National Repository of Grey Literature 3 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Biofilm formation in Streptococcus pneumoniae
Jarošová, Václava ; Petráčková, Denisa (advisor) ; Matyska Lišková, Petra (referee)
Biofilm is a structured community of cells adhered to the surface or to each other and surrounded by extracellular matrix. Biofilm is fomed in several steps starting from single cells adhered to the surface up to microcolonies linked by channels. Because of a higher resistance to antibiotics the current hot topics in the biofilm research are formation of biofilms on medical materials and treatment of bacterial infections associated with biofilms. This work is focused on a biofilm forming bacteria Streptococcus pneumoniae. It is a potentially pathogenic bacterium which colonizes the upper respiratory tract and causes a number of diseases. Biofilms formed by S. pneumoniae exhibit increased resistance to antibiotics, therefore, alternative antimicrobial agents have been recently studied. For biofilm formation studies both open and closed systems are used. The flow cell and biofilm reactors represent commonly used open systems. Closed cultivation systems are for example a Calgary biofilm device and a micro titer plate-system developed by Christensen et al.
The role of Spr1851 protein Streptococcus pneumoniae in cell division
Jarošová, Václava ; Ulrych, Aleš (advisor) ; Seydlová, Gabriela (referee)
The role of Spr1851 protein Streptococcus pneumoniae in cell division Human extracellular pathogen S. pneumoniae encodes unique serin/threonine protein kinase of Eucaryotic type StkP and its cognate phosphatase PhpP. This kinase affects number of cellular processes including virulence, competence, cell division and cell wall synthesis by phosphorylating its substrates. Hypothetical protein Spr1851 named Jag was identified as a new StkP substrate in the membrane fraction by comparing the wild-type phosphoproteomes with StkP deleted strain. This protein consists of three domains and an interdomain region that contains T89 phosphorylation site. There is a Jag_N domain with an unknown function at the N-terminus. The C-terminus contains two domains - KH and R3H, which are highly conserved and their expected function is binding of nucleic acid. The main aim of this work is to explain the function of Jag protein, to determine the effect of individual domains on the phenotype and the localization of the protein and to determine the role of phosphorylation on T89. The results confirm that Jag protein could play a role in cell division or cell wall synthesis. Furthermore, the results indicate that the Jag_N domain is essential for the localization of the protein into the membrane, whereas the KH and R3H domains are...
Biofilm formation in Streptococcus pneumoniae
Jarošová, Václava ; Petráčková, Denisa (advisor) ; Matyska Lišková, Petra (referee)
Biofilm is a structured community of cells adhered to the surface or to each other and surrounded by extracellular matrix. Biofilm is fomed in several steps starting from single cells adhered to the surface up to microcolonies linked by channels. Because of a higher resistance to antibiotics the current hot topics in the biofilm research are formation of biofilms on medical materials and treatment of bacterial infections associated with biofilms. This work is focused on a biofilm forming bacteria Streptococcus pneumoniae. It is a potentially pathogenic bacterium which colonizes the upper respiratory tract and causes a number of diseases. Biofilms formed by S. pneumoniae exhibit increased resistance to antibiotics, therefore, alternative antimicrobial agents have been recently studied. For biofilm formation studies both open and closed systems are used. The flow cell and biofilm reactors represent commonly used open systems. Closed cultivation systems are for example a Calgary biofilm device and a micro titer plate-system developed by Christensen et al.

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13 JAROŠOVÁ, Veronika
2 Jarošová, Vanda
13 Jarošová, Veronika
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