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Western Blot Analysis of Anti-Escherichia coli Serum Immunoglobulins in Women Susceptible to Recurrent Urinary Tract Infections
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References
1995
Year
Increased SusceptibilityUrological ResearchUrologyPathogenesisImmunologyUti SusceptibilityVaginitisSerologic TestingFemale UrologyInfection ControlWomen SusceptibleRecurrent UtisMedicineClinical MicrobiologyAntimicrobial ResistanceWestern Blot Analysis
The basis for increased susceptibility of some women to recurrent urinary tract infections (UTIs) is not clear; increased susceptibility may be due to host factors that promote increased colonization of the vaginal and bladder mucosa with uropathogens or to decreased immune responses to uropathogens. Anti-Escherichia coli antibody specificities in sera from UTI patients and controls were comprehensively assessed to determine whether UTI-susceptible and -nonsusceptible women differed in their capacities to make antibodies to individual E. coli antigens. Sera were analyzed by one-dimensional Western blots using antigens prepared from uropathogenic E. coli. The results showed that sera from subjects without a history of recurrent UTIs contained IgG antibodies to specific E. coli antigens more often than did sera from UTI-susceptible patients. These data suggest that hyporesponsiveness to specific E. coli antigens may be linked to increased UTI susceptibility in some women.
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