216 research outputs found
Mango endophyte and epiphyte microbiome composition during fruit development and post-harvest stages
The influence of the development stage and post-harvest handling on the microbial
composition of mango fruit plays a central role in fruit health. Hence, the composition of fungal and
bacterial microbiota on the anthoplane, fructoplane, stems and stem-end pulp of mango during fruit
development and post-harvest handling were determined using next-generation sequencing of the
internal transcribed spacer and 16S rRNA regions. At full bloom, the inflorescence had the richest
fungal and bacterial communities. The young developing fruit exhibited lower fungal richness and
diversities in comparison to the intermediate and fully developed fruit stages on the fructoplane. At
the post-harvest stage, lower fungal and bacterial diversities were observed following prochloraz
treatment both on the fructoplane and stem-end pulp. Ascomycota (52.8%) and Basidiomycota
(43.2%) were the most dominant fungal phyla, while Penicillium, Botryosphaeria, Alternaria and Mucor
were detected as the known post-harvest decay-causing fungal genera. The Cyanobacteria (35.6%),
Firmicutes (26.1%) and Proteobacteria (23.1%) were the most dominant bacterial phyla. Changes in
the presence of Bacillus subtilis following post-harvest interventions such as prochloraz suggested
a non-target effect of the fungicide. The present study, therefore, provides the primary baseline
data on mango fungal and bacterial diversity and composition, which can be foundational in the
development of effective disease (stem-end rot) management strategies.Supplementary Materials: Figure S1: Taxonomic abundance of pathogenic fungal species at the
preharvest (A) and postharvest stages (B) on the fructoplane, stem-end pulp and fruit stems of cv.
Tommy Atkins mangoes. FP, fructoplane; SEP, stem-end pulp; S, fruit stem.https://www.mdpi.com/journal/horticulturaeam2022Plant Production and Soil Scienc
Bacterial community dynamics and functional profiling of soils from conventional and organic cropping systems
Soil microbiomes play an integral role in agricultural production systems. Understanding of the complex microbial community structure and responses to conventional compared to organic cropping systems is crucial for sustainable production and ecosystems health. This study investigated soil microbial community structure responses based on a four year long field experiment. Bacterial communities characterizing conventional and organic cropping systems were evaluated using Illumina MiSeq high-throughput sequencing targeting the V4-V5 variable region of the 16S rRNA gene. Soil bacterial community structure showed a cropping system dependant distribution, with nitrogen cycling taxa (Bacillus, Niastella, Kribbella, and Beijerinckia) dominant in conventional cropping systems, while carbon cycling taxa (Dokdonella, Caulobacter, Mathylibium, Pedobacter, Cellulomonas and Chthoniobacter and Sorangium) were abundant in organic cropping systems. Functional prediction of the bacterial biomes showed conventional cropping systems to harbour a community adapted to carbon-limited environments, with organic cropping systems dominated by those involved in the degradation of complex organic compounds. These findings suggest the existence of niche specific communities and functional specialization between cropping systems with potential use in soil management through selective promotion of organisms beneficial to soil health.This work forms part of the research of the Centre of Excellence (âCoEâ) in Food Security sponsored by the Department of Science and Innovation, Republic of South Africa (âDSIâ) and administered by the National Research Foundation (âNRFâ).http://www.elsevier.com/locate/apsoilhj2022Plant Production and Soil Scienc
Profiling bacterial communities of irrigation water and leafy green vegetables produced by small-scale farms and sold in informal settlements in South Africa
AVAILABILITY OF DATA AND MATERIALS : Sequence data are available at NCBI-SRA under submission numbers SUB12270895 and SUB12272756 for BioProject number PRJNA900001.ADDITIONAL FILE 1: TABLE S1. Samples analysed for bacterial community characterisation. TABLE S2. Taxonomic breakdown of core bacterial taxa present in flooding irrigation water. TABLE S3. Bacterial families that are associated with isolation and outbreaks in South Africa.Morogo is an African indigenous term used for leafy green vegetables harvested in the wild or cultivated in small-scale farms and consumed by the local populations of the region. Small-scale farmers have gained recognition as important suppliers of morogo to informal settlements. In commercial production systems, leafy green vegetables have increasingly been reported as associated with foodborne pathogens and disease outbreaks. Little is known of the presence of these organisms on leafy green vegetables in the informal unregulated food systems. This study aimed to profile bacterial communities in irrigation water (flooding and overhead irrigation water) and leafy green vegetables (Brassica rapa L. chinensis and Brassica rapa varieties of morogo) to establish the natural bacterial flora at the water-fresh produce interface from five small-scale farms in two provinces in South Africa. Illumina MiSeq high-throughput sequencing showed that each farm exhibited a unique bacterial community composition, with an overall high relative abundance of Proteobacteria, Firmicutes and Actinobacteria, including prominent families such as Burkholderiaceae (48%), Enterobacteriaceae (34%), Bacillales Family XII (8%), Rhodobacteraceae (3%), Micrococcaceae (1.98%) and Pseudomonadaceae (1.79%). Specific Enterobacteriaceae Serratia, Enterobacter, Salmonella, Shigella, Escherichia coli, Buchnera, Citrobacter, Klebsiella and Proteus were identified, in addition to unique communities associated with plant or irrigation water source. These findings suggest that the edible plant microbiome can play an important role as transient contributor to the human gut and has the potential to affect overall health.The Water Research Commission (WRC) for the funded project âMeasurement of water pollution determining the sources and changes of microbial contamination and impact on food safety from farming to retail level for fresh vegetablesâ, the Department of Science and Innovation (DSI)âNational Research Foundation (NRF) Centre of Excellence in Food Security, the Partnerships for Enhanced Engagement in Research (PEER) USAID/DST funded project âCharacterizing and tracking of antimicrobial resistance in the water-plant-food public health interfaceâ and in part by the NRF of South Africa.https://cabiagbio.biomedcentral.comhj2023Plant Production and Soil Scienc
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Serotype distribution, antimicrobial resistance, virulence genes, and genetic diversity of Salmonella spp. isolated from small-scale leafy green vegetable supply chains in South Africa
Salmonella have been implicated in foodborne disease outbreaks globally and is a pressing concern in the South African small-scale sector due to inadequate hygiene standards and limited regulatory oversight, leading to a higher risk of foodborne diseases. By investigating irrigation water and leafy green vegetables produced by small-scale growers and sold through unregulated supply chains, this study was able to determine the presence, serotype distribution, virulence gene profiles, antibiotic resistance, and genetic diversity of Salmonella isolated from these sources. From 426 samples, 21 Salmonella-positive samples were identified, providing 53 Salmonella isolates. Of these, six different Salmonella serotypes and sequence types (STs) were identified, including Salmonella II 42:r: ST1208 (33.96%; n = 18), Salmonella Enteritidis: ST11 (22.64%; n = 12), Salmonella II 42:z29: ST4395 (16.98%; n = 9), Salmonella Havana: ST1524 (15.09%; n = 8), Salmonella Typhimurium: ST19 (9.43%; n = 5), and Salmonella IIIb 47:i:z: ST7890 (1.89%; n = 1). A total of 92.45% of the isolates were found to be multidrug-resistant, showing high rates of resistance to aztreonam (88.68%; n = 47), ceftazidime (86.79%; n = 46), nalidixic acid (77.36%; n = 41), cefotaxime (75.47%; n = 40), cefepime (71.70%; n = 38), and streptomycin (69.81%; n = 37). All isolates possessed the aac(6')-Iaa antimicrobial resistance gene, with a range of between 9 and 256 virulence genes. Eleven cluster patterns were observed from Enterobacterial Repetitive Intergenic Consensus sequence analyses, demonstrating high diversity among the Salmonella spp., with water and fresh produce isolates clustering, suggesting water as a potential contamination source. Plasmid replicon types were identified in 41.51% (n = 22) of the isolates, including Col(pHAD28) in Salmonella Havana (5.66%; n = 3), Col156 in Salmonella II 42:z29:- (1.89%; n = 1) and both IncFIB(S) and IncFII(S) in Salmonella Enteritidis (22.64; n = 12), Salmonella Typhimurium (9.43%; n = 5), and Salmonella Havana (1.89%; n = 1). This study highlights the presence of multidrug-resistant and multivirulent Salmonella spp. in the small-scale leafy green vegetable supply chains, underscoring the need for the development of a âfit-for-purposeâ food safety management system within this system
Apostrophe, witnessing and its essentially theatrical modes of address: Maria DermĂ´ut on Pattimura and Kara Walker on the New Orleans flooding
Apostrophe is best known as a punctuation mark (') or as a key poetic figure (with a speaker addressing an imaginary or absent person or entity). In origin, however, it is a pivotal rhetorical figure that indicates a 'breaking away' or turning away of the speaker from one addressee to another, in a different mode. In this respect, apostrophe is essentially theatrical. To be sure, the turn away implies two different modes of address that may follow upon one another, as is hinted at by the two meanings of the verb 'to witness': being a witness and bearing witness. One cannot do both at the same time. My argument will be, however, that in order to make witnessing work ethically and responsibly, the two modes of address must take place simultaneously, in the coincidence of two modalities of presence: one actual and one virtual. Accordingly, I will distinguish between an address of attention and an address of expression. Whereas the witness is actually paying attention to that which she witnesses, she is virtually (and in the sense Deleuze intended, no less really) turning away in terms of expression. The two come together in what Kelly Oliver called the 'inner witness'. The simultaneous operation of two modes of address suggests that Caroline Nevejan's so-called YUTPA model would have to include two modalities of 'you'. Such a dual modality has become all the more important, in the context of the society of the spectacle. One text will help me first to explore two modes of address through apostrophe. I will focus on a story by Dutch author Maria DermĂ´ut, written in the fifties of the twentieth century, reflecting on an uprising and the subsequent execution of its leader in the Dutch Indies in 1817. Secondly, I will move to American artist Kara Walker's response, in the shape of an installation and a visual essay, to the flooding of New Orleans in 2005. The latter will serve to illustrate a historic shift in the theatrical nature and status of 'presence' in the two modes of address. Instead of thinking of the convergence of media, of which Jenkins speaks, we might think of media swallowing up one another. For instance, the theatrical structure of apostrophe is swallowed up, and in a sense perverted, by the model of the spectacle in modern media. This endangers the very possibility of witnessing in any ethical sense of the word
Low Sensitivity of BinaxNOW RSV in Infants
BACKGROUND: Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a major cause of hospitalization in infants. Early detection of RSV can optimize clinical management and minimize use of antibiotics. BinaxNOW RSV (BN) is a rapid antigen detection test that is widely used. We aimed to validate the sensitivity of BN in hospitalized and nonhospitalized infants against the gold standard of molecular diagnosis. METHODS: We evaluated the performance of BN in infants with acute respiratory tract infections with different degrees of disease severity. Diagnostic accuracy of BN test results were compared with molecular diagnosis as reference standard. RESULTS: One hundred sixty-two respiratory samples from 148 children from October 2017 to February 2019 were studied. Sixty-six (40.7%) samples tested positive for RSV (30 hospitalizations, 31 medically attended episodes not requiring hospitalization, and 5 nonmedically attended episodes). Five of these samples tested positive with BN, leading to an overall sensitivity of BN of 7.6% (95% confidence interval [CI], 3.3%-16.5%) and a specificity of 100% (95% CI, 96.2%-100%). Sensitivity was low in all subgroups. CONCLUSIONS: We found a low sensitivity of BN for point-of-care detection of RSV infection. BinaxNOW RSV should be used and interpreted with caution
Genetic, environmental and stochastic factors in monozygotic twin discordance with a focus on epigenetic differences
PMCID: PMC3566971This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited
Polymorphism in the Tyrosine Hydroxylase (TH) Gene Is Associated with Activity-Impulsivity in German Shepherd Dogs
We investigated the association between repeat polymorphism in intron 4 of the tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) gene and two personality traits, activity-impulsivity and inattention, in German Shepherd Dogs. The behaviour of 104 dogs was characterized by two instruments: (1) the previously validated Dog-Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Rating Scale (Dog-ADHD RS) filled in by the dog owners and (2) the newly developed Activity-impulsivity Behavioural Scale (AIBS) containing four subtests, scored by the experimenters. Internal consistency, inter-observer reliability, test-retest reliability and convergent validity were demonstrated for AIBS
Seasonal Changes in Colour: A Comparison of Structural, Melanin- and Carotenoid-Based Plumage Colours
Plumage coloration is important for bird communication, most notably in sexual signalling. Colour is often considered a good quality indicator, and the expression of exaggerated colours may depend on individual condition during moult. After moult, plumage coloration has been deemed fixed due to the fact that feathers are dead structures. Still, many plumage colours change after moult, although whether this affects signalling has not been sufficiently assessed.) displaying various coloration types (melanin-, carotenoid-based and structural). Birds were caught regularly during three years to measure plumage reflectance. We used models of avian colour vision to derive two variables, one describing chromatic and the other achromatic variation over the year that can be compared in magnitude among different colour types. All studied plumage patches but one (yellow breast of the blue tit) showed significant chromatic changes over the year, although these were smaller than for a typical dynamic trait (bill colour). Overall, structural colours showed a reduction in relative reflectance at shorter wavelengths, carotenoid-based colours the opposite pattern, while no general pattern was found for melanin-based colours. Achromatic changes were also common, but there were no consistent patterns of change for the different types of colours.Changes of plumage coloration independent of moult are probably widespread; they should be perceivable by birds and have the potential to affect colour signalling
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