Publications by authors named "Cindy Morris"

Lung tumor-promoting environmental exposures and γherpesvirus infections are associated with Type 17 inflammation. To test the effect of γherpesvirus infection in promoting lung tumorigenesis, we infected mutant K-Ras-expressing (K-Ras) mice with the murine γherpesvirus MHV68 via oropharyngeal aspiration. After 7 weeks, the infected mice displayed a more than 2-fold increase in lung tumors relative to their K-Ras uninfected littermates.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Relatively few phages that infect plant pathogens have been isolated and investigated. The species complex is present in various environments, including plants. It can cause major crop diseases, such as bacterial canker on apricot trees.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Bacteria from the complex (comprised of at least 15 recognized species and more than 60 different pathovars of ) have been cultured from clouds, rain, snow, streams, rivers, and lakes. Some strains of express an ice nucleation protein (hereafter referred to as ice+) that catalyzes the heterogeneous freezing of water. Though has been sampled intensively from freshwater sources in the U.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Alfalfa growers in the Intermountain West of the United States have recently seen an increased incidence in bacterial stem blight (BSB), which can result in significant herbage yield losses from the first harvest. BSB has been attributed to pv and ; however, little is known about the genetic diversity and pathogenicity of these bacteria or their interaction with alfalfa plants. Here, we present a comprehensive phylogenetic and phenotypic analysis of and strains causing BSB on alfalfa.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Pseudomonas syringae is a bacterial complex that is widespread through a range of environments, typically associated with plants where it can be pathogenic, but also found in non-plant environments such as clouds, precipitation, and surface waters. Understanding its distribution within the environment, and the habitats it occupies, is important for examining its evolution and understanding behaviours. After a recent study found P.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Pseudomonas spp. colonize diverse aquatic and terrestrial habitats and produce a wide variety of secondary metabolites, including lipopeptides. However, previous studies have often examined a limited number of lipopeptide-producing strains.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: This is the first multisite investigation of the validity of scores from the current version of the Medical College Admission Test (MCAT) in clerkship and licensure contexts. It examined the predictive validity of MCAT scores and undergraduate grade point averages (UGPAs) for performance in preclerkship and clerkship courses and on the United States Medical Licensing Examination Step 1 and Step 2 Clinical Knowledge examinations. It also studied students' progress in medical school.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Here we report, for the first time, the occurrence of the bacteria from the species complex in Iceland. We isolated this bacterium from 35 of the 38 samples of angiosperms, moss, ferns and leaf litter collected across the island from five habitat categories (boreal heath, forest, subalpine and glacial scrub, grazed pasture, lava field). The culturable populations of on these plants varied in size across 6 orders of magnitude, were as dense as 10 cfu g and were composed of strains in phylogroups 1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 10 and 13.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is a highly aggressive form of breast cancer. Due to its heterogeneity and lack of hormone receptor expression, this subtype is more likely to metastasize and resist treatment attempts than are other forms of breast cancer. Due to the absence of targetable receptors, chemotherapy and breast conserving surgery have been the predominant treatment options for patients.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Previous studies have identified regions where the occurrence of rainfall significantly increases or decreases the probability for subsequent rainfall over periods that range from a few days to several weeks. These observable phenomena are termed "rainfall feedback" (RF). To better understand the land-atmosphere interactions involved in RF, the behavior of RF patterns was analyzed using data from 1849 to 2016 at ~3000 sites in the contiguous United States.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is a near ubiquitous herpesvirus that relies on host cell metabolism for efficient replication. Although it has been shown that HCMV requires functional host cell mitochondria for efficient replication, it is unknown whether mitochondrial targeted pharmacological agents can be repurposed as antivirals. Here we report that treatment with drugs targeting the electron transport chain (ETC) complexes inhibit HCMV replication.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The collection and analysis of air samples for the study of microbial airborne communities or the detection of airborne pathogens is one of the few insights that we can grasp of a continuously moving flux of microorganisms from their sources to their sinks through the atmosphere. For large-scale studies, a comprehensive sampling of the atmosphere is beyond the scopes of any reasonable experimental setting, making the choice of the sampling locations and dates a key factor for the representativeness of the collected data. In this work we present a new method for revealing the main patterns of air-mass connectivity over a large geographical area using the formalism of spatio-temporal networks, that are particularly suitable for representing complex patterns of connection.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Tobacco use is projected to kill 1 billion people in the 21st century. Tobacco Use Disorder (TUD) is one of the most common substance use disorders in the world. Evidence-based treatment of TUD is effective, but treatment accessibility remains very low.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

are ubiquitous epiphytic plant pathogens infecting a wide range of important agricultural plant species. Bacteriophages has been proposed as biocontrol agents against plant pathogens, however, in order to utilize this approach, a deeper understanding of phage diversity and phage-host interactions is required. Phages targeting GAW0113 were isolated from organic waste samples.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: In spite of a projected shortage of physicians in the USA, the relatively long time and duration of training and high expense, the education of U.S. physicians has changed little over the past 120 years.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We have recently argued that, because microbes have pervasive - often vital - influences on our lives, and that therefore their roles must be taken into account in many of the decisions we face, society must become microbiology-literate, through the introduction of relevant microbiology topics in school curricula (Timmis et al. 2019. Environ Microbiol 21: 1513-1528).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is a prevalent herpesvirus that can cause severe health issues, especially in immunocompromised individuals and during pregnancy, leading to birth defects.
  • Research shows that HCMV infection alters host cell metabolism, increasing both glycolysis and oxidative phosphorylation, while significantly affecting mitochondrial function and structure.
  • The study highlights the importance of mitochondrial DNA in HCMV replication, suggesting that targeting host mitochondria could be a potential therapeutic strategy since current treatments are limited and face challenges like side effects and viral resistance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Strategies to manage plant disease-from use of resistant varieties to crop rotation, elimination of reservoirs, landscape planning, surveillance, quarantine, risk modeling, and anticipation of disease emergences-all rely on knowledge of pathogen host range. However, awareness of the multitude of factors that influence the outcome of plant-microorganism interactions, the spatial and temporal dynamics of these factors, and the diversity of any given pathogen makes it increasingly challenging to define simple, all-purpose rules to circumscribe the host range of a pathogen. For bacteria, fungi, oomycetes, and viruses, we illustrate that host range is often an overlapping continuum-more so than the separation of discrete pathotypes-and that host jumps are common.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Pseudomonas syringae causes significant diseases in fruit trees, particularly apricot bacterial canker, which is hard to control due to limited preventive measures and unclear genetic resistance patterns.
  • Researchers conducted a four-year study on 73 apricot accessions, measuring their susceptibility to canker through artificial inoculations and employing genome-wide association study methods to analyze genetic factors linked to resistance.
  • The study identified 11 significant associations across 7 key loci, highlighting two major loci on chromosomes 5 and 6 that explain a large portion of the phenotypic variance, suggesting co-adaptive genetic strategies in response to environmental selection pressures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Investigations into life history of microorganisms that cause plant diseases have been limited mostly to contexts where they are in interaction with plants, and with cropped or otherwise managed vegetation. Therefore, knowledge about the diversity of plant pathogens, about potential reservoirs of inoculum and about the processes that contribute to their survival and adaptation is limited to these contexts. The agro-centric perspective of plant pathogen life histories is incoherent with respect to the capacity of many of them to persist as saprophytes on various substrates.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Many phytopathogenic fungi are disseminated as spores via the atmosphere from short to long distances. The distance of dissemination determines the extent to which plant diseases can spread and novel genotypes of pathogens can invade new territories. Predictive tools including models that forecast the arrival of spores in areas where susceptible crops are grown can help to more efficiently manage crop health.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Many microbes relevant to crops, domestic animals, and humans are transported over long distances through the atmosphere. Some of these atmospheric microbes catalyze the freezing of water at higher temperatures and facilitate the onset of precipitation. We collected microbes from the lower atmosphere in France and the United States with a small unmanned aircraft system (sUAS).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The structure of pathogen populations is an important driver of epidemics affecting crops and natural plant communities. Comparing the composition of two pathogen populations consisting of assemblages of genotypes or phenotypes is a crucial, recurrent question encountered in many studies in plant disease epidemiology. Determining whether there is a significant difference between two sets of proportions is also a generic question for numerous biological fields.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF