Publications by authors named "L L E Oon"

Background And Objectives: The most common cause of severe foodborne salmonellosis is Typhimurium. Its interaction with intestinal epithelial cells is little known. Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) were recognized as a prominent probiotic gastrointestinal microbiota of humans and animals that confer health-promoting and protective effects.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates three unusual isolates of the fungal pathogen Candida auris found in Singapore, aiming to determine if they represent a new and distinct clade from the known clades (I-V).
  • Through whole-genome sequencing and antifungal susceptibility testing, researchers found that the isolates were genetically separated from existing clades by a significant number of single nucleotide polymorphisms and had unique genetic characteristics.
  • The findings suggest these isolates are a novel clade, referred to as clade VI, highlighting an emerging public health concern due to their resistance patterns and potential for increased transmission.
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Regenerative capabilities of the endothelium rely on vessel-resident progenitors termed endothelial colony forming cells (ECFCs). This study aimed to investigate if these progenitors are impacted by conditions (i.e.

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Recent advancement in biophotovoltaic systems using microalgae, coupled with biorefinery approach, would improve economy-feasibility in production. The major concern is its commercial strength in terms of scalability, strain selection and extraction procedure cost. It must compete with conventional feedstocks such as fossil fuels.

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Introduction: Kidney transplant recipients (KTRs) suffer from immunosuppression-related adverse events (iRAEs), such as infections and malignancy from chronic immunosuppression, but are also at risk of graft loss from rejection with underimmunosuppression. Biomarkers that predict both iRAEs and rejection while allowing individualisation of immunosuppression exposure are lacking. Although plasma viral DNA levels of torque teno virus (TTV), a widely prevalent, non-pathogenic virus, have been shown to predict both iRAE and rejection in newly transplanted KTRs within the first year after transplant, its role for prevalent KTRs on stable immunosuppression is less clear.

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