Interactions Between Endemic Bordetella Species and Host Immunity (2007)
Bordetella pertussis and Bordetella parapertussis are bacterial pathogens that cause whooping cough, a disease that is re-emerging in vaccinated populations. The diseases caused by these bacteria are...
Wolfe, Daniel N., Kirimanjeswara, Girish S., Harvill, Eric T.
Bordetella parapertussis and Bordetella pertussis are closely related species that cause whooping cough, an acute, immunizing disease. Their coexistence in the same host populations at the same time...
Wolfe, Daniel N., Kirimanjeswara, Girish S., Harvill, Eric T.
Bordetella parapertussis and Bordetella pertussis are closely related species that cause whooping cough, an acute, immunizing disease. Their coexistence in the same host populations at the same time...
Comparative Role of Immunoglobulin A in Protective Immunity against the Bordetellae▿
Wolfe, Daniel N., Kirimanjeswara, Girish S., Goebel, Elizabeth M., Harvill, Eric T.
The genus Bordetella includes a group of closely related mammalian pathogens that cause a variety of respiratory diseases in a long list of animals (B. bronchiseptica) and whooping cough in humans...
The O Antigen Enables Bordetella parapertussis To Avoid Bordetella pertussis-Induced Immunity▿
Wolfe, Daniel N., Goebel, Elizabeth M., Bjornstad, Ottar N., Restif, Olivier, Harvill, Eric T.
Bordetella pertussis and Bordetella parapertussis are closely related endemic human pathogens which cause whooping cough, a disease that is reemerging in human populations. Despite how closely...
O Antigen Protects Bordetella parapertussis from Complement▿
Goebel, Elizabeth M., Wolfe, Daniel N., Elder, Kelly, Stibitz, Scott, Harvill, Eric T.
Bordetella pertussis, a causative agent of whooping cough, expresses BrkA, which confers serum resistance, but the closely related human pathogen that also causes whooping cough, Bordetella...
Inefficient Toll-Like Receptor-4 Stimulation Enables Bordetella parapertussis to Avoid Host Immunity
Wolfe, Daniel N., Buboltz, Anne M., Harvill, Eric T.
The recognition of bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) by host Toll-like receptor (TLR)4 is a crucial step in developing protective immunity against several gram negative bacterial pathogens....