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Dive into the research topics where Vesselin Kussovski is active.

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Featured researches published by Vesselin Kussovski.


International Immunopharmacology | 2003

Protective activity of Lentinan in experimental tuberculosis.

Nadya Markova; Vesselin Kussovski; Ivanka Drandarska; Sascha Nikolaeva; Neli Georgieva; Tatyana Radoucheva

Protective effects of Lentinan (Ajinomoto, Japan) against Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection were studied by in vitro and in vivo mouse models. The effectiveness of Lentinan administrated intraperitoneally (i.p.) before infection at a dose of 1 mg/kg three times at 2-day intervals was monitored in vivo by several parameters (body temperature; spleen weight; CFU counts of M. tuberculosis in spleen, liver and lung; and histomorphological observations). Peritoneal macrophages obtained from animals treated with Lentinan were greatly stimulated, as assayed by establishing their number, acid phosphatase activity, H2O2 production and killing ability against M. tuberculosis in vitro. The in vivo model demonstrated that administration of Lentinan before infection can mobilize host defense potential and reduce mycobacterial infection.


Photochemistry and Photobiology | 2014

Antimicrobial photodynamic efficiency of novel cationic porphyrins towards periodontal Gram-positive and Gram-negative pathogenic bacteria.

Chandra Sekhar Prasanth; Suneesh C. Karunakaran; Albish K. Paul; Vesselin Kussovski; Vanya Mantareva; Danaboyina Ramaiah; Leslie Selvaraj; Ivan Angelov; Latchezar Avramov; Krishnankutty Nandakumar; Narayanan Subhash

The Gram‐negative Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans and Fusobacterium nucleatum are major causative agents of aggressive periodontal disease. Due to increase in the number of antibiotic‐resistant bacteria, antimicrobial Photodynamic therapy (aPDT) seems to be a plausible alternative. In this work, photosensitization was performed on Gram‐positive and Gram‐negative bacteria in pure culture using new‐age cationic porphyrins, namely mesoimidazolium‐substituted porphyrin derivative (ImP) and pyridinium‐substituted porphyrin derivative (PyP). The photophysical properties of both the sensitizers including absorption, fluorescence emission, quantum yields of the triplet excited states and singlet oxygen generation efficiencies were evaluated in the context of aPDT application. The studied porphyrins exhibited high ability to accumulate into bacterial cells with complete penetration into early stage biofilms. As compared with ImP, PyP was found to be more effective for photoinactivation of bacterial strains associated with periodontitis, without any signs of dark toxicity, owing to its high photocytotoxicity.


Journal of Porphyrins and Phthalocyanines | 2013

Metallophthalocyanines for antimicrobial photodynamic therapy: an overview of our experience

Vanya Mantareva; Ivan Angelov; Dieter Wöhrle; Ekaterina Borisova; Vesselin Kussovski

Metal phthalocyanine complexes with different charges, hydrophobicity and metal ions were synthesized and studied for antimicrobial photodynamic therapy of pathogenic bacterial and fungal model strains. Ten positively charged complexes with the metals Zn(II), Al(III), Ga(III), In(III), Si(IV) and Ge(IV) in the center of the ligand and substituents at the ligand bearing four or eight N-alkylpyridyloxy groups were prepared. In addition, a negatively charged Zn(II)-phthalocyanine with four sulfophenoxy-groups was synthesized. The absorption spectra showed low intensity of the Soret band in the UV part of the spectrum and the intense Q-band in the red to far red region (λ = 671–697 nm). The fluorescence was determined with quantum yields between 0.1–0.33 and life-times 2.8–4.9 ns in dependence of the kind of metal ion and the substituents. In organic solvents all complexes exist in a monomeric state but in aqueous solution they show aggregation with the exception of Ga(III) phthalocyanines. The singlet oxygen...


International Immunopharmacology | 2002

Effects of intraperitoneal and intranasal application of Lentinan on cellular response in rats.

Nadya Markova; Vesselin Kussovski; Tatyana Radoucheva; Krasimira Dilova; Neli Georgieva

Lentinan (Ajinomoto, Japan) was administrated intraperitoneally (i.p.) and intranasally (i.n.) at different doses (1, 5 and 10 mg/kg) to rats. Effectiveness of Lentinan treatment was evaluated by comparative testing of cell activation (establishing the number, glycolytic and acid phosphatase activity, H2O2 production and killing ability against Salmonella enteritidis and Staphylococcus aureus) at two different compartments--peritoneal and broncho-alveolar cavities. The results indicated that Lentinan induced high-grade activation of peritoneal cells (PCs) and especially of broncho-alveolar cells (BACs) with markedly enhanced effector function (killing ability against S. aureus). Generally, Lentinan, known usually with its parenteral routes of application, can be successful to stimulate the host cell response in the respiratory tract by intranasal route of administration.


Zentralblatt Fur Bakteriologie-international Journal of Medical Microbiology Virology Parasitology and Infectious Diseases | 1996

Experimental Melioidosis in Inbred Mouse Strains

D. Veljanov; A. Vesselinova; S. Nikolova; Hristo Najdenski; Vesselin Kussovski; Nadya Markova

Experimental infection was induced in three inbred mouse strains (BALB/c, BDF1 hybrid and C57BL) by i. p. inoculation with Pseudomonas pseudomallei. The bacterial load in the viscera and the host response induced in different compartments (blood, peritoneal cavity and organs) were determined. Blood cell parameters and peritoneal exudative cell populations were evaluated during the infection with the aid of an automated haematology analyser Technicon H-1. It was found that all mouse strains produced a similar intraperitoneal inflammatory response with predominance of granulocytes at the early stage of infection and subsequent increase of macrophages especially in BDF1 hybrid and BALB/c mice. The highest bacterial count found in the liver and spleen of C57BL was associated with corresponding tissue damage (purulent pneumonia, abscesses in liver, karyorrhexis of hepatocytes and meningoencephalitis). The degree of bacterial load and histological changes found in BALB/c and BDF1 hybrid mice were lower than in C57BL mice. The results show that the variations in the infection magnitude among inbred mouse strains are host-dependent.


International Journal of Medical Microbiology | 2000

Interaction of alveolar macrophages with Staphylococcus aureus and induction of microbial L-forms during infection in rats

Lilia Michailova; Stoyanka Stoitsova; Nadya Markova; Vesselin Kussovski; Mimi Jordanova; Ivanka Dimova

In vivo cell interactions between Staphylococcus aureus and rat alveolar macrophages were investigated after intranasal inoculation during a 30-days period of examination. Some dynamic characteristics of microorganisms in the macrophages were examined by electron microscopy and acid phosphatase cytochemistry. It was found that at earlier infection intervals (days 3 and 7) the ingested cocci were sequestered in phagosomes and phagolysosomes and later many of the microbial cells were digested. An interesting finding was the intracellular appearance of cell wall-defective forms (L-forms) of S. aureus at later intervals (days 14 and 30 after challenge). Infection kinetics were evaluated by isolation and enumeration of colony-forming units of S. aureus from bronchoalveolar fluid and by assessment of blood and bronchoalveolar total and differential leukocyte counts. The results indicate that induction and survival of S. aureus L-forms may occur spontaneously in vivo. This phenomenon could explain some of the mechanisms, provoking the latent and relapsing lung infections.


Zentralblatt Fur Bakteriologie-international Journal of Medical Microbiology Virology Parasitology and Infectious Diseases | 1997

Cell wall-deficient forms (L-forms) of Listeria monocytogenes in experimentally infected rats

Nadya Markova; Lilia Michailova; A. Vesselinova; Vesselin Kussovski; Tatyana Radoucheva; S. Nikolova; Iva Paskaleva

Experimental infections were induced with different bacterial forms of Listeria monocytogenes: parental (S-forms), protoplastic (L-forms) and combined inoculum of both forms by i.p. injection of rats. The parental bacterial forms (S-forms) were isolated up to 7 days after challenge from the peritoneal cavity and the liver, while the L-forms were isolated up to 60 days from the peritoneal cavity. Continuous adhesion of L-forms on the peritoneal macrophage surface was found by scanning-electron microscopy. Erythrocyte and leucocyte count as well as some clinical chemistry parameters were measured during infections. They showed different dynamics in the three experimental groups. Histomorphological changes in the liver (microabscesses and mononuclear cellular granulomas) of infected animals were observed. They were less intensive and appeared later in rats infected with L-forms. The experiments demonstrated that infections caused by parental bacterial forms and by combined inoculum took an acute course, while the infection caused by L-forms could be distinguished as a prolonged and persistent one.


Central European Journal of Biology | 2008

Exhibition of persistent and drug-tolerant L-form habit of Mycobacterium tuberculosis during infection in rats

Nadya Markova; Lilia Michailova; Mimi Jourdanova; Vesselin Kussovski; Violeta Valcheva; Igor Mokrousov; Tatyana Radoucheva

A model for studying mycobacterial L-form formation in vivo was established to demonstrate the ability of M. tuberculosis to behave as a drug-tolerant L-form persister. Rats were infected by intranasal (i.n.) and intraperitoneal (i.p.) routes with 1×108 cells/ml of M. tuberculosis. At weekly intervals during a period of five weeks, samples from lung, spleen, liver, kidney, mesenterial and inguinal lymph nodes, broncho-alveolar and peritoneal lavage liquid were plated simultaneously on Löwenstein-Jensen (LJ) medium or inoculated into specially supplemented for L-forms Dubos broth (drug-free and drug-containing variants). The use of liquid media enabled isolation of mycobacterial L-form cultures during the whole period of experiment including the last two weeks, when tubercle bacilli were not isolated on LJ medium. An unique feature of mycobacterial L-forms was their ability to grow faster than the classical tubercle bacilli. Isolation and growth of L-form cultures in primary drug-containing media demonstrated their drug-tolerant properties. Electron microscopy of liquid media isolates showed that they consisted of morphologically heterogenous populations of membrane-bound and of variable sized L-bodies that completely lack cell walls. The identity of the isolated non-acid fast and morphologically modified L-forms as M. tuberculosis was verified by specific spoligotyping test. The results contribute to special aspects concerning the importance of mycobacterial L-form phenomenon for persistence and latency in tuberculosis, phenotypic drug tolerance, as well as for diagnosis of difficult to identify morphologically changed tubercle bacilli which are often mistaken for contaminants.


Zentralblatt Fur Bakteriologie-international Journal of Medical Microbiology Virology Parasitology and Infectious Diseases | 1998

Killing of Pseudomonas pseudomallei by polymorphonuclear leukocytes and peritoneal macrophages from chicken, sheep, swine and rabbits.

Nadya Markova; Vesselin Kussovski; Tatyana Radoucheva

Differences in the kinetics of Pseudomonas pseudomallei killing by peritoneal macrophages (PM) and polymorphonuclear leucocytes (PMNL) from chickens, sheep, swine and rabbits were found. P. pseudomallei was rapidly killed by porcine PM and PMNL. However the bacterial killing by ovine and lapine PM and PMNL proceeded at a slower rate. In contrast, chicken PM and PMNL ingested and killed the lowest number of P. pseudomallei bacteria. The differences in the bactericidal activity of PM and PMNL from different animal species correlated with the level of their acid phosphatase and glycolytic activity.


Carbohydrate Polymers | 2017

The common lavender (Lavandula angustifolia Mill.) pectic polysaccharides modulate phagocytic leukocytes and intestinal Peyer’s patch cells

Yordan N. Georgiev; Berit Smestad Paulsen; Hiroaki Kiyohara; Milan Ciz; Manol H. Ognyanov; Ondrej Vasicek; Frode Rise; Petko Denev; Haruki Yamada; Antonín Lojek; Vesselin Kussovski; Hilde Barsett; Albert Krastanov; Irina Yanakieva; Maria Kratchanova

Two pectic (chPS-L1, chPS-L2) and one polyphenolic (chPP-L) fractions were obtained from lavender flowers after boiling water extraction, exhaustive removing of alcohol-soluble molecules and SEC. chPS-L1 (52.4kDa) contains mainly low-acetylated and high-methoxylated homogalacturonans (HG), and smaller rhamnogalacturonan (RG) I backbone fragments rich in 1,3,5-branched arabinan and arabinogalactan (AG) II side chains. chPS-L2 (21.8kDa) contains predominantly similarly esterified HG, followed by RGI with AGII structures and RGII. The prevalence of catechin and epicatechin in chPP-L indicates that they form weak interactions with pectins. chPS-L1 and chPS-L2 enhanced ß2-integrin expression on neutrophils, inducing ROS generation and macrophage NO production. Both the effects on ß2-integrin and high complement fixation activity of chPS-L1 were proposed for its inhibitory action against PMA- and OZP-activated ROS formation. This, together with suppression of NO generation after co-stimulation with chPS-L1 and LPS, suggested anti-inflammatory activity of studied pectins. Lavender polysaccharides expressed intestinal Peyers patch immunomodulating activity.

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Nadya Markova

Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

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Tatyana Radoucheva

Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

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Vanya Mantareva

Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

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Ivan Angelov

Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

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A. Vesselinova

Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

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Hristo Najdenski

Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

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Lilia Michailova

Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

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S. Nikolova

Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

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Ekaterina Borisova

Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

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Krassimira Dilova

Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

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