The widespread use of nanoparticles raises substantial environmental, health, and safety issues. The specific mechanisms by which they impact plants and animals, as well as the entire scope of their possible impact, are still unknown. The current work investigates the impact of varying CuO NPs concentrations on phytotoxicity, cytotoxicity, genotoxicity, and antioxidant activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCultured milk products including yogurt, buttermilk, and lassi have made their way into South Asian cuisine for hundreds of years and are extraordinarily beneficial to human health. With a study background on lactic acid bacteria (LAB), these products are scientifically proved to aid in strengthening the immune system, for their anti-mutagenic effects, suitability for those who are lactose intolerant, and for protection against cancer, osteoporosis, and gut disorders. As of now, no scientific attention has been given to the microbial diversity of cultured milk products despite its prominent production and importance in the culture.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe development of innovative wound dressing materials is crucial for effective wound care. It's an active area of research driven by a better understanding of chronic wound pathogenesis. Addressing wound care properly is a clinical challenge, but there is a growing demand for advancements in this field.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF: Patients with first-line drug resistance (DR) to rifampicin (RIF) or isoniazid (INH) as a first-line (FL) line probe assay (LPA) were subjected to genotypic DST using second-line (SL) LPA to identify SL-DR (including pre-XDR) under the National TB Elimination Program (NTEP), India. SL-DR patients were initiated on different DR-TB treatment regimens and monitored for their outcomes. The objective of this retrospective analysis was to understand the mutation profile and treatment outcomes of SL-DR patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdipocyte function is a major determinant of metabolic disease, warranting investigations of regulating mechanisms. We show at single-cell resolution that progenitor cells from four human brown and white adipose depots separate into two main cell fates, an adipogenic and a structural branch, developing from a common progenitor. The adipogenic gene signature contains mitochondrial activity genes, and associates with genome-wide association study traits for fat distribution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the most common cause of acute lower respiratory infection in young children. We previously estimated that in 2015, 33·1 million episodes of RSV-associated acute lower respiratory infection occurred in children aged 0-60 months, resulting in a total of 118 200 deaths worldwide. Since then, several community surveillance studies have been done to obtain a more precise estimation of RSV associated community deaths.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Tuberc Lung Dis
May 2022
Early diagnosis of drug-resistant TB (DR-TB) is crucial in preventing the spread of the disease in the community. Introduction of upfront decentralised drug susceptibility testing to district-level as part of universal drug susceptibility testing (UDST) policy increased the feasibility of rapid and early testing for drug resistance closer to the patient and has resulted in reduced circumstances for transmission. The introduction of the first-line line-probe assay (FL-LPA), GenoType MTBDR v2, has had an extensive impact on the management of multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) in India.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Acute respiratory infections (ARI) are the most common illnesses affecting people of all ages worldwide. Viruses contribute to 30-70% of acute respiratory infections. Identification of these respiratory viruses is not given high priority except influenza; however, the knowledge about prevalence of non-influenza viruses, their seasonal pattern and genetic evolution have significant epidemiological value.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImmune tolerance to allografts has been pursued for decades as an important goal in transplantation. Administration of apoptotic donor splenocytes effectively induces antigen-specific tolerance to allografts in murine studies. Here we show that two peritransplant infusions of apoptotic donor leukocytes under short-term immunotherapy with antagonistic anti-CD40 antibody 2C10R4, rapamycin, soluble tumor necrosis factor receptor and anti-interleukin 6 receptor antibody induce long-term (≥1 year) tolerance to islet allografts in 5 of 5 nonsensitized, MHC class I-disparate, and one MHC class II DRB allele-matched rhesus macaques.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnterococcus faecalis is a common commensal bacterium in animal gastrointestinal (GI) tracts and a leading cause of opportunistic infections of humans in the modern health care setting. E. faecalis OG1RF is a plasmid-free strain that contains few mobile elements yet retains the robust survival characteristics, intrinsic antibiotic resistance, and virulence traits characteristic of most E.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSite specific recombinases are invaluable tools in molecular biology, and are emerging as powerful recorders of cellular events in synthetic biology. We have developed a stringently controlled FLP recombinase system in Escherichia coli using an arabinose inducible promoter combined with a weak ribosome binding site.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTransposon mutagenesis, in combination with parallel sequencing, is becoming a powerful tool for en-masse mutant analysis. A probability generating function was used to explain observed miniHimar transposon insertion patterns, and gene essentiality calls were made by transposon insertion frequency analysis (TIFA). TIFA incorporated the observed genome and sequence motif bias of the miniHimar transposon.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe biosynthesis of wax esters in bacteria is accomplished by a unique pathway that combines a fatty alcohol and a fatty acyl coenzyme A substrate. Previous in vitro enzymatic studies indicated that two different enzymes could be involved in the synthesis of the required fatty alcohol in Marinobacter aquaeolei VT8. In this study, we demonstrate through a series of gene deletions and transcriptional analysis that either enzyme is capable of fulfilling the role of providing the fatty alcohol required for wax ester biosynthesis in vivo, but evolution has clearly selected one of these, a previously characterized fatty aldehyde reductase, as the preferred enzyme to perform this reaction under typical wax ester-accumulating conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhen p-dinitrobenzene is reacted with Et(3)B in t-BuOH or THF in the presence of t-BuOK, it yields p-nitroethylbenzene. In this report we examine the scope of this transformation by monitoring the effect of various parameters on the reaction. It has been found that the reaction is extremely sensitive to temperature and rather insensitive to the base-solvent combination used.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe six-membered ring of the norbornene moiety in the title compound, C(18)H(18)N(4)O(4), is in a slightly distorted boat conformation, and the two five-membered rings within it adopt envelope conformations. The structure is stabilized by inter- and intramolecular N[bond]H..
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