Publications by authors named "Helene Leroy"

Evolutionary radiations provide important insights into species diversification, which is especially true of adaptive radiations. New World wood warblers (Parulidae) are a family of small, insectivorous, forest-dwelling passerine birds, often considered an exemplar of adaptive radiation due to their rapid diversification followed by a slowdown. However, they deviate from the expectations of an adaptive radiation scenario due to the lack of conspicuous morphological and ecological differentiation.

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Body size is an important trait in predator-prey dynamics as it is often linked to detection, as well as the success of capture or escape. Larger prey, for example, often runs higher risk of detection by their predators, which imposes stronger selection on their anti-predator traits compared to smaller prey. Nocturnal Lepidoptera (moths) vary strongly in body size, which has consequences for their predation risk, as bigger moths return stronger echoes for echolocating bats.

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Background: Acute mountain sickness (AMS) is common in high-altitude travellers, and may lead to life-threatening high-altitude cerebral oedema. To better target pre-travel counselling, we aimed to characterize the risk factors for AMS that may be identified prior to departure.

Methods: We performed a descriptive study of high-altitude travellers who consulted at a travel clinic before departure.

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Tuberculosis is one of the infectious diseases that had a huge impact on the health of the populations since the XVIIth century, and this remains true for most of the people in the World in 2012. Its natural story involves: contamination (inhalation of infectious particles, the Pflügge droplets, originating from a patient with bacillary tuberculosis); primary infection (remarkable by initial unresponsiveness of the immune system, followed by strong cellular immunity development within 3 to 9 weeks); latent tuberculosis infection, non-contagious and totally asymptomatic, with efficient control of tuberculosis bacilli replication, lasting for life in more than 90% of cases; and less frequently, tuberculosis disease in patients with insufficient immunity, including children less than 5 years, immunocompromised, and patients recently infected.

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Adult tissues contain highly proliferative, clonogenic cells that meet criteria of multipotent stem cells and are potential sources for autologous reparative and reconstructive medicine. We demonstrated that human dental pulp contains self renewing human dental pulp stem cells (hDPSCs) capable of differentiating into mesenchymal-derived odontoblasts, osteoblasts, adipocytes, and chondrocytes and striated muscle, and interestingly, also into non-mesenchymal melanocytes. Furthermore, we showed that hDPSC cultures include cells with the label-retaining and sphere-forming abilities, traits attributed to multipotent stem cells, and provide evidence that these may be multipotent neural crest stem cells.

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Two copies of a new mariner-like element (MLE) presenting unusual inverted terminal repeats (ITRs), Mcmar1-1 and Mcmar1-2, were cloned and sequenced in the genome of the phytoparasitic nematode Meloidogyne chitwoodi. Although the sequence features of these Mcmar1 transposons are commonplace and link them to the mariner family, at their extremities they have large 355-pb long inverted terminal repeats that are perfectly conserved. This characteristic distinguishes them from all the other MLEs so far described that have imperfectly conserved ITRs of about 26-30 bp.

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