135 research outputs found

    Enjeux de la participation sociale dans l'intégration des personnes atteintes de schizophrénie

    Get PDF
    Ce travail de Bachelor cherche à comprendre comment les personnes atteintes de schizophrénie qui vivent dans leur propre domicile sont-elles intégrées à l’environnement dans lequel elles évoluent. La participation sociale est mise en avant comme un outil de socialisation et comme une clé d’entrée à l’intégration de ces personnes

    Unexpected Transcripts in Tn7 orf19.2646 C. albicans Mutant Lead to Low Fungal Burden Phenotype In vivo.

    Get PDF
    The commensal fungus Candida albicans is the major cause of fungal systemic infection in immuno-compromised patients, with a mortality rate approaching 50% in the case of bloodstream infections. There is therefore a clear need to better understand fungal biology during infection to improve treatment. One of the particularities of C. albicans is its capacity to adapt to drastically diverse environments such as brain, bloodstream or gut. Adaptations to environmental change are mediated by transcription factors (TF) that modulate the expression of their target genes. Previous screening of a collection of Tn7 C. albicans TF mutants in vivo identified orf19.2646 as playing a crucial role in the ability of the fungus to survive within its host. Indeed, the orf19.2646 Tn7 interruption mutant strain displayed a reduced fungal burden compared to the wild-type strain. Surprisingly, an independent deletion mutant did not recapitulate the phenotype of the Tn7 interruption mutant. In the present study, we therefore investigated the difference between these two mutants and determined by performing a RACE analysis whether unexpected transcripts of the Tn7 mutant occurred. We found that two such transcripts upstream and downstream of the Tn7 insertion site were produced. The two transcripts were expressed in an orf19.2646 deletion mutant which displayed a significantly reduced fungal burden level compared to the wild-type in G. mellonella. When the regions corresponding to these transcripts were deleted in the Tn7 mutants, the strains lacking both regions displayed a fungal burden similar to that of the wild-type strain. This study shows for the first time that mRNA transcription may occur downstream of a Tn7 sequence. In addition, these results demonstrated that the low fungal burden phenotype observed in the orf19.2646 Tn7 mutant is due to the presence of these two transcripts together participating to an unidentified virulence mechanism to be further elucidated

    A better understanding of ecological conditions for Leontopodium alpinum Cassini in the Swiss Alps

    Get PDF
    Although Leontopodium alpinum is considered to be threatened in many countries, only limited scientific information about its autecology is available. In this study, we aim to define the most important ecological factors which influence the distribution of L. alpinum in the Swiss Alps. These were assessed at the national scale using species distribution models based on topoclimatic predictors and at the community scale using exhaustive plant inventories. The latter were analysed using hierarchical clustering and principal component analysis, and the results were interpreted using ecological indicator values. L. alpinum was found almost exclusively on base-rich bedrocks (limestone and ultramaphic rocks). The species distribution models showed that the available moisture (dry regions, mostly in the Inner Alps), elevation (mostly above 2000 m.a.s.l.) and slope (mostly >30°) were the most important predictors. The relevés showed that L. alpinum is present in a wide range of plant communities, all subalpine-alpine open grasslands, with a low grass cover. As a light-demanding and short species, L. alpinum requires light at ground level; hence, it can only grow in open, nutrient-poor grasslands. These conditions are met in dry conditions (dry, summer-warm climate, rocky and draining soil, south-facing aspect and/or steep slope), at high elevations, on oligotrophic soils and/or on windy ridges. Base-rich soils appear to also be essential, although it is still unclear if this corresponds to physiological or ecological (lower competition) requirements
    corecore