5 research outputs found

    Microsatellite panel definition to characterize Leishmania strains isolated from human samples in an italian endemic region

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    The Leishmaniasis affects people, domestic and wild animals in temperature, subtropical and tropical regions. The natural cycle involves phlebotominae sandfly vectors transmitting the parasite to the vertebrate host. The insects influence the epidemiology of the disease by their geographical distribution in the seasons and the specific vectorial capacity. Human Leishmania infections are increasing every year in Sicily, which represent the region with the highest endemic level of the disease in Italy. Among different approaches employed for the diagnostic the parasites isolation remains the gold standard

    Validation of a Commercial Loop-Mediated Isothermal Amplification (LAMP)-Based Kit for the Detection of Salmonella spp. According to ISO 16140:2016

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    The traditional cultural method (PCR and Real-Time PCR) for Salmonella spp. detection and identification is laborious and time-consuming. A qualitative LAMP method detecting Salmonella spp. was validated in compliance with ISO 16140:2016. The results show a relative accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity of 100% in comparison with the reference method ISO 6579-1:2017; the LOD50 was set as 0.4 CFU/g. Additionally, a field study was carried out comparing the LAMP kit, a commercially available Real-Time PCR kit (FoodProof Salmonella, Biotecon Diagnostics), and the reference cultural method. The Salmonella spp. LAMP kit was suitable for reliable detection of Salmonella spp., simplifying and reducing the extent and the steps of the analytical process. A total of 105 samples of raw poultry meat were screened for the presence of Salmonella spp. according to three methods: the LAMP kit Salmonella spp. (Enbiotech), the Real-Time PCR kit FoodProof Salmonella (Biotecon), and the reference cultural method. Using these three methods, only one sample out of the 105 (0.95%) tested was positive for Salmonella spp. This sample was further investigated using the reference method described in ISO 6579-3:2014, in order to characterise the Salmonella strain. Following this further biochemical identification and serological typing, the isolate was characterised as Salmonella Infantis

    Oligodendroglioma cells synthesize the differentiation-specific linker histone H1Ëš and release it into the extracellular environment through shed vesicles

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    Chromatin remodelling can be involved in some of the epigenetic modifications found in tumor cells. One of the mechanisms at the basis of chromatin dynamics is likely to be synthesis and incorporation of replacement histone variants, such as the H1Ëš linker histone. Regulation of the expression of this protein can thus be critical in tumorigenesis. In developing brain, H1Ëš expression is mainly regulated at the post-transcriptional level and RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) are involved. In the past, attention mainly focused on the whole brain or isolated neurons and little information is available on H1Ëš expression in other brain cells. Even less is known relating to tumor glial cells. In this study we report that, like in maturing brain and isolated neurons, H1Ëš synthesis sharply increases in differentiating astrocytes growing in a serum-free medium, while the corresponding mRNA decreases. Unexpectedly, in tumor glial cells both H1Ëš RNA and protein are highly expressed, in spite of the fact that H1Ëš is considered a differentiation-specific histone variant. Persistence of H1Ëš mRNA in oligodendroglioma cells is accompanied by high levels of H1Ëš RNA-binding activities which seem to be present, at least in part, also in actively proliferating, but not in differentiating, astrocytes. Finally, we report that oligodendroglioma cells, but not astrocytes, release H1Ëš protein into the culture medium by shedding extracellular vesicles. These findings suggest that deregulation of H1Ëš histone expression can be linked to tumorigenesis
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