Search results for "Transmission"

showing 10 items of 2080 documents

Lack of evidence of mimivirus replication in human PBMCs

2018

The Acanthamoeba polyphaga mimivirus (APMV) was first isolated during a pneumonia outbreak in Bradford, England, and since its discovery many research groups devoted efforts to understand whether this virus could be associated to human diseases, in particular clinical signs and symptoms of pneumonia. In 2013, we observed cytopathic effect in amoebas (rounding and lysis) inoculated with APMV inoculated PBMCs (peripheral blood mononuclear cell) extracts, and at that point we interpreted those results as mimivirus replication in human PBMCs. Based on these results we decided to further investigate APMV replication in human PBMCs, by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and qPCR. No viral fac…

0301 basic medicinevirukset030106 microbiologyImmunologymimivirusReal-Time Polymerase Chain ReactionVirus ReplicationMicrobiologyPeripheral blood mononuclear cellVirus03 medical and health sciencesMultiplicity of infectionBacterial ProteinsMicroscopy Electron TransmissionacanthamoebaViral factoryHumansCytopathic effectMimivirusbiologyDNA Helicasesta1182biology.organism_classificationVirologyHelicase GeneAcanthamoeba030104 developmental biologyInfectious DiseasesDNA ViralPBMCsLeukocytes MononuclearMimiviridaeMicrobes and Infection
researchProduct

Membrane-Associated Enteroviruses Undergo Intercellular Transmission as Pools of Sibling Viral Genomes

2019

Summary Some viruses are released from cells as pools of membrane-associated virions. By increasing the multiplicity of infection (MOI), this type of collective dispersal could favor viral cooperation, but also the emergence of cheater-like viruses such as defective interfering particles. To better understand this process, we examined the genetic diversity of membrane-associated coxsackievirus infectious units. We find that infected cells release membranous structures (including vesicles) that contain 8–21 infectious particles on average. However, in most cases (62%–93%), these structures do not promote the co-transmission of different viral genetic variants present in a cell. Furthermore, …

0301 basic medicinevirusesPopulationViral transmissionGenome ViralBiologyCoxsackievirusmedicine.disease_causeGenomeArticleGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineMultiplicity of infectionMicroscopy Electron TransmissionmedicineHumanseducationlcsh:QH301-705.5social evolutionCollective infectious unitEnterovirusGeneticsSocial evolutionGenetic diversityeducation.field_of_studyenteroviruscollective infectious unitTransmission (medicine)viral transmissionCell MembraneVirionGenetic VariationVirus InternalizationExtracellular vesiclesbiology.organism_classification3. Good health030104 developmental biologylcsh:Biology (General)EnterovirusBiological dispersalextracellular vesicles030217 neurology & neurosurgeryHeLa CellsCell Reports
researchProduct

Modulation of Hippocampal Circuits by Muscarinic and Nicotinic Receptors

2017

This article provides a review of the effects of activation of muscarinic and nicotinic receptors on the physiological properties of circuits in the hippocampal formation. Previous articles have described detailed computational hypotheses about the role of cholinergic neuromodulation in enhancing the dynamics for encoding in cortical structures and the role of reduced cholinergic modulation in allowing consolidation of previously encoded information. This article will focus on addressing the broad scope of different modulatory effects observed within hippocampal circuits, highlighting the heterogeneity of cholinergic modulation in terms of the physiological effects of activation of muscarin…

0301 basic medicinevolume transmissioncholinergic fibersCognitive NeuroscienceNeuroscience (miscellaneous)ReviewHippocampal formationReceptors NicotinicCholinergic modulationHippocampuslcsh:RC321-571tonic depolarization03 medical and health sciencesCellular and Molecular Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineNeuromodulationMuscarinic acetylcholine receptorNeural PathwaysmedicineAnimalsHumanslcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryCholinergic FibersNicotinic ReceptorsChemistrypresynaptic inhibitionReceptors MuscarinicacetylcholineSensory Systems030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structureCholinergicNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryAcetylcholinemedicine.drugNeuroscienceFrontiers in Neural Circuits
researchProduct

More than a pore: How voltage-gated calcium channels act on different levels of neuronal communication regulation.

2021

ABSTRACT Voltage-gated calcium channels (VGCCs) represent key regulators of the calcium influx through the plasma membrane of excitable cells, like neurons. Activated by the depolarization of the membrane, the opening of VGCCs induces very transient and local changes in the intracellular calcium concentration, known as calcium nanodomains, that in turn trigger calcium-dependent signaling cascades and the release of chemical neurotransmitters. Based on their central importance as concierges of excitation-secretion coupling and therefore neuronal communication, VGCCs have been studied in multiple aspects of neuronal function and malfunction. However, studies on molecular interaction partners …

0301 basic medicineα2δ subunitsBiophysicschemistry.chemical_elementReviewNeurotransmissionCalciumBiochemistrySynaptic TransmissionCalcium in biology03 medical and health sciencesvoltage-induced calcium releasealternative splicing0302 clinical medicinevoltage-gated calcium channelsCavβ subunitsVGCC auxiliary subunitsCalcium SignalingIon channelNeuronssynaptogenesisVoltage-dependent calcium channelChemistryRyanodine receptorDepolarization030104 developmental biologyIon channelsCalciumgene regulationNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryIntracellularResearch ArticleChannels (Austin, Tex.)
researchProduct

The cholinergic system in Down's syndrome

2006

The cholinergic system is one of the most important modulatory neurotransmitter systems in the brain. Alterations of the transmission communicators are accompanied by reduction of the cortical activity, which is associated with a learning and memory deficit. Down's syndrome is a pathological condition characterized by a high number of abnormalities that involve the brain.The cholinergic system is involved in alterations of the neurological system such as severe learning difficulties.To explain these alterations, important results are obtained from studies about murine trisomy 16 (animal model of Down's syndrome).The results obtained provide useful elements in the improvement of knowledge ab…

030506 rehabilitationDown syndromeCentral nervous systemTrisomyDiseaseSynaptic TransmissionHealth Professions (miscellaneous)Mice03 medical and health sciencesMemorymedicineAnimalsHumansLearningAttentionReceptors Cholinergic0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesDown's syndromePathologicalCerebral CortexHealth PolicyMedicine (all)05 social sciencesCognitive disorderCholinergic systemBrainTrisomy 16medicine.diseaseChromosomes MammalianDevelopmental disorderDisease Models AnimalPsychiatry and Mental healthmedicine.anatomical_structureCholinergic FibersAnimals Attention; physiology Brain; physiopathology Cerebral Cortex; physiopathology Cholinergic Fibers; physiology Chromosomes; Mammalian Disease Models; Animal Down Syndrome; genetics/physiopathology Humans Learning; physiology Memory; physiology Mice Receptors; Cholinergic; physiology Synaptic Transmission; physiology TrisomyIntellectual disabilitieDown Syndrome0305 other medical sciencePsychologyTrisomyNeuroscience050104 developmental & child psychologyJournal of Intellectual Disabilities
researchProduct

Informal, formal institutions and credit: complements or substitutes?

2019

AbstractThis paper analyses the relationship between informal institutions measured by social trust and the provision of private credit. Research on the trust–finance relationship abounds, although most of it is confined to the micro-level, with far fewer contributions from a wide, cross-country perspective. Considering a sample of 119 economies in the period 1993–2015, results suggest that social trust is an important determinant of private credit, and that its effects are transmitted indirectly via some particular aspects of the quality of economic-judicial institutions. In addition, and contrary to previous findings in related areas, substitutive effects for informal and formal instituti…

050208 financetransmission mechanismsPublic economicsmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesPerspective (graphical)Sample (statistics)social trust0502 economics and businessQuality (business)institutionsBusiness050207 economicsGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceSocial trustPeriod (music)creditmedia_common
researchProduct

Analysing the effects of power swing on wind farms using instantaneous impedances

2020

Abstract Most of the grid disturbances happen due to the presence of faults and power swing. This article focuses on power swing in view of the amount of penetration of renewable energy resources especially the wind farms. There are two sections. First section approached power swing by deriving a mathematical expression which would be able to track the locus of impedance in time domain and subsequently analyze resistance and reactance simultaneously with respect to time. It used a grid comprising of generator, transmission line and load. The derived expression was compared with a power swing generated using RTDS model and the results were analyzed in R-X plane. Second section analyses the i…

060102 archaeologyRenewable Energy Sustainability and the Environmentbusiness.industry020209 energyReactance06 humanities and the arts02 engineering and technologySwingGridRenewable energyTransmission lineControl theory0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringEnvironmental science0601 history and archaeologyTime domainbusinessElectrical impedanceMarginal stabilityRenewable Energy
researchProduct

2021

Multiple global change pressures, and their interplay, cause plant-pollinator extinctions and modify species assemblages and interactions. This may alter the risks of pathogen host shifts, intra- or interspecific pathogen spread, and emergence of novel population or community epidemics. Flowers are hubs for pathogen transmission. Consequently, the structure of plant-pollinator interaction networks may be pivotal in pathogen host shifts and modulating disease dynamics. Traits of plants, pollinators, and pathogens may also govern the interspecific spread of pathogens. Pathogen spillover-spillback between managed and wild pollinators risks driving the evolution of virulence and community epide…

2. Zero hunger0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineeducation.field_of_studyPollinationTransmission (medicine)EcologyHost (biology)PopulationInterspecific competition15. Life on landBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biology13. Climate actionPollinatorEmerging infectious diseaseeducationPathogenEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTrends in Ecology & Evolution
researchProduct

Outside-host predation as a biological control against an environmental opportunist disease

2017

Abstract Environmentally growing opportunist pathogens are a common threat to human health and food production. Due to environmental growth of the pathogen, these diseases are difficult to control with disinfectants and antibiotics. Thus, there is a need for sustainable and effective control methods against environmentally growing opportunist diseases. Predation is often a major limiting factor in the outside host environment. Here we propose that it could be used in the biological control of these diseases. We introduce a novel epidemiological model for environmentally growing opportunists combining pathogen growth within-host (SI model) and outside-host into classical predator-prey model.…

2. Zero hunger0301 basic medicineSI modeleducation.field_of_studyHost (biology)Transmission (medicine)EcologyEcological ModelingPopulationBiological pest controlOutbreakenvironmental opportunistDiseaseBiologyPredation03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biologyflavobacteriumcolumnaris diseaseta1181predator-prey modelepidemiologyEvolutionary dynamicseducationEcological Modelling
researchProduct

2017

Summary Objectives Neisseria meningitidis is the major cause of seasonal meningitis epidemics in the African meningitis belt. In the changing context of a reduction in incidence of serogroup A and an increase in incidence of serogroups W and C and of Streptococcus pneumoniae , a better understanding of the determinants driving the disease transmission dynamics remains crucial to improving bacterial meningitis control. Methods The literature was searched to provide a multi-disciplinary overview of the determinants of meningitis transmission dynamics in the African meningitis belt. Results Seasonal hyperendemicity is likely predominantly caused by increased invasion rates, sporadic localized …

2. Zero hungerMicrobiology (medical)medicine.medical_specialtyTransmission (medicine)Neisseria meningitidis030231 tropical medicineContext (language use)General MedicineBiologymedicine.disease_causemedicine.disease3. Good healthHerd immunity03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineInfectious DiseasesEnvironmental healthStreptococcus pneumoniaeImmunologyEpidemiologymedicine030212 general & internal medicineAfrican meningitis beltMeningitisInternational Journal of Infectious Diseases
researchProduct