18 results on '"Schwanbeck J"'
Search Results
2. The role of endothelial adipose triglyceride lipase (ecATGL) in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF)
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Schwanbeck, J, primary, Stahnke, M, additional, Goeritzer, M, additional, Kolb, D, additional, Kershaw, E E, additional, Zechner, R, additional, Foryst-Ludwig, A, additional, and Kintscher, U, additional
- Published
- 2022
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3. Neue hydrologische Szenarien für die Schweiz
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Muelchi, R., Roessler, O., Schwanbeck, J., Weingartner, R., and Martius, O.
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550 Earth sciences & geology ,910 Geography & travel - Published
- 2021
4. Real-World Energy Measurements of a Wireless Mesh Network
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Jamakovic, A., primary, Dimitrova, D. C., additional, Anwander, M., additional, Macicas, T., additional, Braun, T., additional, Schwanbeck, J., additional, Staub, T., additional, and Nyffenegger, B., additional
- Published
- 2013
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5. Flood triggering in Switzerland: the role of daily to monthly preceding precipitation
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Froidevaux, P., primary, Schwanbeck, J., additional, Weingartner, R., additional, Chevalier, C., additional, and Martius, O., additional
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- 2015
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6. IFKIS-Hydro Sihl: Ein operationelles Hochwasservorhersagesystem für die Stadt Zürich und das Sihltal «Teil 1»
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Zappa, M, Jaun, S, Badoux, A, Schwanbeck, J, Addor, Nans, Liechti, K, Roeser, I, Walser, A, Viviroli, Daniel, Vogt, S, Gerber, M, Trösch, J, Weingartner, Rolf, Oplatka, M, Bezzola, G R, Rhyner, J, and University of Zurich
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10122 Institute of Geography ,910 Geography & travel - Published
- 2010
7. FcγRIIa-mediated antibody-dependent uptake of SARS-CoV-2 enhances IL-6 expression of monocytes.
- Author
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Mese K, Maguilla Rosado E, Lüder CGK, Abdel-Moneim AS, Jordan P, Schwanbeck J, Bunz O, Lugert R, Bohne W, Gao J, Dudakova A, Groß U, and Zautner AE
- Abstract
This work aimed to investigate interactions between antibody-opsonized SARS-CoV-2 and monocytes enriched from human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) to determine whether antibody dependent enhancement might contribute to the pathophysiology of COVID-19. Pre-incubation of SARS-CoV-2 with sera from hospitalized COVID-19 patients led to significantly increased virus uptake and viral replication in monocytes. Remarkably, SARS-CoV-2 pre-incubated with sera from patients with severe COVID-19 but not those with mild disease or post vaccination strongly increased IL-6 secretion by monocytes. Antibody dependent viral uptake was partially inhibited by monoclonal anti-FcγRIIa antibody whereas IL-6 secretion was completely abolished. FcγRIIa preferentially binds IgG2, and sera from patients with severe COVID-19 contained lower IgG2 levels as compared to mild COVID-19 cases whereas IgG1 levels were increased. These data suggests that FcγRIIa-mediated binding of antibody-opsonized SARS-CoV-2 critically impacts monocytic inflammatory cytokine release and COVID-19 pathophysiology.
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- 2024
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8. Clostridioides difficile minimal nutrient requirements for flagellar motility.
- Author
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Schwanbeck J, Oehmig I, Groß U, and Bohne W
- Abstract
As many gastro-intestinal pathogens, the majority of Clostridioides difficile strains express flagella together with a complete chemotaxis system. The resulting swimming motility is likely contributing to the colonization success of this important pathogen. In contrast to the well investigated general energy metabolism of C. difficile , little is known about the metabolic requirements for maintaining the ion motive force across the membrane, which in turn powers the flagellar motor. We studied here systematically the effect of various amino acids and carbohydrates on the swimming velocity of C. difficile using video microscopy in conjunction with a software based quantification of the swimming speed. Removal of individual amino acids from the medium identified proline and cysteine as the most important amino acids that power swimming motility. Glycine, which is as proline one of the few amino acids that are reduced in Stickland reactions, was not critical for swimming motility. This suggests that the ion motive force that powers the flagellar motor, is critically depending on proline reduction. A maximal and stable swimming motility was achieved with only four compounds, including the amino acids proline, cysteine and isoleucine together with a single, but interchangeable carbohydrate source such as glucose, succinate, mannose, ribose, pyruvate, trehalose, or ethanolamine. We expect that the identified "minimal motility medium" will be useful in future investigations on the flagellar motility and chemotactic behavior in C. difficile , particularly for the unambiguous identification of chemoattractants., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Schwanbeck, Oehmig, Groß and Bohne.)
- Published
- 2023
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9. Finerenone Reduces Renal RORγt γδ T Cells and Protects against Cardiorenal Damage.
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Luettges K, Bode M, Diemer JN, Schwanbeck J, Wirth EK, Klopfleisch R, Kappert K, Thiele A, Ritter D, Foryst-Ludwig A, Kolkhof P, Wenzel UO, and Kintscher U
- Subjects
- Animals, Blood Pressure, Desoxycorticosterone Acetate, Fibrosis, Kidney pathology, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Nuclear Receptor Subfamily 1, Group F, Member 3 therapeutic use, Hypertension drug therapy, Hypertension, Renal pathology, Naphthyridines pharmacology, T-Lymphocytes
- Abstract
Introduction: Chronic activation of the mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) leads to pathological processes like inflammation and fibrosis during cardiorenal disease. Modulation of immunological processes in the heart or kidney may serve as a mechanistic and therapeutic interface in cardiorenal pathologies. In this study, we investigated anti-inflammatory/-fibrotic and immunological effects of the selective nonsteroidal MR antagonists finerenone (FIN) in the deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA)-salt model., Methods: Male C57BL6/J mice were uninephrectomized and received a DOCA pellet implantation (2.4 mg/day) plus 0.9% NaCl in drinking water (DOCA-salt) or received a sham operation and were orally treated with FIN (10 mg/kg/day) or vehicle in a preventive study design. Five weeks after the procedure, blood pressure (BP), urinary albumin/creatinine ratio (UACR), glomerular and tubulointerstitial damage, echocardiographic cardiac function, as well as cardiac/renal inflammatory cell content by FACS analysis were assessed., Results: BP was significantly reduced by FIN. FACS analysis revealed a notable immune response due to DOCA-salt exposure. Especially, infiltrating renal RORγt γδ-positive T cells were upregulated, which was significantly ameliorated by FIN treatment. This was accompanied by a significant reduction of UACR in FIN-treated mice. In the heart, FIN reduced DOCA-salt-induced cardiac hypertrophy, cardiac fibrosis and led to an improvement of the global longitudinal strain. Cardiac actions of FIN were not associated with a regulation of cardiac RORγt γδ-positive T cells., Discussion/conclusion: The present study shows cardiac and renal protective effects of FIN in a DOCA-salt model. The cardiorenal protection was accompanied by a reduction of renal RORγt γδ T cells. The observed actions of FIN may provide a potential mechanism of its efficacy recently observed in clinical trials., (© 2022 S. Karger AG, Basel.)
- Published
- 2022
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10. Clostridioides difficile Single Cell Swimming Strategy: A Novel Motility Pattern Regulated by Viscoelastic Properties of the Environment.
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Schwanbeck J, Oehmig I, Groß U, Zautner AE, and Bohne W
- Abstract
Flagellar motility is important for the pathogenesis of many intestinal pathogens, allowing bacteria to move to their preferred ecological niche. Clostridioides difficile is currently the major cause for bacterial health care-associated intestinal infections in the western world. Most clinical strains produce peritrichous flagella and are motile in soft-agar. However, little knowledge exists on the C. difficile swimming behaviour and its regulation at the level of individual cells. We report here on the swimming strategy of C. difficile at the single cell level and its dependency on environmental parameters. A comprehensive analysis of motility parameters from several thousand bacteria was achieved with the aid of a recently developed bacterial tracking programme. C. difficile motility was found to be strongly dependent on the matrix elasticity of the medium. Long run phases of all four motile C. difficile clades were only observed in the presence of high molecular weight molecules such as polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) and mucin, which suggests an adaptation of the motility apparatus to the mucin-rich intestinal environment. Increasing mucin or PVP concentrations lead to longer and straighter runs with increased travelled distance per run and fewer turnarounds that result in a higher net displacement of the bacteria. The observed C. difficile swimming pattern under these conditions is characterised by bidirectional, alternating back and forth run phases, interrupted by a short stop without an apparent reorientation or tumbling phase. This motility type was not described before for peritrichous bacteria and is more similar to some previously described polar monotrichous bacteria., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Schwanbeck, Oehmig, Groß, Zautner and Bohne.)
- Published
- 2021
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11. Diagnosing SARS-CoV-2 with Antigen Testing, Transcription-Mediated Amplification and Real-Time PCR.
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Dierks S, Bader O, Schwanbeck J, Groß U, Weig MS, Mese K, Lugert R, Bohne W, Hahn A, Feltgen N, Torkieh S, Denker FR, Lauermann P, Storch MW, Frickmann H, and Zautner AE
- Abstract
This study was performed as a head-to-head comparison of the performance characteristics of (1) two SARS-CoV-2-specific rapid antigen assays with real-time PCR as gold standard as well as (2) a fully automated high-throughput transcription-mediated amplification (TMA) assay and real-time PCR in a latent class analysis-based test comparison without a gold standard with several hundred samples in a low prevalence "real world" setting. Recorded sensitivity and specificity of the NADAL and the LumiraDx antigen assays and the Hologic Aptima SARS-CoV-2 TMA assay were 0.1429 (0.0194, 0.5835), 0.7644 (0.7016, 0.8174), and 0.7157 (0, 1) as well as 0.4545 (0.2022, 0.7326), 0.9954 (0.9817, 0.9988), and 0.9997 (not estimable), respectively. Agreement kappa between the positive results of the two antigen-based assays was 0.060 (0.002, 0.167) and 0.659 (0.492, 0.825) for TMA and real-time PCR. Samples with low viral load as indicated by cycle threshold (Ct) values > 30 were generally missed by both antigen assays, while 1:10 pooling suggested higher sensitivity of TMA compared to real-time PCR. In conclusion, both sensitivity and specificity speak in favor of the use of the LumiraDx rather than the NADAL antigen assay, while TMA results are comparably as accurate as PCR, when applied in a low prevalence setting.
- Published
- 2021
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12. Detection of a New Resistance-Mediating Plasmid Chimera in a bla OXA-48 -Positive Klebsiella pneumoniae Strain at a German University Hospital.
- Author
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Schwanbeck J, Bohne W, Hasdemir U, Groß U, Pfeifer Y, Bunk B, Riedel T, Spröer C, Overmann J, Frickmann H, and Zautner AE
- Abstract
Mobile genetic elements, such as plasmids, facilitate the spread of antibiotic resistance genes in Enterobacterales. In line with this, we investigated the plasmid-resistome of seven bla
OXA-48 gene-carrying Klebsiella pneumoniae isolates, which were isolated between 2013 and 2014 at the University Medical Center in Göttingen, Germany. All isolates were subjected to complete genome sequencing including the reconstruction of entire plasmid sequences. In addition, phenotypic resistance testing was conducted. The seven isolates comprised both disease-associated isolates and colonizers isolated from five patients. They fell into two clusters of three sequence type (ST)101 and two ST11 isolates, respectively; and ST15 and ST23 singletons. The seven isolates harbored various plasmids of the incompatibility (Inc) groups IncF, IncL/M, IncN, IncR, and a novel plasmid chimera. All blaOXA-48 genes were encoded on the IncL/M plasmids. Of note, distinct phenotypical resistance patterns associated with different sets of resistance genes encoded by IncL/M and IncR plasmids were observed among isolates of the ST101 cluster in spite of high phylogenetic relatedness of the bacterial chromosomes, suggesting nosocomial transmission. This highlights the importance of plasmid uptake and plasmid recombination events for the fast generation of resistance variability after clonal transmission. In conclusion, this study contributes a piece in the puzzle of molecular epidemiology of resistance gene-carrying plasmids in K. pneumoniae in Germany.- Published
- 2021
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13. Comparative Assessment of Sera from Individuals after S-Gene RNA-Based SARS-CoV-2 Vaccination with Spike-Protein-Based and Nucleocapsid-Based Serological Assays.
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Dörschug A, Frickmann H, Schwanbeck J, Yilmaz E, Mese K, Hahn A, Groß U, and Zautner AE
- Abstract
Due to the beginning of vaccination against COVID-19, serological discrimination between vaccine-associated humoral response and serology-based surveillance of natural SARS-CoV-2 infections as well as breakthrough infections becomes an issue of relevance. Here, we assessed the differentiated effects of the application of an RNA vaccine using SARS-CoV-2 spike protein epitopes on the results of both anti-spike protein-based serology (EUROIMMUN) and anti-nucleocapsid-based serology (VIROTECH). A total of 80 serum samples from vaccinees acquired at different time points after vaccination was assessed. While positive or borderline serological response in the anti-spike protein assay was observed for all samples (90% both IgG and IgA, 6.3% IgA only, 3.8% borderline IgG only), only a single case of a falsely positive IgM was observed for the anti-nucleocapsid assay as expected due to this assay's specificity. Positive anti-spike protein antibodies were already detectable in the second week after the first dose of vaccination, with higher titers after the second dose of the vaccine. In conclusion, the combined application of anti-spike protein-based serology and anti-nucleocapsid-based serology will provide a useful option for the discrimination of vaccination response and natural infection.
- Published
- 2021
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14. Comparison of Five Serological Assays for the Detection of SARS-CoV-2 Antibodies.
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Dörschug A, Schwanbeck J, Hahn A, Hillebrecht A, Blaschke S, Mese K, Groß U, Dierks S, Frickmann H, and Zautner AE
- Abstract
Serological assays can contribute to the estimation of population proportions with previous immunologically relevant contact with the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Corona Virus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) virus. In this study, we compared five commercially available diagnostic assays for the diagnostic identification of SARS-CoV-2-specific antibodies. Depending on the assessed immunoglobulin subclass, recorded sensitivity ranged from 17.0% to 81.9% with best results for immunoglobulin G. Specificity with blood donor sera ranged from 90.2% to 100%, with sera from EBV patients it ranged from 84.3% to 100%. Agreement from fair to nearly perfect was recorded depending on the immunoglobulin class between the assays, the with best results being found for immunoglobulin G. Only for this immunoglobulin class was the association between later sample acquisition times (about three weeks after first positive PCR results) and positive serological results in COVID-19 patients confirmed. In conclusion, acceptable and comparable reliability for the assessed immunoglobulin G-specific assays could be shown, while there is still room for improvement regarding the reliability of the assays targeting the other immunoglobulin classes.
- Published
- 2021
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15. Evaluation of the Xiamen AmonMed Biotechnology rapid diagnostic test COVID-19 IgM/IgG test kit (Colloidal gold).
- Author
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Dörschug A, Schwanbeck J, Hahn A, Hillebrecht A, Blaschke S, Groß U, Heimesaat MM, Frickmann H, and Zautner AE
- Abstract
Introduction: To efficiently monitor the COVID-19 pandemic for surveillance purposes, reliable serological rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) are desirable for settings where well-established high-throughput bench-top solutions are not available. Here, we have evaluated such an RDT., Methods: We have assessed the Xiamen AmonMed Biotechnology COVID-19 IgM/IgG test kit (Colloidal gold) and the EUROIMMUN benchtop assay with serum samples from patients with polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-confirmed COVID-19 disease. Samples from patients with Epstein-Barr-virus (EBV) infection and blood donors were used for specificity testing., Results: For the colloid gold rapid test and the EUROIMMUN assay, the study indicated overall sensitivity of 15.2% and 67.4%, respectively, while specificity of 99.0% and 97.9% with the blood donor sera, as well as 100% and 96.8% with the EBV-patients, were observed, respectively. An association of the time period between positive PCR results and serum acquisition with serological test positivity could be observed for the immunologlobulin G subclass of the EUROIMMUN assay only., Conclusions: In spite of acceptable specificity of the assessed RDT, the detected poor sensitivity leaves room for improvement. The test results remain difficult to interpret and therefore the RDT can currently not be recommended for routine diagnostic or surveillance use.
- Published
- 2020
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16. Antimicrobial Resistance Patterns in Clostridioides difficile Strains Isolated from Neonates in Germany.
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Tilkorn FKMT, Frickmann H, Simon IS, Schwanbeck J, Horn S, Zimmermann O, Groß U, Bohne W, and Zautner AE
- Abstract
Young children are frequently colonized with Clostridioides ( C. ) difficile . Depending on their resistance patterns, antibiotic treatment can facilitate gastrointestinal spreading in colonized individuals, potentially leading to transmission to others. C. difficile was isolated from stool samples from infants born in two hospitals in Göttingen and Darmstadt, Germany. All isolates were subjected to phenotypic antimicrobial resistance testing, PCR-based screening for toxin genes and mass spectrometry-based exclusion of ribotypes 027 and 176. Within an initial cohort of 324 neonates with a longitudinal survey of C. difficile , 137 strains were isolated from 48 individuals. Antimicrobial resistance was recorded against metronidazole in one (0.7%), erythromycin in 16 (11.7%) and moxifloxacin in 2 (1.5%) of the strains, whereas no resistance was observed against vancomycin (0.0%) or rifampicin (0.0%). Newly observed resistance against erythromycin in children with detection of previously completely sensitive isolates was reported for C. difficile isolates from 2 out of 48 children. In 20 children (42%), non-toxigenic strains were detected, and from 27 children (56%), toxigenic strains were isolated, while both toxigenic and non-toxigenic strains were recorded for 1 child (2%). Ribotypes 027 or 176 were not observed. In conclusion, the German C. difficile strains isolated from the children showed mild to moderate resistance with predominance of macrolide resistance, a substance class which is frequently applied in children. The observed switches to the dominance of macrolide-resistant isolates suggests likely selection of resistant C. difficile strains already in children.
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- 2020
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17. YSMR: a video tracking and analysis program for bacterial motility.
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Schwanbeck J, Oehmig I, Dretzke J, Zautner AE, Groß U, and Bohne W
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- Bacteria cytology, Movement, Bacteria metabolism, Software, Video Recording
- Abstract
Background: Motility in bacteria forms the basis for taxis and is in some pathogenic bacteria important for virulence. Video tracking of motile bacteria allows the monitoring of bacterial swimming behaviour and taxis on the level of individual cells, which is a prerequisite to study the underlying molecular mechanisms., Results: The open-source python program YSMR (Your Software for Motility Recognition) was designed to simultaneously track a large number of bacterial cells on standard computers from video files in various formats. In order to cope with the high number of tracked objects, we use a simple detection and tracking approach based on grey-value and position, followed by stringent selection against suspicious data points. The generated data can be used for statistical analyses either directly with YSMR or with external programs., Conclusion: In contrast to existing video tracking software, which either requires expensive computer hardware or only tracks a limited number of bacteria for a few seconds, YSMR is an open-source program which allows the 2-D tracking of several hundred objects over at least 5 minutes on standard computer hardware. The code is freely available at https://github.com/schwanbeck/YSMR.
- Published
- 2020
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18. Characterization of a clinical Clostridioides difficile isolate with markedly reduced fidaxomicin susceptibility and a V1143D mutation in rpoB.
- Author
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Schwanbeck J, Riedel T, Laukien F, Schober I, Oehmig I, Zimmermann O, Overmann J, Groß U, Zautner AE, and Bohne W
- Subjects
- Clostridioides difficile enzymology, Clostridioides difficile genetics, Clostridioides difficile isolation & purification, Humans, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Clostridioides difficile drug effects, Clostridium Infections microbiology, DNA-Directed RNA Polymerases genetics, Fidaxomicin pharmacology, Mutation, Missense
- Abstract
Objectives: The identification and characterization of clinical Clostridioides difficile isolates with reduced fidaxomicin susceptibility., Methods: Agar dilution assays were used to determine fidaxomicin MICs. Genome sequence data were obtained by single-molecule real-time (SMRT) sequencing in addition to amplicon sequencing of rpoB and rpoC alleles. Allelic exchange was used to introduce the identified mutation into C. difficile 630Δerm. Replication rates, toxin A/B production and spore formation were determined from the strain with reduced fidaxomicin susceptibility., Results: Out of 50 clinical C. difficile isolates, isolate Goe-91 revealed markedly reduced fidaxomicin susceptibility (MIC >64 mg/L). A V1143D mutation was identified in rpoB of Goe-91. When introduced into C. difficile 630Δerm, this mutation decreased fidaxomicin susceptibility (MIC >64 mg/L), but was also associated with a reduced replication rate, low toxin A/B production and markedly reduced spore formation. In contrast, Goe-91, although also reduced in toxin production, showed normal growth rates and only moderately reduced spore formation capacities. This indicates that the rpoBV1143D allele-associated fitness defect is less pronounced in the clinical isolate., Conclusions: To the best of our knowledge, this is the first description of a pathogenic clinical C. difficile isolate with markedly reduced fidaxomicin susceptibility. The lower-than-expected fitness burden of the resistance-mediating rpoBV1143D allele might be an indication for compensatory mechanisms that take place during in vivo selection of mutants.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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