Publications by authors named "E Loire"

Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to improve detection methods for carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales (CPE) in rectal swabs at a provincial children's hospital in northern Vietnam, focusing on a context with limited resources.* -
  • A total of 376 rectal swab samples were analyzed, confirming that 84.3% of Enterobacterales isolates were resistant to meropenem and/or ertapenem, with NDM being the most prevalent carbapenemase.* -
  • The results highlighted that meropenem resistance is a reliable indicator of carbapenemase production, and the carbapenem inactivation method (CIM) was effective in identifying these resistant bacteria even in resource-constrained settings.*
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Mosquitoes harbor a large diversity of eukaryotic viruses. Those viromes probably influence mosquito physiology and the transmission of human pathogens. Nevertheless, their ecology remains largely unstudied.

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Vaccination is the most cost-effective tool to control contagious bovine pleuropneumonia. The vaccines currently used in Africa are derived from a live strain called T1, which was attenuated by passage in embryonated eggs and broth culture. The number of passages is directly correlated to the degree of attenuation of the vaccinal strains and inversely correlated to their immunogenicity in cattle.

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Our knowledge of the diversity of eukaryotic viruses has recently undergone a massive expansion. This diversity could influence host physiology through yet unknown phenomena of potential interest to the fields of health and food production. However, the assembly processes of this diversity remain elusive in the eukaryotic viromes of terrestrial animals.

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Sustained autocatalysis coupled to compartment growth and division is a key step in the origin of life, but an experimental demonstration of this phenomenon in an artificial system has previously proven elusive. We show that autocatalytic reactions within compartments-when autocatalysis, and reactant and solvent exchange outpace product exchange-drive osmosis and diffusion, resulting in compartment growth. We demonstrate, using the formose reaction compartmentalized in aqueous droplets in an emulsion, that compartment volume can more than double.

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