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1  the cytotoxic effects of a unique bipartite bacterial toxin.
2 ms that regulate GCC activity in response to bacterial toxin.
3 ne for the GBS haemolysin/cytolysin, a novel bacterial toxin.
4 kely to contribute to cytotoxicity from this bacterial toxin.
5 thogenic human virus can be neutralized by a bacterial toxin.
6 on, cell-surface proteolytic activity, for a bacterial toxin.
7 tion that is reduced in cells exposed to the bacterial toxin.
8 how that they function as decoys to mitigate bacterial toxins.
9 satile platform to measure the activities of bacterial toxins.
10 l G proteins by perturbations using siRNA or bacterial toxins.
11 ne-targeting domains found in multiple large bacterial toxins.
12 nd its application to the detection of these bacterial toxins.
13 tidrug tolerance, and are highly enriched in bacterial toxins.
14 stor for several receptor-binding domains of bacterial toxins.
15 prerequisite for the toxicity of a number of bacterial toxins.
16 he RTX (repeats in toxin) family of secreted bacterial toxins.
17 n to be required for endosome escape by many bacterial toxins.
18  of this enzyme in controlling the action of bacterial toxins.
19 y be a generalized response to lumen-derived bacterial toxins.
20 is a novel pore-forming lectin homologous to bacterial toxins.
21 rious endo- and exogenous factors, including bacterial toxins.
22 host and exposes the tissue cells to various bacterial toxins.
23 of the photoregulated gene by phytochrome or bacterial toxins.
24 dded by other enzymes, including sirtuins or bacterial toxins.
25 us to the homologous pore-forming domains of bacterial toxins.
26  cytolethal distending toxin (CDT) family of bacterial toxins.
27 on by DD RT-PCR of cellular genes induced by bacterial toxins.
28 ylation of proteins catalyzed by a number of bacterial toxins.
29 r of the thiol-activated cytolysin family of bacterial toxins.
30 l as ITs prepared with a variety of plant or bacterial toxins.
31  Kretschmann-configured plasmonic sensing of bacterial toxins.
32 tin cytoskeleton is an attractive target for bacterial toxins.
33 , microRNA processing, and susceptibility to bacterial toxins.
34 antially different from those of other known bacterial toxins.
35 post-translational modification catalyzed by bacterial toxins.
36  forms an active inflammasome in response to bacterial toxins.
37  from other well-recognized ADP-ribosylating bacterial toxins.
38 l products including several antibiotics and bacterial toxins.
39 pathogenic Escherichia coli 536 (EC536) is a bacterial toxin 28 (Ntox28) domain that only exhibits ri
40 . difficile infection (CDI) is mediated by 2 bacterial toxins, A and B; neutralizing these toxins wit
41                                         Many bacterial toxins act on conserved components of essentia
42                               Many plant and bacterial toxins act upon cytosolic targets and must the
43             Advances in our understanding of bacterial toxin action parallel the development of bioph
44 sease processes including cancer metastasis, bacterial toxin activation (e.g. anthrax and Pseudomonas
45 tes that enzymatic cross talk exists between bacterial toxin ADP-ribosyltransferases and host ADP-rib
46 d complement or with the GPI-anchor-reactive bacterial toxin aerolysin enriched for the GPI-anchor- p
47 red into cells via the transport domain of a bacterial toxin and may be used to induce apoptosis.
48      This mechanism of action is novel for a bacterial toxin and provides a model for the generation
49  shown here to be a cellular substrate for a bacterial toxin and represents the identification of a m
50 and cellular effects of the ADP-ribosylating bacterial toxin and reveal that mutants defective in bin
51  domains were first described in subunits of bacterial toxins and are also commonly found in polysacc
52 asis for the differential pathogenicities of bacterial toxins and are relevant to the design of vacci
53 gangliosides mimic cells that are invaded by bacterial toxins and can be used as sensitive probes for
54 ternalization pathway has been described for bacterial toxins and cargo machinery, it has never been
55                            Various plant and bacterial toxins and certain viruses hijack this disloca
56 t AB103 will limit inflammatory responses to bacterial toxins and decrease the incidence of organ fai
57                                              Bacterial toxins and effector proteins hijack eukaryotic
58 apase-1 inflammasome assembly in response to bacterial toxins and effectors that inactivate RhoA.
59 del for identification of in vivo targets of bacterial toxins and evaluation of novel candidate thera
60 r small molecules that reduce the actions of bacterial toxins and has been shown to block the retrogr
61 he RTX (repeats in toxin) family of secreted bacterial toxins and is known to target human leukocytes
62                                        AB(5) bacterial toxins and polyomaviruses induce membrane curv
63 ave uncovered a new mechanism by which large bacterial toxins and proteins deliver catalytic activiti
64               The fold resembles poreforming bacterial toxins and shows similarity to BCL-XL although
65                                              Bacterial toxins and small molecules are useful tools fo
66 Myriad formulations involving radionuclides, bacterial toxins and small-molecule drugs linked to anti
67  hitherto uncharacterized mode of action for bacterial toxins and suggest the possibility that serine
68 ity, which are common in host-cell-targeting bacterial toxins and the venoms of certain insects and r
69                       The catalytic sites of bacterial toxins and vertebrate transferases have conser
70 rin has been implicated in the activation of bacterial toxins and viral glycoproteins as well as in t
71 ial physico-chemical property shared by many bacterial toxins and viral proteins - the intrinsically
72                              The assembly of bacterial toxins and virulence factors is critical to th
73 describe a novel small molecule inhibitor of bacterial toxins and virus trafficking through the endoc
74 ntly, EGA was shown to inhibit the action of bacterial toxins and viruses exhibiting a pH-dependent t
75 s the entry of multiple other acid-dependent bacterial toxins and viruses into mammalian cells.
76 cells, are natural receptors for a number of bacterial toxins and viruses whose sensitive detection i
77 antigen binding fragment, or a fragment of a bacterial toxin) and a library of carbohydrates containi
78 ponse of mouse macrophages to stimulation by bacterial toxin, and a spatially-resolved response to lo
79 amic interaction between intestinal mucus, a bacterial toxin, and a toxin regulatory system.
80 ntigen binding fragment, and a fragment of a bacterial toxin, and their interactions with isomeric ca
81 ariety of host ligands, as well as bacteria, bacterial toxins, and a number of viruses.
82                                              Bacterial toxins, and especially alpha-toxin, can mediat
83  designed pore formers, antibiotic peptides, bacterial toxins, and lipases.
84                  Ribonucleases, antibiotics, bacterial toxins, and viruses inhibit protein synthesis,
85 zation of some plasma membrane constituents, bacterial toxins, and viruses occurs via caveolae; howev
86 e to human innate immunity against bacteria, bacterial toxins, and viruses.
87 ains, relate EAP domains to a large class of bacterial toxins, and will guide the design of future ex
88 vation in response to lipopolysaccharide and bacterial toxins, and yet its role during bacterial infe
89                        We report here that a bacterial toxin, anthrax lethal toxin (LeTx), at very lo
90 tentially universal blockers of three binary bacterial toxins: anthrax toxin of Bacillus anthracis, C
91                                              Bacterial toxin-antitoxin (TA) modules are tightly regul
92  proteins HipA and RelE, both members of the bacterial toxin-antitoxin (TA) modules, have the ability
93                                              Bacterial toxin-antitoxin (TA) systems (or "addiction mo
94                                              Bacterial toxin-antitoxin (TA) systems are genetic eleme
95                                              Bacterial toxin-antitoxin (TA) systems regulate key cell
96                                              Bacterial toxin-antitoxin (TA) systems typically consist
97                                              Bacterial toxin-antitoxin protein pairs (TA pairs) encod
98                                          The bacterial toxin-antitoxin system CcdB-CcdA provides a me
99                                              Bacterial toxin-antitoxin systems are important factors
100                                        Using bacterial toxin-antitoxin systems as a model, we screene
101                                        Using bacterial toxin-antitoxin systems, we demonstrate the pl
102                                              Bacterial toxins are a major class of virulence factors
103 ns composed of antibodies linked to plant or bacterial toxins are being evaluated in the treatment of
104                                         Some bacterial toxins are believed to undergo retrograde intr
105                                  While a few bacterial toxins are well characterized, the mechanism o
106 forming toxins (beta-PFT), a large family of bacterial toxins, are generally secreted as water-solubl
107 xoid vaccines--vaccines based on inactivated bacterial toxins--are routinely used to promote antitoxi
108 ically probe the multivalent inhibition of a bacterial toxin as a function of linker length (see sche
109 or that is shared by a mammalian virus and a bacterial toxin, as the cellular receptor for SVV.
110 s of anthrax toxin, and perhaps other binary bacterial toxins, assemble into toxic complexes.
111 e good adsorption capacity of Enterosgel for bacterial toxins associated with gastrointestinal infect
112 lain the mechanism of action of this type of bacterial toxin at an unprecedented level of molecular d
113 ing, bacterial biofilms, bacterial motility, bacterial toxins, bacterial pigments, bacterial enzymes,
114 tic pigs was well tolerated, suggesting that bacterial toxin-based genetic adjuvants may be a safe an
115                                         Many bacterial toxins bind to and gain entrance to target cel
116 have been demonstrated to neutralize diverse bacterial toxins both in vitro and in vivo, with protein
117 hat human defensins inactivate proteinaceous bacterial toxins by taking advantage of their low thermo
118 tool used to investigate Rho function is the bacterial toxin C3 transferase derived from Clostridium
119 outer membrane transporter called FyuA and a bacterial toxin called pesticin that targets this transp
120                 Thus, genomic responses to a bacterial toxin can influence intestinal neoplasia and s
121                                     Numerous bacterial toxins can cross biological membranes to reach
122                                     Numerous bacterial toxins catalyze mono(ADP-ribosyl)ation of mamm
123 ng of neutrophil ?-defensin HNP1 to affected bacterial toxins caused their local unfolding, potentiat
124 n of staphylococcal enterotoxin B (SEB) as a bacterial toxin causing severe food poisoning is of grea
125 m that has similarities to those of both the bacterial toxin CcdB and the quinolone antibacterial age
126 er reminiscent of quinolones, Ca(2+), or the bacterial toxin CcdB.
127 k embryo toxin assay was used to investigate bacterial toxins (cell-free extracellular toxins and cel
128 goals of this study were to understand how a bacterial toxin, cholera toxin (CT), modulates Th17-domi
129 on of microarrays for the detection of three bacterial toxins: cholera toxin, staphylococcal enteroto
130 X) of the cytotoxic endonuclease domain from bacterial toxin colicin (E9) in complex with its cognate
131 e Zamaroczy et al. show that cleavage of the bacterial toxin colicin D is required for its ability to
132                                          The bacterial toxin, colicin Ia, is one such protein.
133           The enzymatic activity of the RelE bacterial toxin component of the Escherichia coli RelBE
134 xotoxin group that has diverged from related bacterial toxins containing crucial zinc atoms.
135 ation in acd2 plants can be triggered by the bacterial toxin coronatine through a light-dependent pro
136                                          The bacterial toxin, coronatine, produced by several pathoge
137 rating bacterial membranes, and inactivating bacterial toxins, defensins are known to intercept vario
138 ch may be broadly applicable to the study of bacterial toxins, defining host pathways that can be tar
139  between organelles, protein degradation and bacterial toxin delivery.
140 ior potential of a fabricated nanosensor for bacterial toxin detection.
141 h may increase the availability of foodborne bacterial toxin diagnostics in regions where there are l
142                                Cytokines and bacterial toxins differ in their effects on neutrophil d
143                                              Bacterial toxins disrupt plasma membrane integrity with
144                                              Bacterial toxins (e.g. bacteriocins) and viruses (bacter
145 dynamic proinflammatory cellular response to bacterial toxins (e.g. lipopolysaccharide or LPS) leads
146 fficking of pathogens such as Ebola virus or bacterial toxins (e.g., cholera toxin).
147  million doses of a purified vaccine free of bacterial toxins edema factor and lethal factor from 1 a
148               When HUVECs are exposed to the bacterial toxin EDIN, which can induce spontaneous trans
149               Thus, the ACDs are a family of bacterial toxin effectors that may be evolutionarily rel
150                                    YoeB is a bacterial toxin encoded by the yefM-yoeB toxin-antitoxin
151  limits the fever induced by a Gram-negative bacterial toxin (Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide, LP
152 r details of how two structurally homologous bacterial toxins evolved divergently to bind calmodulin,
153                     Whereas all pore-forming bacterial toxins examined previously have been shown to
154                                   Of the two bacterial toxins examined, shiga-like toxin 1 subunit B
155 ighly conserved repeat toxin (RTX) family of bacterial toxins expressed by a variety of pathogenic ba
156 al disease cholera and a member of the AB(5) bacterial toxin family, provides the opportunity of desi
157 ptor blockers targeting members of the AB(5) bacterial toxin family.
158                                         Many bacterial toxins form proteinaceous pores that facilitat
159 eurons and nociceptor sensory neurons-detect bacterial toxins, formyl peptides, and lipopolysaccharid
160  is illustrated with the phosphatase YopH, a bacterial toxin from Yersinia pestis.
161    These findings provide insight into how a bacterial toxin functions to specifically impair host si
162           This 2,366-amino-acid, multidomain bacterial toxin glucosylates and inactivates small GTPas
163 CNF1), the paradigm of Rho GTPase activating bacterial toxins has been shown to promote E. coli invas
164                            Recently, several bacterial toxins have been shown in vitro to disrupt imm
165                           Certain domains of bacterial toxins have been shown to facilitate transloca
166                                              Bacterial toxins have been utilized as vaccines, as tool
167                                              Bacterial toxins have evolved successful strategies for
168  they have evolved a remarkable tolerance to bacterial toxins in decaying meat.
169     Our findings highlight the potentials of bacterial toxins in the regulation of human Th17 respons
170 "active" assay technique to the detection of bacterial toxins in water samples from natural sources a
171  amplify the cell lysis inflicted by certain bacterial toxins including the two RTX toxins alpha-hemo
172 subdomain is present in multiple families of bacterial toxins, including all of the clostridial gluco
173                                         Many bacterial toxins, including pertussis toxin (PT), exert
174 (ACDs) are distinct domains found in several bacterial toxins, including the Vibrio cholerae MARTX to
175 ansition-state analogue interrogation of the bacterial toxins indicates that CTA gains catalytic effi
176  respiratory epithelial cells contributes to bacterial toxin-induced cell death, fibrosis, and local
177  genetic, drug-induced, immune-mediated, and bacterial toxin-induced experimental kidney diseases wit
178 our knowledge, this is the first report of a bacterial toxin inducing host target cells to increase t
179           This is the first description of a bacterial toxin inhibiting neutrophil motility by induci
180                          Conversely, several bacterial toxins interfere with cellular signalling mech
181 recombinant form of the fourth domain of the bacterial toxin intermedilysin (the recombinant domain 4
182 le-mediated receptor-dependent delivery of a bacterial toxin into a host cell.
183                                              Bacterial toxins introduce protein modifications such as
184 lecular mechanism by which the activity of a bacterial toxin is regulated by pH.
185            The CDR response of GJ plaques to bacterial toxins is a phenomenon observed for all tested
186   Cytotoxic necrotizing factor 1 (CNF1) is a bacterial toxin known to activate Rho GTPases and induce
187 ilar to viral infection, and the latter is a bacterial toxin known to induce endoplasmic reticulum (E
188 forming toxins and is one of the most potent bacterial toxins known.
189                                          Two bacterial toxins, lethal toxin and edema toxin, are beli
190 rosis factor-alpha and interferon-gamma, the bacterial toxin lipopolysaccharide, the human immunodefi
191 n neutrophil rheology than the Gram-positive bacterial toxins, LTA, and staphylococcal enterotoxins.
192                                              Bacterial toxin-mediated diarrheal disease is a major ca
193                                  In systemic bacterial toxin-mediated inflammation, inhibition of thr
194 identity and showed structural similarity to bacterial toxins: mosquitocidal toxin (MTX2) from Bacill
195 stances known to humankind, but also are the bacterial toxins most frequently used as pharmaceuticals
196 f biological products and those derived from bacterial toxins often rely exclusively on in vivo model
197         ADP-ribosylation (ADP(R)) of eEF2 by bacterial toxins on a unique diphthamide residue inhibit
198 a demonstrate that CrkI inactivation by ExoT bacterial toxin or by mutagenesis blocks vesicle formati
199 nfections in exposed individuals, inactivate bacterial toxins or "correct" hypogammaglobulinemia in i
200 nt markers of organelles and stimulated with bacterial toxins or Candida albicans to induce NETosis.
201                             Translocation of bacterial toxins or effectors into host cells using the
202  RhoA (RhoAV14), activation of Rho GTPase by bacterial toxin, or inhibition of Rho kinase by Y-27632
203          Using a soluble cholesterol-binding bacterial toxin, perfringolysin O, we show that choleste
204 ell system in the presence or absence of the bacterial toxin pneumolysin (PLY).
205 sualize the structural rearrangements in the bacterial toxin pneumolysin that occur when it assembles
206  to the NALT also required expression of the bacterial toxin pneumolysin.
207 fused and ventilated lungs with the purified bacterial toxin, pneumolysin.
208                                          Two bacterial toxins, pneumolysin and, to a lesser extent, H
209 zymes involved in phospholipid metabolism, a bacterial toxin, poxvirus envelope proteins, and bacteri
210 reviously, we have shown that IAP detoxifies bacterial toxins, prevents endotoxemia, and preserves in
211 with GPI-APs (detected by the GPI-AP binding bacterial toxin proaerolysin).
212                        Inhibitors of several bacterial toxins produced by Bacillus anthracis, Staphyl
213                                              Bacterial toxins produced in the gut enter the circulati
214 rge number of culture conditions influencing bacterial toxin production.
215 ection on host survival outcomes and in vivo bacterial toxin production.
216                                          The bacterial toxin protein A from Staphylococcus aureus (Sp
217 Recent studies using two cholesterol-binding bacterial toxin proteins, perfringolysin O (PFO) and dom
218           To our knowledge, BFT is the first bacterial toxin reported to activate T-cell factor-depen
219                                              Bacterial toxins represent a vast reservoir of biochemic
220 biofilm formation by a host-directed protein bacterial toxin represents a novel regulatory mechanism
221                                              Bacterial toxins require localization to specific intrac
222  To our knowledge, LtxA represents the first bacterial toxin shown to localize to the lysosome where
223 lipopolysaccharide, LPS) and a Gram-positive bacterial toxin (Staphylococcus aureus), when these toxi
224 nt resealing after permeabilization with the bacterial toxin streptolysin O (SLO) requires endocytosi
225  dysfunction in patients exposed to multiple bacterial toxins such as in sepsis, multiple-system orga
226 e tmRNA, the ribosomal alarmone (p)ppGpp, or bacterial toxins such as RelE which have been shown to s
227 d not require the stringent factor ppGpp, or bacterial toxins such as RelE, which mediates a similar
228 d by glucosyltransferases, including certain bacterial toxins such as Toxins A and B from Clostridium
229 splay structural homology to channel-forming bacterial toxins, such as colicins, transmembrane domain
230 ibrils that resemble a class of pore-forming bacterial toxins, suggesting that inappropriate membrane
231  This study extends the list of thermolabile bacterial toxins, suggesting that this quality is essent
232 ic viruses and for the activation of several bacterial toxins suggests that selective inhibitors of f
233 , as well as the protective effect against a bacterial toxin, suggests that inhibitors of furin or fu
234 are toxin domains of two distinct classes of bacterial toxin systems, namely polymorphic toxins impli
235                   The intracellularly active bacterial toxin TcdB is a major Clostridioides difficile
236                We discuss detection of three bacterial toxins-tetanus, botulinum, and cholera toxins
237  that NAD+-glycohydrolase is a novel type of bacterial toxin that acts intracellularly in the infecte
238             Pseudomonas exotoxin A (PE) is a bacterial toxin that arrests protein synthesis and induc
239 366 amino acid residues) is an intracellular bacterial toxin that binds to cells and enters the cytos
240 d markedly in susceptibility to aerolysin (a bacterial toxin that binds to GPI-anchored proteins), th
241 brio cholerae RTX is a large multifunctional bacterial toxin that causes actin crosslinking.
242      The cytolysin of E. faecalis is a novel bacterial toxin that contributes to the severity of dise
243 t infection studies and reveal that SLS is a bacterial toxin that does not require bacterial attachme
244 in SUMOylation induced by listeriolysin O, a bacterial toxin that impairs the host cell SUMOylation m
245 regulates protein synthesis in response to a bacterial toxin that inactivates eEF2.
246                       TcdB, an intracellular bacterial toxin that inactivates small GTPases, is a maj
247 at exploits the unique properties of MazF, a bacterial toxin that is an ssRNA- and ACA-specific endor
248 of a mesothelin-specific antibody fused to a bacterial toxin that is presently undergoing phase II te
249 he absence and presence of C3 transferase, a bacterial toxin that specifically inhibits rho.
250                                    CcdB is a bacterial toxin that targets DNA gyrase.
251 late cyclase toxin (ACT), which is a protein bacterial toxin that targets host cells and disarms immu
252 into the cytosol is to fuse them to modified bacterial toxins that are able to enter mammalian cells.
253 cial liposomes as decoy targets to sequester bacterial toxins that are produced during active infecti
254 Lymphostatin represents a new class of large bacterial toxins that blocks lymphocyte activation.
255     Botulinum neurotoxins (BoNTs) are potent bacterial toxins that cause paralysis at femtomolar conc
256                                              Bacterial toxins that disrupt the stability of contracti
257 dent cytolysins (CDCs) are a large family of bacterial toxins that exhibit a dependence on the presen
258 rum and reduce cellular sensitivity to other bacterial toxins that require the same host proteases.
259 mbrane-bound cholesterol sensors are soluble bacterial toxins that show an identical switch-like spec
260                                Evidence from bacterial toxins that specifically inhibit the activity
261                 Channel-forming colicins are bacterial toxins that spontaneously insert into the inne
262 tor type 1 (CNF1), a member of the family of bacterial toxins that target the Rho family of small GTP
263 enic Escherichia coli belongs to a family of bacterial toxins that target the small GTP-binding Rho p
264     C3 thus represents a major family of the bacterial toxins that transfer the ADP-ribose moiety of
265 ats-in-toxin (MARTX) toxins are pore-forming bacterial toxins that translocate multiple functionally
266         The Cdt is a family of gram-negative bacterial toxins that typically arrest eukaryotic cells
267 ism, distinct from those described for other bacterial toxins, that disrupts this signaling pathway.
268 e systems and tissue culture, but, like many bacterial toxins, the in vivo targets of TcdB are unknow
269 technique for simultaneous detection of five bacterial toxins: the cholera toxin, the E. coli heat-la
270 rotects the midgut from virus infections and bacterial toxins through death and replacement of affect
271                        Certhrax is the first bacterial toxin to add a post-translational modification
272 that fusion of the translocation domain of a bacterial toxin to an antigen may greatly enhance vaccin
273 genicity, demonstrate the novel ability of a bacterial toxin to increase its cytotoxicity, establish
274 et only replicating organisms, thus allowing bacterial toxins to cause unchecked, devastating physiol
275  the complement of host factors exploited by bacterial toxins to exert their myriad biological effect
276  the target membrane and forms a channel for bacterial toxins to flow from bacteria into the host cel
277 -tagged anthrolysin O, a cholesterol-binding bacterial toxin, to measure accessible cholesterol in hu
278                         Although circulating bacterial toxins trigger inflammation in sepsis, little
279    Our results reveal a mechanism by which a bacterial toxin uses constitutively occurring calpain-me
280 protease release, the first description of a bacterial toxin using a lysosomal cell death pathway.
281  electrochemical sensor for the detection of bacterial toxins using an electrochemical enzyme-linked
282 e results define a pathway by which a single bacterial toxin utilizes a widely expressed receptor to
283 ency and clinical immunogenicity testing for bacterial toxin vaccine candidates in development.
284 hat an unconventional export mechanism for a bacterial toxin via the T3SS in tandem with the Sec mach
285 crofluidic channels, to assay the binding of bacterial toxins via total internal reflection fluoresce
286 tant function in the cellular uptake of some bacterial toxins, viruses and circulating proteins.
287                 A flow-based immunoassay for bacterial toxin was developed with 5% GM1/DOPC+ membrane
288             A selection procedure based on a bacterial toxin was used to select for cells in which th
289                                        Using bacterial toxins, we describe a new approach for discove
290 nous substrates including growth factors and bacterial toxins, we determined that elevated furin-depe
291                         Here, we made use of bacterial toxins, which directly activate Rho GTPases to
292                   Exceptions to this include bacterial toxins, which insert into and cross the lipid
293 , has rarely been described for pore-forming bacterial toxins, which suggests that VacA is a pore-for
294 t specifically mediates the interaction of a bacterial toxin with a cholesterol-rich membrane.
295  on a CMC surface and detection of the bound bacterial toxins with a biotinylated secondary antibodie
296                                              Bacterial toxins with an AB(5) architecture consist of a
297 te interactions, such as the interactions of bacterial toxins with cell-surface receptors.
298 otulinum neurotoxins (BoNTs) are a family of bacterial toxins with seven major serotypes (BoNT/A-G).
299 de prolonged prophylactic protection against bacterial toxins without inducing inhibitory immune resp
300 responses to several bacterial pathogens and bacterial toxins, yet respond normally to the presence o

 
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