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Clostridium difficile infection: toxins and non-toxin virulence factors, and their contributions to disease establishment and host response
- Source :
- Gut microbes. 3(2)
- Publication Year :
- 2012
-
Abstract
- Clostridium difficile infection is the leading cause of antibiotic- and healthcare-associated diarrhea, and its containment and treatment imposes a significant financial burden, estimated to be over $3 billion in the USA alone. Since the year 2000, CDI epidemics/outbreaks have occurred in North America, Europe and Asia. These outbreaks have been variously associated with, or attributed to, the emergence of Clostridium difficile strains with increased virulence, an increase in resistance to commonly used antimicrobials such as the fluoroquinolones, or host susceptibilities, including the use of gastric acid suppressants, to name a few. Efforts to elucidate C. difficile pathogenic mechanisms have been hampered by a lack of molecular tools, manipulatable animal models, and genetic intractability of clinical C. difficile isolates. However, in the past 5 y, painstaking efforts have resulted in the unraveling of multiple C. difficile virulence-associated pathways and mechanisms. We have recently reviewed the disease, its associated risk factors, transmission and interventions (Viswanathan, Gut Microbes 2010). This article summarizes genetics, non-toxin virulence factors, and host-cell biology associated with C. difficile pathogenesis as of 2011, and highlights those findings/factors that may be of interest as future intervention targets.
- Subjects :
- Microbiology (medical)
Diarrhea
Asia
medicine.drug_class
Virulence Factors
Antibiotics
Bacterial Toxins
Host response
Virulence
Disease
Drug resistance
Review
Biology
medicine.disease_cause
Microbiology
Models, Biological
Drug Resistance, Bacterial
medicine
Humans
Cross Infection
Toxin
Clostridioides difficile
Gastroenterology
Clostridium difficile
Virology
Europe
Infectious Diseases
Host-Pathogen Interactions
North America
Clostridium Infections
medicine.symptom
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 19490984
- Volume :
- 3
- Issue :
- 2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Gut microbes
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....e3f082963df8520605649cfa0e570749