Search results for "BIOFILM"

showing 10 items of 394 documents

Wastewater constituents impact biofilm microbial community in receiving streams

2022

Microbial life in natural biofilms is dominated by prokaryotes and microscopic eukaryotes living in dense association. In stream ecosystems, microbial biofilms influence primary production, elemental cycles, food web interactions as well as water quality. Understanding how biofilm communities respond to anthropogenic impacts, such as wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) effluent, is important given the key role of biofilms in stream ecosystem function. Here, we implemented 16S and 18S rRNA gene sequencing of stream biofilms upstream (US) and downstream (DS) of WWTP effluents in four Swiss streams to test how bacterial and eukaryotic communities respond to wastewater constituents. Stream biofil…

Environmental EngineeringmicropollutantWastewater treatmentjätevesiWastewaterbacterial communitybiofilmbakteeritbiofilmitpiilevätEnvironmental ChemistryEcosystemWaste Management and DisposalEffluentjäteveden käsittelyMicropollutantbiologyEcologyBiofilmAnthropogenic EffectsMicrobiotaAlphaproteobacteriaBiofilmDiatombiology.organism_classificationPollutionFood webdiatomwastewater treatmentmikrobistoMicrobial population biologyWastewaterjätevesikuormitusBiofilmsvirtavedetEnvironmental scienceSewage treatmentBacterial communityBiofilm; Wastewater treatment; Bacterial community; Diatom; Micropollutant
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The Influence of Microbiome Dysbiosis and Bacterial Biofilms on Epidermal Barrier Function in Atopic Dermatitis—An Update

2021

Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a common inflammatory dermatosis affecting up to 30% of children and 10% of adults worldwide. AD is primarily driven by an epidermal barrier defect which triggers immune dysregulation within the skin. According to recent research such phenomena are closely related to the microbial dysbiosis of the skin. There is growing evidence that cutaneous microbiota and bacterial biofilms negatively affect skin barrier function, contributing to the onset and exacerbation of AD. This review summarizes the latest data on the mechanisms leading to microbiome dysbiosis and biofilm formation in AD, and the influence of these phenomena on skin barrier function.

ExacerbationQH301-705.5microbiomeReviewmedicine.disease_causeCatalysisDermatitis AtopicInorganic ChemistryAnimalsHumansMedicineskin barrierMicrobiomeBiology (General)Physical and Theoretical ChemistryQD1-999Molecular BiologySpectroscopySkinstaphylococciEpidermal barrierBacteriaatopic dermatitisintegumentary systembusiness.industryMicrobiotaOrganic ChemistryBiofilmGeneral MedicineAtopic dermatitisImmune dysregulationmedicine.diseaseComputer Science ApplicationsChemistryImmunologyDysbiosisEpidermisbiofilmsbusinessDysbiosisFunction (biology)International Journal of Molecular Sciences
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Interactions micro-organismes - bois et impact sur les propriétés physico-chimiques du vin : fermentation malolactique par le biofilm de Oenococcus o…

2015

Malolactic fermentation improves wine quality, mainly by decreasing acidity. It is carried out by lactic acid bacteria, mainly Oenococcus oeni. This species is favored for its efficiency and its organoleptic outcome. O. oeni ability to withstand wine stress and to keep its fermentation activity is a subject of major interest.Samples of oak showed that O. oeni adheres to wood and is able to persist for several months in wine. However, in the majority of natural habitats, microorganisms grow attached to a surface, within a structured ecosystem called biofilm. In this form of life, cells benefit from an increased stress resistance.These two properties, adherence to a surface and stress resista…

Fermentation malolactiqueBiofilmFût de chêne[ SDV.IDA ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food engineeringWineMalolactic Fermentation[SDV.IDA] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food engineeringElevageMalolactic FermentationOak barrel aging[SDV.IDA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food engineeringAromasVinArômesOenococcus oeni
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Comparative study of laboratory-scale thermophilic and mesophilic activated sludge processes.

2005

Laboratory-scale mesophilic (20-35 degrees C) and thermophilic (55 degrees C) activated sludge processes (ASPs) treating diluted molasses wastewater were compared in effluent quality, removal of different COD fractions, sludge yield, floc size, and sludge settleability. The effect of polyaluminium chloride (PAC) with high cationic charge on sludge settleability and effluent quality was also studied. In the ASPs, the hydraulic retention time was 12h in both processes, corresponding to a volumetric loading rate of 3.2+/-1.0 kg COD(filt) m(-3)d(-1). The mesophilic ASP gave 79+/-18% and 90+/-2% and the thermophilic ASP gave 50+/-6% and 67+/-11% total COD (COD(tot)) and GF/A-filtered COD (COD(fi…

FlocculationEnvironmental EngineeringHydraulic retention timeAluminum HydroxideWaste Disposal FluidWater PurificationBacteria AnaerobicParticle SizeWaste Management and DisposalEffluentWater Science and TechnologyCivil and Structural EngineeringChromatographySewageChemistryEcological ModelingTemperatureFlocculationPulp and paper industryPollutionOxygenActivated sludgeBiodegradation EnvironmentalWastewaterBiofilmsSewage treatmentAerationMesophileWater research
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Biofilm formation byCandida albicansmutants for genes coding fungal proteins exhibiting the eight-cysteine-containing CFEM domain

2006

Several features and functions of a Candida albicans gene, PGA10 (also designated as RBT51), coding for a putative polypeptide species belonging to a subset of fungal proteins containing an eight-cysteine domain referred as CFEM (Common in several Fungal Extracellular Membrane proteins), are described. The ORF of the gene (ORF19.5674) encoded a protein of 250 amino acids, with a predicted molecular mass of 25.17 kDa. The product of the PGA10 gene also exhibited some features reminiscent of a class II-type hydrophobin. Deletion of PGA10 resulted in a cascade of pleiotropic effects, mostly affecting cell-surface-related properties. Thus, the null pga10Delta mutant displayed an increased sensi…

Fungal proteinHydrophobinMutantBiofilmGeneral MedicineBiologybiology.organism_classificationApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyCorpus albicansProtein Structure TertiaryMicrobiologyFungal ProteinsBiochemistryMembrane proteinBiofilmsCandida albicansMutationCloning MolecularCandida albicansGeneFEMS Yeast Research
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Some biological features of Candida albicans mutants for genes coding fungal proteins containing the CFEM domain

2011

Several biological features of Candida albicans genes (PGA10, RBT5 and CSA1) coding for putative polypeptide species belonging to a subset of fungal proteins containing an eight-cysteine domain referred as common in several fungal extracellular membrane (CFEM) are described. The deletion of these genes resulted in a cascade of pleiotropic effects. Thus, mutant strains exhibited higher cell surface hydrophobicity levels and an increased ability to bind to inert or biological substrates. Confocal scanning laser microscopy using concanavalin A-Alexafluor 488 (which binds to mannose and glucose residues) and FUN-1 (a cytoplasmic fluorescent probe for cell viability) dyes showed that mutant stra…

Fungal proteinMutantBiofilmGeneral MedicineBiologybiology.organism_classificationApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyCorpus albicansCell biologyGene expressionExtracellularCandida albicansGeneFEMS Yeast Research
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Homozygous deletion of ATC1 and NTC1 genes in Candida parapsilosis abolishes trehalase activity and affects cell growth, sugar metabolism, stress res…

2015

A double homozygous atc1Δ/atc1Δ/ntc1Δ/ntc1Δ mutant (atc1Δ/ntc1Δ KO) was constructed in the pathogen opportunistic yeast Candida parapsilosis by disruption of the two chromosomal alleles coding for NTC1 gene (encoding a neutral trehalase) in a Cpatc1Δ/atc1Δ background (atc1Δ KO strain, deficient in acid trehalase). The Cpatc1Δ/ntc1Δ KO mutant failed to counteract the inability of Cpatc1Δ cells to metabolize exogenous trehalose and showed a similar growth pattern on several monosaccharides and disaccharides. However, upon prolonged incubation in either rich medium (YPD) or nutrient-starved medium the viability of Cpatc1Δ cells exhibited a sensitive phenotype, which was augmented by further Cp…

Fungal proteinVirulencebiologyMutantTrehalase activityTrehaloseCandida parapsilosisbiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologyTrehaloseYeastMicrobiologyFungal ProteinsOxidative Stresschemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryStress PhysiologicalBiofilmsGeneticsCarbohydrate MetabolismTrehalaseTrehalaseGene knockoutCandidaSequence DeletionFungal Genetics and Biology
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Adaptation of Fusarium oxysporum and Fusarium dimerum to the specific aquatic environment provided by the water systems of hospitals.

2015

SPE IPM MERS EA; International audience; Members of the Fusarium group were recently detected in water distribution systems of several hospitals in the world. An epidemiological investigation was conducted over 2 years in hospital buildings in Dijon and Nancy (France) and in non-hospital buildings in Dijon. The fungi were detected only within the water distribution systems of the hospital buildings and also, but at very low concentrations, in the urban water network of Nancy. All fungi were identified as Fusarium oxysporum species complex (FOSC) and Fusarium dimerum species complex (FDSC) by sequencing part of the translation elongation factor 1- alpha (TEF-1a) gene. Very low diversity was …

FusariumVeterinary medicineEnvironmental EngineeringAntifungal AgentsCopper SulfateSodium Hypochlorite[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Acclimatizationsoilborne fungibiofilmAgar plateopportunistic fungi03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundPeptide Elongation Factor 1FusariumWater SupplyBotanyFusarium oxysporum[SDV.BV]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal BiologyColonizationWaste Management and DisposalSoil Microbiology030304 developmental biologyWater Science and TechnologyCivil and Structural Engineering0303 health sciencesbiology030306 microbiologyEcological ModelingDrinking Wateraquatic nicheTemperatureContaminationPhosphorus Compoundscolonizationbiology.organism_classificationSilicon Dioxidepreventive prophylaxisPollutionHospitalsFungicidechemistrySodium hypochloriteBiofilms[SDE]Environmental SciencesFranceAdaptationWater MicrobiologyWater research
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Bomba rice conservation with a natural biofilm

2018

[EN] The chemical composition of commercial Syzygium aromaticum, Cinnamomum verum, and Laurus nobilis essential oils as well as their antifungal activity against four pathogenic fungi isolated from Mediterranean rice grains has been investigated. Eighty nine compounds accounting for between 98.5 and 99.4% of the total essential oil were identified. The phenylpropanoids eugenol (89.37 ± 0.29%) and eugenol (56.34 ± 0.41%), followed by eugenol acetate (19.48 ± 0.13%) were, respectively, the main compounds in clove and cinnamon essential oils, whereas large amounts of the oxygenated monoterpenes 1,8-cineole (58.07 ± 0.83%) and ¿-terpinyl acetate (13.05 ± 0.44%) were found in bay leaf essential …

General Chemical EngineeringBOTANICA01 natural sciencesAlternaria alternataArticleEssential oillaw.inventionlcsh:Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundLaurus nobilisfoodBay leaflawFood scienceEssential oilbiologyChemistryBiofilm010401 analytical chemistryCinnamomum verumBiofilmFungifood and beveragesGeneral Chemistrybiology.organism_classificationfood.food0104 chemical sciencesEugenol010404 medicinal & biomolecular chemistrylcsh:QD1-999Syzygium
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Transmission to Eels, Portals of Entry, and Putative Reservoirs of Vibrio vulnificus Serovar E (Biotype 2)

2001

ABSTRACT Vibrio vulnificus serovar E (formerly biotype 2) is the etiologic agent that is responsible for the main infectious disease affecting farmed eels. Although the pathogen can theoretically use water as a vehicle for disease transmission, it has not been isolated from tank water during epizootics to date. In this work, the mode of transmission of the disease to healthy eels, the portals of entry of the pathogen into fish, and their putative reservoirs have been investigated by means of laboratory and field experiments. Results of the experiments of direct and indirect host-to-host transmission, patch contact challenges, and oral-anal intubations suggest that water is the prime vehicle…

GillsSerotypeDisease reservoirVibrio vulnificusBiologyApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyFish DiseasesVibrionaceaeVibrio InfectionsAnimalsEnvironmental Microbiology and BiodegradationPathogenDisease ReservoirsVibrioEcologyOutbreakAnguillabiology.organism_classificationVirologyVibrioBiofilmsVibrio InfectionsMicroscopy Electron ScanningWater MicrobiologyFood ScienceBiotechnologyApplied and Environmental Microbiology
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