Search results for "Infectivity"

showing 10 items of 103 documents

The effect of essential oils on norovirus surrogates

2013

Abstract Essential oils (EOs) have long been applied as flavoring agents in foods, and due to their content in antimicrobial compounds, they have potential as natural agents for food preservation. In this study the effect of three EOs, clove, oregano and zataria, was evaluated on the infectivity of norovirus surrogates, i.e. feline calicivirus (FCV) and murine norovirus (MNV). Different concentrations of EOs were individually mixed with each virus at titers of ca. 7–8 log TCID 50 /ml and incubated for 2 h at 4 °C and 37 °C. The infectivity of the recovered viruses after triplicate treatments was evaluated by cell-culture assays. 2% of oregano EO at 37 °C decreased the FCV titers by 3.75 log…

InfectivityFeline calicivirusbiologyved/biologybusiness.industryved/biology.organism_classification_rank.speciesFood preservationAntimicrobialbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.disease_causeFood safetyMicrobiologyTiterNorovirusmedicineFood sciencebusinessFood ScienceBiotechnologyMurine norovirusFood Control
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Cooperative nature of viral replication

2020

The ability of viruses to infect their hosts depends on rapid dissemination following transmission. The notion that viral particles function as independent propagules has been challenged by recent observations suggesting that viral aggregates show enhanced infectivity and faster spread. However, these observations remain poorly understood. Here, we show that viral replication is a cooperative process, such that entry of multiple viral genome copies into the same cell disproportionately increases short-term viral progeny production. This cooperativity arises from the positive feedback established between replication templates and virus-encoded products involved in replication and should be a…

InfectivityGenetics0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinarygenetic structures030306 microbiologyvirusesSciAdv r-articlesCooperativityBiologyGenomeReplication (computing)3. Good health03 medical and health sciencesViral replicationVirologyViral fitnessResearch ArticlesFunction (biology)Research Article030304 developmental biology
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Interactions among co-infecting parasite species: a mechanism maintaining genetic variation in parasites?

2008

Individuals of free-living organisms are often infected simultaneously by a community of parasites. If the co-infecting parasites interact, then this can add significantly to the diversity of host genotype×parasite genotype interactions. However, interactions between parasite species are usually not examined considering potential variation in interactions between different strain combinations of co-infecting parasites. Here, we examined the importance of interactions between strains of fish eye flukes Diplostomum spathaceum and Diplostomum gasterostei on their infectivity in naive fish hosts. We assessed the infection success of strains of both species in single-strain exposures and in co-…

InfectivityGeneticsPolymorphism GeneticVirulenceGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyVirulenceGeneral MedicineBiologybiology.organism_classificationFish eyeGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyHost-Parasite InteractionsSpecies SpecificityDiplostomum spathaceumOncorhynchus mykissGenetic variationGenotypeAnimalsParasite hostingTrematodaTrematodaGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesResearch ArticleGeneral Environmental ScienceProceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
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Survival of fish-virulent strains ofPhotobacterium damselaesubsp.damselaein seawater under starvation conditions

1998

The survival of fish-virulent strains of Photobacterium damselae subsp. damselae in seawater microcosms, with and without sediment, was investigated. The strains survived as culturable bacteria at 14 and 22 degrees C for at least 1 year, and infectivity for fish was maintained. At 5 degrees C, cells lost culturability on solid media, but this was recovered when the temperature was increased to 22 degrees C. Finally, morphological changes in the bacterium (rod to coccus), and production of vesicles and extracellular material were observed during the time of starvation. The overall results suggest that seawater and sediment can act as reservoirs for these virulent strains.

InfectivityGeologic SedimentsVirulencebiologyPhotobacteriumCoccusColony Count MicrobialFishesVirulencePhotobacteriumbiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologyVibrioCulture MediaMicrobiologyCold TemperatureMicePhotobacterium damselaeVibrionaceaeMicroscopy Electron ScanningGeneticsAnimalsSeawaterMolecular BiologyBacteriaFEMS Microbiology Letters
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IN SITU HYBRIDIZATION FOR DETECTION OF HEPATITIS B VIRUS GENOMES IN LIVER TISSUE OF CHRONIC INFECTED CHILDREN

1990

Detection of hepatitis B virus (HBV)-DNA in the liver of chronic infected patients is presently the most sensitive marker of viral replication and infectivity. In situ hybridization (ISH) allows the direct visualization of HBV infected liver cells and distribution of the viral sequences. This study was done to establish ISH and correlate the findings with conventional markers for HBV infection. Methods. Liver biopsies of 50 patients (28 ♂, 22 ♀) aged 0.5-20 years (mean 10.3) with various histological diagnoses were tested by 1SH. The HBV-DNA probe was labeled by nick translation with 35S-CTP to a specific activity of 3-5×108 cpm/μg DNA. Results. HBV-DNA/mRNA could be demonstrated in 38 pati…

InfectivityHepatitis B virusHepatitis B virus DNA polymerasevirus diseasesIn situ hybridizationBiologymedicine.disease_causeVirologyMolecular biologydigestive system diseasesHBcAgHBeAgViral replicationPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthmedicineSouthern blotPediatric Research
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Viability RT-qPCR to detect potentially infectious enteric viruses on heat-processed berries

2019

Berries have frequently been cited as causing gastroenteritis and acute hepatitis outbreaks due to enteric virus contamination, including human norovirus and hepatitis A virus (HAV). Model experiments were performed to evaluate the potential use of viability RT-qPCR to assess the thermal inactivation of norovirus genotype I (GI), GII, and HAV on raspberries, blueberries and strawberries. Initially, two viability markers, platinum chloride and propidium monoazide (PMAxx™), were compared using thermally inactivated norovirus GI and GII suspensions. The results showed better performance of PMAxx™ pretreatment in discriminating native and inactivated viruses. Thus, the pretreatment was optimize…

InfectivityInoculationvirusesNorovirusOutbreakvirus diseasesBiologyContaminationmedicine.disease_causedigestive system diseasesMicrobiologyFood safetyBlowing a raspberryHAVThermal inactivationfluids and secretionsPropidium monoazideGenotypeNorovirusmedicineMolecular assayFoodborne virusFood ScienceBiotechnology
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Delayed transmission of a parasite is compensated by accelerated growth.

2005

Compensatory or ‘catch-up’ growth following prolonged periods of food shortages is known to exist in many free-living animals. It is generally assumed that growth rates under normal circumstances are below maximum because elevated rates of growth are costly. The present paper gives experimental evidence that such compensatory growth mechanisms also exist in parasitic species. We explored the effect of periodic host unavailability on survival, infectivity and growth of the fish ectoparasiteArgulus coregoni. Survival and infectivity ofA. coregonimetanauplii deprived of a host for selected time periods were age dependent, which indicates that all metanauplii carry similar energy resources for …

InfectivityLife Cycle StagesHost (biology)EcologyZoologyEconomic shortageBiologyAccelerated Growthlaw.inventionHost-Parasite InteractionsFish DiseasesInfectious DiseasesTransmission (mechanics)ArguloidalawOncorhynchus mykissParasite hostingAnimalsAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologyCompensatory growth (organism)Argulus coregoniParasitology
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Organoids of human airways to study infectivity and cytopathy of SARS-CoV-2

2020

InfectivityPulmonary and Respiratory Medicine2019-20 coronavirus outbreakCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)business.industrySARS-CoV-2Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)Pneumonia ViralRespiratory SystemCOVID-19medicine.diseaseVirologyArticleOrganoidsPneumoniaBetacoronavirusPandemicOrganoidMedicineHumansbusinessCoronavirus InfectionsPandemicsThe Lancet Respiratory Medicine
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Viability RT-PCR for SARS-CoV-2: a step forward to solve the infectivity quandary

2021

Background Isolation, contact tracing and restrictions on social movement are being globally implemented to prevent and control onward spread of SARS-CoV-2, even though the infection risk modelled on RNA detection by RT-qPCR remains biased as viral shedding and infectivity are not discerned. Thus, we aimed to develop a rapid viability RT-qPCR procedure to infer SARS-CoV-2 infectivity in clinical specimens and environmental samples. Methods We screened monoazide dyes and platinum compounds as viability molecular markers on five SARS-CoV-2 RNA targets. A platinum chloride-based viability RT-qPCR was then optimized using genomic RNA, and inactivated SARS-CoV-2 particles inoculated in buffer, s…

InfectivityReal-time polymerase chain reactionCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)RNAOutbreakViral sheddingBiologyPlatinum chlorideVirology
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Echinostoma friedi: the effect of age of adult worms on the infectivity of miracidia.

2004

AbstractThe effect of ageing of adults ofEchinostoma friedi(Trematoda: Echinostomatidae) on the infectivity of miracidia yielded was analysed. Miracidia were obtained after hatching of eggs obtained from adult worms ofE. friedicollected weekly during the course of experimental infections in golden hamsters. Miracidial infectivity, measured in terms of percentage of infection inLymnaea peregra, was significantly influenced by the age of the adult worms from which the miracidia were derived. Infective miracidia only were obtained from adult worms in the age range from 4 to 9 weeks post-infection. Infectivity was maximal in those miracidia derived from adults collected 8 and 9 weeks post-infec…

InfectivityVeterinary medicineLymnaea peregraAgingEchinostomiasisbiologyMesocricetusHatchingEggsfungiGeneral MedicineAnatomybiology.organism_classificationEchinostomatidaeHost-Parasite InteractionsCricetinaeEchinostomaparasitic diseasesParasite hostingAnimalsAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologyTrematodaEchinostoma friediLymnaeaJournal of helminthology
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