Search results for "PIDE"

showing 10 items of 6055 documents

Comparison of DNase, DNA-polymerase and RNA-polymerase activities present in the DNA-bindung proteins of normal human dermis, epidermis, horny layer …

1978

DNA-binding proteins (DBP) of normal human dermis, epidermis, horny layer and psoriatic scales represent a tissue-specific group of mostly nuclear nonhistone proteins. To analyse their function, the different DBP fractions were examined concerning the presence of DNase, DNA-polymerase and RNA-polymerase activities. DBP of normal epidermis and horny layer contain four different DNases. One DNase of both DBP fractions is active only at pH 5.0. Three DNases of epidermal DBP are active at a pH-range from 5.0--8.5, while the corresponding DNases of horny layer-DBP are most active at pH 7.4. Probably these DNases have changed their pH-optimum during keratinisation. DBP of psoriatic scales include…

DNA polymeraseDNA-Directed DNA PolymeraseDermatologychemistry.chemical_compoundNon-histone proteinDermisRNA polymerasemedicineHumansPsoriasisSkinchemistry.chemical_classificationThymidine monophosphateDeoxyribonucleasesEpidermis (botany)biologyIsoelectric focusingProteinsDNA-Directed RNA PolymerasesGeneral MedicineElectrophoresis DiscMolecular biologyEnzyme Activationmedicine.anatomical_structureEnzymechemistrybiology.proteinEpidermisIsoelectric FocusingProtein Bindingcirculatory and respiratory physiologyArchives of Dermatological Research
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Human leptospirosis cases in Palermo Italy. The role of rodents and climate

2018

Many regions of the world are increasingly exposed to leptospirosis due to poverty, global warming and high urban density. Here, we report a molecular survey for pathogenic Leptospira spp. in rodents and two symptomatic human cases of leptospirosis in the city of Palermo, Italy.Four rodent species were captured in six areas of the city, and a molecular analysis for pathogenic Leptospira spp. on DNA from the kidney samples showed a different prevalence of leptospirosis in all the species of rodents. In addition, two human cases that occurred in May and October of 2009 in the city were also reported. A 67-year-old woman recovered after antibiotic treatment, whereas a 71-year-old woman did not…

DNA Bacterial0301 basic medicinemedicine.medical_specialtyClimateClimate Change030106 microbiology030231 tropical medicinePopulationRodentialcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseases03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineLeptospiraEnvironmental protectionZoonosesEnvironmental healthPrevalencemedicineAnimalsHumansLeptospirosislcsh:RC109-216CitieseducationAgedDisease ReservoirsLeptospiraeducation.field_of_studyHigh prevalencebiologyIncidencelcsh:Public aspects of medicinePublic healthIncidence (epidemiology)ZoonosisPublic Health Environmental and Occupational Healthlcsh:RA1-1270General Medicinebiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseLeptospirosisInfectious DiseasesGeographyItalyFemalePublic HealthCloudburstJournal of Infection and Public Health
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Genotyping of Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1 strains isolated in Northern Sicily, Italy.

2008

During a three-year period, from April 2002 to May 2005, one hundred-forty-seven samples, taken from technical systems of water distribution at point of use, were repeatedly collected at six different sites in Northern Sicily and assayed for the presence of Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1 and serogroups 2 to 14. At the first samplings, the water distribution systems of all the sites were heavily contaminated, and disinfection treatments by the superheat and flush method were therefore performed. Treatments were always successful against L. pneumophila sg.1, but only in a few cases against all other serogroups. Eighty-six strains of L. pneumophila sg. 1, isolated from 26 of these samples,…

DNA BacterialDisinfectionMolecular EpidemiologySettore MED/07 - Microbiologia E Microbiologia ClinicaGenotypeCluster AnalysisFresh WaterSequence Analysis DNAAmplified Fragment Length Polymorphism AnalysisLegionella pneumophila Surveillance Water distribution system Molecular typing Amplified fragment length polymorphismSicilyBacterial Typing TechniquesLegionella pneumophila
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Molecular detection of Anaplasma phagocytophilum DNA in the lesser horseshoe bat (Rhinolophus hipposideros) guano

2018

AbstractAlthough bats are increasingly recognised as potential reservoir hosts of human zoonotic pathogens, bacteria in bats are still poorly studied. To investigate the DNA faecal prevalence of the bacterium Anaplasma phagocytophilum, we sampled 23 lesser horseshoe bat (Rhinolophus hipposideros) maternity colonies located in buildings (churches, barns) in rural villages of eastern France. A total of 552 faecal samples were collected from 278 individuals. Anaplasma phagocytophilum DNA was detected in the faeces of 63 individuals (22.7%). Such high prevalence might suggest persistent infection in bats and/or a frequent consumption of insect preys carrying bacteria. Faecal DNA prevalence vari…

DNA BacterialMale0301 basic medicineDisease reservoirEpidemiology030106 microbiologyRhinolophus hipposiderosZoologyHorseshoe batAnaplasma phagocytophilum DNAFeces03 medical and health sciencesChiropteraZoonosesAnimalsAnaplasmaFecesComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSDisease ReservoirsOriginal Paperbiologybiology.organism_classificationAnaplasma phagocytophilum3. Good health030104 developmental biologyInfectious Diseases[SDE]Environmental SciencesGuanoFemaleFranceAnaplasma phagocytophilum
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Infection with cagA -Positive and cagA -Negative Types of Helicobacter pylori Among Children and Adolescents with Gastrointestinal Symptoms in Latvia

2003

In order to determine the prevalence of concomitant cagA-positive and cagA-negative Helicobacter pylori genotypes in individual subjects, a group of 56 symptomatic patients (aged 8-18 years) was studied. Among 31 patients culture-positive for Helicobacter pylori, only cagA-positive colonies were isolated from 18 patients, both cagA-positive and cagA-negative genotypes were isolated from 4 patients, and in 9 patients all of the individual colonies isolated were cagA-negative, but in seven of them a pool of colonies was positive for cagA. Thus, the presence of both cagA-positive and cagA-negative genotypes in the same individual was identified in 11 of the 31 culture-positive patients tested,…

DNA BacterialMaleMicrobiology (medical)medicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentGenotypeGastrointestinal DiseasesSpirillaceaeBiologyPolymerase Chain ReactionRisk AssessmentSensitivity and SpecificitySeverity of Illness Indexdigestive systemHelicobacter InfectionsCohort StudiesAge DistributionMedical microbiologyBacterial Proteinsmental disordersEpidemiologyGenotypePrevalencemedicineHumansCagAProspective StudiesTypingSex DistributionChildProbabilityAntigens BacterialChi-Square DistributionHelicobacter pyloriGeneral MedicineHelicobacter pyloribacterial infections and mycosesbiology.organism_classificationLatviadigestive system diseasesInfectious DiseasesConcomitantImmunologybacteriaFemaleEuropean Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases
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The incidence of influenza-associated hospitalizations in children in Germany

2002

Since new vaccines and anti-viral drugs for influenza have become available, collation of actual and country-specific epidemiological data is essential. Since respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a well known paediatric airway pathogen and some epidemiological data exist already, a comparison between influenza and RSV seems warranted. From July 1996 to June 2001 the naso-pharyngeal aspirates (NPA) of children from birth to 16 years of age, admitted to one of the two paediatric hospitals in Kiel, Germany, were investigated by a nine-valent multiplex reverse transcriptase PCR assay. NPA were investigated in 60·8% of 3469 children admitted with an acute respiratory tract infection. Community-a…

DNA BacterialMalemedicine.medical_specialtyPediatricsAdolescentHeart DiseasesEpidemiologyPopulationOrthomyxoviridaeRespiratory Syncytial Virus InfectionsRisk FactorsGermanyNasopharynxInfluenza HumanEpidemiologymedicineHumansChildeducationAcute respiratory tract infectionAsthmaeducation.field_of_studybiologyReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reactionbusiness.industryIncidenceIncidence (epidemiology)Infant NewbornInfantvirus diseasesmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationAsthmaHospitalizationVaccinationInfectious DiseasesChild PreschoolFemaleViral diseasebusinessResearch ArticleEpidemiology and Infection
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Fast and low-cost decentralized surveillance of transmission of tuberculosis based on strain-specific PCRs tailored from whole genome sequencing data…

2015

Molecular epidemiology has transformed our knowledge of how tuberculosis (TB) is transmitted. Whole genome sequencing (WGS) has reached unprecedented levels of accuracy. However, it has increased technical requirements and costs, and analysis of data delays results. Our objective was to find a way to reconcile speed and ease of implementation with the high resolution of WGS. The targeted regional allele-specific oligonucleotide PCR (TRAP) assay presented here is based on allele-specific PCR targeting strain-specific single nucleotide polymorphisms, identified from WGS, and makes it possible to track actively transmitted Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains. A TRAP assay was optimized to track…

DNA BacterialMicrobiology (medical)TuberculosisPopulationPilot ProjectsMinisatellite RepeatsComputational biologyBiologyPolymerase Chain ReactionPolymorphism Single NucleotideTRAPlaw.inventionMycobacterium tuberculosisTrap (computing)lawmedicineHumanseducationAllelesWhole genome sequencingMolecular Epidemiologywhole genome sequencingeducation.field_of_studyGeographyMolecular epidemiologytransmissionAllele-specific PCRMycobacterium tuberculosisSequence Analysis DNAGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationVirologyInfectious DiseasesTransmission (mechanics)tuberculosisSpainPopulation SurveillanceVariants of PCRGenome Bacterial
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Epidemiology ofSalmonella typhimurium: ribosomal DNA analysis of strains from human and animal sources

1993

SUMMARYSalmonella typhimuriumis the most frequently identified serovar ofSalmonellain Italy. This serovar is characterized by the widespread dissemination among human and non-human sources of phenotypically and genetically well-differentiated clones.In this study 457 strains ofS. typhimuriumisolated in Italy in the years 1982–91 from human and animal sources were submitted to characterization by the rDNA fingerprinting technique. Application of this typing method, after digestion of chromosomal DNA withHincII endonuclease, confirmed the greatest genetic differentiation of clones ofS. typhimurium, allowing reliable identification of 45 rDNA patterns linked into 9 major clusters. rDNA pattern…

DNA BacterialSalmonella typhimuriumSerotypeSalmonellaSwineEpidemiologymedicine.disease_causeDNA RibosomalMicrobiologyBirdsRibotypingDogsmedicineAnimalsHumansTypingRibosomal DNAGeneticsbiologyAnimal SourcesStrain (biology)Ruminantsbiology.organism_classificationDNA FingerprintingEnterobacteriaceaeBacterial Typing TechniquesInfectious DiseasesHedgehogsCatsRabbitsResearch ArticleEpidemiology and Infection
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Molecular relationship among Salmonella dublin isolates identified at the Center for Enterobacteriaceae of Palermo during the years 1971-85.

1987

SUMMARYA molecular epidemiological study was carried out on 60Salmonella dublinisolates identified at the Southern Italy Enterobacteriaceae Center between 1971 and 1985. These included 23 isolates from children with diarrhoea in Palermo obtained during 1984.All isolates from the outbreak of gastroenteritis in children were resistant to chloramphenicol and streptomycin and harboured two plasmids of 50 MDa and 3 MDa molecular weight, whereas the majority of the isolates identified before 1984 were susceptible to these antibiotics and carried only a 50 MDa molecular weight plasmid. FourS. dublinstrains successively identified from cattle (Palermo, Foggia, Portici) and from a child (Palermo) we…

DNA BacterialSalmonellaEpidemiologyVirulenceChloramphenicol ResistanceBiologymedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyDisease OutbreaksMicePlasmidAntibiotic resistanceAmp resistanceSalmonellamedicineAnimalsHumansChildMice Inbred BALB CSalmonella Infections AnimalMolecular epidemiologyVirulenceTetracycline ResistanceOutbreakDrug Resistance MicrobialVirologyGastroenteritisInfectious DiseasesItalyStreptomycinMetalsSalmonella InfectionsStreptomycinCattleFemaleAmpicillin Resistancemedicine.drugPlasmidsResearch ArticleEpidemiology and infection
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rRNA probing of chromosomal DNA of epidemic and sporadic isolates of Salmonella enterica subsp. Enterica serovar kottbus from Northern and Southern I…

1990

Fifty-two strains of Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica serovar Kottbus, identified at the Centres of Enterobacteriaceae of Northern and Southern Italy, were investigated by molecular genetic methods. Thirteen isolates were recovered during two food-poisoning outbreaks that occurred in May 1987 in Lombardy. The rDNA gene restriction patterns, obtained by probing endonuclease cleaved chromosomal DNA with photobiotin labeled Escherichia coli rRNA, revealed some heterogeneity among strains isolated from Southern Italy, whereas Northern Italy isolates exhibited virtually identical banding patterns.

DNA BacterialSerotypeEpidemiologyPopulationmedicine.disease_causeDisease OutbreaksMicrobiologySalmonellaEscherichia coliHumansMedicineGeneEscherichia colibiologybusiness.industryGenetic VariationNucleic Acid HybridizationOutbreakRNA ProbesRibosomal RNAbiology.organism_classificationDNA FingerprintingEnterobacteriaceaeBlotting SouthernItalyRNA RibosomalSalmonella entericaSalmonella Food PoisoningSalmonella enterica subsp. entericabusinessEuropean Journal of Epidemiology
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