Publications by authors named "Raul E Gonzalez-Ittig"

Article Synopsis
  • - The evolutionary history and distribution of the Córdoba vesper mouse (Calomys venustus) in southern South America have not been thoroughly researched, particularly in regard to Quaternary climatic changes and their impact on genetic variation.
  • - This study used mitochondrial DNA sequencing and ecological niche modeling to investigate the phylogeography and potential distribution of C. venustus, revealing that the Espinal region was likely its area of origin that expanded during the last glacial period.
  • - Findings indicate a strong connection between the Espinal and the Mountain Chaco, supporting the idea that the Espinal has significant biogeographic importance in the region's evolutionary history.
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Background: Caries is a worldwide distributed oral disease of multifactorial nature, with Streptococcus mutans being the most commonly isolated bacterial agent. The glycosyltransferases of this bacterium would play an essential role in the aetiology and pathogenesis of caries.

Aim: We explored how the glucosyltransferase-B (gtf-B) gene variability of S.

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Since the identification of Junin virus in the 1950s, many studies were carried out in wild rodents within the endemic area of the Argentine Hemorrhagic Fever (AHF) that recorded also the activity of the lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) and the Latino virus (LATV). The absence of confirmed cases of AHF since the 1990s in the department of Rio Cuarto, Córdoba province, promoted ecoepidemiological surveillance of infection of Calomys musculinus (Junin virus reservoir) and the search of reservoirs of the other mammarenaviruses. During two years of seasonal sampling, with a capture, mark and release system, 857 rodents were captured, corresponding 57.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the population genetics and phylogeography of the Triatoma dimidiata species in Chiapas, Mexico, focusing on genetic diversity related to environmental and infection factors.
  • It finds that higher levels of human modification correlate with lower genetic diversity and higher rates of Trypanosoma cruzi infections in certain haplogroups.
  • The research also indicates significant genetic differentiation among haplogroups, provides estimates of their divergence times, and supports the notion that their origin is linked to the Tehuantepec Isthmus.
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Background: The Lutzomyia longipalpis complex has a wide but discontinuous distribution in Latin America, extending throughout the Neotropical realm between Mexico and northern Argentina and Uruguay. In the Americas, this sandfly is the main vector of Leishmania infantum, the parasite responsible for Visceral Leishmaniasis (VL). The Lu.

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The disjunct distribution of the harvestman Discocyrtus dilatatus (Opiliones, Gonyleptidae) is used as a case study to test the hypothesis of a trans-Chaco Pleistocene paleobridge during range expansion stages. This would have temporarily connected humid regions ('Mesopotamia' in northeastern Argentina, and the 'Yungas' in the northwest, NWA) in the subtropical and temperate South American lowlands. The present study combines two independent approaches: paleodistributional reconstruction, using the Species Distribution Modeling method MaxEnt and projection onto Quaternary paleoclimates (6 kya, 21 kya, 130 kya), and phylogeographic analyses based on the cytochrome oxidase subunit I molecular marker.

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In recent years, the notion of co-speciation between Hantavirus species and their hosts was discarded in favour of a more likely explanation: preferential host switching. However, the relative importance of this last process in shaping the evolutionary history of hantaviruses remains uncertain, given the present limited knowledge not only of virus-host relationships but also of the pathogen and reservoir phylogenies. In South America, more than 25 hantavirus genotypes were detected; several of them act as aetiological agents of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS).

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Purpose: This study's purpose was to investigate the transmission and genetic identity of Streptococcus mutans strains in mother-child pairs from Cordoba, Argentina in order to establish whether the mother was the main source of infection of the child.

Methods: Seventeen mother-child pairs were analyzed, with samples taken of whole nonstimulated saliva and dental plaque when each child was 18 months old. The mothers gave their written, informed consent to participate in the study.

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The rodent Oligoryzomys longicaudatus or long-tailed pygmy rice rat is the reservoir of the aetiological agent of the hantavirus pulmonary syndrome in southern Argentina and Chile. We characterize 11 polymorphic microsatellite loci which would be useful for studies on microgeographical population structure in the species. Amplification of these loci in 42 individuals from four natural populations revealed four to 21 alleles per locus, and values of observed heterozygosities ranging from 0.

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In a previous phylogeographic study of the rodent Calomys musculinus, 24 haplotypes of the mitochondrial DNA D-loop region were detected using the restriction fragment length polymorphism technique (PCR-RFLP). Seven percent of the individuals showed patterns in which the sum of the sizes of the restriction fragments exceeded the size of the original PCR product. In the present paper we analyze possible causes of these atypical haplotypes.

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In order to contribute to knowledge of colonization patterns in the rodent Calomys musculinus, a natural reservoir of the virus producing Argentine hemorrhagic fever (AHF), we studied the haplotype diversity of the mitochondrial DNA D-loop region in five natural populations from central Argentina. Digestion with eight restriction enzymes (RsaI, MseI, Tsp509I, AluI, AciI, HaeIII, NlaIII, and AseI) revealed polymorphism in the 1300 bp fragment amplified by PCR. Twenty different composite haplotypes were detected.

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