Publications by authors named "Y Sharaby"

Understanding microbial migration and survival mechanisms in dust events (DEs) can elucidate genetic and metabolic exchange between environments and help predict the atmospheric pathways of ecological and health-related microbial stressors. Dust-borne microbial communities have been previously characterized, but the impact and interactions between potentially active bacteria within transported communities remain limited. Here, we analysed samples collected during DEs in Israel, using amplicon sequencing of the 16S rRNA genes and transcripts.

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Airborne microorganisms and biological matter (bioaerosols) play a key role in global biogeochemical cycling, human and crop health trends, and climate patterns. Their presence in the atmosphere is controlled by three main stages: emission, transport, and deposition. Aerial survival rates of bioaerosols are increased through adaptations such as ultra-violet radiation and desiccation resistance or association with particulate matter.

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  • A wastewater-based epidemiology program was implemented at Technion campus to monitor COVID-19 among 3,300 students living in housing clusters, using 10 manholes for sewage sample collection over eight months.
  • The program revealed that 87.4% of samples were negative for SARS-CoV-2, with 11.5% positive, helping the COVID-19 task force track and contain outbreaks effectively, including identifying new cases without prior information.
  • Higher levels of the inflammation biomarker ferritin were found in positive sewage samples, suggesting that monitoring such biomarkers in wastewater could help predict and manage future infectious disease outbreaks.
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  • Chironomids, a type of aquatic insect, were studied to understand their microbiota across different life stages (eggs, larvae, pupae) and locations (Mula and Mutha Rivers in Pune, India, and a lab setting).
  • Non-metric multidimensional scaling analysis revealed that the life stage had a greater impact on microbiota composition than the location, with lab-reared larvae showing distinct differences from field samples.
  • The dominant microbial phylum varied between lab and field settings, and while no significant differences in microbial richness or diversity were found among locations, there were notable differences between the three life stages.
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Drought intensity as experienced by plants depends upon soil moisture status and atmospheric variables such as temperature, radiation, and air vapour pressure deficit. Although the role of shoot architecture with these edaphic and atmospheric factors is well characterized, the extent to which shoot and root dynamic interactions as a continuum are controlled by genotypic variation is less well known. Here, we targeted these interactions using a wild emmer wheat introgression line (IL20) with a distinct drought-induced shift in the shoot-to-root ratio and its drought-sensitive recurrent parent Svevo.

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