1,169 research outputs found

    FoodAfrica—Reducing risk of mycotoxins

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    Structural and Functional Analysis of Cell Wall-Anchored PolypeptideAdhesin BspA in <i>Streptococcus agalactiae</i>

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    Streptococcus agalactiae (group B Streptococcus, GBS) is the predominant cause of early-onset infectious disease in neonates and is responsible for life-threatening infections in elderly and immunocompromised individuals. Clinical manifestations of GBS infection include sepsis, pneumonia, and meningitis. Here, we describe BspA, a deviant antigen I/II family polypeptide that confers adhesive properties linked to pathogenesis in GBS. Heterologous expression of BspA on the surface of the non-adherent bacterium Lactococcus lactis confers adherence to scavenger receptor gp340, human vaginal epithelium, and to the fungus Candida albicans. Complementary crystallographic and biophysical characterization of BspA reveal a novel β-sandwich adhesion domain and unique asparagine-dependent super-helical stalk. Collectively, these findings establish a new bacterial adhesin structure that has in effect been hijacked by a pathogenic Streptococcus species to provide competitive advantage in human mucosal infections

    Coassociation between Group B <i>Streptococcus </i>and <i>Candida albicans </i>Promotes Interactions with Vaginal Epithelium

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    ABSTRACT Group B Streptococcus (GBS) is a leading cause of neonatal sepsis, pneumonia, and meningitis worldwide. In the majority of cases, GBS is transmitted vertically from mother to neonate, making maternal vaginal colonization a key risk factor for neonatal disease. The fungus Candida albicans is an opportunistic pathogen of the female genitourinary tract and the causative agent of vaginal thrush. Carriage of C. albicans has been shown to be an independent risk factor for vaginal colonization by GBS. However, the nature of interactions between these two microbes is poorly understood. This study provides evidence of a reciprocal, synergistic interplay between GBS and C. albicans that may serve to promote their cocolonization of the vaginal mucosa. GBS strains NEM316 (serotype III) and 515 (serotype Ia) are shown to physically interact with C. albicans , with the bacteria exhibiting tropism for candidal hyphal filaments. This interaction enhances association levels of both microbes with the vaginal epithelial cell line VK2/E6E7. The ability of GBS to coassociate with C. albicans is dependent upon expression of the hypha-specific adhesin Als3. In turn, expression of GBS antigen I/II family adhesins (Bsp polypeptides) facilitates this coassociation and confers upon surrogate Lactococcus lactis the capacity to exhibit enhanced interactions with C. albicans on vaginal epithelium. As genitourinary tract colonization is an essential first step in the pathogenesis of GBS and C. albicans , the coassociation mechanism reported here may have important implications for the risk of disease involving both of these pathogens. </jats:p

    Interdigitated ring electrodes: Theory and experiment

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    The oxidation of potassium ferrocyanide, K_4Fe(CN)_6, in aqueous solution under fully supported conditions is carried out at interdigitated band and ring electrode arrays, and compared to theoretical models developed to simulate the processes. Simulated data is found to fit well with experimental results using literature values of diffusion coefficients for Fe(CN)_6^(4-) and Fe(CN)_6^(3-). The theoretical models are used to compare responses from interdigitated band and ring arrays, and the size of ring array required to approximate the response to a linear band array is investigated. An equation is developed for the radius of ring required for a pair of electrodes in a ring array to give a result with 5% of a pair of electrodes in a band array. This equation is found to be independent of the scan rate used over six orders of magnitude

    The Lantern Vol. 51, No. 1, Fall 1984

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    • Sky Eyes • Flowerwait • Haiku • Sunwatch • Epitaph of A Tale • How Do You Tell A Child • Vineyard Wind • By The Sea • The Wanderer • In Back of the Real Supermarket in Collegeville • Mitosis • Smoke Dreams • On Humankind Today - A Message • Dragon • The Lull • Finale • The Sun • Three Steps in Life • Seaside • To Mark • To Father • Yesterday - Today • The Stars • The Journey • Our Shared Experience, Miles Away • Coming Home • Blossom • Life is the Teacher • Midnight Stroll in February • Eyes (Karen\u27s Poem) • Your Love • Same Welcome as Odysseus • Europa • Sinn Fein • Idle Dreams • I Can Take A Hint • In Retrospect • Rest • China and Porcelain are One in the Same • Momenthttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/lantern/1125/thumbnail.jp

    The Lantern Vol. 50, No. 1, Fall 1983

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    • Reaching for My Dream • All Hail • Appreciation • Egotism • Me (Dedicated to...) • Butterfly • Balloon and Bird • Never Again • Mother • The Deaf Ears • Healing • Distress • Silent Death • Whose Reality Is It Anyway? • To Helen • Luna Llena y Soledad • Saved • Jenny • Slope • A Poem in C Minor • A Birth of Proficiency • The Traveling Man • Competing With the Sea • To R. • The Child • And Besides • An Actress\u27 Demise • A Loving Tribute to Francis • Rapunzel • Memorieshttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/lantern/1123/thumbnail.jp

    Methods of the ITC Four Country Smoking and Vaping Survey, wave 1 (2016)

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    AIM: To describe the methods of the 2016 International Tobacco Control (ITC) Four Country Smoking and Vaping (4CV) Survey, conducted in 2016 in Australia (AU), Canada (CA), England (EN) and the United States (US). METHODS: The respondents were cigarette smokers, former smokers (quit within the previous 2 years), and at-least-weekly vapers, aged 18 years and older. Eligible cohort members from the ITC Four Country Survey (4C) were retained. New respondents were sampled by commercial firms from their panels. Where possible, ages 18-24 and vapers were oversampled. Data were collected online, and respondents were remunerated. Survey weights were calibrated to benchmarks from nationally representative surveys. RESULTS: Response rates by country for new recruits once invited ranged from 15.2 to 49.6%. Sample sizes for smokers/former smokers were 1504 in AU, 3006 in CA, 3773 in EN and 2239 in the US. Sample sizes for additional vapers were 727 in CA, 551 in EN and 494 in the US. CONCLUSION: The International Tobacco Control Four Country Smoking and Vaping Survey design and data collection methods allow analyses to examine prospectively the use of cigarettes and nicotine vaping products in jurisdictions with different regulatory policies. The effects on the sampling designs and response quality of recruiting the respondents from commercial panels are mitigated by the use of demographic and geographic quotas in sampling; by quality control measures; and by the construction of survey weights taking into account smoking/vaping status, sex, age, education and geography

    The influence of extrachromosomal elements in the anthrax “cross-over” strain Bacillus cereus G9241

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    Bacillus cereus G9241 was isolated from a welder who survived a pulmonary anthrax-like disease. Strain G9241 carries two virulence plasmids, pBCX01 and pBC210, as well as an extrachromosomal prophage, pBFH_1. pBCX01 has 99.6% sequence identity to pXO1 carried by Bacillus anthracis and encodes the tripartite anthrax toxin genes and atxA, a mammalian virulence transcriptional regulator. This work looks at how the presence of pBCX01 and temperature may affect the lifestyle of B. cereus G9241 using a transcriptomic analysis and by studying spore formation, an important part of the B. anthracis lifecycle. Here we report that pBCX01 has a stronger effect on gene transcription at the mammalian infection relevant temperature of 37°C in comparison to 25°C. At 37°C, the presence of pBCX01 appears to have a negative effect on genes involved in cell metabolism, including biosynthesis of amino acids, whilst positively affecting the transcription of many transmembrane proteins. The study of spore formation showed B. cereus G9241 sporulated rapidly in comparison to the B. cereus sensu stricto type strain ATCC 14579, particularly at 37°C. The carriage of pBCX01 did not affect this phenotype suggesting that other genetic elements were driving rapid sporulation. An unexpected finding of this study was that pBFH_1 is highly expressed at 37°C in comparison to 25°C and pBFH_1 expression leads to the production of Siphoviridae-like phage particles in the supernatant of B. cereus G9241. This study provides an insight on how the extrachromosomal genetic elements in B. cereus G9241 has an influence in bacterial phenotypes

    From cereus to anthrax and back again : the role of the PlcR regulator in the “cross-over” strain Bacillus cereus G9241

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    The plcR gene, which encodes the pleiotropic transcriptional regulator of secreted proteins found in most members of the Bacillus cereus group, is truncated in all Bacillus anthracis isolates. The current dogma suggests this truncation was evolved to accommodate the acquisition of the anthrax toxin regulator, AtxA. However, the B. cereus-B. anthracis “cross-over” strain Bacillus cereus G9241, isolated from a Louisiana welder suffering from an anthrax-like infection, appears to contradict the proposed dogma as it encodes intact copies of both regulators. Here we report that when cultured at 25 °C, cell free B. cereus G9241 culture supernatants are cytotoxic and haemolytic to various eukaryotic cells in addition to insect haemocytes from Manduca sexta. However, this cytotoxic and haemolytic activity of the culture supernatant is lost when the bacteria are grown at 37 °C, behaving much like the supernatants generated by B. anthracis. Using a combination of genetic and proteomic approaches, we identified several PlcR-regulated toxins secreted at 25 °C. We demonstrate that a limiting step for the production of these virulence factors at 37 °C exists within the PlcR-PapR regulation circuit in strain G9241, giving rise to the temperature-dependent haemolytic and cytotoxic activity of the culture supernatants. Differential expression of the protease responsible in processing the PlcR quorum sensing activator PapR appears to be responsible for this phenotype. This study confirms that B. cereus G9241 is able to ‘switch’ between B. cereus and B. anthracis–like phenotypes in a temperature-dependent manner, potentially accommodating the activities of both PlcR and AtxA
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