5 research outputs found
Archive en devenir
Document réalisé dans le cadre de la collection Archives en mouvement. Sous la direction d'Yvon Lemay, la collection vise à explorer la diffusion par l'utilisation de documents d'archives.Les auteurs cherchent à montrer que les archives sont plutôt tournées vers l'avenir que vers le passé en raison justement des diverses utilisations dont elles sont l'objet. Le document comprend des citations de Jacques Derrida, Anna Harding, Françoise Zonabend, Marie-Anne Chabin et Normand Charbonneau entrecoupées de montages d'archives audiovisuelles par Aaron Valdez, ZZID, Ashley Maynor, Rob Parrish et Jacob StalHammar
Microencapsulation of a Staphylococcus phage for concentration and long-term storage
In an effort to reduce food safety risks, virulent phages are investigated as antibacterial agents for the control of
foodborne pathogens. The aim of this study was to evaluate microencapsulation (ME) as a tool to concentrate
and store staphylococcal bacteriophages. As a proof of concept, phage Team1 belonging to the Myoviridae family
was microencapsulated in alginate gel particles of 0.5 mm (micro-beads) and 2 mm (macro-beads) of diameter.
Gel contraction occurred during the hardening period in the CaCl2 solution, and the diameters of the initial
alginate droplets shrunk by 16% (micro-beads) and 44% (micro-beads). As compared to the phage counts in the
alginate solution, this contraction resulted in the increase of the phage titers, per g of alginate gel, by factors of 2
(micro-beads) and 6 (micro-beads). The encapsulation yield was highest in the macro-beads. Although phage
Team1 was successfully frozen in beads, ME did not improve phage stability to freeze-drying. The addition of
glycerol protected the microencapsulated phages during freezing but had no effect on free phage suspensions.
Finally, ME improved storage stability at 4 °C but had no impact on freezing or drying over three months of
storage