Publications by authors named "Read T"

The overall goal of this work was to assess the ability of Natural Killer cells to kill cultures of patient-derived glioblastoma cells. Herein we report impressive levels of NK-92 mediated killing of various patient-derived glioblastoma cultures observed at ET (effector: target) ratios of 5:1 and 1:1. This enabled direct comparison of the degree of glioblastoma cell loss across a broader range of glioblastoma cultures.

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Whole genome sequencing (WGS) is pivotal for the molecular characterization of ()-the leading bacterial cause of sexually transmitted infections and infectious blindness worldwide. WGS can inform epidemiologic, public health and outbreak investigations of these human-restricted pathogens. However, challenges persist in generating high-quality genomes for downstream analyses given its obligate intracellular nature and difficulty with propagation.

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Chronic bacterial infections are often polymicrobial, comprising multiple bacterial species or variants of the same species. Because chronic infections may last for decades, they have the potential to generate high levels of intraspecific variation through within-host diversification over time, and the potential for superinfections to occur through the introduction of multiple pathogen populations to the ongoing infection. Traditional methods for identifying infective agents generally involve isolating one single colony from a given sample, usually after selecting for a specific pathogen or antibiotic resistance profile.

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Coastal cities face significant challenges from plastic pollution, with most plastics being resistant to biodegradation. Biodegradable plastics are increasingly used to address this issue, particularly for items prone to entering, and then accumulating, in waterways, through littering or leakage. Among biodegradable plastics, polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs) are notable as bioderived, bacterially synthesised aliphatic polyesters that are readily biodegradable in varied environments.

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AbstractHost organisms can harbor microbial symbionts that defend them from pathogen infection in addition to the resistance encoded by the host genome. Here, we investigated how variation in defenses, generated from host genetic background and symbiont presence, affects the emergence of pathogen genetic diversity across evolutionary time. We passaged the opportunistic pathogen through populations of the nematode varying in genetic-based defenses and prevalence of a protective symbiont.

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Widespread antibiotic usage has resulted in the rapid evolution of drug-resistant bacterial pathogens and poses significant threats to public health. Resolving how pathogens respond to antibiotics under different contexts is critical for understanding disease emergence and evolution going forward. The impact of antibiotics has been demonstrated most directly through pathogen passaging experiments.

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Benign multicystic peritoneal mesothelioma (BMPM) is a rare condition, in which patients have multiple cystic lesions of the peritoneum. BMPM can mimic mucinous carcinomatosis and can thus create a diagnostic dilemma. We present the case of a 76-year-old woman who was referred for management of ascending colon adenocarcinoma and was noted to have several nonspecific cystic lesions in the abdomen and pelvis on preoperative computed tomography and diagnostic laparoscopy.

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Background: Tracking the spread of antibiotic resistant bacteria is critical to reduce global morbidity and mortality associated with human and animal infections. There is a need to understand the role that wild animals in maintenance and transfer of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs).

Methods: This study used metagenomics to identify and compare the abundance of bacterial species and ARGs detected in the gut microbiomes from sympatric humans and wild mouse lemurs in a forest-dominated, roadless region of Madagascar near Ranomafana National Park.

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Background: The obligate intracellular bacterial family Chlamydiaceae comprises a number of different species that cause disease in various vertebrate hosts including humans. Chlamydia suis, primarily found in the gastrointestinal tract of pigs, is the only species of the Chlamydiaceae family to have naturally gained tetracycline resistance (TetR), through a genomic island (Tet-island), integrated into the middle of chromosomal invasin-like gene inv. Previous studies have hypothesised that the uptake of the Tet-island from a host outside the Chlamydiaceae family was a unique event, followed by spread among C.

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Profilin is an actin monomer-binding protein whose role in actin polymerization has been studied for nearly 50 years. While its principal biochemical features are now well understood, many questions remain about how profilin controls diverse processes within the cell. Dysregulation of profilin has been implicated in a broad range of human diseases, including neurodegeneration, inflammatory disorders, cardiac disease, and cancer.

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The monomer-binding protein profilin 1 (PFN1) plays a crucial role in actin polymerization. However, mutations in PFN1 are also linked to hereditary amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, resulting in a broad range of cellular pathologies which cannot be explained by its primary function as a cytosolic actin assembly factor. This implies that there are important, undiscovered roles for PFN1 in cellular physiology.

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Unlabelled: causes both hospital- and community-acquired infections in humans worldwide. Due to the high incidence of infection, is also one of the most sampled and sequenced pathogens today, providing an outstanding resource to understand variation at the bacterial subspecies level. We processed and downsampled 83,383 public Illumina whole-genome shotgun sequences and 1,263 complete genomes to produce 7,954 representative substrains.

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Angiogenesis plays a vital role for postnatal development and tissue repair following ischemia. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated by NADPH oxidases (NOXes) and mitochondria act as signaling molecules that promote angiogenesis in endothelial cells (ECs) which mainly relies on aerobic glycolysis for ATP production. However, the connections linking redox signaling with glycolysis are not well understood.

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The metabolic intimacy of symbiosis often demands the work of specialists. Natural products and defensive secondary metabolites can drive specificity by ensuring infection and propagation across host generations. But in contrast to bacteria, little is known about the diversity and distribution of natural product biosynthetic pathways among fungi and how they evolve to facilitate symbiosis and adaptation to their host environment.

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We present a novel four-channel optically pumped magnetometer (OPM) for magnetoencephalography that utilizes a two-color pump/probe scheme on a single optical axis. We characterize its performance across 18 built sensor modules. The new sensor implements several improvements over our previously developed sensor including lower vapor-cell operating temperature, improved probe-light detection optics, and reduced optical power requirements.

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is a common cause of skin and soft-tissue infections (SSTIs) and has become the most common cause of bloodstream infections (BSIs) in recent years, but whether the strains causing these two clinical syndromes overlap has not been studied adequately. USA300/500 (clonal complex [CC] 8-sequence type [ST] 8) and USA100 (CC5-ST5) have dominated among methicillin-resistant (MRSA) strains in the United States since the early 2000s. We compared the genomes of unselected MRSA isolates from 131 SSTIs with those from 145 BSIs at a single US center in overlapping periods in 2018-2021.

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Article Synopsis
  • Profilin 1 (PFN1) plays a crucial role in both actin assembly and microtubule growth, but its primary mechanism of influencing microtubules—either directly by regulating tubulin or indirectly through actin polymerization—remains unclear.
  • By adjusting PFN1 levels, actin filament formation, and actomyosin function, researchers found that reducing these elements led to adaptive changes in the microtubule cytoskeleton, especially in neuronal cells.
  • Importantly, these microtubule alterations were reversible with the restoration of actomyosin, suggesting PFN1 mainly regulates microtubules through actin, and that disturbances in actin may result in significant functional changes in other
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The persistence of conventional fossil fuel-derived plastics in marine ecosystems has raised significant environmental concerns. Biodegradable plastics are being explored as an alternative. This study investigates the biodegradation behaviour in two marine environments of melt-extruded sheets of poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-3-hydroxyvalerate) (PHBV) bioplastic as well as blends of PHBV with a non-toxic plasticiser (triethyl citrate, TEC) and composites of PHBV with wood flour.

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Unlabelled: The continued emergence of strains that express resistance to multiple antibiotics, including the last drug for empiric monotherapy (ceftriaxone), necessitates the development of new treatment options to cure gonorrheal infections. Toward this goal, we recently reported that corallopyronin A (CorA), which targets the switch region of the β' subunit (RpoC) of bacterial DNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RNAP), has potent anti-gonococcal activity against a panel of multidrug-resistant clinical strains. Moreover, in that study, CorA could eliminate gonococcal infection of primary human epithelial cells and gonococci in a biofilm state.

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Article Synopsis
  • A study investigated the impact of multidrug-resistant organisms (MDRO) and similar antibiotic-susceptible organisms (CSO) on kidney transplant patients in the early post-transplant period (within 30 days of surgery).
  • Out of 3507 renal transplant recipients (RTRs), only 1.3% showed MDRO detection, but this was linked to significantly higher risks of both graft loss and mortality.
  • The findings suggest that routine screening and preventive measures for MDROs could improve outcomes for kidney transplant patients.
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Background: We aimed to compare patient characteristics, MRSA sequence types, and biofilm production of MRSA strains that did and did not cause a foreign body infection in patients with MRSA bloodstream infections (BSI).

Methods: All adult patients with MRSA BSI hospitalized in two hospitals were identified by clinical microbiology laboratory surveillance. Only patients who had at least one implanted foreign body during the episode of BSI were included.

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Incomplete immunity in recovered hosts is predicted to favor more virulent pathogens upon re-infection in the population. The microbiota colonizing animals can generate a similarly long-lasting, partial immune response, allowing for infection but dampened disease severity. We tracked the evolutionary trajectories of a widespread pathogen (Pseudomonas aeruginosa), experimentally passaged through populations of nematodes immune-primed by a natural microbiota member (P.

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