8 results match your criteria: "National Animal Disease Center (NADC)[Affiliation]"

Detection of Campylobacter jejuni liver dissemination in experimentally colonized turkey poults.

Poult Sci

August 2020

Food Safety and Enteric Pathogens Research Unit, National Animal Disease Center (NADC), U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), Agricultural Research Services (ARS), Ames, IA, USA.

Consumption of contaminated poultry products, including chicken livers, is the main source of human campylobacteriosis and approximately 90% of human cases are caused by Campylobacter jejuni subsp. jejuni (C. jejuni).

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Supershedding cattle shed O157:H7 (O157) at ≥ 10 colony-forming units/g feces. We recently demonstrated that a supershed O157 (SS-O157) strain, SS-17, hyperadheres to the rectoanal junction (RAJ) squamous epithelial (RSE) cells which may contribute to SS-O157 persistence at this site in greater numbers, thereby increasing the fecal O157 load characterizing the supershedding phenomenon. In order to verify if this would be the signature adherence profile of any SS-O157, we tested additional SS-O157 isolates ( = 101; each from a different animal) in the RSE cell adherence assay.

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Complete Genome Sequence of Campylobacter jejuni Strain NADC 20827, Isolated from Commercial Turkeys.

Microbiol Resour Announc

January 2020

Food Safety and Enteric Pathogens Research Unit, National Animal Disease Center (NADC), Agricultural Research Service (ARS), U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), Ames, Iowa, USA

is the main cause of bacterial foodborne disease in humans, who are exposed mostly by consumption of contaminated poultry products. strain NADC 20827 was isolated from the feces of turkeys naturally colonized with spp. We present the complete annotated genome and plasmid sequences of strain NADC 20827.

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Variation in pestivirus growth in testicle primary cell culture is more dependent on the individual cell donor than cattle breed.

Vet Res Commun

March 2017

Ruminant Diseases and Immunology Research Unit, Agricultural Research Service (ARS), National Animal Disease Center (NADC), United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), 1920 Dayton Avenue, PO Box 70, Ames, IA, 50010, USA.

The causes of bovine respiratory disease complex (BRDC) are multifactorial and include infection with both viral and bacterial pathogens. Host factors are also involved as different breeds of cattle appear to have different susceptibilities to BRDC. Infection with bovine pestiviruses, including bovine viral diarrhea virus 1 (BVDV1), BVDV2 and 'HoBi'-like viruses, is linked to the development of BRDC.

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Temporal dynamics of 'HoBi'-like pestivirus quasispecies in persistently infected calves generated under experimental conditions.

Virus Res

January 2017

Ruminant Diseases and Immunology Research Unit, Agricultural Research Service (ARS), National Animal Disease Center (NADC), United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), 1920 Dayton Av., Zip Code 50010, Ames, IA, United States. Electronic address:

'HoBi'-like virus is an atypical group within the Pestivirus genus that is implicated in economic losses for cattle producers due to both acute and persistent infections. Pestivirus strains exist as quasispecies (swarms of individual viruses) in infected animals and the viral populations making up the quasispecies differ widely in size and diversity in each animal. In the present study the viral quasispecies circulating in persistently infected (PI) calves, generated and maintained under experimental conditions using two different 'HoBi'-like strains, was observed over time.

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Comparison of 'HoBi'-like viral populations among persistent infected calves generated under experimental conditions and to inoculum virus.

Virology

May 2016

Ruminant Diseases and Immunology Research Unit, Agricultural Research Service (ARS), National Animal Disease Center (NADC), United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), Ames, IA, United States. Electronic address:

Like other members from the Pestivirus genus, 'HoBi'-like pestiviruses cause economic losses for cattle producers due to both acute and persistent infections. The present study analyzed for the first time PI animals derived from a controlled infection with two different 'HoBi'-like strains where the animals were maintained under conditions where superinfection by other pestiviruses could be excluded. The sequence of the region coding for viral glycoproteins E1/E2 of variants within the swarms of viruses present in the PI calves and two viral inoculums used to generate them were compared.

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Molecular biology of bovine viral diarrhea virus.

Biologicals

January 2013

RDIRU, USDA, ARS, National Animal Disease Center (NADC), 1920 Dayton Ave., Ames, IA 50010, USA.

Bovine viral diarrhea viruses (BVDV) are arguably the most important viral pathogen of ruminants worldwide and can cause severe economic loss. Clinical symptoms of the disease caused by BVDV range from subclinical to severe acute hemorrhagic syndrome, with the severity of disease being strain dependent. These viruses are classified as members of the Pestivirus genus of the Flaviviridae.

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Recent studies have revealed that bacterial protein methylation is a widespread post-translational modification that is required for virulence in selected pathogenic bacteria. In particular, altered methylation of outer-membrane proteins has been shown to modulate the effectiveness of the host immune response. In this study, 2D gel electrophoresis combined with MALDI-TOF MS identified a Leptospira interrogans serovar Copenhageni strain Fiocruz L1-130 protein, corresponding to ORF LIC11848, which undergoes extensive and differential methylation of glutamic acid residues.

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