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Dive into the research topics where Alma Fulurija is active.

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Featured researches published by Alma Fulurija.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Vaccination against GIP for the Treatment of Obesity

Alma Fulurija; Thomas A. Lutz; Katja Sladko; M. Osto; Peter Y. Wielinga; Martin F. Bachmann; Philippe Saudan

Background According to the WHO, more than 1 billion people worldwide are overweight and at risk of developing chronic illnesses, including cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, hypertension and stroke. Current therapies show limited efficacy and are often associated with unpleasant side-effect profiles, hence there is a medical need for new therapeutic interventions in the field of obesity. Gastric inhibitory peptide (GIP, also known as glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide) has recently been postulated to link over-nutrition with obesity. In fact GIP receptor-deficient mice (GIPR−/−) were shown to be completely protected from diet-induced obesity. Thus, disrupting GIP signaling represents a promising novel therapeutic strategy for the treatment of obesity. Methodology/Principal Findings In order to block GIP signaling we chose an active vaccination approach using GIP peptides covalently attached to virus-like particles (VLP-GIP). Vaccination of mice with VLP-GIP induced high titers of specific antibodies and efficiently reduced body weight gain in animals fed a high fat diet. The reduction in body weight gain could be attributed to reduced accumulation of fat. Moreover, increased weight loss was observed in obese mice vaccinated with VLP-GIP. Importantly, despite the incretin action of GIP, VLP-GIP-treated mice did not show signs of glucose intolerance. Conclusions/Significance This study shows that vaccination against GIP was safe and effective. Thus active vaccination may represent a novel, long-lasting treatment for obesity. However further preclinical safety/toxicology studies will be required before the therapeutic concept can be addressed in humans.


Microbiology | 1996

Neutrophil depletion increases susceptibility to systemic and vaginal candidiasis in mice, and reveals differences between brain and kidney in mechanisms of host resistance

Alma Fulurija; R. B. Ashman; John M. Papadimitriou

Infections caused by the yeast Candida albicans represent an increasing threat to debilitated and immunosuppressed patients, and neutropenia is an important risk factor. Monoclonal antibody depletion of neutrophils in mice was used to study the role of these cells in host resistance. Ablation of neutrophils increased susceptibility to both systemic and vaginal challenge. The fungal burden in the kidney increased threefold on day 1, and 100-fold on day 4, and infection was associated with extensive tissue destruction. However, a striking feature of the disseminated disease in neutrophil-depleted animals was the altered pattern of organ involvement. The brain, which is one of the primary target organs in normal mice, was little affected. There was a threefold increase in the number of organisms recovered from the brains of neutrophil-depleted mice on day 4 after infection, but detectable abscesses were rare. In contrast, the heart, which in normal mice shows only minor lesions, developed severe tissue damage following neutrophil depletion. Mice deficient in C5 demonstrated both qualitative and quantitative increases in the severity of infection after neutrophil depletion when compared with C5-sufficient strains. The results are interpreted as reflecting organ-specific differences in the mechanisms of host resistance.


Microbial Pathogenesis | 2003

Role of complement C5 and T lymphocytes in pathogenesis of disseminated and mucosal candidiasis in susceptible DBA/2 mice

R. B. Ashman; John M. Papadimitriou; Alma Fulurija; Karen E. Drysdale; Camile S. Farah; Owen Naidoo; Theo Gotjamanos

The aims of the study were to compare the pathogenesis of Candida albicans infection in various organs and anatomical regions of C5-deficient (DBA/2) and C5-sufficient (BALB/c) mice, and to evaluate the importance of complement C5 and T lymphocytes as factors that determine host susceptibility or resistance. The kidneys of DBA/2 mice showed higher colonisation and more severe tissue damage than those of BALB/c, but infection at other sites, including oral and vaginal mucosa, was generally similar in the two strains. Passive transfer of C5-sufficient serum into DBA/2 mice decreased the fungal burden in the kidney, and prolonged survival of the reconstituted animals. Depletion of CD4(+) and/or CD8(+) cells did not exacerbate either systemic or mucosal infection when compared to controls, and passive transfer of splenocytes from infected donors caused only a small and transient reduction in numbers of yeasts recovered from the kidney of sub-lethally infected recipients. It is concluded that the acute susceptibility of the kidneys in this mouse strain is due to C5 deficiency expressed on a susceptible genetic background. T lymphocytes, however, appear to have minimal influence on recovery from systemic infection with this isolate of C. albicans.


FEBS Letters | 2009

The secreted Helicobacter cysteine-rich protein A causes adherence of human monocytes and differentiation into a macrophage-like phenotype

Claudia Dumrese; Lutz Slomianka; Urs Ziegler; Sung Sook Choi; Awdhesh Kalia; Alma Fulurija; Wei Lu; Douglas E. Berg; Mohammed Benghezal; Barry J. Marshall; Peer R. E. Mittl

Helicobacter pylori genomes typically contain 8 or 9 genes that code for secreted and highly disulfide‐bridged proteins designated Helicobacter cysteine‐rich proteins (Hcp). Here we show that HcpA (hp0211) but not HcpC (hp1098) triggers the differentiation of human myeloid Thp1 monocytes into macrophages. Small amounts of HcpA cause the transition of round‐shaped monocytes into cells with star‐like morphologies, adherence to the culture dish surface, phagocytosis of opsonized fluorescent microspheres, and expression of the surface marker protein CD11b, all of which are indicative of a macrophage‐like phenotype. We conclude that HcpA acts as a bacterial immune modulator similar to a eukaryotic cytokine.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Surface Properties of Helicobacter pylori Urease Complex Are Essential for Persistence

Tobias Schoep; Alma Fulurija; Fayth Good; Wei Lu; Robyn Himbeck; Carola Schwan; Sung Sook Choi; Douglas E. Berg; Peer R. E. Mittl; Mohammed Benghezal; Barry J. Marshall

The enzymatic activity of Helicobacter pyloris urease neutralises stomach acidity, thereby promoting infection by this pathogen. Urease protein has also been found to interact with host cells in vitro, although this propertys possible functional importance has not been studied in vivo. To test for a role of the urease surface in the host/pathogen interaction, surface exposed loops that display high thermal mobility were targeted for inframe insertion mutagenesis. H. pylori expressing urease with insertions at four of eight sites tested retained urease activity, which in three cases was at least as stable as was wild-type urease at pH 3. Bacteria expressing one of these four mutant ureases, however, failed to colonise mice for even two weeks, and a second had reduced bacterial titres after longer term (3 to 6 months) colonisation. These results indicate that a discrete surface of the urease complex is important for H. pylori persistence during gastric colonisation. We propose that this surface interacts directly with host components important for the host-pathogen interaction, immune modulation or other actions that underlie H. pylori persistence in its special gastric mucosal niche.


Microbiology | 1999

Both CD4+ and CD8+ lymphocytes reduce the severity of tissue lesions in murine systemic candidiasis, and CD4+ cells also demonstrate strain-specific immunopathological effects

R. B. Ashman; Alma Fulurija; John M. Papadimitriou

The role of T lymphocytes in host responses to sublethal systemic infection with Candida albicans was evaluated by mAb depletion of CD4+ and CD8+ cells from BALB/c and CBA/CaH mice, which develop mild and severe tissue damage, respectively. Depletion of CD4+ lymphocytes from BALB/c mice markedly increased tissue damage, but did not alter the course of infection. In CBA/CaH mice, depletion of CD4+ cells abrogated tissue destruction in both brain and kidney at day 4 after infection, and significantly decreased fungal colonization in the brain. However, the severity of tissue lesions increased relative to controls from day 8 onwards. A small increase in tissue damage was evident in both mouse strains after depletion of CD8+ cells. There were no major differences between days 4 and 8 after infection in cDNA cytokine profiles of CD4+ lymphocytes from either BALB/c or CBA/CaH mice. After passive transfer into infected syngeneic recipients, spleen cells from infected CBA/CaH mice markedly increased tissue damage when compared to controls, and also caused a significant increase in fungal colonization in the brain. A similar transfer in BALB/c mice increased the number of inflammatory cells in and around the lesions, but had no effect on the fungal burden in brain and kidney. The data demonstrate that both CD4+ and CD8+ lymphocytes contribute to the reduction of tissue damage after systemic infection with C. albicans, and that the development and expression of CD4+ lymphocyte effector function is influenced by the genetic background of the mouse.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Xer recombinase and genome integrity in Helicobacter pylori, a pathogen without topoisomerase IV.

Aleksandra W. Debowski; Christophe Carnoy; Phebe Verbrugghe; Hans-Olof Nilsson; Jonathan C. Gauntlett; Alma Fulurija; Tania Camilleri; Douglas E. Berg; Barry J. Marshall; Mohammed Benghezal

In the model organism E. coli, recombination mediated by the related XerC and XerD recombinases complexed with the FtsK translocase at specialized dif sites, resolves dimeric chromosomes into free monomers to allow efficient chromosome segregation at cell division. Computational genome analysis of Helicobacter pylori, a slow growing gastric pathogen, identified just one chromosomal xer gene (xerH) and its cognate dif site (difH). Here we show that recombination between directly repeated difH sites requires XerH, FtsK but not XerT, the TnPZ transposon associated recombinase. xerH inactivation was not lethal, but resulted in increased DNA per cell, suggesting defective chromosome segregation. The xerH mutant also failed to colonize mice, and was more susceptible to UV and ciprofloxacin, which induce DNA breakage, and thereby recombination and chromosome dimer formation. xerH inactivation and overexpression each led to a DNA segregation defect, suggesting a role for Xer recombination in regulation of replication. In addition to chromosome dimer resolution and based on the absence of genes for topoisomerase IV (parC, parE) in H. pylori, we speculate that XerH may contribute to chromosome decatenation, although possible involvement of H. pyloris DNA gyrase and topoisomerase III homologue are also considered. Further analyses of this system should contribute to general understanding of and possibly therapy development for H. pylori, which causes peptic ulcers and gastric cancer; for the closely related, diarrheagenic Campylobacter species; and for unrelated slow growing pathogens that lack topoisomerase IV, such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis.


Medical Mycology | 1997

Increased tissue resistance in the nude mouse against Candida albicans without altering strain-dependent differences in susceptibility

Alma Fulurija; R. B. Ashman; John M. Papadimitriou

Strain differences in tissue responses to infection with Candida albicans were examined in nude mice having susceptible (CBA/CaH) and resistant (BALB/c) parentage. Homozygous (nu/nu) mice of both strains were more resistant to systemic infection with C. albicans than heterozygous (nul+) littermates as indicated by a reduction in both the severity of tissue damage and colony counts in the brain and kidney. However, the tissue lesions in nu/nu CBA/CaH mice were markedly more severe than those in nu/nu mice with the BALB/c background. This pattern was reflected in the greater fungal burden in the CBA/CaH strain. Analysis of cDNA from infected tissues using a competitive polymerase chain reaction excluded interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma), tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), and interleukin 6 (IL-6) as mediators of the enhanced resistance of the nude mice. The results confirm that the different patterns of lesion severity in BALB/c and CBA/CaH mice do not involve T lymphocyte-mediated pathology, and are consistent with the hypothesis that strain-dependent tissue damage is not dependent on the effector function of macrophages or their precursors.


Gut Pathogens | 2014

Phase-variable restriction/modification systems are required for Helicobacter pylori colonization.

Jonathan C. Gauntlett; Hans-Olof Nilsson; Alma Fulurija; Barry J. Marshall; Mohammed Benghezal

BackgroundOne mechanism utilized by bacterial pathogens for host adaptation and immune evasion is the generation of phenotypic diversity by the phasevarion that results from the differential expression of a suite of genes regulated by the activity of a phase-variable methyltransferase within a restriction modification (RM) system. Phasevarions are active in Helicobacter pylori, however there have been no studies investigating the significance of phase-variable RM systems on host colonization.MethodsTwo mutant types incapable of phase variation were constructed; a clean deletion mutant (‘DEL’) and a mutant (‘ON’) where the homopolymeric repeat was replaced with a non-repeat synonymous sequence, resulting in expression of the full-length protein. The resulting mutants were assessed for their colonisation ability in the mouse model.ResultsFive phase-variable genes encoding either methyltransferases or members of RM systems were found in H. pylori OND79. Our mutants fell into three categories; 1, those with little effect on colonization, 2, those where expression of the full-length protein was detrimental, 3, those where both mutations were detrimental.ConclusionsOur results demonstrated that phase-variable methyltransferases are critical to H. pylori colonization, suggesting that genome methylation and generation of epigenetic diversity is important for colonization and pathogenesis. The third category of mutants suggests that differential genome methylation status of H. pylori cell populations, achieved by the phasevarion, is essential for host adaptation. Studies of phase-variable RM mutants falling in the two other categories, not strictly required for colonization, represent a future perspective to investigate the role of phasevarion in persistence of H. pylori.


Journal of Medical Microbiology | 1999

Acute susceptibility of aged mice to infection with Candida albicans

R. B. Ashman; John M. Papadimitriou; Alma Fulurija

The effect of aging on host resistance to systemic candidosis was assessed by monitoring the course of infection in 16-month-old CBA/CaH mice (aged non-immune) and in a comparable group that had been infected with a sublethal dose of Candida albicans at 6 weeks of age (aged immune). Aged non-immune mice showed rapid progression of the disease, with a marked increase in the number of mycelia in the brain and kidney, and early morbidity. Foci of myocardial necrosis were evident, but inflammatory cells were sparse. The histological picture in the aged immune mice was similar to that in the aged non-immune group, although fewer mycelial aggregates were seen. Both groups of aged mice showed a significantly lower fungal burden in the brain on day 1 of infection, but on day 4, colony counts increased significantly in the aged non-immune mice. Comparison of cytokine gene expression in the infected brains showed that the relative amount of interferon-gamma and tumour necrosis factor-alpha cDNA were similar in all three groups. Interleukin-6 was elevated in both infected non-immune and uninfected aged mice. Aged immune mice showed no morbidity after challenge, and both colonisation and tissue damage were reduced in comparison with the aged non-immune animals.

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R. B. Ashman

University of Queensland

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Barry J. Marshall

University of Western Australia

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Mohammed Benghezal

University of Western Australia

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John M. Papadimitriou

University of Western Australia

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Hans-Olof Nilsson

University of Western Australia

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Aleksandra W. Debowski

University of Western Australia

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Jonathan C. Gauntlett

University of Western Australia

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Wei Lu

University of Western Australia

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