233 research outputs found

    Symbiont identity matters: carbon and phosphorus fluxes between Medicago truncatula and different arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi

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    Many studies have scrutinized the nutritional benefits of arbuscular mycorrhizal associations to their host plants, while the carbon (C) balance of the symbiosis has often been neglected. Here, we present quantification of both the C costs and the phosphorus (P) uptake benefits of mycorrhizal association between barrel medic (Medicago truncatula) and three arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal species, namely Glomus intraradices, Glomus claroideum, and Gigaspora margarita. Plant growth, P uptake and C allocation were assessed 7weeks after sowing by comparing inoculated plants with their non-mycorrhizal counterparts, supplemented with different amounts of P. Isotope tracing (33P and 13C) was used to quantify both the mycorrhizal benefits and the costs, respectively. G. intraradices supported greatest plant P acquisition and incurred high C costs, which lead to similar plant growth benefits as inoculation with G. claroideum, which was less efficient in supporting plant P acquisition, but also required less C. G. margarita imposed large C requirement on the host plant and provided negligible P uptake benefits. However, it did not significantly reduce plant growth due to sink strength stimulation of plant photosynthesis. A simple experimental system such as the one established here should allow quantification of mycorrhizal costs and benefits routinely on a large number of experimental units. This is necessary for rapid progress in assessment of C fluxes between the plants and different mycorrhizal fungi or fungal communities, and for understanding the dynamics between mutualism and parasitism in mycorrhizal symbiose

    Assessing the role of contact tracing in a suspected H7N2 influenza A outbreak in humans in Wales.

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    BACKGROUND: The detailed analysis of an outbreak database has been undertaken to examine the role of contact tracing in controlling an outbreak of possible avian influenza in humans. The outbreak, initiating from the purchase of infected domestic poultry, occurred in North Wales during May and June 2007. During this outbreak, extensive contact tracing was carried out. Following contact tracing, cases and contacts believed to be at risk of infection were given treatment/prophylaxis. METHODS: We analyse the database of cases and their contacts identified for the purposes of contact tracing in relation to both the contact tracing burden and effectiveness. We investigate the distribution of numbers of contacts identified, and use network structure to explore the speed with which treatment/prophylaxis was made available and to estimate the risk of transmission in different settings. RESULTS: Fourteen cases of suspected H7N2 influenza A in humans were associated with a confirmed outbreak among poultry in May-June 2007. The contact tracing dataset consisted of 254 individuals (cases and contacts, of both poultry and humans) who were linked through a network of social contacts. Of these, 102 individuals were given treatment or prophylaxis. Considerable differences between individuals' contact patterns were observed. Home and workplace encounters were more likely to result in transmission than encounters in other settings. After an initial delay, while the outbreak proceeded undetected, contact tracing rapidly caught up with the cases and was effective in reducing the time between onset of symptoms and treatment/prophylaxis. CONCLUSIONS: Contact tracing was used to link together the individuals involved in this outbreak in a social network, allowing the identification of the most likely paths of transmission and the risks of different types of interactions to be assessed. The outbreak highlights the substantial time and cost involved in contact tracing, even for an outbreak affecting few individuals. However, when sufficient resources are available, contact tracing enables cases to be identified before they result in further transmission and thus possibly assists in preventing an outbreak of a novel virus.RIGHTS : This article is licensed under the BioMed Central licence at http://www.biomedcentral.com/about/license which is similar to the 'Creative Commons Attribution Licence'. In brief you may : copy, distribute, and display the work; make derivative works; or make commercial use of the work - under the following conditions: the original author must be given credit; for any reuse or distribution, it must be made clear to others what the license terms of this work are

    Laser Noise Reduction in Air

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    Fluctuations of the white-light supercontinuum produced by ultrashort laser pulses in selfguided filaments (spatio-temporal solitons) in air are investigated. We demonstrate that correlations exist within the white-light supercontinuum, and that they can be used to significantly reduce the laser intensity noise by filtering the spectrum. More precisely, the fundamental wavelength is anticorrelated with the wings of the continuum, while conjugated wavelength pairs on both sides of the continuum are strongly correlated. Spectral filtering of the continuum reduces the laser intensity noise by 1.2 dB, showing that fluctuations are rejected to the edges of the spectrum.Comment: 8 page

    Comparative analysis of the brain distribution of [18F]FDG in populations of patients with Alzheimer's disease with or without family history of dementia.

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    editorial reviewedHereditary forms of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and early-onset forms have more brain damage than sporadic or late-onset forms at the time of diagnosis (1, 2). Data in the literature are contradictory concerning familial forms without known heredity or mutation. The aim of this study was to compare the brain distribution of FDG between two populations of patients with a clinical diagnosis of sporadic AD according to the presence or not of a first degree family history of dementia. We retrospectively included 243 patients with clinical diagnosis of AD who underwent brain FDG PET imaging between 2012 and 2017. SPM12 was used to compare the FDG brain distribution in 199 patients with AD and no familial history of dementia and 43 patients with AD and first degree familial history of dementia. Compared to a database of 22 healthy control subjects, both groups of AD patients showed a significant decrease of FDG distribution in temporo-parietal, posterior cingulate and posterior left frontal cortex with respect to the controls (p inferior to 0.05 corrected for the family-wise error, pFWE-corr). There were no significant differences between the two AD groups (pFWE-corr superior to 0.05 and p superior to 0.001 uncorrected for multiple comparisons) that present the same brain metabolic pathology.Les formes héréditaires de la maladie d’Alzheimer (MA) et les formes à début précoce présentent une atteinte cérébrale plus importante que les formes sporadiques ou celles à début tardif au moment du diagnostic (1, 2). Les données de la littérature sont contradictoires en ce qui concerne les formes familiales sans hérédité ni mutation connue. L’objectif de cette étude était de comparer la distribution cérébrale du [18F]fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose ([18F]FDG) entre deux populations de patients présentant un diagnostic clinique de la MA sporadique selon la présence, ou non, d’une histoire familiale de démence au premier degré. Dans cette étude rétrospective, nous avons inclus 243 patients vus entre 2012 et 2017. Le logiciel SPM12 a été utilisé pour comparer la distribution cérébrale du FDG entre 199 patients souffrant de MA, sans histoire familiale et 43 patients souffrant de MA avec une histoire familiale de démence au premier degré. Comparés à une base de données de 22 sujets contrôles sains, chacun des deux groupes de patients présentait une réduction significative de la distribution du FDG au niveau du cortex temporo-pariétal, cingulaire postérieur et frontal postérieur gauche (p inf�rieur a 0,05 corrigé pour le family-wise error, pFWE-corr), caractéristique de la maladie. Il n’y avait pas de différence significative entre les deux groupes MA (pFWE-corr sup�rieur a 0,05 et p sup�rieur a 0,001 non corrigé, pour des comparaisons multiples) qui présentent donc la même altération métabolique cérébrale

    Subclinical infection and asymptomatic carriage of gastrointestinal zoonoses: Occupational exposure, environmental pathways, and the anonymous spread of disease

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    Asymptomatic carriage of gastrointestinal zoonoses is more common in people whose profession involves them working directly with domesticated animals. Subclinical infections (defined as an infection in which symptoms are either asymptomatic or sufficiently mild to escape diagnosis) are important within a community as unknowing (asymptomatic) carriers of pathogens do not change their behaviour to prevent the spread of disease; therefore the public health significance of asymptomatic human excretion of zoonoses should not be underestimated. However, optimal strategies for managing diseases where asymptomatic carriage instigates further infection remain unresolved, and the impact on disease management is unclear. In this review we consider the environmental pathways associated with prolonged antigenic exposure and critically assess the significance of asymptomatic carriage in disease outbreaks Although screening high-risk groups for occupationally acquired diseases would be logistically problematical, there may be an economic case for identifying and treating asymptomatic carriage if the costs of screening and treatment are less than the costs of identifying and treating those individuals infected by asymptomatic hosts

    Genotoxicity and Gene Expression in the Rat Lung Tissue following Instillation and Inhalation of Different Variants of Amorphous Silica Nanomaterials (aSiO2 NM)

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    This article belongs to the Special Issue Cytotoxicity and Genotoxicity of Nanomaterials.Several reports on amorphous silica nanomaterial (aSiO2 NM) toxicity have been questioning their safety. Herein, we investigated the in vivo pulmonary toxicity of four variants of aSiO2 NM: SiO2_15_Unmod, SiO2_15_Amino, SiO2_7 and SiO2_40. We focused on alterations in lung DNA and protein integrity, and gene expression following single intratracheal instillation in rats. Additionally, a short-term inhalation study (STIS) was carried out for SiO2_7, using TiO2_NM105 as a benchmark NM. In the instillation study, a significant but slight increase in oxidative DNA damage in rats exposed to the highest instilled dose (0.36 mg/rat) of SiO2_15_Amino was observed in the recovery (R) group. Exposure to SiO2_7 or SiO2_40 markedly increased oxidative DNA lesions in rat lung cells of the exposure (E) group at every tested dose. This damage seems to be repaired, since no changes compared to controls were observed in the R groups. In STIS, a significant increase in DNA strand breaks of the lung cells exposed to 0.5 mg/m3 of SiO2_7 or 50 mg/m3 of TiO2_NM105 was observed in both groups. The detected gene expression changes suggest that oxidative stress and/or inflammation pathways are likely implicated in the induction of (oxidative) DNA damage. Overall, all tested aSiO2 NM were not associated with marked in vivo toxicity following instillation or STIS. The genotoxicity findings for SiO2_7 from instillation and STIS are concordant; however, changes in STIS animals were more permanent/difficult to revert.This work was funded by the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) through ERA-NET SIINN project NanoToxClass (SIINN/0001/2013). FB and MJB are recipients of FCT PhD scholarships (SFRH/BD/101060/2014 and SFRH/BD/12046/2016). Thanks are due to FCT/MCTES for the financial support through national funds to EPIUnit (UIDB/04750/2020). J. Laloy performed STIS at the University of Namur with funding provided by BfR (grant agreement number 1329-561). F. Debacq-Chainiaux is a research associate at FRS-FNRS (National Funds for Scientific Research, Belgium).info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Lack of Serologic Evidence of Neospora caninum in Humans, England

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    Retrospective testing of 3,232 serum samples from the general population and 518 serum samples from a high-risk group showed no evidence of human exposure to Neospora caninum in England. Results were obtained by using immunofluorescence antibody testing and ELISA to analyze frequency distribution

    Hazards of Healthy Living: Bottled Water and Salad Vegetables as Risk Factors for Campylobacter Infection

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    Campylobacter is the most common cause of bacterial gastroenteritis worldwide, yet the etiology of this infection remains only partly explained. In a retrospective cohort study, we compared 213 sporadic campylobacter case-patients with 1,144 patients with negative fecal samples. Information was obtained on food history, animal contact, foreign travel, leisure activities, medical conditions, and medication use. Eating chicken, eating food from a fried chicken outlet, eating salad vegetables, drinking bottled water, and direct contact with cows or calves were all independently associated with infection. The population-attributable fractions for these risk factors explained nearly 70% of sporadic campylobacter infections. Eating chicken is a well-established risk factor, but consuming salad and bottled water are not. The association with salad may be explained by cross-contamination of food within the home, but the possibility that natural mineral water is a risk factor for campylobacter infection could have wide public health implications
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