60 research outputs found

    Importance socio-économique du cheptel bovin dans la province du Poni Burkina Faso

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    Le suivi zootechnique réalisé par le CRTA/CIRDES dans la province du Poni repose sur un système d'investigation pluridisciplinaire : "PANURGE". Ce système repose sur un suivi démographique, pondéral et sanitaire d'animaux identifiés individuellement, et des modules d'investigation périphériques. Le CRTA/CIRDES travaille aussi avec l'option "Bovins - Développement". Le présent mémoire propose une analyse du suivi démographique afin d'essayer de déterminer la place socio-économique et le rôle que tient le troupeau chez les éleveurs de la province du Pon

    Methicillin resistance is not a predictor of severity in community-acquired Staphylococcus aureus necrotizing pneumonia—results of a prospective observational study

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    AbstractStaphylococcal necrotizing pneumonia (NP) is a severe disease associated with Panton–Valentine leucocidin (PVL). NP was initially described for methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA) infection, but cases associated with methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) infection have increased concomitantly with the incidence of community-acquired MRSA worldwide. The role of methicillin resistance in the severity of NP remains controversial. The characteristics and outcomes of 133 patients with PVL-positive S. aureus community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) were compared according to methicillin resistance. Data from patients hospitalized for PVL-positive S. aureus CAP in France from 1986 to 2010 were reported to the National Reference Centre for Staphylococci and were included in the study. The primary end point was mortality. Multivariate logistic modelling and the Cox regression were used for subsequent analyses. We analysed 29 cases of PVL-MRSA and 104 cases of PVL-MSSA pneumonia. Airway haemorrhages were more frequently associated with PVL-MSSA pneumonia. However, no differences in the initial severity or the management were found between these two types of pneumonia. The rate of lethality was 39% regardless of methicillin resistance. By Cox regression analysis, methicillin resistance was not found to be a significant independent predictor of mortality at 7 or 30 days (p 0.65 and p 0.71, respectively). Our study demonstrates that methicillin resistance is not associated with the severity of staphylococcal necrotizing pneumonia

    Muscleblind-Like 1 Knockout Mice Reveal Novel Splicing Defects in the Myotonic Dystrophy Brain

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    Myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) is a multi-systemic disorder caused by a CTG trinucleotide repeat expansion (CTGexp) in the DMPK gene. In skeletal muscle, nuclear sequestration of the alternative splicing factor muscleblind-like 1 (MBNL1) explains the majority of the alternative splicing defects observed in the HSALR transgenic mouse model which expresses a pathogenic range CTGexp. In the present study, we addressed the possibility that MBNL1 sequestration by CUGexp RNA also contributes to splicing defects in the mammalian brain. We examined RNA from the brains of homozygous Mbnl1ΔE3/ΔE3 knockout mice using splicing-sensitive microarrays. We used RT-PCR to validate a subset of alternative cassette exons identified by microarray analysis with brain tissues from Mbnl1ΔE3/ΔE3 knockout mice and post-mortem DM1 patients. Surprisingly, splicing-sensitive microarray analysis of Mbnl1ΔE3/ΔE3 brains yielded only 14 candidates for mis-spliced exons. While we confirmed that several of these splicing events are perturbed in both Mbnl1 knockout and DM1 brains, the extent of splicing mis-regulation in the mouse model was significantly less than observed in DM1. Additionally, several alternative exons, including Grin1 exon 4, App exon 7 and Mapt exons 3 and 9, which have previously been reported to be aberrantly spliced in human DM1 brain, were spliced normally in the Mbnl1 knockout brain. The sequestration of MBNL1 by CUGexp RNA results in some of the aberrant splicing events in the DM1 brain. However, we conclude that other factors, possibly other MBNL proteins, likely contribute to splicing mis-regulation in the DM1 brain

    Systematic and Evolutionary Insights Derived from mtDNA COI Barcode Diversity in the Decapoda (Crustacea: Malacostraca)

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    Background: Decapods are the most recognizable of all crustaceans and comprise a dominant group of benthic invertebrates of the continental shelf and slope, including many species of economic importance. Of the 17635 morphologically described Decapoda species, only 5.4% are represented by COI barcode region sequences. It therefore remains a challenge to compile regional databases that identify and analyse the extent and patterns of decapod diversity throughout the world. Methodology/Principal Findings: We contributed 101 decapod species from the North East Atlantic, the Gulf of Cadiz and the Mediterranean Sea, of which 81 species represent novel COI records. Within the newly-generated dataset, 3.6% of the species barcodes conflicted with the assigned morphological taxonomic identification, highlighting both the apparent taxonomic ambiguity among certain groups, and the need for an accelerated and independent taxonomic approach. Using the combined COI barcode projects from the Barcode of Life Database, we provide the most comprehensive COI data set so far examined for the Order (1572 sequences of 528 species, 213 genera, and 67 families). Patterns within families show a general predicted molecular hierarchy, but the scale of divergence at each taxonomic level appears to vary extensively between families. The range values of mean K2P distance observed were: within species 0.285% to 1.375%, within genus 6.376% to 20.924% and within family 11.392% to 25.617%. Nucleotide composition varied greatly across decapods, ranging from 30.8 % to 49.4 % GC content. Conclusions/Significance: Decapod biological diversity was quantified by identifying putative cryptic species allowing a rapid assessment of taxon diversity in groups that have until now received limited morphological and systematic examination. We highlight taxonomic groups or species with unusual nucleotide composition or evolutionary rates. Such data are relevant to strategies for conservation of existing decapod biodiversity, as well as elucidating the mechanisms and constraints shaping the patterns observed.FCT - SFRH/BD/25568/ 2006EC FP6 - GOCE-CT-2005-511234 HERMESFCT - PTDC/MAR/69892/2006 LusomarBo

    Hydrogen superstructures on Co nanoislands and Cu(1 1 1)

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    Surface structures and related electronic properties of flat Co nanoislands supported on Cu(1 1 1) are studied before and after adsorbing different doses of molecular hydrogen at 10 K by low-temperature scanning tunneling microscopy/spectroscopy (STM/STS) at 5 K. It is found that the adsorption process on Co consists in two steps. First, H2 dissociatively chemisorbs on Co forming an atomic H adlayer. Subsequently, molecules impinging on that H-terminated Co surface are physisorbed. When adsorbing a low dose of hydrogen on the Co/Cu(1 1 1) system, STM analysis shows that the chemisorbed hydrogen adlayer on Co forms a p(2 × 2) superstructure. On Cu surface however, no superstructure is observed. When adsorbing a high dose of H2, hydrogen-induced superstructures are observed on both Co and Cu surfaces. These superstructures are ascribed to the presence of physisorbed molecules as revealed by the STS spectra. A (3 × 3) superstructure is observed on Co and a mixture of (2 × 2) and (3 × 3) is identified on Cu. A model describing the adsorption sites of molecules is proposed: H2 molecules occupy on-top sites when arranged as a (2 × 2) phase and they occupy on-top and bridge sites when arranged as a (3 × 3) phase. Besides, STM-induced desorption is used to desorb atomic hydrogen from selected Co nanoisland surface. The desorption is visualized in terms of a disappearance of the p(2 × 2) superstructure
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