Search results for "Virology"

showing 10 items of 2354 documents

Rapid molecular dissection of viral and bacterial immunomes

2006

The development of preventive or therapeutic recombinant vaccines and the generation of serodiagnostic assays for infectious diseases depend essentially on the availability of molecularly defined antigens. A major bottleneck for the identification of suitable target antigens for many pathogens is the isolation of sufficient amounts of material for subsequent genomic or proteomic screening. Applying a highly efficient expression cloning strategy to the human pathogens vaccinia virus (VV) and Chlamydia pneumoniae (CP), we demonstrate that sub-nanogram amounts of isolated nucleic acids can be utilized to determine comprehensive sets of immunodominant antigens. Remarkably, the approach not only…

DNA BacterialMaleBlotting WesternMolecular Sequence DataImmunologyEpitopes T-LymphocyteVaccinia virusBiologymedicine.disease_causePolymerase Chain ReactionViruslaw.inventionMicechemistry.chemical_compoundAntigenlawmedicineAnimalsHumansImmunology and AllergyCloning MolecularAntigens ViralPolymerase chain reactionAntigens BacterialBase SequenceImmunodominant EpitopesImmunogenicityChlamydophila pneumoniaeVirologyCTL*chemistryChlamydophila pneumoniaeDNA ViralExpression cloningFemaleVacciniaEuropean Journal of Immunology
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Borrelia miyamotoi is widespread in Ixodes ricinus ticks in southern Norway.

2015

From April to October 2007, host-seeking Ixodes ricinus ticks were collected from four locations in southern Norway; Farsund, Mandal, Sogne and Tromoy, respectively. Larvae (n=210), nymphs (n=1130) and adults (n=449) were investigated for infection with Borrelia miyamotoi by real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of part of the 16S rRNA gene. Results were verified by direct sequencing of the PCR amplicon generated from the rrs (16S)-rrl (23S) intergenetic spacer. B. miyamotoi was detected at all sites and throughout the period of questing activity, with infection prevalence (≤1.26%) similar to what has been seen in other European countries. Detection of the relapsing fever …

DNA BacterialMaleNymphIxodes ricinusrelapsing feverMolecular Sequence DataZoologyBorrelia miyamotoiMicrobiologylaw.inventionlawmedicineAnimalsNymphPathogenPolymerase chain reactionPhylogenybiologyIxodesNorwayBorreliaAmpliconbiology.organism_classification16S ribosomal RNAmedicine.diseaseVirologyInfectious DiseasesInsect ScienceParasitologyFemaleTicks and tick-borne diseases
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First Report of Anaplasma phagocytophilum and Babesia microti in Rodents in Finland

2014

Tick-borne diseases pose an increasingly important public health problem in Europe. Rodents are the reservoir host for many tick-transmitted pathogens, including Anaplasma phagocytophilum and Babesia microti, which can cause human granulocytic anaplasmosis and babesiosis, respectively. To estimate the presence of these pathogens in rodents in Finland, we examined blood samples from 151 bank voles (Myodes glareolus) and demonstrate, for the first time, that A. phagocytophilum and B. microti commonly infect bank voles (in 22% and 40% of animals, respectively) in Finland. Sequence analysis of a fragment of 18S rRNA showed that the B. microti strain isolated was identical to the Munich strain, …

DNA BacterialMaleVeterinary medicineAnaplasmosisHuman granulocytic anaplasmosisanimal diseasesZoologyRodentiaTickBabesia microtiMicrobiologyRodent DiseasesTicksVirologyIxodes triangulicepsBabesiosisZoonosesparasitic diseasesmedicineAnimalsHumansFinlandTick-borne diseasebiologyArvicolinaeBabesiosisOriginal ArticlesSequence Analysis DNADNA Protozoanbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseasebacterial infections and mycosesAnaplasma phagocytophilumInfectious DiseasesArvicolinaeTick-Borne Diseasesta1181FemalePublic HealthAnaplasmosisAnaplasma phagocytophilum
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DNA Amplification Fingerprinting for Subtyping Neisseria gonorrhoeae Strains

1995

Background and Objectives DNA amplification fingerprinting is used in most epidemiologic studies as a substitute for conventional typing methods. DNA amplification fingerprinting and conventional typing methods were compared in this epidemiologic study of Neisseria gonorrhoeae. Goal of This Study To differentiate 70 Neisseria gonorrhoeae isolates from untreated patients with urogenital gonococcal infection. Study Design Gonococcal strains were characterized by auxo-typing, serotyping, plasmid profile, antibiotic sensitivity, and DNA amplification fingerprinting. The method of unweighted pair-group average linkage was used for cluster analysis. Discriminatory power was calculated applying Si…

DNA BacterialMicrobiology (medical)SerotypeSexually transmitted diseasePenicillin ResistanceMolecular Sequence DataMicrobial Sensitivity TestsDermatologyBiologymedicine.disease_causechemistry.chemical_compoundPlasmidmedicineHumansSerotypingElectrophoresis Agar GelGeneticsBase SequencePublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthNucleic acid amplification techniquebiology.organism_classificationDNA FingerprintingVirologyNeisseria gonorrhoeaeSubtypingBacterial Typing TechniquesInfectious DiseaseschemistryNeisseria gonorrhoeaeNeisseriaceaeNucleic Acid Amplification TechniquesDNASexually Transmitted Diseases
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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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Sequence diversity in the pe_pgrs genes of Mycobacterium tuberculosis is independent of human T cell recognition.

2014

ABSTRACT The Mycobacterium tuberculosis genome includes the large family of pe_pgrs genes, whose functions are unknown. Because of precedents in other pathogens in which gene families showing high sequence variation are involved in antigenic variation, a similar role has been proposed for the pe_pgrs genes. However, the impact of immune selection on pe_pgrs genes has not been examined. Here, we sequenced 27 pe_pgrs genes in 94 clinical strains from five phylogenetic lineages of the M. tuberculosis complex (MTBC). We found that pe_pgrs genes were overall more diverse than the remainder of the MTBC genome, but individual members of the family varied widely in their nucleotide diversity and in…

DNA BacterialNonsynonymous substitutionGenotypeSequence analysisT-Lymphocytes1.1 Normal biological development and functioningMolecular Sequence DataEpitopes T-LymphocyteBiologyGenomeMicrobiologyEpitopeMycobacterium tuberculosisEpitopesRare DiseasesBacterial ProteinsINDEL MutationGeneticUnderpinning researchVirologyAntigenic variationGeneticsGene familyHumansTuberculosis2.1 Biological and endogenous factorsSelection GeneticAntigensAetiologyGeneSelectionGeneticsAntigens BacterialHuman GenomeBacterialMembrane ProteinsComputational BiologyGenetic VariationSequence Analysis DNAMycobacterium tuberculosisDNAbiology.organism_classificationQR1-5023. Good healthInfectious DiseasesGood Health and Well BeingT-LymphocyteSequence AnalysisResearch ArticlemBio
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Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato and Anaplasma phagocytophilum in Ixodes ricinus ticks in Brønnøysund in northern Norway

2013

Ticks are important vectors of disease for both humans and animals. In Europe, Lyme borreliosis is the most abundant tick-borne human disease, whereas anaplasmosis, or tick-borne fever, is the most widespread tick-borne infection in domestic animals. However, knowledge about the prevalence of the causative disease agents in questing ticks in the northern range of their distribution in Norway is missing. Ixodes ricinus ticks were therefore collected by flagging vegetation in Brønnøysund, an area near the Arctic Circle in Norway where ticks have been abundant for decades. Ticks were analysed for infection with Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato and Anaplasma phagocytophilum by real-time PCR ampl…

DNA BacterialNymphIxodes ricinusTickMicrobiologyBorrelia burgdorferi GroupBorreliaparasitic diseasesmedicineAnimalsAnaplasmaBorrelia burgdorferiDemographyTick-borne diseaseIxodesbiologyNorwaybacterial infections and mycosesmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationVirologyAnaplasma phagocytophilumInfectious DiseasesInsect ScienceParasitologyAnaplasmosisAnaplasma phagocytophilumTicks and Tick-borne Diseases
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Novel Probiotic Bifidobacterium longum subsp. infantis CECT 7210 Strain Active against Rotavirus Infections

2011

ABSTRACT Rotavirus is the leading cause of severe acute gastroenteritis among children worldwide. It is well known that breast-feeding and vaccination afford infants protection. Since breast-feeding has drastically decreased in developed countries, efforts have been focused on the potential use of probiotics as preventive agents. In this study, a novel Bifidobacterium longum subsp. infantis strain was isolated from infant feces and selected, based on its capacity to inhibit in vitro rotavirus Wa replication (up to 36.05% infectious foci reduction) and also to protect cells from virus infection (up to 48.50% infectious foci reduction) in both MA-104 and HT-29 cell lines. Furthermore, studies…

DNA BacterialRotavirusFood SafetyBifidobacterium longummedicine.drug_classMolecular Sequence DataAntibioticsVirus Replicationmedicine.disease_causeApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyRotavirus InfectionsVirusCell LineMicrobiologylaw.inventionFecesMiceProbioticfluids and secretionslawRotavirusAntibiosismedicineAnimalsHumansFecesBifidobacteriumMice Inbred BALB CEcologybiologyProbioticsInfantSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationVirologyVaccinationFood MicrobiologyBifidobacteriumFood ScienceBiotechnologyApplied and Environmental Microbiology
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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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pilF polymorphism-based real-time PCR to distinguish Vibrio vulnificus strains of human health relevance

2012

The Gram-negative bacterium Vibrio vulnificus is a common inhabitant of estuarine environments. Globally, V. vulnificus is a significant foodborne pathogen capable of causing necrotizing wound infections and primary septicemia, and is a leading cause of seafood-related mortality. Unfortunately, molecular methods for the detection and enumeration of pathogenic V. vulnificus are hampered by the genetically diverse nature of this pathogen, the range of different biotypes capable of infecting humans and aquatic animals, and the fact that V. vulnificus contains pathogenic as well as non-pathogenic variants. Here we report an alternative approach utilizing the development of a real-time PCR assay…

DNA BacterialSequence analysisMolecular Sequence DataColony Count MicrobialVirulenceMicrobiologiaFood ContaminationVibrio vulnificusReal-Time Polymerase Chain ReactionMicrobiologyBacterial geneticsMicrobiologyBacterial ProteinsGenePathogenVibrio vulnificusPolymorphism GeneticbiologyBase SequenceVirulenceintegumentary systemfungiSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationbacterial infections and mycosesVirologyReal-time polymerase chain reactionSeafoodFood MicrobiologybacteriaBacteriaFood Science
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