935 research outputs found

    Prevalence, co-infection and seasonality of fecal enteropathogens from diarrheic cats in the Republic of Korea (2016–2019): a retrospective study

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    Background Diarrhea is one of the most common clinical symptoms in cats and can be caused by infectious pathogens and investigation of the prevalence, co-infection and seasonality of enteropathogens are not well-established in diarrheic cats. Results Fecal samples of 1620 diarrheic cats were collected and enteropathogens were detected using real-time PCR. We retrospectively investigated the clinical features, total/seasonal prevalence, and infection patterns of enteropathogens. The positive infection rate was 82.59%. Bacterial, viral, and protozoal infections accounted for 49.3, 37.57, and 13.13% of cases, respectively. Feline enteric coronavirus (FECV) was the most common pathogen (29.37%), followed by Clostridium (C.) perfringens, Campylobacter (C.) coli, feline parvovirus, and Tritrichomonas foetus. The seasonality of enteropathogens was observed with peaks as follows: bacterial infections peaked in October, viral infections peaked in November, and protozoal infections peaked in August. Viral and protozoal infections showed differences in prevalence according to patient age. In the infection patterns, the ratios of single infections, mixed infections, and co-infections were 35.72, 9.87, and 54.41%, respectively. FECV was predominant in single infections. The most common patterns of multiple infections were C. perfringens and C. coli in mixed infections and C. perfringens and FECV in co-infections. Conclusions Infection patterns differed according to the enteropathogen species, seasonality, and age distribution in cats. The results of this study might be helpful to understand in clinical characteristics of feline infectious diarrhea. In addition, continued monitoring of feline enteropathogens is required.This work was supported by the Korea Institute of Planning and Evaluation for Technology in Food, Agriculture, Forestry (IPET) through the Agri-food R&D Performance Follow-up Support Program funded by the Ministry of Agricul‑ture, Food and Rural Afairs (MAFRA) (818013–02-2-WT011)

    Detection of an intermediate during the unfolding process of the dimeric ketosteroid isomerase

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    AbstractFailure to detect the intermediate in spite of its existence often leads to the conclusion that two-state transition in the unfolding process of the protein can be justified. In contrast to the previous equilibrium unfolding experiment fitted to a two-state model by circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopies, an equilibrium unfolding intermediate of a dimeric ketosteroid isomerase (KSI) could be detected by small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) and analytical ultracentrifugation. The sizes of KSI were determined to be 18.7Å in 0M urea, 17.3Å in 5.2M urea, and 25.1Å in 7M urea by SAXS. The size of KSI in 5.2M urea was significantly decreased compared with those in 0M and 7M urea, suggesting the existence of a compact intermediate. Sedimentation velocity as obtained by ultracentrifugation confirmed that KSI in 5.2M urea is distinctly different from native and fully-unfolded forms. The sizes measured by pulse field gradient nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy were consistent with those obtained by SAXS. Discrepancy of equilibrium unfolding studies between size measurement methods and optical spectroscopies might be due to the failure in detecting the intermediate by optical spectroscopic methods. Further characterization of the intermediate using 1H NMR spectroscopy and Kratky plot supported the existence of a partially-folded form of KSI which is distinct from those of native and fully-unfolded KSIs. Taken together, our results suggest that the formation of a compact intermediate should precede the association of monomers prior to the dimerization process during the folding of KSI

    Rebamipide May Be Comparable to H2 Receptor Antagonist in Healing Iatrogenic Gastric Ulcers Created by Endoscopic Mucosal Resection: A Prospective Randomized Pilot Study

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    Endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR) results in the formation of iatrogenic gastric ulcers and the optimal treatments for such ulcers are still unclear. We aimed to evaluate the efficacy of rebamipide in the management of EMR-induced ulcers by comparing it with an H2 receptor antagonist. After EMR, patients were randomly assigned into either rebamipide or famotidine groups. All patients received a one-week lansoprazole 30 mg q.d. therapy followed by three-week famotidine (20 mg b.i.d.) or rebamipide (100 mg t.i.d.) therapy. Four weeks after the treatments, ulcer sizes, stages, bleeding rates, and ulcer-related symptoms were compared using endoscopy and a questionnaire. A total of 63 patients were enrolled in this study. Finally, 51 patients were analyzed, 26 in rebamipide and 25 in famotidine group. Baseline characteristics were not significantly different between the two groups. Four weeks after EMR, the two groups were comparable in terms of ulcer reduction ratio (P=0.297), and ulcer stage (P=1.000). Moreover, no difference was observed with regard to ulcer-related symptoms, drug compliance, adverse drug event rates, and bleeding rates. Our data suggest that rebamipide is not inferior to famotidine in healing iatrogenic gastric ulcers, and could be a therapeutic option in the treatment of such ulcers

    Robust, Conformal ZnO Coatings on Fabrics via Atmospheric-Pressure Spatial Atomic Layer Deposition with In-Situ Thickness Control

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    This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Gurbandurdyyev, G., Mistry, K., Delumeau, L. V., Loke, J. Y., Teoh, C. H., Cheon, J., Ye, F., Tam, K. C., & Musselman, K. P. (2023). Robust, conformal zno coatings on fabrics via atmospheric‐pressure spatial atomic layer deposition with in‐situ thickness control**. ChemNanoMat, 9(2)., which has been published in final form at https://doi.org/10.1002/cnma.202200498. This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with Wiley Terms and Conditions for Use of Self-Archived Versions.Zinc oxide (ZnO) is a promising material for functionalization of textiles. It can add a range of functionalities, including UV protection, antimicrobial activity, flame retardancy, hydrophobicity and electrical conductivity. Commercialization of ZnO – coated textiles is still limited due to the cost and challenges related to their manufacture. Moreover, making robust coatings on textiles and measuring their thickness is also challenging. In this work, atmospheric-pressure spatial atomic layer deposition (AP-SALD) systems are utilized for the first time to coat synthetic spun-bond polypropylene (PP) and natural cotton fabrics with ZnO. The coatings are found to be conformal and uniform, forming complete shells around the fabric fibers. The growth rate is measured to be ~0.24 nm/cycle using an in-situ reflectance setup and Virtual Interface (VI) model, which enable precise control of the coating thickness. The coatings are shown to provide UV-protection and render cotton fabric hydrophobic. No damage is observed after washing, linear abrasion, adhesion, twisting and bending tests, indicating that the coatings are robust. Aerosol-penetration tests indicate the coatings do not impact the filtering efficiency of fabrics used in N95 respirators. The results are encouraging for industrialization of the AP-SALD technique for functional textiles.The polypropylene fabrics were provided by Eclipse Automation. The authors thank Joe Paquette and Rob Shwery at Eclipse Automation for providing helpful information about the polypropylene fabrics. K.P.M. acknowledges funding from NSERC Alliance (ALLRP 554383-20), NSERC Discovery (RGPIN-2017-04212, RGPAS-2017-507977), Canada Foundation for Innovation John R. Evans Leaders Fund (Project 35552), Canada Foundation for Innovation Exceptional Opportunities Fund COVID-19 (Project 41017), and Ontario Ministry of Research, Innovation and Science Low Carbon Innovation Fund (Project Perovskite Photovoltaics)

    CpG Island Methylation in Familial Colorectal Cancer Patients Not Fulfilling the Amsterdam Criteria

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    To determine the role of methylation in colorectal cancer patients with a family history, we enrolled 25 colorectal cancer patients with a family history of colorectal cancer but without a mutation in the hMLH1 and hMSH2 genes. Thirty patients with sporadic colorectal cancer were included as control. The methylation status of COX2, MGMT, hMLH1, TIMP3, p16, and MINT2 in normal mucosa and tumor were assessed using methylation-specific PCR. In patients with a family history, the methylation frequency ranged from 4.0% for TIMP3 to 44.4% for MGMT, whereas, in patients with sporadic colorectal cancer, it ranged from 6.7% for TIMP3 to 50.0% for p16. Nine of the 25 patients with family history (36.0%) were classified as methylation-prone, and nine of the 30 patients with sporadic cancers (30.0%) were as methylation-prone, making their methylation indices 0.19 and 0.16, respectively (p=0.522). As for the individual genes, the methylation rate of MGMT was higher in colorectal cancer patients with family history (44.0% vs. 13.0%, p=0.016), whereas the methylation rate of p16 was higher in sporadic colorectal cancers (50.0% vs. 8.7%, p=0.046). While CpG island methylation of tumor suppressor genes may play a role in colorectal carcinogenesis, the genes involved may be different between tumors of patients with and without a family history of colorectal cancer

    Search for a dark vector gauge boson decaying to π+π\pi^+ \pi^- using ηπ+πγ\eta \rightarrow \pi^+\pi^- \gamma decays

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    We report a search for a dark vector gauge boson UU^\prime that couples to quarks in the decay chain D+D0π+,D0KS0η,ηUγD^{*+} \to D^0 \pi^+, D^0 \to K^0_S \eta, \eta \to U^\prime \gamma, Uπ+πU^\prime \to \pi^+ \pi^-. No signal is found and we set a mass-dependent limit on the baryonic fine structure constant of 10310210^{-3} - 10^{-2} in the UU^\prime mass range of 290 to 520 MeV/c2c^2. This analysis is based on a data sample of 976 fb1^{-1} collected by the Belle experiment at the KEKB asymmetric-energy e+ee^+e^- collider.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure

    Invariant-mass and fractional-energy dependence of inclusive production of di-hadrons in e+ee^+e^- annihilation at s=\sqrt{s}= 10.58 GeV

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    The inclusive cross sections for di-hadrons of charged pions and kaons (e+ehhXe^+e^- \rightarrow hhX) in electron-positron annihilation are reported. They are obtained as a function of the total fractional energy and invariant mass for any di-hadron combination in the same hemisphere as defined by the thrust event-shape variable and its axis. Since same-hemisphere di-hadrons can be assumed to originate predominantly from the same initial parton, di-hadron fragmentation functions are probed. These di-hadron fragmentation functions are needed as an unpolarized baseline in order to quantitatively understand related spin-dependent measurements in other processes and to apply them to the extraction of quark transversity distribution functions in the nucleon. The di-hadron cross sections are obtained from a 655fb1655\,{\rm fb}^{-1} data sample collected at or near the Υ(4S)\Upsilon(4S) resonance with the Belle detector at the KEKB asymmetric-energy e+ee^+ e^- collider.Comment: 21 pages, 18 figures plus 25 figures in supplemental material, submitted to PR

    Search for Λc+ϕpπ0\Lambda_c^+\to\phi p \pi^0 and branching fraction measurement of Λc+Kπ+pπ0\Lambda_c^+\to K^-\pi^+ p \pi^0

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    We have searched for the Cabibbo-suppressed decay Λc+ϕpπ0\Lambda_c^+\to\phi p\pi^0 in e+ee^+e^- collisions using a data sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 915 fb1\rm fb^{-1}. The data were collected by the Belle experiment at the KEKB e+ee^+e^- asymmetric-energy collider running at or near the Υ(4S)\Upsilon(4S) and Υ(5S)\Upsilon(5S) resonances. No significant signal is observed, and we set an upper limit on the branching fraction of B(Λc+ϕpπ0)<15.3×105\mathcal{B}(\Lambda_c^+\to \phi p\pi^0) <15.3\times10^{-5} at 90% confidence level. The contribution for nonresonant Λc+K+Kpπ0\Lambda_c^+\to K^+K^- p\pi^0 decays is found to be consistent with zero and the corresponding upper limit on its branching fraction is set to be B(Λc+K+Kpπ0)NR<6.3×105\mathcal{B}(\Lambda_c^+\to K^+K^-p\pi^0)_{\rm NR} <6.3\times10^{-5} at 90% confidence level. We also measure the branching fraction for the Cabibbo-favored decay Λc+Kπ+pπ0\Lambda_c^+\to K^-\pi^+p\pi^0; the result is B(Λc+Kπ+pπ0)=(4.42±0.05(stat.)±0.12(syst.)±0.16(BNorm))%\mathcal{B}(\Lambda_c^+\to K^-\pi^+p\pi^0)= (4.42\pm0.05\, (\rm stat.) \pm 0.12\, (\rm syst.) \pm 0.16\, (\mathcal{B}_{\rm Norm}))\%, which is the most precise measurement to date. Finally, we have searched for an intermediate hidden-strangeness pentaquark decay Ps+ϕpP^+_s\to\phi p. We see no evidence for this intermediate decay and set an upper limit on the product branching fraction of B(Λc+Ps+π0)×B(Ps+ϕp)<8.3×105{\cal B}(\Lambda_c^+\to P^+_s \pi^0)\times {\cal B}(P^+_s\to\phi p) <8.3\times 10^{-5} at 90% confidence level.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, 1 table, minor text change in version

    Search for D0D^{0} decays to invisible final states at Belle

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    We report the result from the first search for D0D^0 decays to invisible final states. The analysis is performed on a data sample of 924 fb1\rm{fb}^{-1} collected at and near the Υ(4S)\Upsilon(4S) and Υ(5S)\Upsilon(5S) resonances with the Belle detector at the KEKB asymmetric-energy e+ee^{+}e^{-} collider. The absolute branching fraction is determined using an inclusive D0D^0 sample, obtained by fully reconstructing the rest of the particle system including the other charmed particle. No significant signal yield is observed and an upper limit of 9.4×1059.4\times 10^{-5} is set on the branching fraction of D0D^0 to invisible final states at 90\% confidence level.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures, submitted to PRD(RC
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