Publications by authors named "Whipp M"

Two cases of phaeohyphomycotic infections were caused by , not previously identified in human infections, and one new species, , respectively. Morphological and cultural investigation as well as phylogenetic analysis was constructed based on maximum likelihood analyses using actin and -tubulin sequences to identify the fungal isolates.

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Background: To date, Cryptosporidium cuniculus has been found exclusively in rabbits and humans. The present study provides the first published molecular evidence for C. cuniculus in an Australian human patient as well as a kangaroo.

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We compared the diagnostic accuracy of the Carba NP test with that of a straightforward matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) method for detecting carbapenemase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (CPE). Using PCR as the reference method, both tests demonstrated a sensitivity of 87% and a specificity of 100%. MALDI-TOF MS offers a potential alternative for the rapid detection of CPE in the clinical laboratory setting.

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Article Synopsis
  • VNTRs are rapidly mutating DNA sequences used for genotyping, and MLVA is a method that analyzes these sequences to detect food-borne outbreaks, particularly with Salmonella.
  • The study examined the mutation rates of five specific VNTR loci associated with S. Typhimurium and found that three loci (STTR5, STTR6, STTR10) changed during growth, while the other two (STTR3 and STTR9) remained stable.
  • The researchers proposed a new distance metric for analyzing MLVA data that provides more accurate results for identifying transmission clusters by grouping isolates with similar profiles at the rapidly changing loci.
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Little is known about the molecular composition of Cryptosporidium species from humans living in the insular state of Tasmania, Australia. In the present study, we genetically characterized 82 samples of Cryptosporidium from humans following conventional coproscopic testing in a routine, diagnostic laboratory. Using a PCR-coupled single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) technique, targeting portions of the small subunit rRNA (SSU), and 60 kDa glycoprotein (gp60) loci, we identified two species of Cryptosporidium, including C.

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Two identical isolates were recovered in pure culture from the blood and urine of a patient suffering from severe septicaemia associated with obstructive pyelonephritis secondary to lithotripsy. Preliminary phenotypic and genotypic characterizations based on serological, biochemical and sequence analyses following PCR amplification of selected gene regions indicate that this organism represents a potential new Francisella genomic species.

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Cryptosporidiosis of humans is an intestinal disease caused predominantly by infection with Cryptosporidium hominis or C. parvum. This disease is transmitted mainly via the faecal-oral route (water or food) and has major socioeconomic impact globally.

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In the present study, we analyzed genetic variation in Cryptosporidium species from humans (n = 62) with clinical cryptosporidiosis in South Australia. Sequence variation was assessed in regions within the small subunit of nuclear rRNA (p-SSU), the 70-kDa heat shock protein (p-hsp70), and the 60-kDa glycoprotein (p-gp60) genes by employing single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis and sequencing. Based on the analyses of p-SSU and p-hsp70, Cryptosporidium hominis (n = 38) and Cryptosporidium parvum (n = 24) were identified.

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In the present study, we used a mutation scanning-targeted sequencing approach to assess variation in part (pgp60) of the 60 kDa glycoprotein (gp60) gene among Cryptosporidium samples from humans in Victoria, Australia. Two nuclear ribosomal loci (the small subunit rRNA gene and the second internal transcribed spacer) were used to identify the samples as Cryptosporidium hominis (n = 74), Cryptosporidium parvum (n = 23) or Cryptosporidium meleagridis (n = 1). In total, nine distinct pgp60 sequences were identified (three C.

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Mucoid strains of Moraxella nonliquefaciens were recovered from the sputa of three indigenous Australians with chronic lung disease. These atypical strains failed to reduce nitrate, and one strain produced beta-lactamase. While the mucoid phenotype of M.

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Francisella tularensis is found throughout the Northern Hemisphere, where it is associated with the disease of tularaemia in animals and humans. The isolation and identification is reported of a novicida-like subspecies of F. tularensis from a foot wound sustained in brackish water in the Northern Territory of Australia.

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We describe an immunocompetent adolescent who presented with exceptionally severe Bordetella holmesii infection, including previously undescribed manifestations. Sequelae included a severe restrictive lung defect due to pulmonary fibrosis.

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In Escherichia coli K-12, the shiA gene is involved in the uptake of shikimate. This gene has been cloned and its nucleotide sequence determined. The gene is predicted to encode a protein of 438 amino acids and lies adjacent to the amn gene.

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Patients with cancer must deal with a variety of psychological and social difficulties, but the extent to which staff assist patients with these difficulties is not clear. Using the Critical Incident Technique (CIT), patients attending a Cancer Centre were asked to describe situations in which their emotional needs were, and were not, met by staff. Although most patients were able to describe a situation in which their needs were met by staff, 23% also described a situation in which this was not the case.

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In the course of sequencing the aroK gene, a number of errors were found in the published sequence. The corrected sequence alters the length of the aroK coding region such that the AroK and AroL proteins are now of comparable length and the homology between them extends the entire length of the two enzymes.

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pheV, one of the genes that code for tRNA(Phe), was deleted from the chromosome of a strain of Escherichia coli K-12. As a consequence of this mutation, expression of pheA, the gene for chorismate mutase P-prephenate dehydratase, the first enzyme in the terminal pathway of phenylalanine biosynthesis, was derepressed. Similar derepression of pheA has been reported in pheR mutants of E.

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Two cases of squamous cell carcinoma complicating longstanding acne conglobata in a father and daughter are described. The outcome was fatal in both cases.

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A mutant strain of Escherichia coli K-12 that is defective in both the tyrosine-specific and phenylalanine-specific transport systems was isolated. The defects in these systems were shown to be due to mutations in two distinct loci, tyrP and pheP, respectively.

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The regulation of the aromatic amino acid transport systems was investigated. The common (general) aromatic transport system and the tyrosine-specific transport system were found to be subject to repression control, thus confirming earlier reports. In addition, tryosine- and tryptophan-specific transport were found to be enhanced by growth of cells with phenylalanine.

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