Search results for "Salmo"

showing 10 items of 442 documents

Diarrhoe bei 1337 Kindern der Universitätsklinik Mainz: Bedeutung von Salmonellen und Rotaviren

1993

In Germany, infectious diseases cause little mortality, but they are responsible for a large proportion of morbidity. In order to obtain data about the relevance of infectious diarrhea, the charts of 1337 outpatients, hospitalized for this disorder in the time between 1986-1989 at the Children's Hospital, Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, were analyzed. Sixty-seven percent of patients were younger than one year. An offending organism could be isolated in 42.1% of patients, with Rotaviruses being the leading cause of diarrhea (415 cases), followed by Salmonella spp. (130 cases). Rotavirus-disease was mainly seen in winter, Salmonella-disease in late summer and in autumn. Severe courses of…

Pediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtySalmonellaCross-sectional studybusiness.industryIncidence (epidemiology)medicine.disease_causeSurgeryDiarrheaEl NiñoRotavirusPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthEpidemiologymedicinemedicine.symptombusinessFecesKlinische Pädiatrie
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Occurrence and pathogenicity of Yersinia ruckeri at fish farms in northern and central Finland

1992

. Salmonid fish at fish farms in northern and central Finland and perch, Perca fluviatilis L., roach, Rutilus rutilus (L.), and whitefish, Coregonus sp., from four lakes in central Finland were studied between 1985 and 1990 for the occurrence of Yersinia ruckeri. The bacteria were found in fish from both areas, but in most cases, only single diseased salmon, Salmo salar L., brown trout, S. trutta L., rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss (Walbaum), whitefish and perch were encountered and were always connected with stress conditions. One clinical outbreak occured in salmon fingerlings in northern Finland, and the fish were successfully treated with trimethoprim-sulpha. Monthly monitoring of la…

Perchbiologybusiness.industryVeterinary (miscellaneous)Fish farmingZoologyAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationFisheryBrown troutAquacultureRainbow troutYersinia ruckeriSalmoRutilusbusinessJournal of Fish Diseases
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Temperature effects on anaesthesia with clove oil in six temperate-zone fishes

2004

The potential use of clove oil (eugenol) as an anaesthetic for Atlantic salmon Salmo salar, brown trout Salmo trutta, rainbow trout Oncohynchus mykiss, whitefish Coregonus lavaretus, perch Perca fluviatilis and roach Rutilus rutilus was examined at 5, 10, 15 and 20°C using three anaesthetic concentrations (varying from 20 to 200 mg l -1 ) at each temperature. Substantial species differences in sensitivity to clove oil were observed, even amongst congeners, and there may be some disadvantages (slow recovery and possibly mortality) with using clove oil for 0+ year whitefish and at low temperatures for perch and roach.

Perchbiologyfood.dishZoologyAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationFisheryEugenolchemistry.chemical_compoundBrown troutfoodchemistryCoregonus lavaretusTemperate climateRainbow troutRutilusSalmoEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Fish Biology
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Mycotoxin Incidence in Some Fish Products: QuEChERS Methodology and Liquid Chromatography Linear Ion Trap Tandem Mass Spectrometry Approach

2019

The inclusion of vegetal raw materials in feed for fish farming has increased the risk of mycotoxin occurrence in feed, as well as in edible tissues from fish fed with contaminated feed, due to the carry-over to muscle portions. Therefore, the objective of this study was to evaluate the occurrence of 15 mycotoxins in processed fish products, which are commonly consumed, such as smoked salmon and trout, different types of sushi, and gula substitutes. A QuEChERS method was employed to perform the mycotoxin extraction from fish samples. For mycotoxin identification and quantitation, the selected technique was the liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry linear ion trap (LC-MS/MS-LIT). Sm…

Pharmaceutical ScienceTandem mass spectrometry01 natural sciencesAnalytical Chemistrysushichemistry.chemical_compoundTandem Mass SpectrometryDepsipeptidesDrug Discoverymass spectrometrybiologySolid Phase ExtractionFishesfood and beverages04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesFish products040401 food scienceSmoked salmonTroutChemistry (miscellaneous)Molecular Medicineendocrine systemanimal structuresFish farmingFood ContaminationQuechersSensitivity and SpecificityArticlelcsh:QD241-4410404 agricultural biotechnologyfoodlcsh:Organic chemistrymycotoxinsFish ProductsAnimalsHumansliquid chromatographyPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryMycotoxinMuscle SkeletalfishChromatography010401 analytical chemistryOrganic Chemistrybiology.organism_classificationsmoked salmonfood.food0104 chemical sciencesSmoked fishchemistryTrichothecenesChromatography LiquidMolecules
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Influence of fructose 1,6-diphosphate on the lung antioxidant defenses of mice with endotoxemia.

1990

PharmacologyLipopolysaccharidesAntioxidantLungFructose 1 6 diphosphateFree RadicalsChemistrymedicine.medical_treatmentMice Inbred StrainsShock SepticAntioxidantsMicemedicine.anatomical_structureBiochemistrySalmonella enteritidismedicineFructosediphosphatesAnimalsFemaleLungPharmacological research
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TiO2 Supported over Hβ and HZSM-5 Photocatalysts for Salmonelle and Escherichia Coli Disinfection

2008

Photocatalysis TiO2 HZSM-5 Salmonelle Escherichia Coli
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Soil mutagens are airborne mutagens: variation of mutagenic activities induced in Salmonella typhimurium TA 98 and TA 100 by organic extracts of agri…

2000

As our hypothesis was that soil mutagens are airborne mutagens, possibly modified by soil microorganisms, we checked solvent extracts from agricultural and forest soils collected during late summer in the environment of Mainz, a region highly charged by anthropogenic air pollution, or near Bayreuth, a rural low charged region of Germany, or in a remote region of western Corsica without anthropogenic air pollution for the presence of mutagenicity in Salmonella typhimurium. Levels of mutagenic activities were quantified by calculation of revertants/g from the initial slope of dose-response curves applying tester strains S. typhimurium TA 98 and TA 100 in the absence and presence of an activat…

PollutionSalmonella typhimuriumMethylnitronitrosoguanidineHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesismedia_common.quotation_subjectMutagenmedicine.disease_causecomplex mixturesAmes testTreesSoilGermanyGeneticsmedicineBenzo(a)pyreneAnimalsSoil PollutantsOrganic matterBiotransformationmedia_commonPollutantchemistry.chemical_classificationAir PollutantsGeographyChemistryEcologyfood and beveragesAgricultureSoil contaminationRatsEnvironmental chemistrySoil waterMicrosomes LiverComposition (visual arts)FranceSeasonsMutagensMutation research
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SIK2 orchestrates actin-dependent host response upon Salmonella infection

2021

Significance Through conducting quantitative proteomics upon Salmonella infection, we identified a SIK2 signaling network, implementing the kinase into a so far concealed biological function. Our data exposed SIK2 as a central orchestrator of an actin regulatory network, coordinating the stability of Salmonella-containing vacuole (SCV) and cellular actin assembly, in order to limit the acute phase of the infection. Most strikingly, SIK2 is not exclusively acting locally on actin assembly associated with the SCV but impacts the actin cytoskeleton architecture in its entirety upon Salmonella infection. Our work provides a mechanistic framework for how the actin cytoskeleton is regulated and h…

ProteomicsSalmonellaactin cytoskeletonImmunoblottingArp2/3 complexSalmonella infectionmacromolecular substancesProtein Serine-Threonine Kinasesmedicine.disease_causeBiochemistry03 medical and health sciencesMice0302 clinical medicineSalmonellamedicineXenophagyAnimalsHumansArp2/3 complexProtein Interaction MapsPhosphorylationActinCells Cultured030304 developmental biologyActin nucleation0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinarybiologyEpithelial CellsBiological Sciencesmedicine.diseaseActin cytoskeletonHCT116 CellsPhosphoproteinsActinsCell biologySalmonella-containing vacuoleHEK293 CellsFormins407Host-Pathogen Interactionsbiology.proteinRNA Interference030217 neurology & neurosurgeryhost–pathogen interactionsHeLa CellsSignal TransductionProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
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Ultrahigh-Throughput Proteomics Using Fast RPLC Separations with ESI-MS/MS

2005

We describe approaches for proteomics analysis using electrospray ionization-tandem mass spectrometry coupled with fast reversed-phase liquid chromatography (RPLC) separations. The RPLC separations used 50-microm-i.d. fused-silica capillaries packed with submicrometer-sized C18-bonded porous silica particles and achieved peak capacities of 130-420 for analytes from proteome tryptic digests. When these separations were combined with linear ion trap tandem mass spectrometry measurements, approximately 1000 proteins could be identified in 50 min from approximately 4000 identified tryptic peptides; approximately 550 proteins in 20 min from approximately 1800 peptides; and approximately 250 prot…

ProteomicsSpectrometry Mass Electrospray IonizationElectrosprayChemical ionizationTime FactorsChromatographySurface PropertiesChemistryElectrospray ionizationAnalytical chemistryProteinsSalmonella entericaReversed-phase chromatographySilicon DioxideMass spectrometryTandem mass spectrometrySensitivity and SpecificityAnalytical ChemistryIon trapParticle SizeQuadrupole ion trapPeptidesPorosityChromatography High Pressure LiquidAnalytical Chemistry
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Evolution-guided evaluation of the inverted terminal repeats of the synthetic transposon Sleeping Beauty.

2018

Abstract Sleeping Beauty (SB) is a synthetic Tc1/mariner transposon that is widely used for genetic engineering in vertebrates, including humans. Its sequence was derived from a consensus of sequences found in fish species including the Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar). One of the functional components of SB, the transposase enzyme, has been subject to extensive mutagenesis yielding hyperactive protein variants for advanced applications. The second functional component, the transposon inverted terminal repeats (ITRs), has so far not been extensively modified, mainly due to a lack of natural sequence information. Importantly, as genome sequences become available, they can provide a rich source …

Recombination Geneticlcsh:RSalmo salarTerminal Repeat Sequenceslcsh:MedicineComputational BiologyArticle570 Life sciencesDNA Transposable ElementsAnimalsHumanslcsh:Qlcsh:ScienceGenetic EngineeringMolecular Biology570 BiowissenschaftenScientific reports
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