Search results for "Host"

showing 10 items of 1982 documents

Bacteriophage Adherence to Mucus Mediates Preventive Protection against Pathogenic Bacteria

2019

The mucosal surfaces of animals are habitat for microbes, including viruses. Bacteriophages—viruses that infect bacteria—were shown to be able to bind to mucus. This may result in a symbiotic relationship in which phages find bacterial hosts to infect, protecting the mucus-producing animal from bacterial infections in the process. Here, we studied phage binding on mucus and the effect of mucin on phage-bacterium interactions. The significance of our research is in showing that phage adhesion to mucus results in preventive protection against bacterial infections, which will serve as basis for the development of prophylactic phage therapy approaches. Besides, we also reveal that exposure to m…

medicine.medical_treatmentvirusesbacteriophage therapymedicine.disease_causebakteeritBacteriophageFish Diseaseshost-pathogen interactionslimakalvotPathogenOrganism1183 Plant biology microbiology virology11832 Microbiology and virology2. Zero hunger0303 health scienceshostpathogen interactionsbiologyvirulenssimucosal pathogensQR1-5023. Good healthBACTERIOPHAGEResearch ArticleProtein BindingbacteriophagesPhage therapyeducationvirusFlavobacteriumMicrobiologybakteriofagitHost-Microbe BiologyMicrobiologyViral Proteins03 medical and health sciencesImmunityVirologyAntibiosismedicineAnimalsPhage Therapy030304 developmental biologyMucous MembraneBacteria030306 microbiologybacterial virulenceMucinPathogenic bacteriaEditor's Pickkalatauditbiology.organism_classificationMucusfagiterapiaMucusFlavobacterium columnareBacteriamBio
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Vibrio vulnificus: from water to host

2017

Vibrio vulnificus is an aquatic pathogen autochthonous from temperate, tropical and subtropical ecosystems where it lives either as a sessile cell, forming biofilms or as a free-swimming cell. From these locations, the pathogen can occasionally infect humans and fish causing a disease named vibriosis. The most severe form of human and fish vibriosis is associated with the pathogen’s ability to spread from the infection site to the bloodstream and multiply, process known as invasion. Before invasion, the pathogen has to colonize the mucosal host surface, process that involves not only bacterial attachment/adhesion but also resistance to mucosal immunity, commensal microbiota (competitors) an…

metagenomicsmicrobiologíaAnguilla anguillamicrobiologyhost-associated microbiota:CIENCIAS DE LA VIDA [UNESCO]transposon insertion sequencingEuropean eelUNESCO::CIENCIAS DE LA VIDAmicrobiotaVibrio vulnificusVibrioanguila
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Isolation and characterization of microsatellite markers in the liver fluke (Fasciola hepatica)

2004

PRIMER NOTE; International audience; Six microsatellite markers were isolated from Fasciola hepatica, a re-emerging parasite that causes important veterinary and public health problems. In a sample of 52 liver flukes from a region of hyperendemicity (Bolivian Altiplano), five microsatellite were polymorphic. Our results showed that liver flukes present important genetic variability, suggesting a preferential outcrossing reproduction mode for this hermaphroditic parasite.

microsatellitemedia_common.quotation_subjectOutcrossingBiochemistryGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology030308 mycology & parasitology03 medical and health sciences[SDE.BE.PARA]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecology/domain_sde.be.paraparasitic diseasesParasite hostingFasciola hepaticaGenetic variability030304 developmental biologymedia_commonGenetics0303 health sciencesliver flukeEcologybiologyFasciola hepaticaLiver flukebiology.organism_classificationIsolation (microbiology)3. Good healthMicrosatelliteReproductionMolecular Ecology Notes
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Vicente Llorens, la discontinuidad cultural y la recuperación del arte del exilio

2022

Este artículo rescata la faceta más artística de Vicente Llorens que surgió tras entrar en contacto con los artistas del exilio, también fue coleccionista y visitante de museos. Comenzó con la organización de exposiciones y concluyó con la reconstrucción del discurso artístico de la diáspora republicana. Una de sus principales líneas de trabajo fue la discontinuidad de la cultura española. En su afán por reconstruirla para dar testimonio de quiénes fueron los intelectuales exiliados tras la Guerra Civil, su trabajo se convirtió en el punto de referencia de estudios artísticos posteriores.

mozart.Visual Arts and Performing Artsflauta mágicakentridge“UNESCO:HISTORIA”óperanarizshostakóvichArs Longa. Cuadernos de arte
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Patterns of trunk spine growth in two congeneric species of acanthocephalan: investment in attachment may differ between sexes and species.

2012

SUMMARYAcanthocephalans have evolved a hooked proboscis and some taxa have trunk spines to attach to their definitive hosts. These structures are generated before being used, thus a key question is how investment in attachment could optimally be allocated through the ontogeny. The number and arrangement of hooks and spines are never modified in the definitive host, but it is unclear whether these structures grow during adult development. A comparison of the size of trunk spines between cystacanths and adults of Corynosoma cetaceum and C. australe indicated that spines grow in both species, but only in females, which also had significantly larger spines than males. This sexual dimorphism did…

musculoskeletal diseasesMaleOntogenyDolphinsZoologyFlounderAcanthocephalaHost-Parasite InteractionsSpecies SpecificityAnimalsBody SizeSex CharacteristicsbiologyEcologyProboscismusculoskeletal systembiology.organism_classificationTrunkSpineSea LionsSexual dimorphismSpine (zoology)Infectious DiseasesPerchesKey (lock)Animal Science and ZoologyParasitologyFemaleAllometryHelminthiasis AnimalAcanthocephalaParasitology
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297: Establishment of a chimeric NOD-scid/IL2RγcNull transplantation-model to evaluate graft-vs-host and graft-vs-leukemia immune responses of ex viv…

2007

musculoskeletal diseasesTransplantationbusiness.industryHost (biology)NodT lymphocyteHematologymedicine.diseaseVirologyTransplantationstomatognathic diseasesLeukemiaImmune systemimmune system diseaseshemic and lymphatic diseasesImmunologyMedicinebusinessEx vivoBiology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation
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Treatment with a CO-releasing molecule (CORM-3) reduces joint inflammation and erosion in murine collagen-induced arthritis.

2008

Contains fulltext : 70589.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access) OBJECTIVE: CO-releasing molecules (CO-RMs) are a novel class of anti-inflammatory agents. We have examined the possible therapeutic effects of CORM-3 in collagen-induced arthritis (CIA). METHODS: Arthritis was induced in DBA-1/J mice by type II collagen. Animals were treated with CORM-3 (5 and 10 mg/kg/day, intraperitoneally) or the inactive compound iCORM-3 (10 mg/kg/day, intraperitoneally) unable to release CO, from days 22 to 31. Production of anti-type II collagen antibodies, cytokines and cartilage olimeric matrix protein (COMP) was evaluated by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and prostaglandin E(2) (PGE(2)) by rad…

musculoskeletal diseasesmedicine.medical_treatmentImmunologyAnti-Inflammatory AgentsDrug Evaluation PreclinicalType II collagenArthritisInflammationPharmacologyAuto-immunity transplantation and immunotherapy [N4i 4]DinoprostoneGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyMiceRheumatologyOrganometallic CompoundsPerception and Action [DCN 1]medicineAnimalsImmunology and AllergyChronic inflammation and autoimmunity [UMCN 4.2]Dose-Response Relationship Drugbiologybusiness.industryRANK LigandInterleukinIntercellular Adhesion Molecule-1medicine.diseaseArthritis ExperimentalPathogenesis and modulation of inflammation [N4i 1]Cellular infiltrationCyclooxygenase 2Mice Inbred DBARANKLImmunologybiology.proteinCytokinesTumor necrosis factor alphaMicrobial pathogenesis and host defense [UMCN 4.1]Inflammation Mediatorsmedicine.symptombusinessInfection and autoimmunity [NCMLS 1]Heme Oxygenase-1Immunity infection and tissue repair [NCMLS 1]Prostaglandin E
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Role of PRRs (TLR2 and Dectin-1) in hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell differentiation: implications in protection against Candida albicans infec…

2020

Detection of infection by hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) is essential to replace myeloid cells consumed during the immune response. HSPCs express some functional pattern recognition receptors involved in the recognition of Candida albicans. In this context, our group has previously demonstrated that C. albicans yeasts induce proliferation and differentiation of HSPCs via TLR2 and Dectin-1. In the present PhD thesis, we used in vitro and ex vivo models of HSPC differentiation to investigate the functional consequences for mature myeloid cells of exposure of HSPCs to PAMPs or C. albicans yeasts. In vitro experiments show that murine HSPCs continuously exposed to TLR2 or TLR4 …

myeloid cellshematopoietic stem and progenitor cellsUNESCO::CIENCIAS DE LA VIDAtlr2candida albicansmouse modelsdectin-1host immune responses:CIENCIAS DE LA VIDA [UNESCO]
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Inter and intra-guild interactions in egg parasitoid species of the soybean stink bug complex

2002

Abstract – The objective of this research was to evaluate the parasitism behavior of Telenomus podisiAshmead, Trissolcus basalis (Wollaston) e Trissolcus urichi Crawford (Hymenoptera: Scelionidae) oneggs of Nezara viridula L., Euschistus heros F., Piezodorus guildinii Westwood and Acrosternumaseadum Rolston (Heteroptera: Pentatomidae), in no choice and multiple choice experiments. For allparasitoid species, the results demonstrated the existence of a main host species that maximizes thereproductive success. The competitive interactions among the parasitoid species were investigated inexperiments of sequential and simultaneous release of different combinations of parasitoid pairs on thehosts…

métodos de combate às pragasbiologyHeteropteraparasitismcompetição biológicaParasitismHymenopteraPentatomidaebiology.organism_classificationlcsh:S1-972ParasitoidparasitismoTelenomus podisiNezara viridularelação parasita-hospedeiroBotanyAnimal Science and Zoologypest control methodshost-parasite relationsbiological competitionlcsh:Agriculture (General)Agronomy and Crop ScienceScelionidae
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Data from: The interplay of nested biotic interactions and the abiotic environment regulates populations of a hypersymbiont

2019

1. The role of biotic interactions in shaping distribution and abundance of species should be particularly pronounced in symbionts. Indeed, symbionts have a dual niche composed of traits of their individual hosts and the abiotic environment external to the host, and often combine active dispersal at finer scales with host-mediated dispersal at broader scales. The biotic complexity in the determinants of species distribution and abundance should be even more pronounced for hypersymbionts (symbionts of other symbionts). 2. We use a chain of symbiosis to explore the relative influence of nested biotic interactions and the abiotic environment on occupancy and abundance of a hypersymbiont. 3. Ou…

nichesymbiotic hostnested hostshost traits
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