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Featured researches published by Dominique Krüger.


BMC Infectious Diseases | 2003

Comparison of two DNA targets for the diagnosis of Toxoplasmosis by real-time PCR using fluorescence resonance energy transfer hybridization probes

Udo Reischl; Stéphane Bretagne; Dominique Krüger; Pauline Ernault; Jean-Marc Costa

BackgroundToxoplasmosis is an infectious disease caused by the parasitic protozoan Toxoplasma gondii. It is endemic worldwide and, depending on the geographic location, 15 to 85% of the human population are asymptomatically infected. Routine diagnosis is based on serology. The parasite has emerged as a major opportunistic pathogen for immunocompromised patients, in whom it can cause life-threatening disease. Moreover, when a pregnant woman develops a primary Toxoplasma gondii infection, the parasite may be transmitted to the fetus and cause serious damnage. For these two subpopulations, a rapid and accurate diagnosis is required to initiate treatment. Serological diagnosis of active infection is unreliable because reactivation is not always accompanied by changes in antibody levels, and the presence of IgM does not necessarily indicate recent infection. Application of quantitative PCR has evolved as a sensitive, specific, and rapid method for the detection of Toxoplasma gondii DNA in amniotic fluid, blood, tissue samples, and cerebrospinal fluid.MethodsTwo separate, real-time fluorescence PCR assays were designed and evaluated with clinical samples. The first, targeting the 35-fold repeated B1 gene, and a second, targeting a newly described multicopy genomic fragment of Toxoplasma gondii. Amplicons of different intragenic copies were analyzed for sequence heterogeneity.ResultsComparative LightCycler experiments were conducted with a dilution series of Toxoplasma gondii genomic DNA, 5 reference strains, and 51 Toxoplasma gondii-positive amniotic fluid samples revealing a 10 to 100-fold higher sensitivity for the PCR assay targeting the newly described 529-bp repeat element of Toxoplasma gondii.ConclusionWe have developed a quantitative LightCycler PCR protocol which offer rapid cycling with real-time, sequence-specific detection of amplicons. Results of quantitative PCR demonstrate that the 529-bp repeat element is repeated more than 300-fold in the genome of Toxoplasma gondii. Since individual intragenic copies of the target are conserved on sequence level, the high copy number leads to an ultimate level of analytical sensitivity in routine practice. This newly described 529-bp repeat element should be preferred to less repeated or more divergent target sequences in order to improve the sensitivity of PCR tests for the diagnosis of toxoplasmosis.


EMBO Reports | 2003

Widespread PrPSc accumulation in muscles of hamsters orally infected with scrapie

Achim Thomzig; Christine Kratzel; Gudrun Lenz; Dominique Krüger; Michael Beekes

Scrapie, bovine spongiform encephalopathy and chronic wasting disease are orally communicable, transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs). As zoonotic transmissions of TSE agents may pose a risk to human health, the identification of reservoirs for infectivity in animal tissues and their exclusion from human consumption has become a matter of great importance for consumer protection. In this study, a variety of muscles from hamsters that were orally challenged with scrapie was screened for the presence of a molecular marker for TSE infection, PrPSc (the pathological isoform of the prion protein PrP). Sensitive western blotting revealed consistent PrPSc accumulation in skeletal muscles from forelimb and hindlimb, head, back and shoulder, and in tongue. Previously, our animal model has provided substantial baseline information about the peripheral routing of infection in naturally occurring and orally acquired ruminant TSEs. Therefore, the findings described here highlight further the necessity to investigate thoroughly whether muscles of TSE‐infected sheep, cattle, elk and deer contain infectious agents.


Veterinary Research | 2009

Faecal shedding, alimentary clearance and intestinal spread of prions in hamsters fed with scrapie

Dominique Krüger; Achim Thomzig; Gudrun Lenz; Kristin Kampf; Patricia A. McBride; Michael Beekes

Shedding of prions via faeces may be involved in the transmission of contagious prion diseases. Here, we fed hamsters 10 mg of 263K scrapie brain homogenate and examined the faecal excretion of disease-associated prion protein (PrPTSE) during the course of infection. The intestinal fate of ingested PrPTSE was further investigated by monitoring the deposition of the protein in components of the gut wall using immunohistochemistry and paraffin-embedded tissue (PET) blotting. Western blotting of faecal extracts showed shedding of PrPTSE in the excrement at 24–72 h post infection (hpi), but not at 0–24 hpi or at later preclinical or clinical time points. About 5% of the ingested PrPTSE were excreted via the faeces. However, the bulk of PrPTSE was cleared from the alimentary canal, most probably by degradation, while an indiscernible proportion of the inoculum triggered intestinal infection. Components of the gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT) and the enteric nervous system (ENS) showed progressing accumulation of PrPTSE from 30 days post infection (dpi) and 60 dpi, respectively. At the clinical stage of disease, substantial deposits of PrPTSE were found in the GALT in close vicinity to the intestinal lumen. Despite an apparent possibility of shedding from Peyer’s patches that may involve the follicle-associated epithelium (FAE), only small amounts of PrPTSE were detected in faeces from clinically infected animals by serial protein misfolding cyclic amplification (sPMCA). Although excrement may thus provide a vehicle for the release of endogenously formed PrPTSE, intestinal clearance mechanisms seem to partially counteract such a mode of prion dissemination.


Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2001

Quality control for the diagnosis of Toxoplasma gondii reactivation in SCT patients using PCR assays.

Jean-Marc Costa; Carmen Muñoz; Dominique Krüger; Rodrigo Martino; T. K. Held; Marie-Laure Dardé; Catherine Cordonnier; Stéphane Bretagne; Marrow Transplantation

Quality control for the diagnosis of Toxoplasma gondii reactivation in SCT patients using PCR assays


Archives of Microbiology | 1994

A novel, “hidden” penicillin-induced death of staphylococci at high drug concentration, occurring earlier than murosome-mediated killing processes

Peter Giesbrecht; Thomas Kersten; Heinrich Maidhof; Dominique Krüger; Peter Blümel; Harald Grob; Jörg Wecke

In log-phase cells of staphylococci, cultivated under high, “non-lytic” concentrations of penicillin G, there occurred a novel killing process hitherto hidden behind seemingly bacteriostatic effects. Two events are essential for the apprearance of this “hidden death”: (i) the failure of the dividing cell to deposit enough fibrillar cross-wall material to be welded together, and (ii) a premature ripping up of incomplete cross walls along their splitting system. “Hidden death” started as early as 10–15 min after drug addition, already during the first division cycle. It was the consequence of a loss of cytoplasmic constituents which erupted through peripheral slit-like openings in the incomplete cross walls. The loss resulted either in more or less empty cells or in cell shrinkage. These destructions could be prevented by raising the external osmotic pressure. In contrast, the conventional “non-hidden death” occurred only much later and exclusively during the second division cycle and mainly in those dividing cells, whose nascent cross walls of the first division plane had been welded together. These welding processes at nascent cross walls, resulting in tough connecting bridges between presumptive individual cells, were considered as a morphogenetic tool which protects the cells, so that they can resist the otherwise fatal penicillin-induced damages for at least an additional generation time (“morphogenetic resistance system”). Such welded cells, in the virtual absence of underlying cross-wall material, lost cytoplasm and were killed via ejection through pore-like wall openings or via explosions in the second division plane and after liberation of their murosomes, as it was the case in the presence of low, “lytic” concentrations of penicillin. Bacteriolysis did not cause any of the hitherto known penicillin-induced killing processes.


BMC Veterinary Research | 2007

Relevance of the regional lymph node in scrapie pathogenesis after peripheral infection of hamsters

Christine Kratzel; Dominique Krüger; Michael Beekes

BackgroundThe exact role of the lymphoreticular system in the spread of peripheral prion infections to the central nervous system still needs further elucidation. Against this background, the influence of the regional lymph node (Ln. popliteus) on the pathogenesis of scrapie was monitored in a hamster model of prion infection via the footpad.MethodsSurgical lymphadenectomy was carried out at different time points after infection, or prior to inoculation, in order to elucidate the impact of the lymph node on lethal neuroinvasion.ResultsThe Ln. popliteus did not show an influence on pathogenesis when a high dose of infectivity was administered. However, it was found to modulate the interval of time until the development of terminal scrapie in a subset of animals lymphadenectomized after low-dose infection. In additon, lymphadenectomy performed four weeks before inoculation prevented cerebral PrPTSE deposition and development of disease during the period of observation (314 days) in the majority of hamsters challenged with a very low dose of scrapie agent.ConclusionOur findings suggest the regional lymph node as a potentially facilitating or even essential factor for invasion of the brain after peripheral challenge with low doses of infectious scrapie agent. The invasive in vivo approach pursued in this study may be applied also to other animal species for further elucidating the involvement of lymphoid tissue in the pathogenesis of experimental and natural TSEs.


Fems Microbiology Letters | 1998

A second European collaborative study on polymerase chain reaction for Toxoplasma gondii, involving 15 teams

Hervé Pelloux; Edward Guy; Maria Cristina Angelici; Horst Aspöck; Marie-Hélène Bessières; Rosemarie Blatz; Mariassunta Del Pezzo; Veronique Girault; Regina Gratzl; Mona Holberg-Petersen; Julie D. Johnson; Dominique Krüger; Maija Lappalainen; Anne Naessens; Mats Olsson


Journal of General Virology | 2006

Pathological prion protein in muscles of hamsters and mice infected with rodent-adapted BSE or vCJD

Achim Thomzig; Franco Cardone; Dominique Krüger; Maurizio Pocchiari; Paul Brown; Michael Beekes


Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 1987

Trimethoprim-induced structural alterations in Staphylococcus aureus and the recovery of bacteria in drug-free medium

Takeshi Nishino; Jörg Wecke; Dominique Krüger; Peter Giesbrecht


Veterinary Research | 2007

Propagation of scrapie in peripheral nerves after footpad infection in normal and neurotoxin exposed hamsters

Christine Kratzel; Jessica Mai; Kazimierz Madela; Michael Beekes; Dominique Krüger

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Udo Reischl

University of Regensburg

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Jean-Marc Costa

American Hospital of Paris

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