213 research outputs found

    The Development of Print Awareness in Four-Year-Old Children

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    Participants for this study were 56 four-year-old children and their parents. All children were enrolled or on a waiting list to be enrolled in a preschool program in the Cache Valley area. A parent questionnaire and environmental assessment were utilized to determine whether a) the physical environment, b) behaviors of parents, and c) birth order of children is related to development of print awareness as measured by a print awareness test. A variety of statistical analyses was used to explore relationships among the above variables. Major findings suggest that the behaviors that reflect parents\u27 attitudes regarding literacy are most important in the development of their children\u27s print awareness. Fathers\u27 use of the library and mothers\u27 education are significantly related to their children\u27s performance on the print Awareness Test. The amount of time that children spend watching videos is also significantly correlated to their print Awareness Test scores. Significant differences were found in what mothers and fathers do to prepare their children for reading, with mothers taking a more active role in reading to the children and teaching them literacy skills. Other notable findings suggest that the reading pleasure of each parent is important to their children\u27s enjoyment in being read to and to creating positive feelings about reading. Parents tend to predict that their children will learn to read at about the same ages as they themselves learned to read

    Monoclonal antibodies to a proenkephalin A fusion peptide synthesized in Escherichia coli recognize novel proenkephalin A precursor forms

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    Monoclonal antibodies have been generated to a chimeric peptide comprised of Escherichia coli beta-galactosidase fused to the amino acid sequence 69-207 of human preproenkephalin A. Two monoclonal antibodies, PE-1 and PE-2, were identified by their ability to recognize the same segment of proenkephalin A fused to the cII gene product of the E. coli bacteriophage lambda. The binding domains of PE-1 and PE-2 have been broadly located, with respect to the primary translation product, within the amino acid sequences 152-207 and 84-131, respectively. Immunoblot analysis of total bovine adrenomedullary chromaffin granule lysate reveals PE-1 and PE-2 immunoreactive forms of observed molecular mass 35, 33, 29, 24, 22, and 15 kDa, and an 18-kDa PE-1 immunoreactive form. Separation of granule membranes from their contents reveals differential membrane association of these high molecular weight polypeptides. There is preliminary evidence that PE-1 may be detecting a subset of polypeptides where shortening from the NH2 terminus has occurred. We postulate that the 35-kDa form represents the intact bovine enkephalin precursor of predicted molecular mass 27.3 kDa. This experimental approach should be generally applicable to the generation of antibodies which will recognize intact peptide precursors together with their post-translational cleavage products

    Monoclonal antibodies to a proenkephalin A fusion peptide synthesized in Escherichia coli recognize novel proenkephalin A precursor forms

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    Monoclonal antibodies have been generated to a chimeric peptide comprised of Escherichia coli beta-galactosidase fused to the amino acid sequence 69-207 of human preproenkephalin A. Two monoclonal antibodies, PE-1 and PE-2, were identified by their ability to recognize the same segment of proenkephalin A fused to the cII gene product of the E. coli bacteriophage lambda. The binding domains of PE-1 and PE-2 have been broadly located, with respect to the primary translation product, within the amino acid sequences 152-207 and 84-131, respectively. Immunoblot analysis of total bovine adrenomedullary chromaffin granule lysate reveals PE-1 and PE-2 immunoreactive forms of observed molecular mass 35, 33, 29, 24, 22, and 15 kDa, and an 18-kDa PE-1 immunoreactive form. Separation of granule membranes from their contents reveals differential membrane association of these high molecular weight polypeptides. There is preliminary evidence that PE-1 may be detecting a subset of polypeptides where shortening from the NH2 terminus has occurred. We postulate that the 35-kDa form represents the intact bovine enkephalin precursor of predicted molecular mass 27.3 kDa. This experimental approach should be generally applicable to the generation of antibodies which will recognize intact peptide precursors together with their post-translational cleavage products

    Investigation of Brucella melitensis in sable antelope (Hippotragus niger) in South Africa

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    Supplementary Data 1: Mitigation plan for Farm 1.In this study, Brucella melitensis infection in sable antelope (Hippotragus niger) was investigated on two wildlife ranches in South Africa over a 12-year period in order to determine the origin of the outbreaks and the role of livestock in maintaining the disease. Retrospective data were obtained from farm records and interviews as well as samples tested from di erent disease scenarios and clinical settings. On one ranch, 10 of 74 sable tested seropositive for B. melitensis in 2004 but were certified clear of infection after no further brucellosis cases were detected following repeated serological tests and culling over a five-year period. Recrudescence occurred in 2013 (7 of 187 brucellosis positives) and in 2014 (one positive), with persistent, latent infection being the most reasonable explanation. In a second case study, linked to the first one through a common vendor, 15 of 80 sable tested positive in 2016, some five years after the acquisition of the animals from a putative source. Brucella melitensis biovar 1 and/or 3 were isolated from each outbreak on both ranches. Both outbreaks resulted in substantial losses for the owners, arising from testing and culling and significant resource expenditure by the state. The study identified the diagnostic challenges for identifying and resolving disease outbreaks in wildlife, the persistence of B. melitensis in sable, the risks associated with animal movements, and the need for a wildlife-sensitive disease control scheme. Although the actual source of infection could not be identified, the investigation points away from local livestock as a source of ongoing infection while the persistent infection is consistent with the disease circulating within small, ranched populations and being spread through the keeping and trading of high-value animals. The implications of the study findings to disease control in wildlife are discussed.The ARC-Onderstepoort Veterinary Research (OVR); the Department of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development; National Research Foundation (NRF) and the University of Pretoria.http://www.mdpi.com/journal/microorganismsam2021Centre for Veterinary Wildlife StudiesParaclinical SciencesProduction Animal StudiesVeterinary Tropical Disease

    The first report of Escherichia fergusonii isolated from non-human primates, in Africa

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    The aim of this study was to determine the resistance phenotypes of selected enteric bacteria isolated from nonhuman primates at a wildlife-human interface. Bacterial isolates from faecal samples of non-human primates at two wildlife rehabilitation centres in South Africa were screened for the presence of Escherichia coli. The biochemical characterisation of E. coli and E. coli-like bacteria revealed both adonitol positive and sorbitol negative strains – a unique characteristic of Escherichia fergusonii and Escherichia coli K99. Further tests were carried out to identify the isolates, namely growth on Simmons citrate agar supplemented with 2% adonitol and biochemical tests based on their ability to ferment cellobiose and D-arabitol. Antimicrobial sensitivity was determined with microbroth dilution tests employing microtitre plates with 21 different antimicrobial drugs. Molecular characterisation was done with a duplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay that targeted the yliE and EFER_1569 genes. E. fergusonii strains were confirmed by the presence of a 233 bp segment of the yliE gene and a 432 bp segment of the EFER_1569 gene. Twenty-three E. coli-like bacteria were confirmed as E. fergusonii based on the confirmatory tests and they were in 100% agreement. Approximately 87% of them were resistant to polymyxins B and E (colistin) as well as the carbapenem group with occasional resistance to amikacin. This is the first reported isolation and identification of E. fergusonii strains in non-human primates. The findings point to E. fergusonii as a possible emerging pathogen of zoonotic importance.https://www.elsevier.com/locate/onehltam2018Veterinary Tropical Disease

    Establishment of Centromeric Chromatin by the CENP-A Assembly Factor CAL1 Requires FACT-Mediated Transcription

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    SummaryCentromeres are essential chromosomal structures that mediate accurate chromosome segregation during cell division. Centromeres are specified epigenetically by the heritable incorporation of the centromeric histone H3 variant CENP-A. While many of the primary factors that mediate centromeric deposition of CENP-A are known, the chromatin and DNA requirements of this process have remained elusive. Here, we uncover a role for transcription in Drosophila CENP-A deposition. Using an inducible ectopic centromere system that uncouples CENP-A deposition from endogenous centromere function and cell-cycle progression, we demonstrate that CENP-A assembly by its loading factor, CAL1, requires RNAPII-mediated transcription of the underlying DNA. This transcription depends on the CAL1 binding partner FACT, but not on CENP-A incorporation. Our work establishes RNAPII passage as a key step in chaperone-mediated CENP-A chromatin establishment and propagation

    Comorbid depression and anxiety effects on pregnancy and neonatal outcome

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    The effects of comorbid depression and anxiety were compared to the effects of depression alone and anxiety alone on pregnancy mood states and biochemistry and on neonatal outcomes in a large multi-ethnic sample. At the prenatal period the comorbid and depressed groups had higher scores than the other groups on the depression measure. But, the comorbid group had higher anxiety, anger and daily hassles scores than the other groups, and they had lower dopamine levels. As compared to the non-depressed group, they also reported more sleep disturbances and relationship problems. The comorbid group also experienced a greater incidence of prematurity than the depressed, the high anxiety and the non-depressed groups. Although the comorbid and anxiety groups were lower birthweight than the non-depressed and depressed groups, the comorbid group did not differ from the depressed and anxiety groups on birth length. The neonates of the comorbid and depressed groups had higher cortisol and norepinephrine and lower dopamine and serotonin levels than the neonates of the anxiety and non-depressed groups as well as greater relative right frontal EEG. These data suggest that for some measures comorbidity of depression and anxiety is the worst condition (e.g., incidence of prematurity), while for others, comorbidity is no more impactful than depression alone.This research was supported by a Merit Award (MH #46586), an NIH grant (AT #00370) and Senior Research Scientist Awards (MH #0033 1 and AT #001585) and a March of Dimes Grant (#12-FYO3-48) to Tiffany Field and funding from Johnson and Johnson Pediatric Institute to the Touch Research Institute

    Whole genome sequence analysis of Brucella abortus isolates from various regions of South Africa

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    The availability of whole genome sequences in public databases permits genome-wide comparative studies of various bacterial species. Whole genome sequence-single nucleotide polymorphisms (WGS-SNP) analysis has been used in recent studies and allows the discrimination of various Brucella species and strains. In the present study, 13 Brucella spp. strains from cattle of various locations in provinces of South Africa were typed and discriminated. WGS-SNP analysis indicated a maximum pairwise distance ranging from 4 to 77 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) between the South African Brucella abortus virulent field strains. Moreover, it was shown that the South African B. abortus strains grouped closely to B. abortus strains from Mozambique and Zimbabwe, as well as other Eurasian countries, such as Portugal and India. WGS-SNP analysis of South African B. abortus strains demonstrated that the same genotype circulated in one farm (Farm 1), whereas another farm (Farm 2) in the same province had two different genotypes. This indicated that brucellosis in South Africa spreads within the herd on some farms, whereas the introduction of infected animals is the mode of transmission on other farms. Three B. abortus vaccine S19 strains isolated from tissue and aborted material were identical, even though they originated from different herds and regions of South Africa. This might be due to the incorrect vaccination of animals older than the recommended age of 4–8 months or might be a problem associated with vaccine production.SUPPLEMENTARY TABLES: Table S1: Sample order used in Bruce-ladder (A) and AMOS (B) multiplex PCR assays and the descriptive information of the gel images, Table S2: Clean unique variants of the South African strains (refer to Table 2 for the sample names (in column 1) and sample ID (in column 2)).The Gauteng Department of Agriculture and Rural Development (GDARD), National Research Foundation, South Africa and Institute of Tropical Medicine, Belgium.https://www.mdpi.com/journal/microorganismsam2022Veterinary Tropical Disease
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