Top 10 similar words or synonyms for rodentium

muridarum    0.807007

hepaticus    0.790972

mopn    0.787067

iniae    0.785752

epec    0.782154

upec    0.779305

cenocepacia    0.775732

haemolytica    0.761950

abortus    0.759364

uropathogenic    0.755259

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for rodentium

Article Example
Citrobacter rodentium Citrobacter rodentium is a Gram-negative species of bacteria.
Helicobacter rodentium Helicobacter rodentium is a bacterium in the Helicobacteraceae family, Campylobacterales order. It is a spiral-shaped bacterium with a bipolar, single, nonsheathed flagellum. It is resistant to cephalothin and nalidixic acid. Its type strain is MIT 95-1707 (= ATCC 700285). Its name refers to the species first being isolated from mice.
Intimin Antibodies to intimin are present in: (1) Immune colostrum from mothers in EPEC endemic areas, (2) The serum of EPEC/EHEC infected children and EPEC infected volunteers, and (3) Secretions of Citrobacter rodentium infected mice.
Altered Schaedler flora Bacteria microenvironment is very important in the pathogenesis of clinical and experimental chronic intestinal inflammation. Whary, "et al." examined Helicobacter rodentium infection and the resulting ulcerative typhlocolitis, sepsis, and morbidity. Using ASF mice, they showed a decrease in disease progression due to colonization resistance in the lower bowel from the impacts of normal anaerobic flora. In another summary, Fox examined the relationship between microbiome of the gut and the onset of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) with the infection of "H. bilis. H. bilis" is noted to elicit heterologous immune response to lower gut flora, in both activating pro-inflammatory cytokine and dendritic cell activity and probiotic anti-inflammatory activity due to the presentation of commensal antigens. ASF Lactobacilli and Bacteroides help moderate bowel inflammation in a balanced manner in pathogen infection studies.
Colonization resistance Recently, it has been observed that colonization resistance can occur within the host in a 'direct' or 'indirect' manner. The former refers to particular components of the microbiota directly competing with exogenous pathogens for nutritional niches (e.g. "Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron" directly competes with "Citrobacter rodentium" for carbohydrates in the intestinal lumen) or by producing growth inhibitors (e.g. "Bacteroides thuringiensis" can secrete bacteriocin that directly targets spore-forming "Clostridium difficile", thus inhibiting its growth through an unknown mechanism), that directly inhibit the colonizing pathogen. Indirect colonization resistance is thought to be mediated through the induction of immune responses in the host that concomitantly inhibit the colonizing pathogen. An example of this has been observed with "B. thetaiotaomicron", which can induce the host to produce antimicrobial C-type lectins REGIIIγ and REGIIIβ, both anti-microbial peptides that target gram-positive bacteria.