14 research outputs found

    Molecular and antigenic characterisation of Ehrlichia ruminantium in Amblyomma variegatum ticks and in vitro cultures

    Get PDF
    The rickettsial pathogen Ehrlichia ruminantium, transmitted by ticks of the genus Amblyomma, causes heartwater, an economically important, often fatal disease of domestic and wild ruminants in sub-Saharan Africa and in the Caribbean. The studies described in this thesis have contributed to understanding several aspects of heartwater. First, a real-time PCR method was developed in order to study the kinetics of infection with E. ruminantium in the mammalian host. The assay was validated for specificity and sensitivity and was used to estimate numbers of the organisms in the blood of infected sheep. However, organisms were only detected during the clinical phase of infection, indicating that the way in which it was applied did not provide sufficient sensitivity to follow the early stages of infection. This PCR assay was then used, together with transcription and proteomic analyses, to investigate differential gene expression of E. ruminantium in the arthropod and mammalian hosts, in order to identify genes that may allow the organisms to successfully adapt to different environments. These studies used in vitro tick and mammalian cell culture systems, as well as tissues from infected A. variegatum ticks, and initially focused on the map1 multigene family. Although transcripts for most of the map1 paralogs were detected in organisms grown in vitro, in both mammalian and tick cells, only transcripts from map1 and map1-1 were detected in infected ticks. Moreover, map1-1 transcripts were more abundant in midguts than in salivary glands whereas map1 transcripts were most abundant in salivary glands and were expressed at higher levels following several days of tick feeding on a mammalian host. Because of the quantities of material required, proteomic analysis was only possible using in vitro-cultured organisms. Comparison of proteins encoded by the map1 cluster in E. ruminantium grown in tick or bovine endothelial cell cultures, using 2D gels and MALDI-TOF analysis, revealed that different proteins predominated in the corresponding spots in 2D gels from the different cultures; products of the map1-1 gene were abundant in tick cells, while products of map1 were abundant in endothelial cells. The detection of higher levels of map1 transcripts in salivary glands than in midguts of infected ticks, together with the presence of abundant MAP1 protein in organisms grown in mammalian but not in tick cell lines, suggest that expression of this protein may be associated with infectivity for mammalian cells. In contrast, map1-1 transcripts were abundant both in midguts of infected ticks and in tick cell lines, and the protein was expressed at high levels in infected tick cell cultures. Since both of these stages have low infectivity for sheep, these results suggest that the MAP1-1 protein may play an important role within the vector, possibly associated with colonisation and replication of E. ruminantium in the tick midgut. Collectively these findings suggest that this multigene family is involved in functions of biological relevance in different stages of the life cycle of E. ruminantium. Lastly the suppression subtractive hybridisation (SSH) technique was applied to RNA extracted from E. ruminantium-infected endothelial and tick cell cultures in an attempt to sample a large portion of the E. ruminantium genome for differentially expressed genes; although not resulting in identification of any differentially transcribed genes in the present study, this method was shown to work in principle

    Selection of reference genes for quantitative RT-PCR studies in Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) microplus and Rhipicephalus appendiculatus ticks and determination of the expression profile of Bm86

    Get PDF
    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>For accurate and reliable gene expression analysis, normalization of gene expression data against reference genes is essential. In most studies on ticks where (semi-)quantitative RT-PCR is employed, normalization occurs with a single reference gene, usually β-actin, without validation of its presumed expression stability. The first goal of this study was to evaluate the expression stability of commonly used reference genes in <it>Rhipicephalus appendiculatus </it>and <it>Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) microplus </it>ticks. To demonstrate the usefulness of these results, an unresolved issue in tick vaccine development was examined. Commercial vaccines against <it>R. microplus </it>were developed based on the recombinant antigen Bm86, but despite a high degree of sequence homology, these vaccines are not effective against <it>R. appendiculatus</it>. In fact, Bm86-based vaccines give better protection against some tick species with lower Bm86 sequence homology. One possible explanation is the variation in Bm86 expression levels between <it>R. microplus </it>and <it>R. appendiculatus</it>. The most stable reference genes were therefore used for normalization of the Bm86 expression profile in all life stages of both species to examine whether antigen abundance plays a role in Bm86 vaccine susceptibility.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The transcription levels of nine potential reference genes: β-actin (ACTB), β-tubulin (BTUB), elongation factor 1α (ELF1A), glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), glutathione S-transferase (GST), H3 histone family 3A (H3F3A), cyclophilin (PPIA), ribosomal protein L4 (RPL4) and TATA box binding protein (TBP) were measured in all life stages of <it>R. microplus </it>and <it>R. appendiculatus</it>. ELF1A was found to be the most stable expressed gene in both species following analysis by both geNorm and Normfinder software applications, GST showed the least stability. The expression profile of Bm86 in <it>R. appendiculatus </it>and <it>R. microplus </it>revealed a more continuous Bm86 antigen abundance in <it>R. microplus </it>throughout its one-host life cycle compared to the three-host tick <it>R. appendiculatus </it>where large variations were observed between different life stages.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Based on these results, ELF1A can be proposed as an initial reference gene for normalization of quantitative RT-PCR data in whole <it>R. microplus </it>and <it>R. appendiculatus </it>ticks. The observed differences in Bm86 expression profile between the two species alone can not adequately explain the lack of a Bm86 vaccination effect in <it>R. appendiculatus</it>.</p

    Problemas socioemocionales asociados al afrontamiento improductivo en adolescentes

    Get PDF
    Los adolescentes están frecuentemente expuestos a estresores cotidianos, siendo los esfuerzos que despliegan para resolver estos estresores lo que se denomina afrontamiento. El afrontamiento implica acciones individuales e intencionales ante situaciones estresantes con el fin de recobrar el equilibrio. Frydenberg y Lewis (1991) desarrollan una tipología formada por tres estilos de afrontamiento empleados por los adolescentes, representando aspectos funcionales y disfuncionales: centrado en la resolución del problema, afrontamiento en referencia a otros y afrontamiento improductivo. Este último constituye una combinación de estrategias que muestran incapacidad para solucionar los problemas (e.g., preocuparse, ignorar el problema, reservarlo para sí, autoinculparse, etc.), asociándose a consecuencias emocionales negativas. El objetivo de este trabajo es examinar la relación entre el estilo de afrontamiento improductivo y problemas socioemocionales (estresores percibidos, manifestaciones o respuestas de estrés, sintomatología internalizada/externalizada y agresividad) en estudiantes de Educación Secundaria Obligatoria. La muestra ha estado compuesta por 652 adolescentes con edades comprendidas entre 12 y 14 años (M = 12.87, DT = 0.74), procedentes de diversos centros educativos de Málaga ubicados en zonas de nivel socioeconómico medio. Se han calculado las correlaciones entre las puntuaciones en afrontamiento improductivo y en los diversos indicadores de problemas socioemocionales. Los resultados muestran correlaciones más altas entre el afrontamiento improductivo y las medidas de estresores percibidos, manifestaciones de estrés y sintomatología internalizada. Estos resultados destacan la importancia de implementar programas para la mejora del afrontamiento en adolescentes, preferentemente integrados dentro del Proyecto Educativo de Centro.Universidad de Málaga. Campus de Excelencia Internacional Andalucía Tech

    Estresores adolescentes: Desarrollo de la versión española del Adolescent Stress Questionnaire (ASQ-S)

    Get PDF
    El propósito del presente trabajo es estudiar las propiedades psicométricas de la versión española del Adolescent Stress Questionnaire (ASQ-S) para evaluar los estresores contemporáneos que experimenta la población adolescente entre 12 y 18 años.Universidad de Málaga. Campus de Excelencia Internacional Andalucía Tech

    Dynamics and within-host interaction of Theileria lestoquardi and T. ovis among naive sheep in Oman

    Get PDF
    Mixed species infections of Theileria spp. are common in nature. Experimental and epidemiological data suggest that mixed species infections elicit cross-immunity that can modulate pathogenicity and disease burden at the population level. The present study examined within-host interactions, over a period of 13 months during natural infections with two Theileria spp., pathogenic (T. lestoquardi) and non-pathogenic (T. ovis), amongst a cohort of naive sheep in Oman. In the first two months after exposure to infection, a high rate of mortality was seen among sheep infected with T. lestoquardi alone. However, subsequently mixed-infections of T. lestoquardi and T. ovis prevailed, and no further death occurred. The overall densities of both parasite species were significantly higher as single infection vs mixed infection and the higher relative density of pathogenic T. lestoquardi indicated a competitive advantage over T. ovis in mixed infection. The density of both species fluctuated significantly over time, with no difference in density between the very hot (May to August) and warm season (September to April). A high degree of genotype multiplicity was seen among T. lestoquardi infections, which increased with rising parasite density. Our results illustrate a potential competitive interaction between the two ovine Theileria spp., and a substantial reduction in the risk of mortality in mixed parasite infections, indicating that T. ovis confers heterologous protection against lethal T. lestoquardi infection

    Effect of viral storm in patients admitted to intensive care units with severe COVID-19 in Spain: a multicentre, prospective, cohort study

    Get PDF
    Background: The contribution of the virus to the pathogenesis of severe COVID-19 is still unclear. We aimed to evaluate associations between viral RNA load in plasma and host response, complications, and deaths in critically ill patients with COVID-19. Methods: We did a prospective cohort study across 23 hospitals in Spain. We included patients aged 18 years or older with laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection who were admitted to an intensive care unit between March 16, 2020, and Feb 27, 2021. RNA of the SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid region 1 (N1) was quantified in plasma samples collected from patients in the first 48 h following admission, using digital PCR. Patients were grouped on the basis of N1 quantity: VIR-N1-Zero ([removed]2747 N1 copies per mL). The primary outcome was all-cause death within 90 days after admission. We evaluated odds ratios (ORs) for the primary outcome between groups using a logistic regression analysis. Findings: 1068 patients met the inclusion criteria, of whom 117 had insufficient plasma samples and 115 had key information missing. 836 patients were included in the analysis, of whom 403 (48%) were in the VIR-N1-Low group, 283 (34%) were in the VIR-N1-Storm group, and 150 (18%) were in the VIR-N1-Zero group. Overall, patients in the VIR-N1-Storm group had the most severe disease: 266 (94%) of 283 patients received invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV), 116 (41%) developed acute kidney injury, 180 (65%) had secondary infections, and 148 (52%) died within 90 days. Patients in the VIR-N1-Zero group had the least severe disease: 81 (54%) of 150 received IMV, 34 (23%) developed acute kidney injury, 47 (32%) had secondary infections, and 26 (17%) died within 90 days (OR for death 0·30, 95% CI 0·16–0·55; p<0·0001, compared with the VIR-N1-Storm group). 106 (26%) of 403 patients in the VIR-N1-Low group died within 90 days (OR for death 0·39, 95% CI 0·26–0·57; p[removed]11 página

    Soy Niña

    Get PDF
    Este libro pretende contribuir al reencuentro de la educación con esas finalidades que verdaderamente importan a una niña o un niño: ser feliz, jugar, vivir juntos y (no) aprender. Para ello hemos puesto el arte, nuestras experiencias y el saber acumulado al servicio del disfrute, el cuestionamiento, el análisis crítico y la construcción común de un presente deseable. Un texto colaborativo coordinado por Ignacio Calderón Almendros y realizado por alumnado de Educación y Cambio Social en el Grado en Educación Infantil de la Universidad de Málaga

    Molecular and antigenic characterisation of Ehrlichia ruminantium in Amblyomma variegatum ticks and in vitro cultures

    No full text
    The rickettsial pathogen Ehrlichia ruminantium, transmitted by ticks of the genus Amblyomma, causes heartwater, an economically important, often fatal disease of domestic and wild ruminants in sub-Saharan Africa and in the Caribbean. The studies described in this thesis have contributed to understanding several aspects of heartwater. First, a real-time PCR method was developed in order to study the kinetics of infection with E. ruminantium in the mammalian host. The assay was validated for specificity and sensitivity and was used to estimate numbers of the organisms in the blood of infected sheep. However, organisms were only detected during the clinical phase of infection, indicating that the way in which it was applied did not provide sufficient sensitivity to follow the early stages of infection. This PCR assay was then used, together with transcription and proteomic analyses, to investigate differential gene expression of E. ruminantium in the arthropod and mammalian hosts, in order to identify genes that may allow the organisms to successfully adapt to different environments. These studies used in vitro tick and mammalian cell culture systems, as well as tissues from infected A. variegatum ticks, and initially focused on the map1 multigene family. Although transcripts for most of the map1 paralogs were detected in organisms grown in vitro, in both mammalian and tick cells, only transcripts from map1 and map1-1 were detected in infected ticks. Moreover, map1-1 transcripts were more abundant in midguts than in salivary glands whereas map1 transcripts were most abundant in salivary glands and were expressed at higher levels following several days of tick feeding on a mammalian host. Because of the quantities of material required, proteomic analysis was only possible using in vitro-cultured organisms. Comparison of proteins encoded by the map1 cluster in E. ruminantium grown in tick or bovine endothelial cell cultures, using 2D gels and MALDI-TOF analysis, revealed that different proteins predominated in the corresponding spots in 2D gels from the different cultures; products of the map1-1 gene were abundant in tick cells, while products of map1 were abundant in endothelial cells. The detection of higher levels of map1 transcripts in salivary glands than in midguts of infected ticks, together with the presence of abundant MAP1 protein in organisms grown in mammalian but not in tick cell lines, suggest that expression of this protein may be associated with infectivity for mammalian cells. In contrast, map1-1 transcripts were abundant both in midguts of infected ticks and in tick cell lines, and the protein was expressed at high levels in infected tick cell cultures. Since both of these stages have low infectivity for sheep, these results suggest that the MAP1-1 protein may play an important role within the vector, possibly associated with colonisation and replication of E. ruminantium in the tick midgut. Collectively these findings suggest that this multigene family is involved in functions of biological relevance in different stages of the life cycle of E. ruminantium. Lastly the suppression subtractive hybridisation (SSH) technique was applied to RNA extracted from E. ruminantium-infected endothelial and tick cell cultures in an attempt to sample a large portion of the E. ruminantium genome for differentially expressed genes; although not resulting in identification of any differentially transcribed genes in the present study, this method was shown to work in principle.EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceGBUnited Kingdo

    Selection of reference genes for quantitative RT-PCR studies in Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) microplus and Rhipicephalus appendiculatus ticks and determination of the expression profile of Bm86

    No full text
    BACKGROUND: For accurate and reliable gene expression analysis, normalization of gene expression data against reference genes is essential. In most studies on ticks where (semi-)quantitative RT-PCR is employed, normalization occurs with a single reference gene, usually β-actin, without validation of its presumed expression stability. The first goal of this study was to evaluate the expression stability of commonly used reference genes in Rhipicephalus appendiculatus and Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) microplus ticks. To demonstrate the usefulness of these results, an unresolved issue in tick vaccine development was examined. Commercial vaccines against R. microplus were developed based on the recombinant antigen Bm86, but despite a high degree of sequence homology, these vaccines are not effective against R. appendiculatus. In fact, Bm86-based vaccines give better protection against some tick species with lower Bm86 sequence homology. One possible explanation is the variation in Bm86 expression levels between R. microplus and R. appendiculatus. The most stable reference genes were therefore used for normalization of the Bm86 expression profile in all life stages of both species to examine whether antigen abundance plays a role in Bm86 vaccine susceptibility. RESULTS: The transcription levels of nine potential reference genes: β-actin (ACTB), β-tubulin (BTUB), elongation factor 1α (ELF1A), glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), glutathione Stransferase (GST), H3 histone family 3A (H3F3A), cyclophilin (PPIA), ribosomal protein L4 (RPL4) and TATA box binding protein (TBP) were measured in all life stages of R. microplus and R. appendiculatus. ELF1A was found to be the most stable expressed gene in both species following analysis by both geNorm and Normfinder software applications, GST showed the least stability. The expression profile of Bm86 in R. appendiculatus and R. microplus revealed a more continuous Bm86 antigen abundance in R. microplus throughout its one-host life cycle compared to the three-host tick R. appendiculatus where large variations were observed between different life stages. CONCLUSION: Based on these results, ELF1A can be proposed as an initial reference gene for normalization of quantitative RT-PCR data in whole R. microplus and R. appendiculatus ticks. The observed differences in Bm86 expression profile between the two species alone can not adequately explain the lack of a Bm86 vaccination effect in R. appendiculatus

    Differential transcription of the major antigenic protein 1 multigene family of Ehrlichia ruminantium in Amblyomma variegatum ticks

    No full text
    The rickettsial pathogen Ehrlichia ruminantium causes heartwater in ruminants and is transmitted by ticks of the genus Amblyomma. The map1 gene, encoding the major surface protein MAP1, is a member of a multigene family containing 16 paralogs. In order to investigate differential transcription of genes of the map1 multigene family in vivo in unfed and feeding ticks, RNA was extracted from midguts and salivary glands of E. ruminantium-infected adult female Amblyomma variegatum ticks and analysed by RT-PCR using MAP1 paralog-specific primers. In unfed ticks, only transcripts from the map1-1 gene were observed in midguts and no transcripts were detected in salivary glands. In feeding ticks, map1-1 transcripts were more abundant in midguts whereas high levels of map1 transcripts were observed in salivary glands. Our results show that differential transcription of genes of the E. ruminantium map1 cluster occurs in vivo in different tissues of infected ticks before and during transmission feeding, indicating that this multigene family may be involved in functions of biological relevance in different stages of the life cycle of E. ruminantium.The research described in this manuscript was supported by two consecutive grants from the European Union (ICA4-CT-2000-30026 and INCO-CT-2005-003713). We are grateful to Dominique Martinez for providing the Amblyomma variegatum ticks and to Keith Sumption and Cornelis Bekker for advice and technical support. Jos van Putten is thanked for critical reading of the manuscript and helpful comments
    corecore