Publications by authors named "L Mageiros"

Background: Food protein-induced allergic proctocolitis (FPIAP) is the leading cause of rectal bleeding in infants. Tolerance is presumed to develop until the first year of age, although natural history studies are scarce, making the determination of the ideal duration for any intervention, challenging. Intestinal microbiota (IM) is crucial in food allergy development; however, data for FPIAP remain limited.

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Recombination of short DNA fragments via horizontal gene transfer (HGT) can introduce beneficial alleles, create genomic disharmony through negative epistasis, and create adaptive gene combinations through positive epistasis. For non-core (accessory) genes, the negative epistatic cost is likely to be minimal because the incoming genes have not co-evolved with the recipient genome and are frequently observed as tightly linked cassettes with major effects. By contrast, interspecific recombination in the core genome is expected to be rare because disruptive allelic replacement is likely to introduce negative epistasis.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates how the number of allergens a person is sensitized to (monosensitized vs polysensitized) affects the severity and variety of symptoms in patients with allergic rhinitis (AR).
  • - Results show that polysensitized patients reported more symptoms, especially itchy eyes and wheezing, compared to monosensitized patients, indicating that having multiple sensitivities leads to a greater symptom burden.
  • - The research concludes that greater sensitization correlates with a wider range of symptoms and suggests that different levels of sensitization may affect various organs in the body.
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Allergic diseases can be affected by virus-host interactions and are increasingly linked with the tissue-specific microbiome. High-throughput metagenomic sequencing has offered the opportunity to study the presence of viruses as an ecologic system, namely, the virome. Even though virome studies are technically challenging conceptually and analytically, they are already producing novel data expanding our understanding of the pathophysiologic mechanisms related to chronic inflammation and allergy.

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This longitudinal study tests correlations between antimicrobial agents (AA) and corresponding antimicrobial resistance genes (ARGs) generated by a community of >100 k people inhabiting one city (Bath) over a 13 month randomised monitoring programme of community wastewater. Several AAs experienced seasonal fluctuations, such as the macrolides erythromycin and clarithromycin that were found in higher loads in winter, whilst other AA levels, including sulfamethoxazole and sulfapyridine, stayed consistent over the study period. Interestingly, and as opposed to AAs, ARGs prevalence was found to be less variable, which indicates that fluctuations in AA usage might either not directly affect ARG levels or this process spans beyond the 13-month monitoring period.

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