112 research outputs found
Emerging diseases of maize and onion caused by bacteria belonging to the genus Pantoea
Center rot of onion, caused by Pantoea ananatis, was first described in the USA, in 1997. P. ananatis is seed-borne in onions and it was suggested that it was introduced into the USA on infected seed lots from South Africa. Center rot has not been observed in South Africa and it was essential to determine if P. ananatis is present in local onion seed. Colonies resembling those of P. ananatis were isolated from four South African seed lots on PA 20, a new semi-selective medium. Pathogenicity tests demonstrated that the South African and America strains induced the same symptoms on onion. Phenotypic and genotypic analyses identified the strains from seed as P. ananatis. In 2004/2005, an unreported disease of maize, brown stalk rot, was observed on commercial fields in South Africa. The representative strains induced disease symptoms similar to those observed in the field. The phenotypic and genotyping tests showed that the strains belonged to the genus Pantoea and separated them into two groups. The first group was identified as P. ananatis. The F-AFLP genomic fingerprints generated by the second group of strains, were distinctly different from those generated by known Pantoea species. To resolve the taxonomic position of Pantoea isolated from onion and maize, sixty-seven strains were subjected to a polyphasic study. The methods used included phenotypic characterisation, genomic fingerprinting, 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis and DNA-DNA hybridisation. The results revealed that the strains belong to three different species within the genus Pantoea: P. ananatis, P. vagens and a novel species, Pantoea allii sp. nov.Thesis (PhD (Microbiology))--University of Pretoria, 2009.Microbiology and Plant Pathologyunrestricte
Draft genome sequences for the onion center roth pathogen Pantoea ananatis PA4 and maize brown stalk rot pathogen P. ananatis BD442
Pantoea ananatis is an emerging phytopathogen that infects a broad spectrum of plant hosts. Here, we present the genomes of two South African isolates, P. ananatis PA4, which causes center rot of onion, and BD442, isolated from brown stalk rot of maize
Precautionary Regulation in Europe and the United States: A Quantitative Comparison
Much attention has been addressed to the question of whether Europe or the United States adopts a more precautionary stance to the regulation of potential environmental, health, and safety risks. Some commentators suggest that Europe is more risk-averse and precautionary, whereas the US is seen as more risk-taking and optimistic about the prospects for new technology. Others suggest that the US is more precautionary because its regulatory process is more legalistic and adversarial, while Europe is more lax and corporatist in its regulations. The flip-flop hypothesis claims that the US was more precautionary than Europe in the 1970s and early 1980s, and that Europe has become more precautionary since then. We examine the levels and trends in regulation of environmental, health, and safety risks since 1970. Unlike previous research, which has studied only a small set of prominent cases selected non-randomly, we develop a comprehensive list of almost 3,000 risks and code the relative stringency of regulation in Europe and the US for each of 100 risks randomly selected from that list for each year from 1970 through 2004. Our results suggest that: (a) averaging over risks, there is no significant difference in relative precaution over the period, (b) weakly consistent with the flip-flop hypothesis, there is some evidence of a modest shift toward greater relative precaution of European regulation since about 1990, although (c) there is a diversity of trends across risks, of which the most common is no change in relative precaution (including cases where Europe and the US are equally precautionary and where Europe or the US has been consistently more precautionary). The overall finding is of a mixed and diverse pattern of relative transatlantic precaution over the period
Draft genome sequences of the onion center rot Pathogen Pantoea ananatis PA4 and maize brown stalk rot Pathogen P. ananatis BD442
Pantoea ananatis is an emerging phytopathogen that infects a broad spectrum of plant hosts. Here, we present the genomes of
two South African isolates, P. ananatis PA4, which causes center rot of onion, and BD442, isolated from brown stalk rot of
maize.The University of Pretoria, the National Research
Foundation (NRF), the Forestry and Agricultural Biotechnology
Institute (FABI), the Tree Protection Cooperative Programme (TPCP),
the NRF/Department of Science and Technology Centre of Excellence in
tree Health Biotechnology (CTHB), and the THRIP support program of
the Department of Trade and Industry, South Africa.http://genomea.asm.orgam201
Extra-Legal Factors and Product Liability: The Influence of Mock Jurors’ Demographic Characteristics and Intuitions about the Cause of an Injury
Two experiments were performed to investigate the role of extra-legal factors in a simulated product liability trial. In cases where the factual evidence was identical, subjects’ liability judgments varied as a function of the case-specific factor of the alleged source of the plaintiff’s injury. In deciding cases differently depending on the alleged cause, subjects relied on intuitions about what injury sources are more or less likely to cause a certain kind of injury. Juror- specific factors also influenced subjects’ verdicts. There was no difference between students and non-students, but race and SES—factors that are often correlated with student status—did affect subjects’ verdicts. Low-SES and minority subjects were more likely to find the defendant liable than high-SES and white subjects. The results are considered in terms of general decision-making processes, and the implications for jury selection and mock jury research are discussed
Insights into Cross-Kingdom Plant Pathogenic Bacteria
Plant and human pathogens have evolved disease factors to successfully exploit their respective hosts. Phytopathogens utilize specific determinants that help to breach reinforced cell walls and manipulate plant physiology to facilitate the disease process, while human pathogens use determinants for exploiting mammalian physiology and overcoming highly developed adaptive immune responses. Emerging research, however, has highlighted the ability of seemingly dedicated human pathogens to cause plant disease, and specialized plant pathogens to cause human disease. Such microbes represent interesting systems for studying the evolution of cross-kingdom pathogenicity, and the benefits and tradeoffs of exploiting multiple hosts with drastically different morphologies and physiologies. This review will explore cross-kingdom pathogenicity, where plants and humans are common hosts. We illustrate that while cross-kingdom pathogenicity appears to be maintained, the directionality of host association (plant to human, or human to plant) is difficult to determine. Cross-kingdom human pathogens, and their potential plant reservoirs, have important implications for the emergence of infectious diseases
Cause of Death and Predictors of All-Cause Mortality in Anticoagulated Patients With Nonvalvular Atrial Fibrillation : Data From ROCKET AF
M. Kaste on työryhmän ROCKET AF Steering Comm jäsen.Background-Atrial fibrillation is associated with higher mortality. Identification of causes of death and contemporary risk factors for all-cause mortality may guide interventions. Methods and Results-In the Rivaroxaban Once Daily Oral Direct Factor Xa Inhibition Compared with Vitamin K Antagonism for Prevention of Stroke and Embolism Trial in Atrial Fibrillation (ROCKET AF) study, patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation were randomized to rivaroxaban or dose-adjusted warfarin. Cox proportional hazards regression with backward elimination identified factors at randomization that were independently associated with all-cause mortality in the 14 171 participants in the intention-to-treat population. The median age was 73 years, and the mean CHADS(2) score was 3.5. Over 1.9 years of median follow-up, 1214 (8.6%) patients died. Kaplan-Meier mortality rates were 4.2% at 1 year and 8.9% at 2 years. The majority of classified deaths (1081) were cardiovascular (72%), whereas only 6% were nonhemorrhagic stroke or systemic embolism. No significant difference in all-cause mortality was observed between the rivaroxaban and warfarin arms (P=0.15). Heart failure (hazard ratio 1.51, 95% CI 1.33-1.70, P= 75 years (hazard ratio 1.69, 95% CI 1.51-1.90, P Conclusions-In a large population of patients anticoagulated for nonvalvular atrial fibrillation, approximate to 7 in 10 deaths were cardiovascular, whereasPeer reviewe
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