow on alginate-containing solid media plates and occurrence of a clearance zone after flooding the plates with agents such as 10% (w/v) cetyl pyridinium chloride (cpc), which can form complexes with alginate. although the cpc method is good, advantageous, and routinely used, the agar in the media interferes with the action of cpc, which makes judgment about clearan ... | 2015 | 26138394 |
| [detection of toxigenic genes nhea, nheb and nhec in bacillus cereus strains isolated from powdered milk samples in costa rica]. | powdered milk is a frequently consumed product that does not need to be kept under cold conditions. nevertheless, different microorganisms may contaminate it. powdered milk is a highly consumed product by costa rican population, and bacillus cereus is a potentially pathogenic bacteria associated to it, with the ability to develop toxins depending on the presence of the respective codifying genes. the aim of this study was to determine the presence of the toxigenic genes nhea, nheb and nhec from ... | 2014 | 26137795 |
| class iv polyhydroxyalkanoate (pha) synthases and pha-producing bacillus. | this review highlights the recent investigations of class iv polyhydroxyalkanoate (pha) synthases, the newest classification of pha synthases. class iv synthases are prevalent in organisms of the bacillus genus and are composed of a catalytic subunit phac (approximately 40 kda), which has a phac box sequence ([gs]-x-c-x-[ga]-g) at the active site, and a second subunit phar (approximately 20 kda). the representative pha-producing bacillus strains are bacillus megaterium and bacillus cereus; the n ... | 2015 | 26135986 |
| evaluation of synergistic antibacterial and antioxidant efficacy of essential oils of spices and herbs in combination. | the present study was carried out to evaluate the possible synergistic interactions on antibacterial and antioxidant efficacy of essential oils of some selected spices and herbs [bay leaf, black pepper, coriander (seed and leaf), cumin, garlic, ginger, mustard, onion and turmeric] in combination. antibacterial combination effect was evaluated against six important food-borne bacteria (bacillus cereus, listeria monocytogenes, micrococcus luteus, staphylococcus aureus, escherichia coli and salmone ... | 2015 | 26132146 |
| identification and characterization of a novel geobacillus thermoglucosidasius bacteriophage, gve3. | the study of extremophilic phages may reveal new phage families as well as different mechanisms of infection, propagation and lysis to those found in phages from temperate environments. we describe a novel siphovirus, gve3, which infects the thermophile geobacillus thermoglucosidasius. the genome size is 141,298 bp (g+c 29.6%), making it the largest geobacillus spp-infecting phage known. gve3 appears to be most closely related to the recently described bacillus anthracis phage vb_bans_tsamsa, ra ... | 2015 | 26123922 |
| the adaptive response of bacterial food-borne pathogens in the environment, host and food: implications for food safety. | bacteria are constantly faced to stress situations in their ecological niches, the food and the host gastrointestinal tract. the capacity to detect and respond to surrounding changes is crucial for bacterial pathogens to survive or grow in changing environments. to this purpose, cells have evolved various sophisticated networks designed to protect against stressors or repair damage caused by them. challenges can occur during production of foods when subjected to processing, and after food ingest ... | 2015 | 26116419 |
| from genome to toxicity: a combinatory approach highlights the complexity of enterotoxin production in bacillus cereus. | in recent years bacillus cereus has gained increasing importance as a food poisoning pathogen. it is the eponymous member of the b. cereus sensu lato group that consists of eight closely related species showing impressive diversity of their pathogenicity. the high variability of cytotoxicity and the complex regulatory network of enterotoxin expression have complicated efforts to predict the toxic potential of new b. cereus isolates. in this study, comprehensive analyses of enterotoxin gene seque ... | 2015 | 26113843 |
| direct recovery of cyclodextringlycosyltransferase from bacillus cereus using aqueous two-phase flotation. | purification of cyclodextrin glycosyl transferase (cgtase) from bacillus cereus using polyethylene glycol (peg)-potassium phosphates aqueous two-phase flotation (atpf) system was studied in this paper. the effects of varying peg molecular weight, tie-line length (tll) value, volume ratio (vr), ph value, crude concentration and gas nitrogen flotation time were investigated. the optimal condition for purification of cgtase was attained at 18.0% (w/w) peg 8000, 7.0% (w/w) potassium phosphates, vr o ... | 2015 | 26111602 |
| water-soluble moringa oleifera lectin interferes with growth, survival and cell permeability of corrosive and pathogenic bacteria. | this work evaluated the antibacterial activity of a water-soluble moringa oleifera seed lectin (wsmol) by evaluating its effect on growth, survival and cell permeability of bacillus sp., bacillus cereus, bacillus pumillus, bacillus megaterium, micrococcus sp., pseudomonas sp., pseudomonas fluorescens, pseudomonas stutzeri and serratia marcescens. in addition, the effect of lectin on membrane integrity of most sensitive species was also evaluated. all the tested bacteria are able to cause biocorr ... | 2015 | 26109449 |
| bacteriophages and bacteriophage-derived endolysins as potential therapeutics to combat gram-positive spore forming bacteria. | since their discovery in 1915, bacteriophages have been routinely used within eastern europe to treat a variety of bacterial infections. although initially ignored by the west due to the success of antibiotics, increasing levels and diversity of antibiotic resistance is driving a renaissance for bacteriophage-derived therapy, which is in part due to the highly specific nature of bacteriophages as well as their relative abundance. this review focuses on the bacteriophages and derived lysins of re ... | 2015 | 26109320 |
| antimicrobial mechanism of resveratrol-trans-dihydrodimer produced from peroxidase-catalyzed oxidation of resveratrol. | plant polyphenols are known to have varying antimicrobial potencies, including direct antibacterial activity, synergism with antibiotics and suppression of bacterial virulence. we performed the in vitro oligomerization of resveratrol catalyzed by soybean peroxidase, and the two isomers (resveratrol-trans-dihydrodimer and pallidol) produced were tested for antimicrobial activity. the resveratrol-trans-dihydrodimer displayed antimicrobial activity against the gram-positive bacteria bacillus cereus ... | 2015 | 26109045 |
| bacillus subtilis systems biology: applications of -omics techniques to the study of endospore formation. | endospore-forming bacteria, with bacillus subtilis being the prevalent model organism, belong to the phylum firmicutes. although the last common ancestor of all firmicutes is likely to have been an endospore-forming species, not every lineage in the phylum has maintained the ability to produce endospores (hereafter, spores). in 1997, the release of the full genome sequence for b. subtilis strain 168 marked the beginning of the genomic era for the study of spore formation (sporulation). in this o ... | 2014 | 26105826 |
| virulence plasmids of spore-forming bacteria. | plasmid-encoded virulence factors are important in the pathogenesis of diseases caused by spore-forming bacteria. unlike many other bacteria, the most common virulence factors encoded by plasmids in clostridium and bacillus species are protein toxins. clostridium perfringens causes several histotoxic and enterotoxin diseases in both humans and animals and produces a broad range of toxins, including many pore-forming toxins such as c. perfringens enterotoxin, epsilon-toxin, beta-toxin, and netb. ... | 2014 | 26104459 |
| heme interplay between ilsa and isdc: two structurally different surface proteins from bacillus cereus. | iron is an essential element for bacterial growth and virulence. because of its limited bioavailability in the host, bacteria have adapted several strategies to acquire iron during infection. in the human opportunistic bacteria bacillus cereus, a surface protein ilsa is shown to be involved in iron acquisition from both ferritin and hemoproteins. ilsa has a modular structure consisting of a neat (near iron transporter) domain at the n-terminus, several lrr (leucine rich repeat) motifs and a slh ... | 2015 | 26093289 |
| cleanliness of linen and clothing items professionally laundered or dry-cleaned. | we asked 14 professional cleaners (laundry services) to clean various unused (new) linen and clothing items with a microbial contamination level of <1 cfu/cm(2) and then evaluated the bacterial/fungal contamination of the laundered or dry-cleaned items. after laundering, 6 (21.4%) of the 28 samples from 4 of the 14 cleaners (28.6%) were contaminated (1-1,200 cfu/cm(2)). after dry-cleaning, 2 (7.1%) of the 28 samples from 2 (14.3%) of the 14 cleaners were contaminated (7-10 cfu/cm(2)). the main c ... | 2016 | 26073734 |
| bacterial contamination of iranian paper currency. | transmission of human pathogens can be occurred via inert objects. paper currency is a further common contact surface whereby pathogens can be transferred within a population although the significance remains unknown. hence, the aim of the present study was to investigate microbial populations associated with iranian paper currency. | 2013 | 26060669 |
| study of lactic acid bacteria community from raw milk of iranian one humped camel and evaluation of their probiotic properties. | camel milk is amongst valuable food sources in iran. on the other hand, due to the presence of probiotic bacteria and bacteriocin producers in camel milk, probiotic bacteria can be isolated and identified from this food product. | 2015 | 26060561 |
| purification, crystallization and x-ray crystallographic studies of a bacillus cereus mepr-like transcription factor, bc0657. | transcription factors of the marr family respond to internal and external changes and regulate a variety of biological functions through ligand association with microorganisms. mepr belongs to the marr family, and its mutations are associated with the development of multidrug resistance in staphylococcus aureus, which has caused a growing health problem. in this study, a bacillus cereus mepr-like transcription regulator, bc0657, was crystallized. the bc0657 crystals diffracted to 2.05 å resoluti ... | 2015 | 26057803 |
| effects of dietary bacillus cereus g19, b. cereus bc-01, and paracoccus marcusii db11 supplementation on the growth, immune response, and expression of immune-related genes in coelomocytes and intestine of the sea cucumber (apostichopus japonicus selenka). | probiotics have positive effects on the nutrient digestibility and absorption, immune responses, and growth of aquatic animals, including the sea cucumber (apostichopus japonicus selenka). a 60-day feeding trial was conducted to evaluate the effects of bacillus cereus g19, b. cereus bc-01 and paracoccus marcusii db11 supplementation on the growth, immune response, and expression level of four immune-related genes (aj-p105, aj-p50, aj-rel, and aj-lys) in coelomocytes and the intestine of juvenile ... | 2015 | 26052012 |
| correlations between cyanobacterial density and bacterial transformation to the viable but nonculturable (vbnc) state in four freshwater water bodies. | nutrient concentrations, phytoplankton density and community composition, and the viable but nonculturable (vbnc) state of heterotrophic bacteria were investigated in three connected reservoirs and a small isolated lake in south china to study the relationship between biotic and abiotic factors and the vbnc state in bacteria. nutrient concentrations in the reservoirs increased in the direction of water flow, whereas wenshan lake was more eutrophic. cyanobacterial blooms occurred in all four wate ... | 2015 | 26048238 |
| production of poly-β-hydroxybutyrate by bacillus cereus ps 10 using biphasic-acid-pretreated rice straw. | poly-β-hydroxybutyrate (phb) has attracted a great deal of attention in recent years due to its potential use for production of fully degradable bioplastics, however, high cost of phb production is the major bottleneck for its wide range industrial applications. in the current study rice straw hydrolysate (rsh) was employed as a cost-effective substrate for phb production. rsh was prepared based on biphasic acid-pretreatment of rice straw i.e. first phase treatment with 1% sulphuric acid at 121 ... | 2015 | 26047898 |
| a novel and highly specific phage endolysin cell wall binding domain for detection of bacillus cereus. | rapid, specific and sensitive detection of pathogenic bacteria is crucial for public health and safety. bacillus cereus is harmful as it causes foodborne illness and a number of systemic and local infections. we report a novel phage endolysin cell wall-binding domain (cbd) for b. cereus and the development of a highly specific and sensitive surface plasmon resonance (spr)-based b. cereus detection method using the cbd. the newly discovered cbd from endolysin of pbc1, a b. cereus-specific bacteri ... | 2015 | 26043681 |
| characterization of cereulide synthetase, a toxin-producing macromolecular machine. | cereulide synthetase is a two-protein nonribosomal peptide synthetase system that produces a potent emetic toxin in virulent strains of bacillus cereus. the toxin cereulide is a depsipeptide, as it consists of alternating aminoacyl and hydroxyacyl residues. the hydroxyacyl residues are derived from keto acid substrates, which cereulide synthetase selects and stereospecifically reduces with imbedded ketoreductase domains before incorporating them into the growing depsipeptide chain. we present an ... | 2015 | 26042597 |
| a novel suicide plasmid for efficient gene mutation in listeria monocytogenes. | although several plasmids have been used in listeria monocytogenes for generating mutants by allelic exchange, construction of l. monocytogenes mutants has been inefficient due to lack of effective selection markers for first and second recombination events. to address this problem, we have developed a new suicide plasmid, phoss1, by using the pmad plasmid backbone and anhydrotetracycline selection marker (secy antisense rna) driven by an inducible pxyl/teto promoter. expression of the secy anti ... | 2015 | 26038185 |
| kinetics of bacterial inactivation by 405nm and 520nm light emitting diodes and the role of endogenous coproporphyrin on bacterial susceptibility. | photodynamic inactivation studies of microbial pathogens have focused on the use of an external photosensitizer or a precursor compound to eliminate bacteria. the present study investigated the inactivation kinetics of six bacterial pathogens by a 405nm light emitting diode (led) without the addition of any external compound. the role of endogenous coproporphyrin on the bacterial susceptibility to leds was also examined. pathogens were illuminated with leds at 25, 10 and 4°c for 9h and the inact ... | 2015 | 26036659 |
| the worldwide distribution of genetically and phylogenetically diverse bacillus cereus isolates harbouring bacillus anthracis-like plasmids. | bacillus cereus is a close relative of b. anthracis, the causative agent of anthrax whose pathogenic determinants are located on pxo1 and pxo2 plasmids. bacillus anthracis-like plasmids have been also noted among b. cereus, however, genetic features of b. cereus harbouring these elements remain largely undescribed, especially from the global perspective. herein, we present the genetic polymorphism, population structure and phylogeny of b. cereus with pxo1-/pxo2-like plasmids originating from arg ... | 2015 | 26033739 |
| estimation and evaluation of management options to control and/or reduce the risk of not complying with commercial sterility. | in a previous study, a modular process risk model, from the raw material reception to the final product storage, was built to estimate the risk of a uht-aseptic line of not complying with commercial sterility (pujol et al., 2015). this present study was focused on demonstrating how the model (updated version with uncertainty and variability separated and 2(nd) order monte carlo procedure run) could be used to assess quantitatively the influence of management options. this assessment was done in ... | 2015 | 26032815 |
| antimicrobial and cytotoxic activities from jatropha dioica roots. | the antimicrobial and cytotoxic activities of organic extracts obtained from roots of the medicinal plant jatropha dioica (euphorbiaceae) were investigated. in order to evaluate their antimicrobial activity, the organic extracts were tested against clinical isolates of the human pathogens bacillus cereus, escherichia coli, salmonella typhi, staphylococcus aureus, enterobacter aerogenes, enterobacter cloacae, salmonella typhimurium, cryptococcus neoformans, candida albicans, candida parapsilosis ... | 2014 | 26031013 |
| selenium-fortified wheat: potential of microbes for biofortification of selenium and other essential nutrients. | selenium (se) is an essential micronutrient for humans and animals, and se deficiency is a worldwide problem. plants are a main dietary source of se for humans and livestock. in this study we investigated the effect of two selenium-tolerant bacterial strains bacillus cereus-yap6 and bacillus licheniformis-yap7, on the growth and se uptake by wheat plants. the bacteria-inoculated plants exhibited a significant increase in spike length, shoot length and dry biomass. inoculated se-treated plants al ... | 2015 | 26030365 |
| supercritical co2 extraction of functional compounds from spirulina and their biological activity. | supercritical carbon dioxide (scco2) extraction and fractionation of spirulina platensis was carried out to obtain functional compounds with antioxidant, antimicrobial and enzyme inhibitory activities. extraction of scco2 was carried out using 200 g of spirulina powder at 40 ºc under 120 bar pressure with co2 flow rate of 1.2 kg h(-1). scco2 fraction obtained was further treated with hexane and ethyl acetate to identify its components. individual components were identified by comparing mass spec ... | 2015 | 26028745 |
| [effect of bacillus cereus hemolysin ii on hepatocyte cells]. | we investigated the efficiency of increasing the permeability (permeabilization) of cell membranes in primary liver cells by bacillus cereus hemolysin ii. an assessment of the degree of permeabilization was car ried out by measuring the fluorescence intensity of various low molecular weight dyes, which enter through pores into hepatocyte cells cultivated with hemolysin. we uncovered a high efficacy of hemolysin hlyii action on hepatocyte cell walls, which exceeded the effect of nonionic detergen ... | 2015 | 26027363 |
| sonodynamic action of curcumin on foodborne bacteria bacillus cereus and escherichia coli. | bacterial contamination is an important cause of foodborne diseases. the present study aimed to investigate sonodynamic action of curcumin on foodborne bacteria bacillus cereus (b. cereus) and escherichia coli (e. coli). the uptake of curcumin was measured for optimizing the concentration incubation time before ultrasound sonication, and colony forming units (cfu) were counted after ultrasound treatment. the chromosomal dna fragmentation of bacteria was analyzed and the effect of hypoxic conditi ... | 2015 | 26026869 |
| improvement of glycine oxidase by dna shuffling, and site-saturation mutagenesis of f247 residue. | glyphosate is a broad spectrum herbicide widely used throughout the world, and it could be degraded by glycine oxidase (go) through cn bond cleavage. for a better understanding of the structure-function relationship and improving the activity of b3s1 (go from bacillus cereus), dna shuffling was performed. a mutant b4s7 (the km, vmax, kcat and kcat/km values on glyphosate were 0.1 mm, 0.002401 mm min(-1), 3.62 min(-1) and 36.2 mm(-1) min(-1), respectively. the four parameters on glycine were 50.3 ... | 2015 | 26025077 |
| pcr detection and identification of bacterial contaminants in ocular samples from post-operative endophthalmitis. | bacterial endophthalmitis is a sight-threatening complication of ocular surgery which requires urgent medical consideration including comprehensive diagnosis. polymerase chain reaction (pcr) as a sensitive molecular method has been extensively used for detection of microbial species in clinical specimens. | 2015 | 26023576 |
| bioactive compounds isolated from submerged fermentations of the chilean fungus stereum rameale. | liquid fermentations of the fungus stereum rameale (n° 2511) yielded extracts with antibacterial activity. the antibacterial activity reached its peak after 216 h of stirring. bioassay-guided fractionation methods were employed for the isolation of the bioactive metabolites. three known compounds were identified: ms-3 (1), vibralactone (2) and vibralactone b (3). the three compounds showed antibacterial activity as a function of their concentration. minimal bactericidal concentrations (mbc) of c ... | 2015 | 26020559 |
| optimization and purification of mannanase produced by an alkaliphilic-thermotolerant bacillus cereus n1 isolated from bani salama lake in wadi el-natron. | an alkaliphilic-thermotolerant bacillus cereus n1 isolated from bani salama lake, wadi el-natron, egypt, was proved to produce mannanase enzyme. optimization of the fermentation medium components using plackett-burman design was applied. glucose and inoculum size were found to be the most significant factors enhancing the production of the enzyme. on applying optimized medium in the fermentation process, an enzyme productivity of 42.2 uml(-1) was achieved with 6.4 fold increase compared to the b ... | 2015 | 26019646 |
| antimicrobial activity and antibiotic susceptibility of lactobacillus and bifidobacterium spp. intended for use as starter and probiotic cultures. | antimicrobial activity and antibiotic susceptibility were tested for 23 lactobacillus and three bifidobacterium strains isolated from different ecological niches. agar-well diffusion method was used to test the antagonistic effect (against staphylococcus aureus, escherichia coli, bacillus cereus and candida albicans) of acid and neutralized (ph 5.5) lyophilized concentrated supernatants (cell-free supernatant; cfs) and whey (cell-free whey fractions; cfw) from de man-rogosa-sharpe/trypticase-phy ... | 2015 | 26019620 |
| [screening of homoacetogen mixed culture converting h2/co2 to acetate]. | homoacetogens are a group of microorganisms with application potential to produce chemicals and biofuels by the bioconversion of synthesis gas. in this study, we collected waste activated sludge samples to screen homoacetogens by hungate anaerobic technique, and studied the effect of ph on acetate and alcohol production from h2/co2 gas. the mixed culture contained clostridium ljungdahlii, lysinibacillus fusiformis and bacillus cereus. acetate concentration achieved 31.69 mmol/l when the initial ... | 2014 | 26016379 |
| a cluster of bacillus cereus bacteremia cases among injection drug users. | bacillus cereus is a ubiquitous spore-forming organism that is infrequently implicated in extraintestinal infections. the authors report three cases of b cereus bacteremia among injection drug users presenting within one month to an urban tertiary care hospital. treatment with intravenous vancomycin was successful in all three cases. while temporal association suggested an outbreak, molecular studies of patient isolates using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis did not suggest a common source. a re ... | 2015 | 26015795 |
| evaluation of the effectiveness of a pathogen inactivation technology against clinically relevant transfusion-transmitted bacterial strains. | to increase blood safety, various procedures are currently implemented, including donor selection, optimized donor arm disinfection, and diversion. in addition, pathogen inactivation (pi) techniques can be used for platelets (plts) and plasma concentrates. | 2015 | 26013691 |
| depsipeptide intermediates interrogate proposed biosynthesis of cereulide, the emetic toxin of bacillus cereus. | cereulide and isocereulides a-g are biosynthesized as emetic toxins by bacillus cereus via a non-ribosomal peptide synthetase (nrps) called ces. although a thiotemplate mechanisms involving cyclo-trimerization of ready-made d-o-leu-d-ala-l-o-val-l-val via a thioesterase (te) domain is proposed for cereulide biosynthesis, the exact mechanism is far from being understood. uplc-tof ms analysis of b. cereus strains in combination with (13)c-labeling experiments now revealed tetra-, octa-, and dodeca ... | 2015 | 26013201 |
| design, synthesis, in silico and in vitro studies of substituted 1, 2, 3, 4- tetrahydro pyrimidine phosphorus derivatives. | molecular docking studies of the designed two series (4a-l, 6a-l, 9 and 10) of novel substituted phosphorylated 1, 4-dihydropyridine and 1,2,3,4-tetrahydropyrimidine derivatives against the drug targets of dhfr from bacillus cereus, lpxc from pseudomonas aeruginosa, idh from e. coli and murb from staphylococcus aureus were encouraged for their synthesis. these compounds were synthesized from substituted aromatic aldehydes, thiourea/urea and ethyl acetoacetate in the presence of polyphosphoric ac ... | 2015 | 26004048 |
| antibacterial activity of native california medicinal plant extracts isolated from rhamnus californica and umbellularia californica. | antimicrobial resistance (amr) is a major threat to global public health. medicinal plants have long been used as remedies for infectious diseases by native cultures around the world and have the potential for providing effective treatments for antibiotic-resistant infections. rhamnus californica (rhamnaceae) and umbellularia californica (lauraceae) are two indigenous california plant species historically used by native americans to treat skin, respiratory and gastrointestinal infections. this s ... | 2015 | 26001558 |
| cereulide food toxin, beta cell function and diabetes: facts and hypotheses. | the incidence of both type 1 and type 2 diabetes is increasing and although environmental pollutants are believed to be potential culprits, the extent to which they can be held responsible remains uncertain. some bacterial strains of the bacillus cereus produce a toxin, cereulide, which is frequently found in starchy meals and which is difficult to eradicate from the food chain as it is highly resistant to heat, acidity and proteolysis. while cereulide is well known to cause acute emetic toxicit ... | 2015 | 25998918 |