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Korea Center for Diseases Control and P... Publications | LitMetric

7 results match your criteria: "Korea Center for Diseases Control and Prevention[Affiliation]"

Recent investigations have revealed that the human microbiome plays an essential role in the occurrence of type 2 diabetes (T2D). However, despite the importance of understanding the involvement of the microbiota throughout the body in T2D, most studies have focused specifically on the intestinal microbiota. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) have been recently found to provide important evidence regarding the mechanisms of T2D pathogenesis, as they act as key messengers between intestinal microorganisms and the host.

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Prevalence of Self-reported Allergic Diseases and IgE Levels: A 2010 KNHANES Analysis.

Allergy Asthma Immunol Res

July 2017

Division of Allergy and Chronic Respiratory Diseases, Center for Biomedical Sciences, Korea National Institute of Health, Korea Center for Diseases Control and Prevention, Osong, Korea.

Purpose: The prevalence of allergic diseases is known to be associated with both demographic and environmental factors. Herein, we aimed to determine significant factors associated with the prevalence of allergic diseases and with total immunoglobulin E (tIgE) and specific immunoglobulin E (sIgE) levels in Korea.

Methods: We analyzed unweighted data collected by the 2010 Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey for 2,342 subjects who underwent serum tests for tIgE and sIgE to Dermatophagoides farinae, dog, and Blattella germanica, representing a sample of 16,003,645 citizens, by considering the sample weight and stratification.

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Invasion of vascular endothelial cells is thought to be a critical step in the development of metastatic infections in patients with Staphylococcus aureus bacteraemia. This study was designed to evaluate the association between the ability to invade endothelial cells and metastatic infection by S. aureus.

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The effect of protein expression of Streptococcus pneumoniae by blood.

J Biochem Mol Biol

November 2006

Division of Bacterial Respiratory Infections, Center for Infectious Disease, National Institute of Health, Korea Center for Diseases control and Prevention, 5 Nokbun-Dong, Eunpyung-Ku, Seoul, 122-701, Korea.

During infection, the common respiratory tract pathogen Streptococcus pneumoniae encounters several environmental conditions, such as upper respiratory tract, lung tissue, and blood stream, etc. In this study, we examined the effects of blood on S. pneumoniae protein expression using a combination of highly sensitive 2-dimensional electrophoresis (DE) and MALDI-TOF MS and/or LC/ESI-MS/MS.

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Proteomic analysis of protein expression in Streptococcus pneumoniae in response to temperature shift.

J Microbiol

August 2006

Lab. of Pathogenic Proteomics, Center for Immunology and Pathology, National Institute of Health, Korea Center for Diseases control and Prevention, 5 Nokbun-Dong, Seoul 122-701, Republic of Korea.

From its initial colonization to causation of disease, Streptococcus pneumoniae has evolved strategies to cope with a number of stressful in vivo environmental conditions. In order to analyze a global view of this organism's response to heat shock, we established a 2-D electrophoresis proteome map of the S. pneumoniae D39 soluble proteins under in vitro culture conditions and performed the comparative proteome analysis to a 37 to 42 degrees temperature up-shift in S.

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Proteomic analysis of growth phase-dependent proteins of Streptococcus pneumoniae.

Proteomics

February 2006

Division of Bacterial Respiratory Infections, Department of Microbiology, National Institute of Health, Korea Center for Diseases Control and Prevention, Eunpyung-Ku, Seoul, Korea.

Streptococcus pneumoniae is an important human pathogen that causes a variety of diseases, such as pneumonia, bacteremia, meningitis, otitis media, and sinusitis, in both adults and children. The global pattern of growth phase-dependent protein expression of S. pneumoniae during in vitro culture was analyzed using 2-DE combined with MALDI-TOF MS and LC/ESI-MS/MS.

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