Team:UT-Dallas/Project/history
From 2014.igem.org
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Mechanism of Infection: <br> | Mechanism of Infection: <br> | ||
- | Although most V. cholerae ingested dies in the acidic stomach, the survivors can quickly colonize the small intestine. The symptoms associated with V. cholerae infection are primarily caused by the cholera toxin, but there are several genes that contribute to the colonization and pathogenicity of V. cholerae. Many of the genes associated with the virulence of V. cholerae are located on a pathogenicity island believed to originate from phage (2). We chose several genes identified for their role in pathogenicity and colonization to target for our project. | + | Although most V. cholerae ingested dies in the acidic stomach, the survivors can quickly colonize the small intestine. The symptoms associated with V. cholerae infection are primarily caused by the cholera toxin, but there are several genes that contribute to the colonization and pathogenicity of V. cholerae. Many of the genes associated with the virulence of V. cholerae are located on a pathogenicity island believed to originate from phage (2). We chose several genes identified for their role in pathogenicity and colonization to target for our project. <br> |
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Cholera Toxin: <br> | Cholera Toxin: <br> | ||
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Accessory Colonization Factor: <br> | Accessory Colonization Factor: <br> | ||
The exact mechanism of the accessory colonization factor proteins are unknown, but they have been shown to enhance colonization of V. cholerae in the gut in infant mice (6). | The exact mechanism of the accessory colonization factor proteins are unknown, but they have been shown to enhance colonization of V. cholerae in the gut in infant mice (6). | ||
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Cholera and the beginnings of phage therapy: <br> | Cholera and the beginnings of phage therapy: <br> |
Revision as of 20:38, 17 October 2014
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History of Cholera |
Project |
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“We have witnessed in our days the birth of a new pestilence, which, in the short space of fourteen years, has desolated the fairest portions of the globe, and swept off at least fifty MILLIONS of our race. It has mastered every variety of climate, surmounted every natural barrier, conquered every people. It has not, like the simoon, blasted life and then passed away; the cholera, like the small-pox or plague, takes root in the soil which has once possessed.” (The London and Paris Observer, 11/27/1831)
Introduction:
Mechanism of Infection:
Cholera Toxin:
Transcriptional regulator toxT:
Toxin Coregulated Pilus:
Accessory Colonization Factor:
Cholera and the beginnings of phage therapy:
Sources: |
More about our project: |