Publications by authors named "Rollins R"

Objective: To report our recent experience with prenatal detection of significant cardiovascular malformations (CVMs) in Nevada's state-wide maternal population receiving prenatal care.

Methods: We queried our databases for those with significant CVMs diagnosed pre- or postnatally between May 1, 2021, and April 30, 2024. We defined CVMs as those that required, would have required, or will likely require a therapeutic procedure in the first 12 months.

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Understanding the factors driving infection prevalence among host species is crucial for effective disease mitigation. Angiostrongylus cantonensis, the rat lungworm, causes neuroangiostrongyliasis and serves as an excellent model for studying infection dynamics across hosts. This study investigates the relative impact of encounter rates on A.

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Lyme borreliosis (LB) is the most common vector-borne disease in the Northern Hemisphere caused by spirochetes belonging to the sensu lato (sl) complex. spirochetes circulate in obligatory transmission cycles between tick vectors and different vertebrate hosts. To successfully complete this complex transmission cycle, sl encodes for an arsenal of proteins including the PFam54 protein family with known, or proposed, influences to reservoir host and/or vector adaptation.

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This study investigated the influence of stress on release of larvae from a snail host, . We subjected 140 infected, wild-caught to three stress-inducing treatments (heat, molluscicide, physical disturbance) and an unstressed control treatment for 24 h, after which larval presence and abundance in the slime were quantified by qPCR targeting the ITS1 region of the parasite's DNA, and compared among treatments. The significance of stress and host infection load on larval release was determined by generalized linear mixed models and permutation tests.

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Article Synopsis
  • Ticks are significant vectors for diseases, but their classification, especially between closely related species like Ixodes inopinatus and Ixodes ricinus, remains unclear.
  • A study in Germany identified ticks from great tits, confirming that those morphologically identified as I. inopinatus are genetically actually I. ricinus, using advanced molecular techniques.
  • The findings imply that I. inopinatus may be geographically restricted and questions its presence in central Europe, demonstrating the potential of genomic tools for clarifying tick taxonomy.
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  • - The Borrelia burgdorferi species complex causes Lyme borreliosis, but understanding the genetic differences among its various genospecies is hindered by challenges in assembling complete genomes due to their complex structures and numerous plasmids.
  • - Previous genome assembly techniques have proven inadequate, but researchers used advanced HiFi PacBio sequencing and a refined workflow to successfully achieve gap-free and high-quality genome assemblies for Borrelia, including both chromosomal and plasmid sequences.
  • - The study concludes that utilizing high-fidelity sequencing and an optimized reconstruction pipeline can effectively resolve complex microbial genomes, potentially benefiting future genomic research on other microorganisms.
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  • Ixodes persulcatus, a hard-bodied tick found in Asia and Eastern Europe, is studied for its role in transmitting pathogens to humans and livestock.
  • Research focused on the microbiome of 85 Borrelia-positive ticks from Japan's Hokkaido and Honshu islands using 16S rRNA sequencing.
  • Results showed that microbiome diversity is mainly influenced by the sex of the ticks, with males having greater diversity, while both genders harbored multiple potential human pathogens, highlighting the tick's significance as a disease vector.
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Vector-borne pathogens exist in obligate transmission cycles between vector and reservoir host species. Host and vector shifts can lead to geographic expansion of infectious agents and the emergence of new diseases in susceptible individuals. Three bacterial genospecies (Borrelia afzelii, Borrelia bavariensis, and Borrelia garinii) predominantly utilize two distinct tick species as vectors in Asia (Ixodes persulcatus) and Europe (Ixodes ricinus).

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Neuroangiostrongyliasis (NAS) is an emerging parasitic disease caused by the neurotropic nematode Angiostrongylus cantonensis. Since it was first discovered, in rats in southern China in the 1930s, this tropical to subtropical parasite has spread to much of Southeast Asia, the Pacific Islands (including Hawaii), Australia, Japan, South America, the southeastern United States, the Caribbean, Africa, the Canary Islands, and the Balearic Islands. The parasite completes its natural life cycle in snails and slugs (intermediate hosts), and rats (definitive hosts).

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Microbes are found in nearly every habitat and organism on the planet, where they are critical to host health, fitness, and metabolism. In most organisms, few microbes are inherited at birth; instead, acquiring microbiomes generally involves complicated interactions between the environment, hosts, and symbionts. Despite the criticality of microbiome acquisition, we know little about where hosts' microbes reside when not in or on hosts of interest.

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  • The study investigates how the BRCA deficiency and PARP inhibitors (PARPis) interact, revealing that PARPis are effective in both BRCA-mutated and non-BRCA mutated tumors due to different mechanisms of action.
  • It highlights that resistance to PARPis like Talazoparib develops, especially in non-BRCA mutated tumors, and explores the role of the SNAI2 transcription factor linked to the epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) in this resistance.
  • The research suggests that targeting the PARP1/CHD1L/SNAI2 pathway may help overcome resistance and enhance the effectiveness of Talazoparib in treating non-BRCA mutated tumors.
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Thermal food processing leads to the formation of advanced glycation end products (AGE) such as N -carboxymethyllysine (CML). Accordingly, these non-canonical amino acids are an important part of the human diet. However, CML is only partially decomposed by our gut microbiota and up to 30% are excreted via faeces and, hence, enter the environment.

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Parasitic nematodes devastate human and animal health. The limited number of anthelmintics available is concerning, especially because of increasing drug resistance. Anthelmintics are commonly derived from natural products, e.

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Lyme borreliosis is the most common vector-borne disease in the Northern Hemisphere, caused by spirochetes belonging to the Borrelia burgdorferi species complex, which are transmitted by ixodid ticks. B. burgdorferi sensu lato species produce a family of proteins on the linear plasmid 54 (PFam54), some of which confer the functions of cell adhesion and inactivation of complement, the first line of host defense.

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Microorganisms live in close association with metazoan hosts and form symbiotic microbiotas that modulate host biology. Although the function of host-associated microbiomes may change with composition, hosts within a population can exhibit high turnover in microbiome composition among individuals. However, environmental drivers of this variation are inadequately described.

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Populations of vector-borne pathogens are shaped by the distribution and movement of vector and reservoir hosts. To study what impact host and vector association have on tick-borne pathogens, we investigated the population structure of using multilocus sequence typing (MLST). Novel sequences were acquired from questing ticks collected in multiple North African and European locations and were supplemented by publicly available sequences at the Borrelia Pubmlst database (accessed on 11 February 2020).

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Diverse snail species serve as intermediate hosts of the parasitic nematode Angiostrongylus cantonensis, the etiological agent of human neuroangiostrongyliasis. However, levels of A. cantonensis infection prevalence and intensity vary dramatically among these host species.

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Article Synopsis
  • Plant microbiomes are influenced by environmental factors and host characteristics, which work at different spatial levels and often interact in complex ways.
  • A study on Hibiscus tiliaceus trees in Hawaii showed that the type of microhabitat largely determined bacterial community composition, while the location influenced fungal community composition more significantly.
  • Fungal communities exhibited greater dissimilarity along environmental gradients compared to bacterial communities, with specific differences in patterns observed across various plant parts, indicating a nested relationship between aboveground and belowground microbial diversity.
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Seasonal migration of birds between breeding and wintering areas can facilitate the spread of tick species and tick-borne diseases. In this study, 151 birds representing 10 different bird species were captured on Ponza Island, an important migratory stopover off the western coast of Italy and screened for tick infestation. Ticks were collected and identified morphologically.

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Lyme borreliosis (LB) is the most common arthropod-borne disease in Europe and North America and is caused by members of the Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato (Bbsl) species complex. These bacteria are transmitted by ixodid tick vectors and therefore human LB risk is influenced by the prevalence and distribution of Bbsl genospecies within tick vectors throughout the wild. These distributions can easily change over spatiotemporal scales and, to understand LB risk fully, up to date information on prevalence and distribution of Bbsl is required.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study focuses on reconstructing the genomes of 33 Borrelia bavariensis isolates from Eurasia, highlighting the complexity and fragmentation of their genetic material.
  • The researchers utilized a combination of long-read and short-read sequencing data, revealing a balance of genetic conservation and variability in plasmids—indicating both shared and unique genetic features among different geographic isolates.
  • The findings suggest that genetic differences between European and Asian populations may be linked to adaptation to specific tick vectors, paving the way for further studies on the pathogen's host interaction and virulence.
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Background And Aims: The pattern of genetic alterations in cancer driver genes in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is highly diverse, which partially explains the low efficacy of available therapies. In spite of this, the existing mouse models only recapitulate a small portion of HCC inter-tumor heterogeneity, limiting the understanding of the disease and the nomination of personalized therapies. Here, we aimed at establishing a novel collection of HCC mouse models that captured human HCC diversity.

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Immune dysfunction in the tumor microenvironment occurs through epigenetic changes in both tumor cells and immune cells that alter transcriptional programs driving cell fate and cell function. Oncogenic activation of the histone methyltransferase EZH2 mediates gene expression changes, governing tumor immunogenicity as well as differentiation, survival and activation states of immune lineages. Emerging preclinical studies have highlighted the potential for EZH2 inhibitors to reverse epigenetic immune suppression in tumors and combine with immune checkpoint therapies.

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Angiostrongylus cantonensis, the rat lungworm, is an emerging zoonotic pathogen that cycles between definitive rat and intermediate gastropod hosts. Zoonotic infection occurs when humans intentionally or accidentally consume infectious larvae in a gastropod host, and may manifest as neuroangiostrongyliasis, characterized by eosinophilic meningitis, severe neurological impairment, and even death. Thus, the risk of A.

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