Search results for "bacteria."

showing 10 items of 4757 documents

Unshared binding sites for Bacillus thuringiensis Cry3Aa and Cry3Ca proteins in the weevil Cylas puncticollis (Brentidae)

2016

Bacillus thuringiensis Cry3Aa and Cry3Ca proteins have been reported to be toxic against the African sweetpotato pest Cylas puncticollis. In the present work, the binding sites of these proteins in C. puncticollis brush border vesicles suggest the occurrence of different binding sites, but only one of them is shared. Our results suggest that pest resistance mediated by alteration of the shared Cry-receptor binding site might not render both Cry proteins ineffective.

endocrine systemAfrican sweetpotato weevilBacillus thuringiensis ToxinsShort CommunicationBinding sitesInsect controlfungiBacillus thuringiensisToxicologyBinding CompetitiveInsect resistance managementEndotoxinsHemolysin ProteinsInsecticidal proteinsBacterial ProteinsAnimalsWeevilsToxicon
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Extent of variation of the Bacillus thuringiensis toxin reservoir: the case of the geranium bronze, Cacyreus marshalli butler (Lepidoptera: Lycaenida…

2002

ABSTRACT Despite the fact that around 200 cry genes from Bacillus thuringiensis have already been cloned, only a few Cry proteins are toxic towards a given pest. A crucial step in the mode of action of Cry proteins is binding to specific sites in the midgut of susceptible insects. Binding studies in insects that have developed cross-resistance discourage the combined use of Cry proteins sharing the same binding site. If resistance management strategies are to be implemented, the arsenal of Cry proteins suitable to control a given pest may be not so vast as it might seem at first. The present study evaluates the potential of B. thuringiensis for the control of a new pest, the geranium bronze…

endocrine systemBacterial ToxinsBacillus thuringiensisZoologymedicine.disease_causeApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyBinding CompetitiveLepidoptera genitaliaHemolysin ProteinsBacterial ProteinsBacillus thuringiensisBotanymedicineInvertebrate MicrobiologyAnimalsBinding sitePest Control BiologicalBinding SitesEcologybiologyBacillus thuringiensis ToxinsToxinGeranium bronzefungiLycaenidaeMidgutPlantsbiology.organism_classificationEndotoxinsLepidopteraPEST analysisFood ScienceBiotechnologyApplied and environmental microbiology
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Aeromonas salmonicida in Finland: pathological problems associated with atypical and typical strains

1991

. Aeromonas salmonicida was studied at fish farms producing salmonid smolts in northern and central Finland from 1982 onwards. Aeromonas salmonicida subsp. salmonicida has been causing epizootics in salmon, Salmo salar L., and trout, S. trutta L., at two coastal farms in northern Finland sinee 1986, involving 1–29% mortality in the fish-rearing units affceted. The disease causes more serious losses of sea trout yearlings and brood fish than of salmon. The achromogenic atypical A. salmonicida proved to be the most common bacterial disease in brown and sea trout at one farm in northern Finland throughout the period, causing constant heavy losses, mainly of fingerlings, especially in 1982–1986…

endocrine systemBacterial diseasebusiness.industryanimal diseasesVeterinary (miscellaneous)Fish farmingZoologyAquatic animalAquatic ScienceBiologybiology.organism_classificationFisheryAeromonas salmonicidaBrown troutTroutAquacultureSalmobusinessJournal of Fish Diseases
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Evidence that water transmits Vibrio vulnificus biotype 2 infections to eels

1995

Vibrio vulnificus biotype 2 is classically considered an obligate eel pathogen. However, it has recently been associated with one human septicemic case. In this paper, the opportunistic behavior of this pathogen is discussed. The bacterium can survive alone in brackish water or attached to eel surfaces for at least 14 days. It is able to spread through water and infect healthy eels by using skin as a portal of entry. These results suggest that water and infected eels may act as reservoirs of infection. A capsule seems to be essential for waterborne infectivity, which would explain why cells recovered from naturally diseased eels give rise to pure cultures of opaque colonies. The spread of t…

endocrine systemDisease reservoiranimal structuresVibrio vulnificusSodium ChlorideApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyBacterial AdhesionMicrobiologyFish DiseasesAnguillidaeVibrio InfectionsAnimalsHumansPathogenBacterial CapsulesDisease ReservoirsSkinVibrioInfectivityEelsVirulenceEcologybiologyObligateTemperaturebiology.organism_classificationVibrioMucusVibrio InfectionsWater MicrobiologyResearch ArticleFood ScienceBiotechnologyApplied and Environmental Microbiology
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Removal of bis (2-ethylhexyl) phthalate from reject water in a nitrogen-removing sequencing batch reactor.

2003

Reject water from sewage sludge processing may contain high concentrations of nutrients and organic pollutants and cause internal pollution load at a sewage treatment plant (STP) if circulated to the headworks of an STP. In the present study removal of nitrogen and bis (2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (DEHP) from reject water was studied in two sequencing batch reactors (SBRs) with different aerobic/anoxic periods during a 6-h total cycle period. Ammonia-nitrogen (NH(4)-N) was almost totally removed in both reactors, apparently by nitrification throughout the run, while denitrification declined with decreasing SCOD in the influent resulting in an increase in the effluent nitrate-nitrogen (NO(3)-N) …

endocrine systemEnvironmental EngineeringDenitrificationSequencing batch reactorManagement Monitoring Policy and LawWaste Disposal FluidWater Purificationchemistry.chemical_compoundBacteria AnaerobicBioreactorsDiethylhexyl PhthalateNitrogen CompoundsWaste Management and DisposalEffluentFinlandBis(2-ethylhexyl) phthalateChemistryGeneral MedicineBacteria AerobicEnvironmental chemistryNitrificationSewage treatmentAdsorptionSludgeWater Pollutants ChemicalWaste disposalJournal of environmental management
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In situ analysis of the bacterial communities associated to farmed eel by whole-cell hybridization.

1999

Bacterial communities in water samples and eel slime were investigated by fluorescence in situ hybridization of whole bacterial cells in an eel intensive culture system over 1 year. A newly developed probe, matching 27 Vibrio spp., and a specific probe for Vibrio vulnificus were used. Phylogenetic probes complementary to selected regions of the 16S and 23S ribosomal RNA revealed that Proteobacteria of the alpha and beta subclass were predominant in water and eel slime. Members of the gamma subclass (e.g. vibrios and aeromonads) were more abundant in eel slime, although no V. vulnificus was detected.

endocrine systemanimal structuresColony Count MicrobialVibrio vulnificusAquacultureApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyVibrionaceae23S ribosomal RNARNA Ribosomal 16SmedicineAnimalsIn Situ Hybridization FluorescencePhylogenyAlphaproteobacteriaVibrioEelsbiologymedicine.diagnostic_testBacteriafungiBetaproteobacteriaequipment and suppliesbiology.organism_classificationVibrioRNA BacterialRNA Ribosomal 23SbacteriaProteobacteriaMolecular probeOligonucleotide ProbesWater MicrobiologyBacteriaFluorescence in situ hybridizationLetters in applied microbiology
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Table S2 from Oxidative stress and senescence in social insects—a significant but inconsistent link?

2021

Genes involved in the enzymatic antioxidant system following Corona and Robinson (2006) identified in Apis, Anopheles and/or Drosophila.

endocrine systembacteriabacterial infections and mycosesequipment and supplies
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Ocular gelling microspheres: in vitro precorneal retention time and drug permeation through reconstituted corneal epithelium.

2008

Purpose: The model drug norfloxacin (NOR)was encapsulated into trehalose (TRH) and hydroxyethylcellulose(NAT) microspheres to obtain a novel gelling ophthalmic delivery system for prolonged release on corneal tissue. Methods: We assessed NOR release from microspheres, prepared by the emulsion-solvent evaporation method. A new in vitro tear turnover model, including inserts containing reconstituted human corneal epithelium (RHC), was designed to evaluate the TRH/NAT microspheres’ precorneal retention time. Bioadhesive properties of TRH/NAT microspheres were validated by using drug-loaded microspheres prepared with gelatine (GLT) commonly used as reference material in adhesion studies. Result…

endocrine systemmedicine.medical_specialtyBioadhesiveBiological AvailabilityReconstituted corneal epitheliumIn Vitro TechniquesDOSAGE FORMSPermeabilityDelayed-Action PreparationsAqueous Humorchemistry.chemical_compoundCorneamedicineHumansPharmacology (medical)CONTAINING LIPOSOMESCelluloseOcular microsphereCorneal epitheliumCell Line TransformedPharmacologyChromatographyEpithelium CornealAdhesivenessTrehaloseDELIVERY SYSTEMTrehaloseIn vitroMicrospheresSurgeryAnti-Bacterial AgentsTREHALOSE-HYDROXYETHYLCELLULOSE MICROSPHERESOphthalmologymedicine.anatomical_structurechemistrySettore CHIM/09 - Farmaceutico Tecnologico ApplicativoPermeability (electromagnetism)SOLUTE RELEASEDelayed-Action PreparationsGelatinSwellingmedicine.symptomOphthalmic SolutionsGelsNorfloxacinJournal of ocular pharmacology and therapeutics : the official journal of the Association for Ocular Pharmacology and Therapeutics
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Toward Comprehensive Plant Microbiome Research

2020

Microbes have driven eco-evolutionary adaptations organizing biodiversity from the origin of life. They are ubiquitous and abundant, facilitating the biochemical processes that make Earth habitable and shape ecosystem structures, functions, and services. Recent studies reveal that commensalistic and beneficial microbes associated with wild and domesticated plants may aid in establishing sustainable agriculture for a changing climate. However, developing microbe-based biotechnologies and ecosystem services requires a thorough understanding of the diversity and complexity of microbial interactions with each other and with higher organisms. We discuss the hot and blind spots in contemporary re…

endofyytit0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineEcology (disciplines)evoluutioBiodiversitylcsh:EvolutionmicrobiomeendophytesBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesbakteeritEcosystem services03 medical and health scienceslcsh:QH540-549.5Sustainable agriculturekasvitlcsh:QH359-425kasvitauditEcosystemMicrobiomebacteriaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEcologybusiness.industryEnvironmental resource managementpathogensekologiamikrobiekologiamikrobistotaudinaiheuttajat030104 developmental biologysaprobesfungilcsh:EcologysienetbusinessFrontiers in Ecology and Evolution
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Heritable Epichloë symbiosis shapes fungal but not bacterial communities of plant leaves

2019

Keystone microbial species have driven eco-evolutionary processes since the origin of life. However, due to our inability to detect the majority of microbiota, members of diverse microbial communities of fungi, bacteria and viruses have largely been ignored as keystone species in past literature. Here we tested whether heritable Epichloë species of pooidae grasses modulate microbiota of their shared host plant. peerReviewed

endofyytitEpichloeMicrobiotalcsh:Rsymbioosiheinäkasvitlcsh:MedicinemicrobiomeComputational BiologyendophytesPoaceaesymbiosisArticlebakteeritPlant Leavesmikrobistograsses (family)Endophyteslcsh:Qfungilcsh:SciencesienetbacteriaSymbiosisScientific Reports
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