卡他氏布氏菌:流行病学、表面抗原结构和免疫反应。

T F Murphy
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引用次数: 189

摘要

在过去的十年中,卡他氏Branhamella catarrhalis已成为一种重要的人类病原体。这种细菌是儿童中耳炎和慢性阻塞性肺病成人下呼吸道感染的常见病因。卡他氏芽孢杆菌是一种专门的人类病原体。它寄居在一小部分成年人的呼吸道中,而大部分儿童的呼吸道中。包括基因组DNA限制性内切酶分析在内的研究表明,定植是一个动态的过程,人类宿主经常消除和获得新的菌株。卡他菌表面含有外膜蛋白、低脂多糖和菌毛。编码几种外膜蛋白的基因已被克隆,其中一些蛋白正被研究作为潜在的疫苗抗原。由于缺乏适当的卡塔卡芽孢杆菌感染动物模型,对免疫反应的分析受到限制。有关外膜结构的新信息应指导人类对卡他性芽孢杆菌免疫反应的研究。特异性检测暴露在细菌表面的决定因子抗体的免疫测定将阐明最相关的免疫反应。认识到卡他芽孢杆菌是一种重要的人类病原体,刺激了对该细菌的流行病学和表面结构的研究。了解感染机制和阐明人类对感染的免疫反应的未来研究有望开发新的方法来治疗和预防由卡他氏芽孢杆菌引起的感染。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Branhamella catarrhalis: epidemiology, surface antigenic structure, and immune response.

Over the past decade, Branhamella catarrhalis has emerged as an important human pathogen. The bacterium is a common cause of otitis media in children and of lower respiratory tract infections in adults with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. B. catarrhalis is exclusively a human pathogen. It colonizes the respiratory tract of a small proportion of adults and a larger proportion of children. Studies involving restriction enzyme analysis of genomic DNA show that colonization is a dynamic process, with the human host eliminating and acquiring new strains frequently. The surface of B. catarrhalis contains outer membrane proteins, lipooligosaccharide, and pili. The genes which encode several outer membrane proteins have been cloned, and some of these proteins are being studied as potential vaccine antigens. Analysis of the immune response has been limited by the lack of an adequate animal model of B. catarrhalis infection. New information regarding outer membrane structure should guide studies of the human immune response to B. catarrhalis. Immunoassays which specifically detect antibodies to determinants exposed on the bacterial surface will elucidate the most relevant immune response. The recognition of B. catarrhalis as an important human pathogen has stimulated research on the epidemiology and surface structures of the bacterium. Future studies to understand the mechanisms of infection and to elucidate the human immune response to infection hold promise of developing new methods to treat and prevent infections caused by B. catarrhalis.

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