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1.
Bull Exp Biol Med ; 148(3): 410-5, 2009 Sep.
Article in English, Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20396701

ABSTRACT

Antagonistic activity of Malassezia yeast towards clinically significant yeast species was studied. Ten Malassezia strains exhibited this activity. M. furfur strain exhibited maximum activity and the least sensitivity to "foreign" metabolites. M. globosa proved to be the most sensitive and the least active. M. furfur metabolites exhibited pronounced activity towards 6 Basidiomycetes strains. This effect was significantly higher in comparison with antagonistic activity towards 13 Ascomycetes species. Studies of a complex of M. furfur antagonistic metabolites showed that it has at least two components: thermolabile proteins with molecular weights of 33 and 35 kDa and a thermostable one, proteinase-resistant. In contrast to metabolites of many other yeast species, this substance is more effective against related Basidiomycetes microorganisms (Cryptococcus albicans), while antagonistic proteins are active mainly towards Ascomycetes, such as Candida albicans. It was found that mycocin-like activity of Malassezia is encoded by chromosomes, but not plasmids.


Subject(s)
Malassezia/metabolism , Malassezia/physiology , Antibiosis , Ascomycota/growth & development , Basidiomycota/growth & development , Candida albicans/growth & development , Chromosomes, Fungal/genetics , Electrophoresis, Gel, Pulsed-Field , Fungal Proteins/chemistry , Fungal Proteins/genetics , Fungal Proteins/metabolism , Microbial Sensitivity Tests , Molecular Weight
2.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17672129

ABSTRACT

Bordetella pertussis growth phases during homogenous batch dynamic cultivation in the liquid medium as well as during the static cultivation on the solid medium were established. The maximal activity of agglutination reaction with antisera to B. pertussis agglutinogens 1, 2, and 3 was detected in bacterial culture at the end of exponential phase of growth. The activity of agglutination reaction decreased when cultures in stationary and death phases were used. During transition from exponential to death phase level of antibodies to agglutinogen 2 decreased by4 - 32 times. 2 - 4-fold decrease of antibodies level was observed when antiserum to agglutinogen 3 was used. Activity of agglutination reaction with antiserum to agglutinogen 1 was high and did not depend from phase of growth. When polyvalent antiserum to B. pertussis was used 4-fold decrease of antibody titers was observed in parallel with change of growth phases. Sera from rabbits immunized with B. pertussis cultures from the middle of exponential growth phase, the end of this phase, and begin of the death phase had high (maximal) level of agglutinating antibodies (6400), which was detected on 101 day after immunization with the former culture and on 31 day after immunization with either of the two latter cultures. To the end of experiment (292 day) titers decreased to 800, 3200, and 1600 respectively. These findings confirm an advisability of use of exponential growth culture for immunization of rabbits in order to obtain highly active diagnostic antisera to B. pertussis.


Subject(s)
Bordetella pertussis/growth & development , Bordetella pertussis/immunology , Virulence Factors, Bordetella/immunology , Whooping Cough/immunology , Agglutination , Animals , Antibodies, Bacterial/blood , Antibodies, Bacterial/immunology , Bordetella pertussis/metabolism , Culture Media , Immunization , Rabbits , Time Factors , Virulence Factors, Bordetella/metabolism , Whooping Cough/blood
3.
Mikrobiologiia ; 75(4): 562-9, 2006.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17025185

ABSTRACT

It was shown that two stress factors, hypoxia and hyperosmotic shock, if applied simultaneously to the yeast Debaryomyces hansenii, display an antagonistic mode of interaction, which results in an increased degree of halophily of this microorganism under microaerobic conditions. Studies of the effects of respiration inhibitors (sodium azide and salicyl hydroxamic acid, SHA) and of the pattern of changes in the composition of the respiratory chain of Debaryomyces hansenii under the stated stress conditions led to the suggestion of three (or four) chains of electron transfer functioning simultaneously in the cell: the classical respiratory chain involving cytochrome-c oxidase, an alternative respiratory chain involving a cyanide- and azide-resistant oxidase, and additional respiratory chains involving oxidases resistant to salt, azide and SHA. Thus, the antagonistic mode of interaction between hypoxia and hyperosmotic shock results from the redirection of the electron flow from the salt-susceptible respiratory systems to the salt-unsusceptible ones encoded by "the hypoxia genes" and activated (induced) under microaerobic conditions.


Subject(s)
Oxygen/metabolism , Yeasts/physiology , Anaerobiosis , Azides/pharmacology , Cyanides/pharmacology , Electron Transport , Electron Transport Complex IV/metabolism , Osmotic Pressure , Oxidoreductases/metabolism , Sodium Chloride , Yeasts/metabolism
4.
Mikrobiologiia ; 71(2): 160-5, 2002.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12024812

ABSTRACT

Two stress factors, hypoxia (microaerobic conditions) and a high salt concentration, if applied simultaneously to aerobic microorganisms, display an antagonistic mode of interaction. As a result, the NaCl level that is usually optimal for moderate halophiles (5-6%) becomes optimal for the growth of weak halophiles (Rhodococcus erythropolis and Shewanella sp. CN32); the halotolerant yeast Yarrowia lypolytica acquires halophilic properties (with a growth optimum at a NaCl concentration of 10%), and the growth rate of the extremely halophilic Halobacterium salinarum increases at supraoptimal salt concentrations (25-34%). This phenomenon is apparently due to multiple changes in metabolic reactions. In particular, high salt concentrations suppress respiration and the formation of enzymes (superoxide dismutase and catalase) that protect the cell from toxic oxygen species. Therefore, establishment of microaerobic conditions compensates for the loss of these protective mechanisms and enables cell growth at higher salt concentrations than under aerobic conditions. Of some importance can also be the increase in the intracellular concentrations of osmoprotectants caused by the suppression of their intracellular oxidation. The implications of this phenomenon for the ecophysiology of microorganisms (including oiloxidizing species) and for the classification of weak and moderate halophiles are discussed.


Subject(s)
Bacteria/growth & development , Bacterial Physiological Phenomena , Culture Media , Halobacterium salinarum/growth & development , Osmosis , Oxygen/metabolism , Rhodococcus/growth & development , Shewanella/growth & development , Sodium Chloride , Water Microbiology , Yarrowia/growth & development
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