75 research outputs found

    Virulence and antimicrobial resistance genes in human MRSA ST398 isolates in Austria

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    This study determined the genetic background of virulence and resistance genes of MRSA ST398 in Austria. From 2004 up to 2008 a total of 41 human isolates of MRSA ST398 were investigated for virulence and resistance gene patterns using DNA microarray chip analysis. Highly similar virulence gene profiles were found in 29 (70·7%) of the isolates but genes encoding Panton-Valentine leukocidin, enterotoxins, or toxic shock syndrome toxin were not detected. Genes conferring resistance to tetracycline and erythromycin-lincosamide were common as all but one of the isolates exhibited tetM and/or tetK, which are involved in tetracycline resistance, and 12 (29·9%) were positive for ermC, conferring resistance to erythromycin/lincosamide. SplitsTree analysis showed that 40 isolates were closely related. Changes in virulence and resistance gene patterns were minimal over the observed time perio

    Towards a sustainable and equitable blue economy

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    The global rush to develop the \u2018blue economy\u2019 risks harming both the marine environment and human wellbeing. Bold policies and actions are urgently needed. We identify five priorities to chart a course towards an environmentally sustainable and socially equitable blue economy

    Social-ecological alignment and ecological conditions in coral reefs

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    Complex social-ecological interactions underpin many environmental problems. To help capture this complexity, we advance an interdisciplinary network modeling framework to identify important relationships between people and nature that can influence environmental conditions. Drawing on comprehensive social and ecological data from five coral reef fishing communities in Kenya; including interviews with 648 fishers, underwater visual census data of reef ecosystem condition, and time-series landings data; we show that positive ecological conditions are associated with ‘social-ecological network closure’ – i.e., fully linked and thus closed network structures between social actors and ecological resources. Our results suggest that when fishers facing common dilemmas form cooperative communication ties with direct resource competitors, they may achieve positive gains in reef fish biomass and functional richness. Our work provides key empirical insight to a growing body of research on social-ecological alignment, and helps to advance an integrative framework that can be applied empirically in different social-ecological contexts

    LUMINOS-102: Lerapolturev with and without α-PD- 1 in unresectable α-PD- 1 refractory melanoma

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    Lerapolturev (lera, formerly PVSRIPO) is a novel poliovirus based intratumoral immunotherapy that infects both cancer cells and antigen-presenting cells (APCs) via CD155, the poliovirus receptor. Lera has direct anticancer effects while also generating type I/III interferon-dominated inflammation and anti-tumor T-cell priming and activation via infection of local APCs. LUMINOS-102 (NCT04577807) is a multi-center, open-label, two-arm randomized Phase 2 study investigating the efficacy and safety of lera ± α-PD- 1 in patients with unresectable melanoma who failed prior α-PD- 1 therapy. Cross-over to the α-PD- 1 arm is permitted after progression, PR for ≥6 mo or 6 mo on treatment with SD. The maximum initial lera dose was 6x108 TCID50 /visit every 3 or 4 weeks (Q3/4 W). As of March 2022, the maximum lera dose was increased to 1.6 x 109 TCID50/visit, every week (QW) for 7 weeks (induction), followed by Q3/4 W dosing (maintenance). As of 20-Jun- 2022, 21 participants (10 male, 11 female, median 64 yrs) received lera (n = 14 at initial dose, Q3/4 W; n = 4 at increased dose, Q3/4 W; n = 3 at increased dose, QW) ± αPD-1. Five patients are currently on treatment. With the initial regimen, no objective responses and a CBR of 7% were observed. However, with the higher dose regimen, 1 complete response and a CBR of 71% (5/7) has been observed. Two of 4 participants with stable disease have evidence of response (1 with resolution of uninjected lung metastasis, 1 with decreased PET signal in injected and uninjected lesions receiving combination therapy). The only treatment related AE in \u3e1 pt was fatigue (19%, all grade 1 or 2). No dose-limiting toxicities or treatment-related SAEs were reported. Multiplex-IF analysis of on-treatment tumor biopsies will be presented. Lera ± αPD-1 is well tolerated, with early signs of efficacy at the higher dose level. Enrollment and randomization are ongoing

    Something old, something new: historical perspectives provide lessons for blue growth agendas

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in this record.The concept of ‘blue growth’, which aims to promote the growth of ocean economies whilst holistically managing marine socio-ecological systems, is emerging within national and international marine policy. The concept is often promoted as being novel, however, we show that, historical analogies exist which can provide insights for contemporary planning and implementation of blue growth. Using a case study approach based on expert knowledge, we identified 20 historical fisheries or aquaculture examples from 13 countries, spanning the last 40–800 years, that we contend embody blue growth concepts. This is the first time, to our knowledge, that blue growth has been investigated across such broad spatial and temporal scales. The past societies managed to balance exploitation with equitable access, ecological integrity, and/or economic growth for varying periods of time. Four main trajectories existed that led to the success or failure of blue growth. Success was linked to equitable rather than open access, innovation, and management that was responsive, holistic, and based on scientific knowledge and monitoring. The inability to achieve or maintain blue growth resulted from failures to address limits to industry growth and/or anticipate the impacts of adverse extrinsic events and drivers (e.g., changes in international markets, war), the prioritisation of short-term gains over long-term sustainability, and loss of supporting systems. Fourteen cross-cutting lessons and 10 recommendations were derived that can improve understanding and implementation of blue growth. Despite the contemporary literature broadly supporting our findings, these recommendations are not adequately addressed by agendas seeking to realize blue growth.European Commissio

    Key features for more successful place-based sustainability research on social-ecological systems: A Programme on Ecosystem Change and Society (PECS) perspective

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    Contains fulltext : 166650.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)The emerging discipline of sustainability science is focused explicitly on the dynamic interactions between nature and society and is committed to research that spans multiple scales and can support transitions toward greater sustainability. Because a growing body of place-based social-ecological sustainability research (PBSESR) has emerged in recent decades, there is a growing need to understand better how to maximize the effectiveness of this work. The Programme on Ecosystem Change and Society (PECS) provides a unique opportunity for synthesizing insights gained from this research community on key features that may contribute to the relative success of PBSESR. We surveyed the leaders of PECS-affiliated projects using a combination of open, closed, and semistructured questions to identify which features of a research project are perceived to contribute to successful research design and implementation. We assessed six types of research features: problem orientation, research team, and contextual, conceptual, methodological, and evaluative features. We examined the desirable and undesirable aspects of each feature, the enabling factors and obstacles associated with project implementation, and asked respondents to assess the performance of their own projects in relation to these features. Responses were obtained from 25 projects working in 42 social-ecological study cases within 25 countries. Factors that contribute to the overall success of PBSESR included: explicitly addressing integrated social-ecological systems; a focus on solution- and transformation-oriented research; adaptation of studies to their local context; trusted, long-term, and frequent engagement with stakeholders and partners; and an early definition of the purpose and scope of research. Factors that hindered the success of PBSESR included: the complexities inherent to social-ecological systems, the imposition of particular epistemologies and methods on the wider research group, the need for long periods of time to initiate and conduct this kind of research, and power asymmetries both within the research team and among stakeholders. In the self-assessment exercise, performance relating to team and context-related features was ranked higher than performance relating to methodological, evaluation, and problem orientation features. We discuss how these insights are relevant for balancing place-based and global perspectives in sustainability science, fostering more rapid progress toward inter- and transdisciplinary integration, redefining and measuring the success of PBSESR, and facing the challenges of academic and research funding institutions. These results highlight the valuable opportunity that the PECS community provides in helping build a community of practice for PBSESR.45 p

    Residual marine protected areas five years on : are we still favouring ease of establishment over need for protection ?

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    Marine protected areas (MPAs) are today's cornerstone of many marine conservation strategies. Our 2015 study (Devillers et al., 2015) and others have shown, however, that the placement of MPAs is 'residual' to commercial uses and biased towards areas of lower economic value or interest. In this paper, we explored the impact of our study on marine science, policy and management practice. We reviewed the papers citing our work and compiled expert opinions on some of the impacts of our study. Results indicate a strong general uptake in the scientific community but more uneven impacts on policy and management in different contexts, with a likely smaller impact of the research on conservation practice. 1.2.3.4
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