Search results for "Arum"
showing 10 items of 354 documents
Characterization of Lactobacillus isolates from fermented olives and their bacteriocin gene profiles
2011
Near one hundred isolates of Lactobacillus paraplantarum, Lactobacillus pentosus and Lactobacillus plantarum from table olives were studied. Strains were genotyped by rep-PCR. Although the technique failed to differentiate some isolates at the species level, it proved a robust and easy procedure that could be useful for distinguishing between related strains of L. paraplantarum, L. pentosus and L. plantarum from a large pool of unrelated strains of these species. A PCR-based screening revealed the presence of the plantaricin encoding genes plnA, plnB, plnC, plnD, plnE/F, plnF, plnI, plnJ, plnK, plnG and plnN in most isolates of the three species. Sequences of bacteriocin genes present in L.…
Epimerization, oxidation and reduction of bile acids by Eubacterium lentum
1984
Summary Twenty-eight strains of Eubacterium lentum were divided into five groups on the basis of their ability to metabolize cholic acid and dehydrocholic acid: (I) Strains with 3α- and 3/β-dehydrogenating activities (1 strain), (II) strains with 12α-dehydrogenating activity (5 strains), (III) strains with 3α-, 3β-, 7α-, and 12α-dehydrogenating activities (8 isolates), (IV) transition stages between group II and III (1 strain), (V) strains devoid of any measurable bile acid metabolizing activities or with only trace activities (11 isolates). Using appropriate bile acids it was demonstrated that hydroxyl or keto groups at positions C 3 , C 7 , and C 12 did not influence bile acid transformat…
Inactivation of a small heat shock protein affects cell morphology and membrane fluidity in Lactobacillus plantarum WCFS1.
2011
A small heat shock gene of Lactobacillus plantarum strain WCFS1 was deleted using a Cre-lox based system. Compared to the wild type, the ∆hsp 18.55 mutant strain displayed a similar growth rate when cultivated either under optimal temperature or under different stress conditions such as heat, low pH and salt stress. However, a longer lag phase was observed when the ∆hsp 18.55 mutant strain was cultivated under short intense heat stress (50 °C). This suggests that the hsp 18.55 gene of L. plantarum may be involved in recovery of L. plantarum stressed cells in the early stage of high temperature stress. In addition, morphology of the mutant cells, investigated by scanning electron microscopy,…
Malaria and the heart: Two rare case reports of plasmodium falciparum-associated pericarditis
2017
Malaria is one of the most important parasitic diseases in the world, causing significant mortality and morbidity in the tropical regions1 . Although symptoms can range from a mild fever to severe complicated forms, there are limited published data on cardiac involvement of malaria and only a few studies have been carried out regarding cardiac function in severe malaria2–3. Cardiac involvement in the course of malaria ranges from severe forms with hypatension, shock, circulatory collapse and impaired haemodynamic function, to mild disorders documented by Electrocardiogram (ECG) and echocardiography4–6. Pericardial involvement in malaria is a very rare event7–8. We report here two cases of f…
Meningitis caused by Enterococcus gallinarum after lumbar drainage of cerebrospinal fluid.
2005
We report a rare case of meningitis caused by Enterococcus gallinarum, a bacterium characterized by its ability to express low-level resistance to vancomycin. As in the three other previously reported cases, this one occurred in a patient with a cerebrospinal fluid drainage catheter and properly responded to antimicrobial therapy and removal of the drain.
Caroli Linnaeus. Species Plantarum 1753. gada izdevums
2019
Latvijas Universitātes Botānikas un mikoloģijas kolekcijās glabājas Karla Linneja (1707 – 1778) viena no viņa izcilākā darba “Species Plantarum” pirmizdevumiem, kam šobrīd ir ne tikai zinātniska, bet arī bibliogrāfiska vērtība. Zīmogi un ieraksti šajās grāmatās dod liecības par to īpašniekiem laika gaitā.
Dispositions légales concernant les ponts dans la législation de Justinien
2019
Many bridges built in the ancient Rome have survived to the present time. In this presentation, the author does not focus his attention on the architectural, archaeological, construction or statistical aspects. He discusses, above all, the legal regulations concerning the bridges in the Justinian's legislation. He is looking for an answer to the question of who in the ancient times at the Romans’ supervised the bridges. He wonders if the curatores pontis existed? It touches on the question of building a "private" bridge, the correlation of bridge issues and servitude, the bridge versus assassination, the bridge versus a suicide or the bridge versus taxes paid by the Church. The Romans did n…
Purification and characterization of an inducible p-coumaric acid decarboxylase from Lactobacillus plantarum
2006
Abstract Lactobacillus plantarum cells displayed substrate-inducible decarboxylase activities on p-coumaric and ferulic acids of 0.6 and 0.01 μmol min−1 mg−1, respectively. Activity in uninduced cells or corresponding cell extracts was undetectable (
Identification, Characterization and Synthesis of Natural Parasitic Cysteine Protease Inhibitors – More Potent Falcitidin Analogs
2021
ABSTRACTProtease inhibitors represent a promising therapeutic option for the treatment of parasitic diseases such as malaria and human African trypanosomiasis. Falcitidin was the first member of a new class of inhibitors of falcipain-2, a cysteine protease of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum. Using a metabolomics dataset of 25 Chitinophaga strains for molecular networking enabled identification of over 30 natural analogs of falcitidin. Based on MS/MS spectra, they vary in their amino acid chain length, sequence, acyl residue, and C-terminal functionalization; therefore, they were grouped into the four falcitidin peptide families A-D. The isolation, characterization and absolute st…
Molecular characterization of the phenolic acid metabolism in the lactic acid bacteria Lactobacillus plantarum
2001
The lactic acid bacteria Lactobacillus plantarumdisplays substrate-inducible decar- boxylase activities on p-coumaric, caffeic and ferulic acids. Purification of the p-coumaric acid decarboxylase (PDC) was performed. Sequence of the N-terminal part of the PDC led to the cloning of the corresponding pdc gene. Expression of this gene in Escherichia colirevealed that PDC displayed a weak activity on ferulic acid, detectable in vitro in the presence of ammonium sulfate. Transcrip- tional studies of this gene in L. plantarum demonstrated that the pdc transcription is phenolic acid- dependent. A mutant deficient in the PDC activity, designated LPD1, was constructed to study phe- nolic acid altern…