Virulence Attributes of Low-Virulence Organisms

The vast majority of infections involving female pelvic structures arise from organisms that are members of the normal flora. In addition, exogenous organisms that invade through the lower genital tract must interact with organisms that are part of the host's flora. In contrast to the concept...

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Main Author: Bryan Larsen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 1994-01-01
Series:Infectious Diseases in Obstetrics and Gynecology
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/S1064744994000463
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spelling doaj-c400167baa0649c8908d636f3aab5c2f2020-11-24T21:11:07ZengHindawi LimitedInfectious Diseases in Obstetrics and Gynecology1064-74491098-09971994-01-01229510410.1155/S1064744994000463Virulence Attributes of Low-Virulence OrganismsBryan Larsen0Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Marshall University School of Medicine, 1801 6th Avenue, Huntington 25703, WV, USAThe vast majority of infections involving female pelvic structures arise from organisms that are members of the normal flora. In addition, exogenous organisms that invade through the lower genital tract must interact with organisms that are part of the host's flora. In contrast to the concept that the normal flora is entirely innocuous, recent research has begun to identify what appear to be virulence attributes among these ordinarily low-virulence organisms. Most of our understanding of virulence has been derived from highly virulent organisms, of which Neisseria gonorrhoeae provides an example of relevance to the female genital tract. A review of the virulence factors of the gonococcus is presented to serve as an example of the variety of virulence properties associated with pathogenic bacteria. Molecular biology has begun to clarify one of the important paradigms of pathogenic bacteriology—that bacteria change their expression of virulence properties in response to their location within a host or to the stage of infection. Thus, infection involves not only the possession of virulence factors, but also the carefully controlled use of those factors. Virulence is often controlled by the coordinate expression of many virulence-associated genes in response to one environmental signal. With regard to low- virulence organisms present in the female lower genital tract, we are beginning to identify some of their virulence attributes. Examples from the work of our laboratory include the hemolysin of Gardnerella vaginalis and an immunosuppressive mycotoxin produced by Candida albicans. Demonstrating the coordinate expression (or other control mechanisms) of virulence factors in these sometimes innocuous and sometimes inimical organisms represents the next frontier in the study of normal vaginal microbiology.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/S1064744994000463
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bryan Larsen
spellingShingle Bryan Larsen
Virulence Attributes of Low-Virulence Organisms
Infectious Diseases in Obstetrics and Gynecology
author_facet Bryan Larsen
author_sort Bryan Larsen
title Virulence Attributes of Low-Virulence Organisms
title_short Virulence Attributes of Low-Virulence Organisms
title_full Virulence Attributes of Low-Virulence Organisms
title_fullStr Virulence Attributes of Low-Virulence Organisms
title_full_unstemmed Virulence Attributes of Low-Virulence Organisms
title_sort virulence attributes of low-virulence organisms
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Infectious Diseases in Obstetrics and Gynecology
issn 1064-7449
1098-0997
publishDate 1994-01-01
description The vast majority of infections involving female pelvic structures arise from organisms that are members of the normal flora. In addition, exogenous organisms that invade through the lower genital tract must interact with organisms that are part of the host's flora. In contrast to the concept that the normal flora is entirely innocuous, recent research has begun to identify what appear to be virulence attributes among these ordinarily low-virulence organisms. Most of our understanding of virulence has been derived from highly virulent organisms, of which Neisseria gonorrhoeae provides an example of relevance to the female genital tract. A review of the virulence factors of the gonococcus is presented to serve as an example of the variety of virulence properties associated with pathogenic bacteria. Molecular biology has begun to clarify one of the important paradigms of pathogenic bacteriology—that bacteria change their expression of virulence properties in response to their location within a host or to the stage of infection. Thus, infection involves not only the possession of virulence factors, but also the carefully controlled use of those factors. Virulence is often controlled by the coordinate expression of many virulence-associated genes in response to one environmental signal. With regard to low- virulence organisms present in the female lower genital tract, we are beginning to identify some of their virulence attributes. Examples from the work of our laboratory include the hemolysin of Gardnerella vaginalis and an immunosuppressive mycotoxin produced by Candida albicans. Demonstrating the coordinate expression (or other control mechanisms) of virulence factors in these sometimes innocuous and sometimes inimical organisms represents the next frontier in the study of normal vaginal microbiology.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/S1064744994000463
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