The purpose of the present study was to isolate Lactobacillus bacteria from mother's milk and to assess their probiotic potential. Sixty breast milk samples were collected from the volunteered mothers aged from 19 to 35 and from rural areas of Lorestan and Markazi Provinces, Iran. At first, 970 bacill-shaped bacterial colonies were isolated from these samples and stored in proper condition. Two hundred isolates were randomly selected and investigated for their ability to tolerate acidic condition and to tolerate bile salt as well. Only 33 isolates could withstand the exposure to low pH and bile salt. The isolates were identified using PCR primer specific to Lactobacillus and it was demonstrated that eighteen of thirty-three isolates were belonged to the Lactobacillus. Among the isolates, 16 and 2 of them were Lactobacillus reuteri and L. gasseri, respectively. In addition, the antibiotic resistance of the isolates was determined using disc diffusion method and all of the isolates were shown to be sensitive to eight out of the twelve investigated antibiotics. Moreover, the antagonistic effect of the isolates was inspected on ten indicator pathogens. Interestingly, all of the pathogenic bacteria were inhibited by Lactobacillus isolates. In addition, to partially understand the nature of inhibition mechanism, well diffusion deployed for two randomly-selected indicator bacteria and the resulting halos of three isolates were statistically significant compared to other lactobacillus (p < 0.05). Subsequently, bacteriocin genes (plnS, Laf, gasA) were identified by PCR among the isolates. The results showed that only 2 isolates possessed the gasA gene which were in accordance with well diffusion test. Consequently, eighteen Lactobacillus isolated from breast milk samples which all of them were able to tolerate low pH and bile salt. Similarly, all of the Lactobacillus isolates were proved to inhibit the growth of pathogen strains and two of them possess a bacteriocin-related gene.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.micpath.2018.03.020 | DOI Listing |
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb) infection can lead to various outcomes, including active tuberculosis or latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI). Household contacts of TB cases have a high risk of acquiring LTBI.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Med Inform
January 2025
Department of Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence, University of Udine, 33100, Italy.
Background: Segmentation models for clinical data experience severe performance degradation when trained on a single client from one domain and distributed to other clients from different domain. Federated Learning (FL) provides a solution by enabling multi-party collaborative learning without compromising the confidentiality of clients' private data.
Methods: In this paper, we propose a cross-domain FL method for Weakly Supervised Semantic Segmentation (FL-W3S) of white blood cells in microscopic images.
J Neurosurg
January 2025
Departments of1Biomedical Engineering.
Objective: Epilepsy is a common neurological disease affecting nearly 1% of the global population, and temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is the most common type. Patients experience recurrent seizures and chronic cognitive deficits that can impact their quality of life, ability to work, and independence. These cognitive deficits often extend beyond the temporal lobe and are not well understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurosurg Spine
January 2025
1Department of Neurosurgery, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and.
Objective: Smartphones and wearable devices can be effective tools to objectively assess patient mobility and well-being before and after spine surgery. In this retrospective observational study, the authors investigated the relationship between these longitudinal perioperative patient activity data and socioeconomic and demographic correlates, assessing whether smartphone-captured metrics may allow neurosurgeons to distinguish intergroup patterns.
Methods: A multi-institutional retrospective study of patients who underwent spinal decompression with and without fusion between 2017 and 2021 was conducted.
Biochemistry
January 2025
Department of Chemistry, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77842, United States.
The exterior surface of the human pathogen is coated with a capsular polysaccharide (CPS) that consists of a repeating sequence of 2-5 different sugars that can be modified with various molecular decorations. In the HS:2 serotype from strain NCTC 11168, the repeating unit within the CPS is composed of d-ribose, -acetyl-d-galactosamine, and a d-glucuronic acid that is further amidated with either serinol or ethanolamine. The d-glucuronic acid moiety is also decorated with d-glycero-l-gluco-heptose.
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