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For this purpose, specific anti-GSL antibodies or Stxs themselves in conjunction with anti-Stx antibodies can be used. The described protocols of antibody-mediated detection of TLC-separated globo-series GSLs and corresponding identification of Stx-binding globo-series GSLs will provide detailed advice for successful GSL analysis and particularly highlight the power of the TLC overlay technique.Microvesicles are shed from cell surfaces during infectious or inflammatory conditions and may contribute to the pathogenesis of disease. During Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) infection, microvesicles are released from blood cells. These microvesicles play a part in inflammation, thrombosis, hemolysis, and the transfer of the main virulence factor of STEC strains, Shiga toxin, to target organ cells. This chapter describes how to isolate blood cell- and cell culture-derived microvesicles from plasma or cell culture medium, respectively, and how to characterize these microvesicles by various methods, with special focus on Shiga toxin-associated microvesicles.Outer membrane vesicles (OMVs), nanoparticles released by Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC), have been identified as novel efficient virulence tools of these pathogens. STEC O157 OMVs carry a cocktail of virulence factors including Shiga toxin 2a (Stx2a), cytolethal distending toxin V (CdtV), EHEC hemolysin, flagellin, and lipopolysaccharide. OMVs are taken up by human intestinal epithelial and microvascular endothelial cells, the major targets during STEC infection, and deliver the virulence factors into host cells. There the toxins separate from OMVs and are trafficked via different pathways to their target compartments, i.e., the cytosol (Stx2a-A subunit), nucleus (CdtV-B subunit), and mitochondria (EHEC hemolysin). This leads to a toxin-specific host cell injury and ultimately apoptotic cell death. Besides their cytotoxic effects, STEC OMVs trigger an inflammatory response via their lipopolysaccharide and flagellin components. In this chapter, we describe methods for the isolation and purification of STEC OMVs, for the detection of OMV-associated virulence factors, and for the analysis of OMV interactions with host cells including OMV cellular uptake and intracellular trafficking of OMVs and OMV-delivered toxins.Plants represent alternative or secondary hosts for Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC), enabling transmission of the pathogens through the food chain on horticultural crops. This becomes a public health concern for plants that are eaten raw or minimally processed, such as leafy salad and fruits. STEC actively interact with plants as hosts, and so to determine the mechanistic basis to the interaction, it is necessary to assess STEC gene function in planta. Here, we describe analysis of an STEC biofilm component, curli, that plays a role in STEC colony formation in plant leaves. It also serves as a suitable example of the approaches required for qualitative and quantitative assessment of functional host colonization traits.The bacteriophage Lambda (λ) "Red" recombination system has enabled the development of efficient methods for engineering bacterial chromosomes. This system has been particularly important to the field of bacterial pathogenesis, where it has advanced the study of virulence factors from Shiga toxin-producing and enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (STEC and EPEC). Transient plasmid-driven expression of Lambda Red allows homologous recombination between PCR-derived linear DNA substrates and target loci in the STEC/EPEC chromosomes. Red-associated techniques can be used to create individual gene knockouts, generate deletions of large pathogenicity islands, and make markerless allelic exchanges. This chapter describes specific strategies and procedures for performing Lambda Red-mediated genome engineering in STEC.Shiga toxin (Stx) phages can be induced from Stx-producing Escherichia coli strains (STEC) or can be isolated as free virions from different samples. Here we describe methods used for the detection, enumeration, and isolation of Stx bacteriophages. Stx phages are temperate phages located in the genome of STEC. Their induction from the host strain cultures is achieved by different inducing agents, mitomycin C being one of the most commonly used. Detection of infectious Stx phages requires the production of visible plaques in a confluent lawn of the host strain using a double agar layer method. However, as the plaques produced by Stx phages are often barely visible and there is a possibility that non-Stx phages can also be induced from the strain, a hybridization step should be added to recognize and properly enumerate the lysis plaques generated after induction. Molecular methods can also be used to identify and enumerate Stx phages. Selleckchem Salvianolic acid B Real-time quantitative PCR (qPCR) is the most accurate method for absolute quantification, although it cannot determine the infectivity of Stx phages. qPCR can also be useful for the detection of free Stx phage virions in different sample types.Stx phages induced from lysogenic bacterial strains can be purified by cesium chloride density gradients; this protocol also helps to specifically discriminate Stx phages from other prophages present in the genome of the host strain by selecting the phages expressing the Stx gene. High titer suspensions of Stx phages obtained after induction of large volumes of bacterial cultures and lysate concentration permits phage characterization by electron microscopy studies and genomic analysis.Escherichia coli is a species of bacteria that can be present in a wide variety of mammalian hosts and potentially soil environments. E. coli has an open genome and can show considerable diversity in gene content between isolates. It is a reasonable assumption that gene content reflects evolution of strains in particular host environments and therefore can be used to predict the host most likely to be the source of an isolate. An extrapolation of this argument is that strains may also have gene content that favors success in multiple hosts and so the possibility of successful transmission from one host to another, for example, from cattle to human, can also be predicted based on gene content. In this methods chapter, we consider the issue of Shiga toxin (Stx)-producing E. coli (STEC) strains that are present in ruminants as the main host reservoir and for which we know that a subset causes life-threatening infections in humans. We show how the genome sequences of E. coli isolated from both cattle and humans can be used to build a classifier to predict human and cattle host association and how this can be applied to score key STEC serotypes known to be associated with human infection. With the example dataset used, serogroups O157, O26, and O111 show the highest, and O103 and O145 the lowest, predictions for human association. The long-term ambition is to combine such machine learning predictions with phylogeny to predict the zoonotic threat of an isolate based on its whole genome sequence (WGS).Today, whole genome sequencing (WGS)-based typing is the gold standard approach to detect outbreaks of Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) and to differentiate them from sporadic cases. Here, we describe an optimized protocol to efficiently determine the genome sequences of STEC using short read Illumina technology and provide information on helpful tools for the subsequent bioinformatic analysis.Cattle and other ruminants are primary reservoirs for Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) strains which have a highly variable, but unpredictable, pathogenic potential for humans. Domestic swine can carry and shed STEC, but only STEC strains producing the Shiga toxin (Stx) 2e variant and causing edema disease in piglets are considered pathogens of veterinary medical interest. In this chapter, we present general diagnostic workflows for sampling livestock animals to assess STEC prevalence, magnitude, and duration of host colonization. This is followed by detailed method protocols for STEC detection and typing at genetic and phenotypic levels to assess the relative virulence exerted by the strains.Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) are human pathogens causing severe diseases, such as hemorrhagic colitis and the hemolytic uremic syndrome. The prompt diagnosis of STEC infection is of primary importance to drive the most appropriate patient's management procedures. The methods to diagnose STEC infections include both direct isolation of the STEC from stool samples and the identification of indirect evidences based on molecular, phenotypic, and serological applications. Here, the procedures in use at the Italian Reference Laboratory for E. coli infections are described.The importance of tumor-associated antigen-specific T cells in the effective control of cancer has been highlighted by recent advances in cancer immunotherapies that target the programmed cell death-1 (PD-1) pathway or that utilize modified T cell receptors. Phosphopeptide-specific T cells are of interest because they recognize a new class of tumor antigens that are derived from proteins relevant for cancer development and growth. These T cell lines or their antigen receptors can be used in combination with other forms of therapy to improve the immune response and survival of cancer patients. We describe here a protocol for the generation of human and transgenic murine phosphopeptide-specific T cells lines as tools for investigating T cell reactivity against melanoma phosphoantigens displayed by HLA-A*0201.Expression of chimeric antigen receptors can redirect T cell specificity and allow for MHC-independent recognition of melanoma associated antigens. Retroviral transduction is used to express chimeric antigen receptor constructs in murine CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. Here we describe the production of retroviral supernatants and the activation, transduction, expansion, and selection of murine T cells expressing the chimeric-PD1 receptor. This protocol can be modified for any murine chimeric antigen receptor construct.Gene electrotransfer (GET) is a reliable and effective physical method for in vivo delivery of plasmid DNA (pDNA). Several preclinical and clinical studies have utilized GET to deliver plasmids encoding immune stimulating genes for treatment of melanoma and other tumor types. Intratumor delivery of plasmids encoding cytokines directly to tumors can induce not only a local immune response, but a systemic one as well. To obtain an effective immune response, it is critical to achieve the appropriate expression pattern of the delivered transgene. Expression pattern (levels and kinetics) can be modified by manipulating the electrotransfer parameters. These parameters include the tissue target and the electric pulse parameters of pulse width, electric field, and pulse number. We have found that to induce a robust immune response, we needed only low to moderately elevated expression levels compared to controls. When developing a therapeutic protocol, it is important to establish what expression profile will enable the appropriate response. In this chapter we describe how to determine the appropriate GET protocol to achieve the expression profile that can result in the desired clinical response.

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