17 results match your criteria: "Wadsworth Center New York State Department of Health[Affiliation]"

Persistent organic pollutants (POPs) including polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), hexachlorobenzene (HCB), and dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (-DDT) were reported to influence immunological activity. As endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDC), these pollutants may disrupt normal thyroid function and act as catalysts for development of autoimmune thyroid disease by directly and indirectly affecting levels of thyroid peroxidase antibodies (TPOAbs). Native American communities are disproportionately exposed to harmful toxicants and are at an increased risk of developing an autoimmune disease.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

West Nile virus (WNV) primarily infects birds and mosquitoes but has also caused over 2,000 human deaths, and >50,000 reported human cases in the United States. Expected numbers of WNV neuroinvasive cases for the present were described for the Northeastern United States, using a negative binomial model. Changes in temperature-based suitability for WNV due to climate change were examined for the next decade using a temperature-trait model.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Candida auris is an urgent antimicrobial resistance threat due to its global emergence, high mortality, and persistent transmissions. Nearly half of C. auris clinical and surveillance cases in the United States are from the New York and New Jersey Metropolitan area.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Editorial: Mucosal Vaccination: Strategies to Induce and Evaluate Mucosal Immunity.

Front Immunol

May 2022

Division of Mucosal Immunology & Diagnostics, Program Area Chronic Lung Diseases, Research Center Borstel, Leibniz Lung Center, Borstel, Germany.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Inhalation of trace amounts of ricin toxin, a plant-derived ribosome-inactivating protein, results in ablation of alveolar macrophages, widespread epithelial damage, and the onset of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). While ricin's receptors are ubiquitous, certain cell types are more sensitive to ricin-induced cell death than others for reasons that remain unclear. For example, we demonstrate in side-by-side studies that macrophage-like differentiated THP-1 (dTHP-1) cells are hyper-sensitive to ricin, while lung epithelium-derived A549 cells are relatively insensitive, even though both cell types experience similar degrees of translational inhibition and p38 MAPK activation in response to ricin.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Harmonizing Newborn Screening Laboratory Proficiency Test Results Using the CDC NSQAP Reference Materials.

Int J Neonatal Screen

September 2020

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Division of Laboratory Sciences, Newborn Screening and Molecular Biology Branch, MS F19, Atlanta, GA 30341, USA; (C.A.P.); (M.S.); (J.M.); (C.C.).

Newborn screening (NBS) laboratories cannot accurately compare mass spectrometry-derived results and cutoff values due to differences in testing methodologies. The objective of this study was to assess harmonization of laboratory proficiency test (PT) results using quality control (QC) data. Newborn Screening Quality Assurance Program (NSQAP) QC and PT data reported from 302 laboratories in 2019 were used to compare results among laboratories.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Female and male mice of the BTBR /J (BTBR) strain have behaviors that resemble autism spectrum disorder. In comparison to C57BL/6 (B6) mice, BTBR mice have elevated humoral immunity, in that they have naturally high serum IgG levels and generate high levels of IgG antibodies, including autoantibodies to brain antigens. This study focused on the specificities of autoantibodies and the immune cells and their transcription factors that might be responsible for the autoantibodies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Talaromycosis (penicilliosis) is a major fungal disease endemic across a narrow band of tropical countries of South and Southeast Asia. The etiologic agent is a thermally dimorphic fungus Talaromyces (Penicillium) marneffei, which was first isolated from a bamboo rat in Vietnam in 1956, but no formal description was published. In 1959, Professor Gabriel Segretain formally described it as a novel species Talaromyces (Penicillium) marneffei, and the human pathogenic potential of the fungus in Mycopathologia.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • * BB0406 plays a crucial role in the survival of the bacteria in mammalian hosts, especially in establishing infections in distant organs.
  • * Understanding the function of BB0406 in aiding spirochete movement through host barriers can help develop new treatments for early Lyme disease infections.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The multidrug-resistant yeast pathogen continues to cause outbreaks and clusters of clinical cases worldwide. Previously, we developed a real-time PCR assay for the detection of from surveillance samples (L. Leach, Y.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato (Bbsl), the causative agent of Lyme disease, establishes an initial infection in the host's skin following a tick bite, and then disseminates to distant organs, leading to multisystem manifestations. Tick-to-vertebrate host transmission requires that Bbsl survives during blood feeding. Complement is an important innate host defense in blood and interstitial fluid.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A temporal trend can be seen in recent human history where the dominant causes of death have shifted from infectious to chronic diseases in industrialized societies. Human influences in the current "Anthropocene" epoch are exponentially impacting the environment and consequentially health. Changing ecological niches are suggested to have created health transitions expressed as modifications of immune balance from infections inflicting pathologies in the Holocene epoch (12,000 years ago) to human behaviors inflicting pathologies beginning in the Anthropocene epoch (300 years ago).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background/objectives: Maternal obesity may influence neonatal and childhood morbidities through increased inflammation and/or altered immune response. Less is known about paternal obesity. We hypothesized that excessive parental weight contributes to elevated inflammation and altered immunoglobulin (Ig) profiles in neonates.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Salmonella enterica serovar Enteritidis is a significant cause of gastrointestinal illness in the United States; however, current molecular subtyping methods lack resolution for this highly clonal serovar. Advances in next-generation sequencing technologies have made it possible to examine whole-genome sequencing (WGS) as a potential molecular subtyping tool for outbreak detection and source trace back. Here, we conducted a retrospective analysis of S.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This review summarizes the successes and continuing challenges associated with the identification of small-molecule inhibitors of ricin and Shiga toxins, members of the RNA N-glycosidase family of toxins that irreversibly inactivate eukaryotic ribosomes through the depurination of a conserved adenosine residue within the sarcin-ricin loop (SRL) of 28S rRNA. Virtual screening of chemical libraries has led to the identification of at least three broad classes of small molecules that bind in or near the toxin's active sites and thereby interfere with RNA N-glycosidase activity. Rational design is being used to improve the specific activity and solubility of a number of these compounds.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF