28 research outputs found

    Pattern of hiv-infection in Hurungwe District, Mashonaland West, Zimbabwe

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    A journal article on the pattern of HIV infection in a rural Zimbabwe district.After the first case of HIV-infection had been diagnosed in 1986 in a Northern district of Zimbabwe, a local hospital based surveillance system, was introduced. In order to monitor the spread of the epidemic in the district, residence, age, sex and clinical presentation of all newly diagnosed HIV-paticnts were recorded. After three years, the data were compiled and analysed with the following results. Altogether 887 symptomatic HIV-patients (0,5 pc of the district population) were diagnosed. The most common HIV-associated signs and symptoms were PGL (47 pc), chest infection (29 pc), herpes zoster (24 pc) and chronic STDs (15 pc). The fcmalc-to-malc ratio in adults was 1,4. The average age on diagnosis in women was 26,0±6,7 years and in men 30,7±8,6 years. The three years’ cumulative incidence of HIV-cases was 27,2/1 000 in the urban area and 3/1 000 in the rural areas of the district

    A novel Candida glycerinogenes mutant with high glycerol productivity in high phosphate concentration medium

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    A novel Candida glycerinogenes mutant, which possesses high glycerol productivity in a high phosphate concentration medium, was obtained by mutagenesis of an industrial glycerol producer. The mutant accumulated a total biomass of 11.5 g l-1, which is less than the 15 g l-1of the wild-type strain, but it consumed glucose faster than the wild-type strain did. The mutant reached its maximal glycerol concentration of 129 g l -1 in 84 h compared to 96 h for the wild-type strain. High cytoplasmic glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase activity of the mutant in the early glycerol formation phase, leading to a rapid glycerol synthesis and accumulation, may be the main reason for the short fermentation process. © Springer 2005.Articl

    Nitrogen Fixation and Hydrogen Metabolism in Relation to the Dissolved Oxygen Tension in Chemostat Cultures of the Wild Type and a Hydrogenase-Negative Mutant of Azorhizobium caulinodans

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    Both the wild type and an isogenic hydrogenase-negative mutant of Azorhizobium caulinodans growing ex planta on N(2) as the N source were studied in succinate-limited steady-state chemostat cultures under 0.2 to 3.0% dissolved O(2) tension. Production or consumption of O(2), H(2), and CO(2) was measured with an on-line-connected mass spectrometer. In the range of 0.2 to 3.0%, growth of both the wild type and the mutant was equally dependent on the dissolved O(2) tension: the growth yield decreased, and the specific O(2) consumption and CO(2) production increased. A similar dependency on the dissolved O(2) tension was found for the mutant with 2.5% H(2) in the influent gas. The H(2)/N(2) ratio (moles of H(2) evolved per mole of N(2) consumed via nitrogenase) of the mutant, growing with or without 2.5% H(2), increased with increasing dissolved O(2) tensions. This increase in the H(2)/N(2) ratio was small but significant. The dependencies of the ATP/N(2) ratio (moles of ATP consumed per mole of N(2) fixed) and the ATP/2e(-) ratio [moles of ATP consumed per mole of electron pairs transferred from NAD(P)H to nitrogenase] on the dissolved O(2) tension were estimated. These dependencies were interpreted in terms of the physiological concepts of respiratory protection and autoprotection
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