Background: The prevalence of diabetes remains high, with traditional lifestyle interventions demonstrating limited success in improving diabetes-related outcomes, particularly among individuals with diabetes-related mental health comorbidities. Digital health interventions provide the ability to ease the sustained and rigorous self-management needs associated with diabetes care and treatment. Current interventions though, are plagued by small sample sizes, underpowered pilot studies, and immense heterogeneity in program intervention, duration, and measured outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn order to respond to changing environments and fluctuations in internal states, animals adjust their behavior through diverse neuromodulatory mechanisms. In this study we show that electrical synapses between the ASH primary quinine-detecting sensory neurons and the neighboring ASK neurons are required for modulating the aversive response to the bitter tastant quinine in C. elegans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Neural networks and their function are defined by synapses, which are adhesions specialized for intercellular communication that can be either chemical or electrical. At chemical synapses, transmission between neurons is mediated by neurotransmitters, whereas at electrical synapses, direct ionic and metabolic coupling occur via gap junctions between neurons. The molecular pathways required for electrical synaptogenesis are not well understood, and whether they share mechanisms of formation with chemical synapses is not clear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Equine protozoal myeloencephalitis (EPM) is a serious and often fatal neurologic disease of horses, but few studies have investigated risk factors.
Objectives: To evaluate operation- and individual-level factors associated with likelihood of the occurrence of EPM.
Animals: Data were collected as part of a study of the US equine industry from 1,178 operations representing 83.
In 2005 the National Animal Health Monitoring System conducted a survey in 183 live poultry markets throughout the United States. The objectives of this study were to describe characteristics of live poultry markets in the United States and to identify potential risk factors for markets to be repeatedly positive for low-pathogenicity avian influenza virus (LPAIV) H5/H7. A questionnaire was administered to market operators that included questions regarding types of birds and other animals in the market, biosecurity, and cleaning and disinfecting practices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe National Animal Health Monitoring System (NAHMS) Poultry '04 study was conducted to better describe non-commercial United States poultry populations, in particular, backyard and gamefowl breeder flocks. To estimate the density of backyard flocks in close proximity to commercial operations, a sample of 350 commercial poultry operations in 18 top poultry producing states was selected from the National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) list of poultry operations. A 1 mile radius circle was drawn around each operation, and door-to-door canvassing was conducted within these circles to enumerate premises with all species of birds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: The term hypotonia is often used to describe children with reduced muscle tone, yet it remains abstract and undefined. The purpose of this study was to identify characteristics of children with hypotonia to begin the process of developing an operational definition of hypotonia.
Methods: Three hundred physical and occupational therapists were systematically selected from the memberships of the Pediatric Section of the American Physical Therapy Association and the Developmental Delay Section of the American Occupational Therapy Association and asked to complete an open-ended survey exploring characteristics of strength, endurance, mobility, posture, and flexibility.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother
March 2004
Antibiotic efflux is an important mechanism of resistance in pathogenic bacteria. Here we describe the identification and characterization of a novel chromosomally encoded multidrug resistance efflux protein in Staphylococcus aureus, MdeA (multidrug efflux A). MdeA was identified from screening an S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFluoroquinolones are being increasingly used for acute lower respiratory tract infection where Streptococcus pneumoniae is the most important bacterial pathogen. S. pneumoniae becomes resistant to quinolone antibiotics by mutations in a small section of the parC and gyrA genes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrob Drug Resist
December 2002
It is assumed that bacteria always pay a significant physiological price for the acquisition of resistance to antibiotics. To test whether this was the case for a strain of Streptococcus pneumoniae that develops resistance to fluoroquinolone antibiotics, we selected resistance to these agents in a wild-type strain and measured their fitness in comparative growth experiments. The relative growth rate of a mutant strain selected on ciprofloxacin (parC Serine 79 to Tyrosine) was compared with its susceptible isogenic parent and no significant deficit was found (relative fitness 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMycoplasma virus P1 is one of only four viruses isolated from the genus Mycoplasma. The host for P1, Mycoplasma pulmonis, possesses complex, phase-variable restriction and modification enzymes and the Vsa family of phase-variable surface proteins. The ability of P1 virus to infect host cells is influenced by these phase-variable systems, rendering P1 a valuable tool for assessing host properties.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSelectively regulating gene expression in bacteria has provided an important tool for studying gene function. However, well-regulated gene control systems have been restricted primarily for use in laboratory non-pathogenic strains of bacteria (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFew genetic systems for studying mycoplasmas exist, but transposon Tn916 has been shown to transpose into the genomes of some species and can be used as an insertional mutagen. In the current study, the ability of Enterococcus faecalis to serve as a donor for the conjugative transfer of transposon Tn916 into the genome of the avian pathogen Mycoplasma gallisepticum strain PG31 was examined. Transconjugants were obtained at a frequency of > or =6 x 10(-8) per recipient CFU.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrevious attempts to introduce transposon Tn4001 into Mycoplasma pulmonis and Mycoplasma arthritidis have not been successful, possibly due to functional failure of the transposon's gentamicin resistance determinant. Tn4001C and Tn4001T were constructed, respectively, by insertion of a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene and the tetM tetracycline resistance determinant into Tn4001. Both Tn4001C and Tn4001T transposed in M.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aim of this study was to characterize quinolone resistance mechanisms in strains of Streptococcus pneumoniae with increased MICs of ofloxacin. These strains were also tested for their susceptibility to a battery of quinolone antimicrobial agents, including gemifloxacin. Of the S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe bacteriophage MAV1 is required for the development of arthritis in rats after infection with its host Mycoplasma arthritidis. To identify the phage-encoded virulence factor for this arthritis, the complete nucleotide sequence of MAV1 was determined. The linear double-stranded genome of MAV1 is 15644bp and contains 15 ORFs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Bacteriol
November 1998
The lysogenic bacteriophage MAV1, which is associated with the arthritogenicity of Mycoplasma arthritidis, was characterized. Several strains of M. arthritidis were examined for their ability to support growth of MAV1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMycoplasma arthritidis is a rat pathogen causing a severe polyarthritis. The study of its pathogenic mechanisms has been hampered by the lack of genetic systems for use with M. arthritidis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough mycoplasmas lack cell walls, they are in many respects similar to the gram-positive bacteria with which they share a common ancestor. The molecular biology of mycoplasmas is intriguing because the chromosome is uniquely small (< 600 kb in some species) and extremely A-T rich (as high as 75 mol% in some species). Perhaps to accommodate DNA with a lower G + C content, most mycoplasmas do not have the "universal" genetic code.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe chromosome of the murine pathogen Mycoplasma pulmonis undergoes rearrangements at a high frequency. We show that some of these rearrangements regulate the phase-variable expression of a cluster of genes (the vsa locus) that encode the variable V-1 surface antigens. Only one vsa gene is associated with an expression site; the other vsa genes are transcriptionally silent.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMycoplasma arthritidis causes a severe polyarthritis under natural conditions in rats and under experimental conditions in both rats and mice. Although the disease itself has been extensively studied, M. arthritidis virulence factors remain uncharacterized.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwenty Mycoplasma arthritidis strains or isolates were compared by a combination of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay by an antiserum adsorption technique, Western immunoblotting, and restriction analysis of chromosomal DNA. Antigenic markers that defined strains related to strains 158p10p9, PG6, and H606 were identified. In addition, restriction analysis allowed all 20 strains to be divided into six groups.
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