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Inhibition of sialidase activity and cellular invasion by the bacterial vaginosis pathogen Gardnerella vaginalis

Authors :
Kathryn L. Naylor
G. Govinden
Andrew M. Frey
Jennifer L. Parker
Graham P. Stafford
Dilly O. C. Anumba
Source :
Archives of Microbiology
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Springer, 2018.

Abstract

Bacterial vaginosis is a genital tract infection, thought to be caused by transformation of a lactobacillus-rich flora to a dysbiotic microbiota enriched in mixed anaerobes. The most prominent of these is Gardnerella vaginalis (GV), an anaerobic pathogen that produces sialidase enzyme to cleave terminal sialic acid residues from human glycans. Notably, high sialidase activity is associated with preterm birth and low birthweight. We explored the potential of the sialidase inhibitor Zanamavir against GV whole cell sialidase activity using methyl–umbelliferyl neuraminic acid (MU-NANA) cleavage assays, with Zanamavir causing a 30% reduction in whole cell GV sialidase activity (p

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03028933
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Archives of Microbiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5f9a5913b50c6c6249f366fc122dd400