Publications by authors named "S Songsivilai"

Developing nanomaterials that are effective, safe, and selective for gene transfer applications is challenging. Bacteriophages (phage), viruses that infect bacteria only, have shown promise for targeted gene transfer applications. Unfortunately, limited progress has been achieved in improving their potential to overcome mammalian cellular barriers.

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Burkholderia pseudomallei is the causative agent of melioidosis, an overwhelming, rapidly fatal septic infection, and B. thailandensis is a closely related, less virulent species. Both organisms are naturally competent for DNA transformation, and this report describes a procedure exploiting this property for the rapid generation of marked deletion mutations by using PCR products.

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Burkholderia pseudomallei is the causative agent of melioidosis, a severe and potentially fatal infectious disease in humans known to be endemic in Southeast Asia and northern Australia. The infection is also increasingly recognized in various animal species with a potential to spread to humans. With the potential as a biological warfare agent, specific serodiagnosis of melioidosis for surveillance in large populations at risk, humans or animals, would be highly valuable.

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Burkholderia pseudomallei is a recognized biothreat agent and the causative agent of melioidosis. This Gram-negative bacterium exists as a soil saprophyte in melioidosis-endemic areas of the world and accounts for 20% of community-acquired septicaemias in northeastern Thailand where half of those affected die. Here we report the complete genome of B.

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Nonstructural 3 (NS3) protein of hepatitis C virus (HCV) is one of the antigens commonly used in diagnostic assays for antibody to hepatitis C virus. However, immune response to the NS3 protein from one genotype may not cross-react with that from other genotypes. In the development of an anti-HCV assay, the NS3 genes from genotypes 1 and 3 commonly found in Thailand were amplified and cloned into a bacterial expression system.

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