Publications by authors named "J I Luengo"

Testosterone holds significant medical and economic importance, with the global market for testosterone replacement therapies valued at approximately USD 1.9 billion in 2023. This hormone is essential for the development and maintenance of male sexual characteristics as well as bone and muscle health.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Strain U can utilize biogenic amines like putrescine and cadaverine, along with their breakdown products (ɣ-aminobutyrate and δ-aminovalerate), as its only carbon sources.
  • - Several gene paralogs have been identified in strain U that are responsible for catabolizing these compounds, including those encoding putrescine-pyruvate and ɣ-aminobutyrate aminotransferases.
  • - Gene expression levels vary significantly based on the carbon source; putrescine upregulates certain genes while cadaverine triggers others, highlighting distinct mechanisms for polyamine metabolism in strain U.
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The study of the catabolic potential of microbial species isolated from different habitats has allowed the identification and characterization of bacteria able to assimilate bile acids and/or other steroids (e.g., testosterone and 4-androsten-3,17-dione) under aerobic conditions through the 9,10-seco pathway.

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Interest about the isolation and characterization of steroid-catabolizing bacteria has increased over time due to the massive release of these recalcitrant compounds and their deleterious effects or their biotransformation derivatives as endocrine disruptors for wildlife, as well as their potential use in biotechnological approaches for the synthesis of pharmacological compounds. Thus, in this chapter, an isolation protocol to select environmental bacteria able to degrade sterols, bile acids, and androgens is shown. Moreover, procedures for the determination of cholesterol oxidase or different hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activities in Pseudomonas putida DOC21, Rhodococcus sp.

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The aim of this study was to describe the initial oral microbiota and how delivery mode and feeding practices impact its diversity in 0-2-month-old infants. This was a cross-sectional study that consisted of one collection of saliva samples from 0-2-month infants at baseline. Ten pairs of mothers and infants were selected.

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