11 research outputs found
Novel antiviral activity of dialdehyde starch
A significant effort worldwide is being directed toward development of
novel biocides against drug-resistant bacterial and viruses because of
the significant potential human infection risks in the general
population. We report here the discovery of a strong antiviral biocide,
dialdheyde starch (DAS). Antiviral tests were carried out against three
non-envelop viruses, including two bacterial viruses MS2 and PRD1, and
one human virus Poliovirus. Dialdehyde starch aqueous suspensions were
effective biocides against these three test viruses in a 1 hr exposure
test. The antiviral activity was significantly enhanced in a four-hour
exposure test, with maximum seven orders of magnitude reductions
against MS2 and PRD1, and four-order reduction against Poliovirus. The
antiviral activity of dialdehyde starch was found to be pH dependent,
being more active in alkaline and acidic conditions than in neutral
conditions
Multilaboratory evaluation of methods for detecting enteric viruses in soils.
Two candidate methods for the recovery and detection of viruses in soil were subjected to round robin comparative testing by members of the American Society for Testing and Materials D19:24:04:04 Subcommittee Task Group. Selection of the methods, designated "Berg" and "Goyal," was based on results of an initial screening which indicated that both met basic criteria considered essential by the task group. Both methods utilized beef extract solutions to achieve desorption and recovery of viruses from representative soils: a fine sand soil, an organic muck soil, a sandy loam soil, and a clay loam soil. One of the two methods, Goyal, also used a secondary concentration of resulting soil eluants via low-pH organic flocculation to achieve a smaller final assay volume. Evaluation of the two methods was simultaneously performed in replicate by nine different laboratories. Each of the produced samples was divided into portions, and these were respectively subjected to quantitative viral plaque assay by both the individual, termed independent, laboratory which had done the soil processing and a single common reference laboratory, using a single cell line and passage level. The Berg method seemed to produce slightly higher virus recovery values; however, the differences in virus assay titers for samples produced by the two methods were not statistically significant (P less than or equal to 0.05) for any one of the four soils. Despite this lack of a method effect, th
Novel antiviral activity of dialdehyde starch
A significant effort worldwide is being directed toward development of
novel biocides against drug-resistant bacterial and viruses because of
the significant potential human infection risks in the general
population. We report here the discovery of a strong antiviral biocide,
dialdheyde starch (DAS). Antiviral tests were carried out against three
non-envelop viruses, including two bacterial viruses MS2 and PRD1, and
one human virus Poliovirus. Dialdehyde starch aqueous suspensions were
effective biocides against these three test viruses in a 1 hr exposure
test. The antiviral activity was significantly enhanced in a four-hour
exposure test, with maximum seven orders of magnitude reductions
against MS2 and PRD1, and four-order reduction against Poliovirus. The
antiviral activity of dialdehyde starch was found to be pH dependent,
being more active in alkaline and acidic conditions than in neutral
conditions
HerMES: a search for high-redshift dusty galaxies in the HerMES Large Mode Survey â catalogue, number counts and early results
Selecting sources with rising flux densities towards longer wavelengths from Herschel/Spectral and Photometric Imaging Receiver (SPIRE) maps is an efficient way to produce a catalogue rich in high-redshift (z > 4) dusty star-forming galaxies. The effectiveness of this approach has already been confirmed by spectroscopic follow-up observations, but the previously available catalogues made this way are limited by small survey areas. Here we apply a map-based search method to 274 deg2 of the Herschel Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey (HerMES) Large Mode Survey and create a catalogue of 477 objects with SPIRE flux densities S500 > S350 > S250 and a 5Ï cut-off S500 > 52 mJy. From this catalogue we determine that the total number of these âredâ sources is at least an order of magnitude higher than predicted by galaxy evolution models. These results are in agreement with previous findings in smaller HerMES fields; however, due to our significantly larger sample size we are also able to investigate the shape of the red source counts for the first time. We have obtained spectroscopic redshift measurements for two of our sources using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array. The redshifts z = 5.1 and 3.8 confirm that with our selection method we can indeed find high-redshift dusty star-forming galaxies