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1 e body, and an extracellular form called the elementary body.
2 tein) on the outer surface of the chlamydial elementary body.
3 noprecipitated with TARP from C. trachomatis elementary bodies.
4 only minimally packaged into the infectious elementary bodies.
5 ges that include the formation of infectious elementary bodies.
6 within these cells by generating infectious elementary bodies.
7 with DCs pulsed with inactivated chlamydial elementary bodies.
8 ere was a restricted production of infective elementary bodies.
9 s with no evidence of redifferentiation into elementary bodies.
10 gement of cell surface heparan sulfate by L2 elementary bodies.
11 lected late-stage proteins and transition to elementary bodies, a Chlamydia developmental form that i
12 condition is reversible, yielding infectious elementary bodies after removal of the inducers, includi
13 to lysosomes due to an intrinsic property of elementary bodies and (ii) an active modification of the
14 g of sedimented culture transport medium for elementary bodies and by TMA with 16S rRNA as a target.
15 cells infected with multiple C. trachomatis elementary bodies and cultivated at 32 degrees C for 24
17 IF) antibody titers to Chlamydia trachomatis elementary bodies and ELISA antibody to recombinant chla
18 icroscopy for the presence of C. trachomatis elementary bodies and for the presence and number of cel
19 mydia developmental transition to infectious elementary bodies and highlights the potential applicati
21 identified in purified Chlamydia trachomatis elementary bodies and in the chlamydial parasitophorous
22 dsF is concentrated in the outer membrane of elementary bodies and is surface exposed as a component
23 d imply that the cytotoxin is present in the elementary body and delivered to host cells very early d
25 ioning between the infectious, extracellular elementary body and the replicative, intracellular retic
26 ering the conversion of reticulate bodies to elementary bodies, and for translocation of lipid drople
27 e compared by testing C. pneumoniae purified elementary bodies, animal tissues, 228 peripheral blood
28 had increased CSF antibodies to C pneumoniae elementary body antigens as shown by enzyme-linked immun
29 lamydophila abortus or Chlamydophila pecorum elementary body antigens quantified antibodies against C
32 stence leads to attenuated production of new elementary bodies, appearance of morphologically aberran
33 In contrast to localization in RB, SEP in elementary bodies appears diffuse and irregular, suggest
36 in synthesis inhibitors, vesicles containing elementary bodies are very slow to acquire lysosomal cha
39 hose of proteins identified in C. pneumoniae elementary bodies by matrix-assisted laser desorption io
40 ermined by diminished recovery of infectious elementary bodies, differed markedly among chlamydial st
41 -mer OmcB peptide that bound the surfaces of elementary bodies (EB) and by heparin-binding peptide cr
42 IgG antibodies to serovar D of chlamydia elementary bodies (EB) and IgG antibodies to CHSP60-1, C
44 t reduction in infectivity of C. trachomatis elementary bodies (EB) harvested from Desferal-exposed p
46 A8-35 had a higher ratio of Abs to denatured elementary bodies (EB) over live EB, recognized more syn
50 matis standards ranging from 32 to 1,048,576 elementary bodies (EB)/ml of urine exhibited a linear co
51 e investigated immune responses to Chlamydia elementary body (EB) and 3 genotypically variant heat sh
52 rized by an infectious cell type known as an elementary body (EB) and an intracellular replicative fo
54 n a regulated fashion between the infectious elementary body (EB) and the replicative reticulate body
56 to those from the reference C. psittaci B577 elementary body (EB) ELISA and the Chlamydia complement
58 at low or undetectable levels at the time of elementary body (EB) to reticulate body conversion early
59 transition between two forms: the infectious elementary body (EB), and the rapidly dividing reticulat
60 g between two distinct forms: the infectious elementary body (EB), and the replicative but non-infect
61 acellular chlamydial infectious particle, or elementary body (EB), is enveloped by an intra- and inte
63 ial cell-surface GAGs, as well as chlamydial elementary body (EB)-surface GAGs, were investigated.
66 Vaccines based on live attenuated Chlamydia elementary bodies (EBs) can cause disease in vaccinated
67 ajor outer membrane protein (MOMP) and whole elementary bodies (EBs) from the 4 predominant serovars
68 hasic developmental cycle whereby infectious elementary bodies (EBs) invade host epithelial cells and
70 t full-length CT153 (p91) was present in the elementary bodies (EBs) of 15 C. trachomatis reference s
71 lity to recognize the immunizing peptide and elementary bodies (EBs) of C. pneumoniae by enzyme-linke
73 lfate receptor for binding C. trachomatis L2 elementary bodies (EBs) prior to entry into HeLa cells.
75 ated the presence of a type III apparatus on elementary bodies (EBs) that might function early in inf
76 vity to formalin-fixed Chlamydia trachomatis elementary bodies (EBs) to address whether these associa
77 he susceptibilities of Chlamydia trachomatis elementary bodies (EBs) to human defensin HNP-2 and porc
78 entiation of infectious, metabolically inert elementary bodies (EBs) to larger, metabolically active
79 nifested by the transformation of infectious elementary bodies (EBs) to larger, non-infectious reticu
80 crophages at low MOIs but yielded few viable elementary bodies (EBs) when macrophages were infected a
81 ection (after 20 h) when RBs reorganize into elementary bodies (EBs), and is absent in infectious EBs
88 t RAM can detect as few as 10 C. trachomatis elementary bodies in less than 2 h, comparable to result
89 esponse occurs both with the introduction of elementary bodies into the host and early replication of
91 d significantly decreased incorporation into elementary bodies of both C. trachomatis and Chlamydophi
92 tocol for the growth and harvest of purified elementary bodies of Chlamydia pneumoniae is presented.
93 , to label proteins in the outer membrane of elementary bodies of Chlamydia trachomatis LGV serovar L
94 ominent lipid and nucleic acid signals while elementary bodies revealed higher carbohydrate and prote
96 odies generated to the Chlamydia trachomatis elementary bodies stained Chlamydia-infected cells, but
97 infected with multiple Chlamydia trachomatis elementary bodies, they are internalized by endocytosis
98 etween infectious but metabolically inactive elementary bodies to metabolically active but noninfecti
102 iption, as well as initial transformation of elementary bodies to reticulate bodies, were detected ea
103 the maturation of the reticulate body to the elementary body, TTS genes expressed in the later stages
104 ation of rCPAF and UV-inactivated chlamydial elementary bodies (UV-EB) against vaginal chlamydial cha
105 d antibodies targeting Chlamydia trachomatis elementary bodies was not associated with reduced endome
106 n PMNs were depleted, the number of released elementary bodies was significantly greater as determine
107 n a dose-dependent manner; were not toxic to elementary bodies; were cidal at a concentration of > or