Antigenic protein synthesis of Campylobacter jejuni in contact with chicken cells

Publikation: KonferencebidragPosterForskning

Standard

Antigenic protein synthesis of Campylobacter jejuni in contact with chicken cells. / Vegge, Christina Skovgaard; Bang, Dang D.; Li, Yiping; Brøndsted, Lone; Madsen, Mogens; Ingmer, Hanne.

2007. Poster session præsenteret ved International Symposium on Microbial Adaptation to Stress and Environment, Marburg, Tyskland.

Publikation: KonferencebidragPosterForskning

Harvard

Vegge, CS, Bang, DD, Li, Y, Brøndsted, L, Madsen, M & Ingmer, H 2007, 'Antigenic protein synthesis of Campylobacter jejuni in contact with chicken cells', International Symposium on Microbial Adaptation to Stress and Environment, Marburg, Tyskland, 12/04/2007 - 14/04/2007.

APA

Vegge, C. S., Bang, D. D., Li, Y., Brøndsted, L., Madsen, M., & Ingmer, H. (2007). Antigenic protein synthesis of Campylobacter jejuni in contact with chicken cells. Poster session præsenteret ved International Symposium on Microbial Adaptation to Stress and Environment, Marburg, Tyskland.

Vancouver

Vegge CS, Bang DD, Li Y, Brøndsted L, Madsen M, Ingmer H. Antigenic protein synthesis of Campylobacter jejuni in contact with chicken cells. 2007. Poster session præsenteret ved International Symposium on Microbial Adaptation to Stress and Environment, Marburg, Tyskland.

Author

Vegge, Christina Skovgaard ; Bang, Dang D. ; Li, Yiping ; Brøndsted, Lone ; Madsen, Mogens ; Ingmer, Hanne. / Antigenic protein synthesis of Campylobacter jejuni in contact with chicken cells. Poster session præsenteret ved International Symposium on Microbial Adaptation to Stress and Environment, Marburg, Tyskland.1 s.

Bibtex

@conference{985f1b40a1c211ddb6ae000ea68e967b,
title = "Antigenic protein synthesis of Campylobacter jejuni in contact with chicken cells",
abstract = "Campylobacter jejuni is the primary food borne bacterial pathogen in the developed world causing millions of gastroenteritis cases each year. C. jejuni is a Gram negative, spiral-shaped, highly motile bacterium with very restricted growth requirements, and it appears to be adapted to the environment of the avian gastrointestinal tract. Consequently, the most important reservoir for C. jejuni is the gut of chickens, which are colonized efficiently without causing disease in the birds. Upon co-cultivation with mammalian cells, C. jejuni secrete specific Cia proteins, which are required for internalization into host cells. However, the pathogenic lifestyle of C. jejuni in the human intestine is different from the commensal colonization of the chicken gut, and it was therefore hypothesized that different proteins are secreted during chicken colonization. This hypothesis was tested by analyzing the synthesis of antigenic C. jejuni proteins upon cultivation with chicken cells. Two strains of C. jejuni (the human isolate NCTC11168 and the chicken isolate DVI-SC11) were incubated with primary intestinal chicken cells and subsequently used to raise antisera in rabbits. Negative controls were carried out in parallel. These antisera were tested by Western blotting against C. jejuni total protein as well as periplasmic-, surface- and extracellular protein fractions. A unique antibody reaction was discovered to a protein from samples, which had been cultivated with chicken cells. The identity of this protein will be determined and the function will be examined by construction of mutants, which will be investigated for colonization potential and environmental growth requirements.",
author = "Vegge, {Christina Skovgaard} and Bang, {Dang D.} and Yiping Li and Lone Br{\o}ndsted and Mogens Madsen and Hanne Ingmer",
year = "2007",
language = "English",
note = "null ; Conference date: 12-04-2007 Through 14-04-2007",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Antigenic protein synthesis of Campylobacter jejuni in contact with chicken cells

AU - Vegge, Christina Skovgaard

AU - Bang, Dang D.

AU - Li, Yiping

AU - Brøndsted, Lone

AU - Madsen, Mogens

AU - Ingmer, Hanne

PY - 2007

Y1 - 2007

N2 - Campylobacter jejuni is the primary food borne bacterial pathogen in the developed world causing millions of gastroenteritis cases each year. C. jejuni is a Gram negative, spiral-shaped, highly motile bacterium with very restricted growth requirements, and it appears to be adapted to the environment of the avian gastrointestinal tract. Consequently, the most important reservoir for C. jejuni is the gut of chickens, which are colonized efficiently without causing disease in the birds. Upon co-cultivation with mammalian cells, C. jejuni secrete specific Cia proteins, which are required for internalization into host cells. However, the pathogenic lifestyle of C. jejuni in the human intestine is different from the commensal colonization of the chicken gut, and it was therefore hypothesized that different proteins are secreted during chicken colonization. This hypothesis was tested by analyzing the synthesis of antigenic C. jejuni proteins upon cultivation with chicken cells. Two strains of C. jejuni (the human isolate NCTC11168 and the chicken isolate DVI-SC11) were incubated with primary intestinal chicken cells and subsequently used to raise antisera in rabbits. Negative controls were carried out in parallel. These antisera were tested by Western blotting against C. jejuni total protein as well as periplasmic-, surface- and extracellular protein fractions. A unique antibody reaction was discovered to a protein from samples, which had been cultivated with chicken cells. The identity of this protein will be determined and the function will be examined by construction of mutants, which will be investigated for colonization potential and environmental growth requirements.

AB - Campylobacter jejuni is the primary food borne bacterial pathogen in the developed world causing millions of gastroenteritis cases each year. C. jejuni is a Gram negative, spiral-shaped, highly motile bacterium with very restricted growth requirements, and it appears to be adapted to the environment of the avian gastrointestinal tract. Consequently, the most important reservoir for C. jejuni is the gut of chickens, which are colonized efficiently without causing disease in the birds. Upon co-cultivation with mammalian cells, C. jejuni secrete specific Cia proteins, which are required for internalization into host cells. However, the pathogenic lifestyle of C. jejuni in the human intestine is different from the commensal colonization of the chicken gut, and it was therefore hypothesized that different proteins are secreted during chicken colonization. This hypothesis was tested by analyzing the synthesis of antigenic C. jejuni proteins upon cultivation with chicken cells. Two strains of C. jejuni (the human isolate NCTC11168 and the chicken isolate DVI-SC11) were incubated with primary intestinal chicken cells and subsequently used to raise antisera in rabbits. Negative controls were carried out in parallel. These antisera were tested by Western blotting against C. jejuni total protein as well as periplasmic-, surface- and extracellular protein fractions. A unique antibody reaction was discovered to a protein from samples, which had been cultivated with chicken cells. The identity of this protein will be determined and the function will be examined by construction of mutants, which will be investigated for colonization potential and environmental growth requirements.

M3 - Poster

Y2 - 12 April 2007 through 14 April 2007

ER -

ID: 8075432