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Acta Medica Portuguesa 2003The authors present a clinical case of a female child, aged 23 months, previously healthy that 24 hours after falling down started to refuse walking and complained about...
The authors present a clinical case of a female child, aged 23 months, previously healthy that 24 hours after falling down started to refuse walking and complained about back pain. She never had fever. She felt better with nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs, restarting the symptoms, two days after therapy suppression. At admission on hospital she presented inability to flex the lower back and loss of lumbar lordosis, being normal the remaining physical examination. There was a raise of erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and a radiological narrowing of the L1/L2 inter-vertebral disc space, a compatible image of spondylodiscitis in the MRI. Several diagnosis hipothesis have been considered, being infectious spondylodiscitis the most probable. We instituted tuberculosis therapeutic during one year and intravenous ceftriaxone for tree weeks followed by oral acetil cefuroxime (tree weeks). The spine has been immobilized with spine support. At four months disease and two months therapy, a Oerskovia xanthineolytica was isolated by intervertebral needle biopsy. A good clinical and radiological evolution has been observed. The authors stress the importance of MRI and intervertebral needle biopsy in the diagnosis of spondylodiscitis. It is also enhanced the use of MRI and ESR in the monitoring of response to the treatment.
Topics: Actinobacteria; Bacterial Infections; Discitis; Female; Humans; Infant
PubMed: 22226217
DOI: No ID Found -
Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) Dec 2022Sialidase preparations are applied in structural and functional studies on sialoglycans, in the production of sialylated therapeutic proteins and synthetic substrates...
Sialidase preparations are applied in structural and functional studies on sialoglycans, in the production of sialylated therapeutic proteins and synthetic substrates for use in biochemical research, etc. They are obtained mainly from pathogenic microorganisms; therefore, the demand for apathogenic producers of sialidase is of exceptional importance for the safe production of this enzyme. Here, we report for the first time the presence of a sialidase gene and enzyme in the saprophytic actinomycete Oerskovia paurometabola strain O129. An electrophoretically pure, glycosylated enzyme with a molecular weight of 70 kDa was obtained after a two-step chromatographic procedure using DEAE cellulose and Q-sepharose. The biochemical characterization showed that the enzyme is extracellular, inductive, and able to cleave α(2→3,6,8) linked sialic acids with preference for α(2→3) bonds. The enzyme production was strongly induced by glycomacropeptide (GMP) from milk whey, as well as by sialic acid. Investigation of the deduced amino acid sequence revealed that the protein molecule has the typical six-bladed β-propeller structure and contains all features of bacterial sialidases, i.e., an YRIP motif, five Asp-boxes, and the conserved amino acids in the active site. The presence of an unusual signal peptide of 40 amino acids was predicted. The sialidase-producing O. paurometabola O129 showed high and constant enzyme production. Together with its saprophytic nature, this makes it a reliable producer with high potential for industrial application.
Topics: Neuraminidase; Amino Acid Sequence; N-Acetylneuraminic Acid; Sialic Acids
PubMed: 36558051
DOI: 10.3390/molecules27248922 -
Case Reports in Ophthalmology 2019To present a previously unreported cause of bacterial endophthalmitis manifesting as delayed post-traumatic endophthalmitis ultimately responsive to total capsulectomy.
PURPOSE
To present a previously unreported cause of bacterial endophthalmitis manifesting as delayed post-traumatic endophthalmitis ultimately responsive to total capsulectomy.
CASE REPORT
A patient presented with chronic endophthalmitis that occurred after ocular trauma with organic material and was eventually isolated. After a prolonged treatment course, including two pars plana vitrectomies and total capsulectomy, the patient achieved 20/80 visual acuity at 1-year follow-up.
CONCLUSION
This is the first reported patient with endophthalmitis due to , a Gram-positive bacillus found in soil that rarely causes human infection. The infection had a delayed presentation despite early prophylactic antibiotics and was ultimately eliminated with total capsulectomy. Removal of lens and lens capsule may be necessary in the management of post-traumatic endophthalmitis unresponsive to more conservative therapy, particularly in cases involving atypical organisms and lens capsule violation.
PubMed: 31607896
DOI: 10.1159/000502413 -
Applied and Environmental Microbiology Oct 1978Motile actinomycetes capable of degrading walls of viable yeast cells were isolated from soil and identified as Oerskovia xanthineolytica. A lytic assay based on...
Motile actinomycetes capable of degrading walls of viable yeast cells were isolated from soil and identified as Oerskovia xanthineolytica. A lytic assay based on susceptibility of enzyme-treated cells to osmotic shock was developed, and 10 of 15 strains of O. xanthineolytica, Oerskovia turbata, and nonmotile Oerskovia- like organisms from other collections were found to possess yeast lytic activities. All lytic strains produced laminaranase and alpha-mannanase, but the amounts, determined by reducing group assays, were not proportional to the observed lytic activities. The Oerskovia isolates demonstrated chemotactic, predatory activity against various yeast strains and killed yeasts in mixed cultures. Of 15 carbon sources tested for production of lytic enzyme, purified yeast cell walls elicited the highest activity. Glucose repressed enzyme production and caused cells to remain in the microfilamentous and motile rod stages of the Oerskovia cell cycle. Crude lytic activity was optimal at pH 5.6 to 7.0 and inactivated by heating for 6 min at 50 degrees C. Partial purification by isoelectric focusing showed that all lytic activity was associated with four beta-(1-->3)-glucanases. The absence of protein disulfide reductase, N-acetyl-beta-d-hexosaminidase, and phosphomannanase in crude preparations indicated that the principal enzyme responsible for yeast wall lysis was a beta-(1-->3)-glucanase that produced relatively little reducing sugar from yeast glucan.
PubMed: 16345321
DOI: 10.1128/aem.36.4.594-605.1978 -
Internal Medicine (Tokyo, Japan) 2015A 50-year-old woman with end-stage renal disease on continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis was admitted with abdominal pain, fever and cloudy peritoneal fluid. The... (Review)
Review
A 50-year-old woman with end-stage renal disease on continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis was admitted with abdominal pain, fever and cloudy peritoneal fluid. The diagnosis was peritonitis, and the causative bacteria were Cellulosimicrobium cellulans and Enterobacter cloacae. She was subsequently treated with the administration of intraperitoneal antibiotics and removal of the infected indwelling catheter. We herein report a case of Cellulosimicrobium cellulans and Enterobacter cloacae co-infection in a patient with peritonitis and review the relevant literature.
Topics: Actinomycetales; Actinomycetales Infections; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Ascitic Fluid; Catheters, Indwelling; Coinfection; Enterobacter cloacae; Enterobacteriaceae Infections; Female; Humans; Kidney Failure, Chronic; Middle Aged; Peritoneal Dialysis, Continuous Ambulatory; Peritonitis; Treatment Outcome
PubMed: 25786454
DOI: 10.2169/internalmedicine.54.3261 -
Standards in Genomic Sciences 2017A nonmotile, Gram-positive bacterium that shows an elongated and branching cell shape was isolated from soil samples from the botanical garden of Ulm University, Ulm,...
A nonmotile, Gram-positive bacterium that shows an elongated and branching cell shape was isolated from soil samples from the botanical garden of Ulm University, Ulm, Germany. Here, the isolation procedure, identification, genome sequencing and metabolic features of the strain are described. Phylogenetic analysis allowed to identify the isolated strain as The genus belongs to the family within the order . The length of cells of ranges from 1 μm to 15 μm, depending on the growth phase. In the exponential growth phase, cells show an elongated and branching shape, whereas cells break up to round or coccoid elements in the stationary growth phase. The 4,535,074 bp long genome consists of 85 contigs with 3918 protein-coding genes and 57 RNA genes. The isolated strain was shown to degrade numerous complex carbon sources such as cellulose, chitin, and starch, which can be found ubiquitously in nature. Moreover, analysis of the genomic sequence revealed the genetic potential to degrade these compounds.
PubMed: 28484582
DOI: 10.1186/s40793-017-0244-4 -
Journal of Clinical Microbiology Jul 1996Oerskovia spp. are gram-positive, Nocardia-like bacilli which inhabit the soil and rarely cause human infections. Previously reported cases of Oerskovia infection have... (Review)
Review
Oerskovia spp. are gram-positive, Nocardia-like bacilli which inhabit the soil and rarely cause human infections. Previously reported cases of Oerskovia infection have been characterized by a nonaggressive course and an association with foreign bodies. We report the first case of a patient with a prosthetic joint infection due to Oerskovia xanthineolytica. Our patient presented with a prolonged, indolent course and was thought to have aseptic loosening of his prosthesis until the time of surgery. He was cured of his infection by removal of the prosthesis, antibiotic therapy, and delayed reimplantation. Review of the previous 10 reported cases of Oerskovia infection in humans supports the recommendation that foreign-body-associated infections should be treated with a strategy that includes removal of the foreign material.
Topics: Actinomycetales; Actinomycetales Infections; Aged; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Drug Therapy, Combination; Humans; Knee Prosthesis; Male; Prosthesis-Related Infections; Reoperation
PubMed: 8784601
DOI: 10.1128/JCM.34.7.1821-1824.1996 -
Journal of Clinical Microbiology Sep 1990Oerskovia species are nocardialike bacteria that have been implicated as pathogens only rarely. These organisms are branched, gram-positive bacilli that are oxidase... (Review)
Review
Oerskovia species are nocardialike bacteria that have been implicated as pathogens only rarely. These organisms are branched, gram-positive bacilli that are oxidase negative, catalase positive, and non-acid fast. Unlike Nocardia species, these organisms are motile, do not produce aerial mycelia, and possess a cell wall with large amounts of galactose. Colonies are bright yellow and produce branched vegetative hyphae on nutrient agar. A 70-year-old patient undergoing chronic ambulatory peritoneal dialysis for end-stage renal dysfunction developed recurrent peritonitis. Five peritoneal fluid cultures and one catheter specimen obtained over a period of two weeks yielded a gram-positive bacillus; Oerskovia xanthineolytica was isolated from all six cultures. Prolonged systemic therapy with gentamicin and vancomycin was unsuccessful in curing the peritonitis, but the infection resolved following removal of the peritoneal catheter. This is the first reported case of peritonitis associated with this microorganism. A review of previously described Oerskovia infections, most of which were associated with foreign bodies, showed that removal of infected foci was usually necessary for cure.
Topics: Actinomycetales; Actinomycetales Infections; Aged; Bacteriological Techniques; Humans; Male; Peritoneal Dialysis, Continuous Ambulatory; Peritonitis; Vancomycin
PubMed: 2229375
DOI: 10.1128/jcm.28.9.1934-1937.1990 -
Journal of Clinical Microbiology Jun 2004Oerskovia turbata is an unusual bacterial cause of endocarditis and septicemia in immunocompromised patients. In this study, we compared 12 isolates from a 1975 medical...
Oerskovia turbata is an unusual bacterial cause of endocarditis and septicemia in immunocompromised patients. In this study, we compared 12 isolates from a 1975 medical center cluster, 11 originally identified as O. turbata (four from the blood of a homograft aortic valve-associated endocarditis patient and seven from contaminated homograft valves) and one CDC group A-3 strain from the blood of a second endocarditis patient with fatal outcome, with eight control strains from unrelated locations. The control strains included type and reference strains of O. turbata, Cellulomonas hominis, and CDC group A-3. The four blood isolates from the first patient and six of the valve isolates shared identical biochemical, antimicrobial susceptibility, and BglI ribotype patterns that differed from the second patient's isolate and control strains. The blood isolate from the second patient and the remaining valve isolate shared a phenotypic and genotypic profile and were phenotypically identical to, but epidemiologically different from, the CDC group A-3 reference strain with the strain-specific enzyme. Also, these isolates differed from the type strain and the other reference strains of C. hominis and O. turbata. Our results indicate that the four blood isolates from the first patient and six of the homograft valve isolates represent a single clone of O. turbata associated with endocarditis. Additionally, our results indicate that the blood isolate from the second patient and one of the homograft valve isolates differ from O. turbata and C. hominis and represent a unique clone of CDC group A-3 associated with fatal endocarditis.
Topics: Actinomycetales; Endocarditis, Bacterial; Heart Valves; Humans; Phylogeny; Ribotyping; Transplantation, Homologous
PubMed: 15184426
DOI: 10.1128/JCM.42.6.2495-2500.2004 -
Journal of Global Infectious Diseases 2018
PubMed: 29910574
DOI: 10.4103/jgid.jgid_67_17