6 results match your criteria: "Mediterranean Institute of Microbiology (FR 3479)[Affiliation]"
Virologie (Montrouge)
April 2020
Emeritus Professor of Medicine, Aix-Marseille Université/APHM Genomic & Structural Information Laboratory (UMR 7256) Mediterranean Institute of Microbiology (FR 3479), Marseille, France Member of the board of directors of the French society of virology until March 30, 2020.
If they work as expected, the strict containment measures enforced to stop the French Covid-19 epidemic will leave a large proportion of the population "naive" about the SARS-CoV-2 virus. In these conditions, how can we prevent the epidemic from rebounding, at a time when this restrictive policy will soon become untenable economically and socially? Based on the figures, now well known, of the lethality of covid-19 according to age classes, I suggest that a gradual release of the containment be instituted, which will keep retirees in isolation (the 65+ age class), whose risk is maximal and the impact on economic production the lowest. This scenario might be applicable to most European countries that enforce mandatory retirement ages for most of workers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVirologie (Montrouge)
April 2020
Emeritus Professor of Medicine, Aix-Marseille Université/APHM Genomic & Structural Information Laboratory (UMR 7256) Mediterranean Institute of Microbiology (FR 3479), Marseille, France Member of the board of directors of the French society of virology until March 30, 2020.
Virol Sin
June 2016
Structural and Genomic Information Laboratory (UMR7256), CNRS Aix Marseille University, Mediterranean Institute of Microbiology (FR 3479), Marseille, France.
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View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Microbiol Rep
December 2015
Observatoire Océanologique, Sorbonne Universités, UPMC Univ Paris 06, Avenue du Fontaulé, 66650, Banyuls-sur-Mer, France.
High-throughput sequencing of Prasinovirus DNA polymerase and host green algal (Mamiellophyceae) ribosomal RNA genes was used to analyse the diversity and distribution of these taxa over a ∼10 000 km latitudinal section of the Indian Ocean. New viral and host groups were identified among the different trophic conditions observed, and highlighted that although unknown prasinoviruses are diverse, the cosmopolitan algal genera Bathycoccus, Micromonas and Ostreococcus represent a large proportion of the host diversity. While Prasinovirus communities were correlated to both the geography and the environment, host communities were not, perhaps because the genetic marker used lacked sufficient resolution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFISME J
June 2015
CNRS UMR 7144 and UMPC, Evolution of Pelagic Ecosystems and Protists (EPEP), CNRS, UPMC, Station Biologique de Roscoff, Roscoff, France.
Emiliania huxleyi is the most abundant calcifying plankton in modern oceans with substantial intraspecific genome variability and a biphasic life cycle involving sexual alternation between calcified 2N and flagellated 1N cells. We show that high genome content variability in Emiliania relates to erosion of 1N-specific genes and loss of the ability to form flagellated cells. Analysis of 185 E.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFISME J
September 2013
CNRS, Aix-Marseille Université, Laboratoire Information Génomique et Structurale (UMR 7256), Mediterranean Institute of Microbiology (FR 3479), Marseille, France.
Nucleo-cytoplasmic large DNA viruses (NCLDVs) constitute a group of eukaryotic viruses that can have crucial ecological roles in the sea by accelerating the turnover of their unicellular hosts or by causing diseases in animals. To better characterize the diversity, abundance and biogeography of marine NCLDVs, we analyzed 17 metagenomes derived from microbial samples (0.2-1.
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