Publications by authors named "T I Kochan"

Larvae of (the greater wax moth) are being increasingly used as a model to study microbial pathogenesis. In this model, bacterial virulence is typically measured by determining the 50% lethal dose (LD) of a bacterial strain or mutant. The use of to study pathogenesis, however, is challenging because of the extreme sensitivity of larvae to this bacterium.

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Hypermutator lineages of arise frequently during the years of airway infection experienced by patients with cystic fibrosis and bronchiectasis but are rare in the absence of chronic infection and structural lung disease. Since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, large numbers of patients have remained mechanically ventilated for extended periods of time. These patients are prone to acquire bacterial pathogens that persist for many weeks and have the opportunity to evolve within the pulmonary environment.

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is a common cause of difficult-to-treat infections due to its propensity to express resistance to many antibiotics. For example, carbapenem-resistant has been named an urgent threat by the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Gastrointestinal colonization in patients with has been linked to subsequent infection, making it a key process to control in the prevention of multidrug-resistant infections.

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In an attempt to identify novel bacterial species, microbiologists have examined a wide range of environmental niches. We describe the serendipitous discovery of a novel gram-negative bacterial species from a different type of extreme niche: a purchased vial of antibiotic. The vial of antibiotic hygromycin B was found to be factory contaminated with a bacterial species, which we designate sp.

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