Search results for "Mycological Typing Techniques"

showing 5 items of 35 documents

Identifying yeasts using surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy

2019

Made available in DSpace on 2019-10-06T15:40:09Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 0 Previous issue date: 2019-07-05 Tekes Academy of Finland Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP) The molecular fingerprints of yeasts Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Dekkera bruxellensis, and Wickerhamomyces anomalus (former name Pichia anomala) have been examined using surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) and helium ion microscopy (HIM). The SERS spectra obtained from cell cultures (lysate and non-treated cells) distinguish between these very closely related fungal species. Highly SERS active silver nano-particles suitable for detecting complex biomolecules were fabricated using a simple synt…

SilverPichia anomalaWickerhamomyces anomalusSurface PropertiesSaccharomyces cerevisiaeMetal Nanoparticles02 engineering and technologySaccharomyces cerevisiaeheliumyeast010402 general chemistrySpectrum Analysis Raman01 natural sciencesSilver nanoparticlePichiaAnalytical ChemistryBiokemia solu- ja molekyylibiologia - Biochemistry cell and molecular biologysymbols.namesakehiivaYeastsaggregaatitMycological Typing TechniquesInstrumentationSpectroscopychemistry.chemical_classificationChromatographyta114biologyDekkeraChemistrySERSBiomoleculehopeasilver nanoparticleSurface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologybiology.organism_classificationAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsYeastYeast0104 chemical sciences3. Good healthaggregatesymbolshelium ion microscopynanohiukkaset0210 nano-technologyRaman spectroscopy
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CRYPTIC SPECIES RELATED TO DALDINIA CONCENTRICA AND D. ESCHSCHOLZII, WITH NOTES ON D. BAKERI

2004

Daldinia macaronesica (from the Canary Islands and Madeira), D. palmensis (from the Canary Islands), D. martinii and D. raimundi (from Sicily), and D. vanderguchtiae (from Jersey, Channel Islands) spp. nov., are described, based on new combinations of teleomorphic and anamorphic characters. They all resemble the pantropical D. eschscholzii and/or the European D. concentrica with regard to teleomorphic characters and secondary metabolite profiles generated by analytical HPLC. The status of the newly described taxa was established by SEM of ascospores and microscopic studies of their anamorphs in comparison with various materials of the aforementioned known species. HPLC and SEM studies on th…

Species complexbiologyXylarialesSettore BIO/02 - Botanica SistematicaHolotypePantropicalPlant SciencePigments BiologicalSpores Fungalbiology.organism_classificationEuropeTaxonChemotaxonomyBotanyDaldinia concentricaGeneticsMicroscopy Electron ScanningTaxonomy (biology)Type specimenMycological Typing TechniquesCryptic species Daldinia AscomycetesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsChromatography High Pressure LiquidBiotechnology
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Pythium stipitatumsp. nov. isolated from soil and plant debris taken in France, Tunisia, Turkey, and India

2009

Pythium stipitatum is a slow-growing oomycete and has been isolated from soil samples and plant materials from France, Tunisia, Turkey and India. Its morphological characteristics are reminiscent of those of Pythium ramificatum, discovered in Algeria by the corresponding author. Unfortunately, the Algerian isolate was not deposited in any culture collection and ultimately got lost. Those were the days when molecular description of fungi was not a fashion; hence, no molecular characteristics of the Algerian isolates were deposited to the GenBank. Moreover, its coralloid antheridial branches made it an easy prey to be considered as synonymous to Pythium minus. Because there are no living stra…

TunisiaTurkeyMolecular Sequence DataIndiaPythiumPoaceaeMicrobiologySpecies SpecificityDNA Ribosomal SpacerBotanyGeneticsPythiumInternal transcribed spacerDNA FungalMycological Typing TechniquesMolecular BiologySoil MicrobiologyOomycetebiologyfood and beveragesGenes rRNASequence Analysis DNAPlantsRibosomal RNAbiology.organism_classificationAntheridiumGenBankOosporeTaxonomy (biology)FranceBeta vulgarisFEMS Microbiology Letters
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Wickerhamomyces sylviae f.a., sp. nov., an ascomycetous yeast species isolated from migratory birds.

2013

In the present work, we investigated the phylogenetic position and phenotypic characteristics of eight yeast isolates collected from migratory birds on the island of Ustica, Italy. A phylogenetic analysis based on the D1/D2 region of the large-subunit rRNA gene showed that all isolates clustered as a single separate lineage within the Wickerhamomyces clade. They exhibited distinct morphological and physiological characteristics and were clearly separated from their closest relatives, Wickerhamomyces lynferdii, Wickerhamomyces anomalus and Wickerhamomyces subpelliculosus, in blastn searches. On the basis of the isolation source, physiological features and molecular strain typing carried out …

Wickerhamomyces anomalusLineage (evolution)Molecular Sequence DataWickerhamomyces; Birds; YeastZoologyMinisatellite RepeatsBiologyWickerhamomyceMicrobiologyBirdsWickerhamomycesBirdPhylogeneticsBotanyRibosome SubunitsAnimalsDNA FungalMycological Typing TechniquesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyIslandsPhylogenetic treeFungal geneticsDNAGeneral MedicineSequence Analysis DNARibosomal RNARibosome Subunits Large EukaryoticDNA FingerprintingYeastRAPDRandom Amplified Polymorphic DNA TechniqueFungalAnimal Migration; Animals; Birds; DNA Fingerprinting; DNA Fungal; Islands; Italy; Minisatellite Repeats; Molecular Sequence Data; Mycological Typing Techniques; Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA Technique; Ribosome Subunits Large Eukaryotic; Saccharomycetales; Sequence Analysis DNA; PhylogenyItalySaccharomycetalesLargeEukaryoticAnimal MigrationSequence AnalysisSettore AGR/16 - Microbiologia AgrariaInternational journal of systematic and evolutionary microbiology
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Molecular typing of Candida albicans isolates from patients and health care workers in a neonatal intensive care unit

2011

Aims:  The aim of this study was to investigate the genetic relatedness between Candida albicans isolates and to assess their nosocomial origin and the likeliness of cross-transmission between health care workers (HCWs) and hospitalized neonates in a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). Methods:  We retrospectively analysed 82 isolates obtained from 40 neonates and seven isolates from onychomycosis of the fingers of five HCWs in a Tunisian NICU by using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) and randomly amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) analysis with CA1 and CA2 as primers. Results:  In RAPD analysis, the discriminatory power (DP) of CA1 and CA2 primers was 0·86 and 0·81, respectively. A h…

medicine.medical_specialtyNeonatal intensive care unitbiologyIncidence (epidemiology)Fungal geneticsGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMycological Typing TechniquesMicrobiologyRAPDInternal medicineGenotypemedicinePulsed-field gel electrophoresisCandida albicansBiotechnologyJournal of Applied Microbiology
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