2 resultados para Brucellosis in cattle

em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


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Pharmaceuticals are useful tools to prevent and treat human and animal diseases. Following administration, a significant fraction of pharmaceuticals is excreted unaltered into faeces and urine and may enter the aquatic ecosystem and agricultural soil through irrigation with recycled water, constituting a significant source of emerging contaminants into the environment. Understanding major factors influencing their environmental fate is consequently needed to value the risk, reduce contamination, and set up bioremediation technologies. The antiviral drug Tamiflu (oseltamivir carboxylate, OC) has received recent attention due to the potential use as a first line defence against H5N1 and H1N1 influenza viruses. Research has shown that OC is not removed during conventional wastewater treatments, thus having the potential to enter surface water bodies. A series of laboratory experiments investigated the fate and the removal of OC in surface water systems in Italy and Japan and in a municipal wastewater treatment plant. A preliminary laboratory study investigated the persistence of the active antiviral drug in water samples from an irrigation canal in northern Italy (Canale Emiliano Romagnolo). After an initial rapid decrease, OC concentration slowly decreased during the remaining incubation period. Approximately 65% of the initial OC amount remained in water at the end of the 36-day incubation period. A negligible amount of OC was lost both from sterilized water and from sterilized water/sediment samples, suggesting a significant role of microbial degradation. Stimulating microbial processes by the addition of sediments resulted in reduced OC persistence. Presence of OC (1.5 μg mL-1) did not significantly affect the metabolic potential of the water microbial population, that was estimated by glyphosate and metolachlor mineralization. In contrast, OC caused an initial transient decrease in the size of the indigenous microbial population of water samples. A second laboratory study focused on basic processes governing the environmental fate of OC in surface water from two contrasting aquatic ecosystems of northern Italy, the River Po and the Venice Lagoon. Results of this study confirmed the potential of OC to persist in surface water. However, the addition of 5% of sediments resulted in rapid OC degradation. The estimated half-life of OC in water/sediment of the River Po was 15 days. After three weeks of incubation at 20 °C, more than 8% of 14C-OC evolved as 14CO2 from water/sediment samples of the River Po and Venice Lagoon. OC was moderately retained onto coarse sediments from the two sites. In water/sediment samples of the River Po and Venice Lagoon treated with 14C-OC, more than 30% of the 14C-residues remained water-extractable after three weeks of incubation. The low affinity of OC to sediments suggests that the presence of sediments would not reduce its bioavailability to microbial degradation. Another series of laboratory experiments investigated the fate and the removal of OC in two surface water ecosystems of Japan and in the municipal wastewater treatment plant of the city of Bologna, in Northern Italy. The persistence of OC in surface water ranged from non-detectable degradation to a half-life of 53 days. After 40 days, less than 3% of radiolabeled OC evolved as 14CO2. The presence of sediments (5%) led to a significant increase of OC degradation and of mineralization rates. A more intense mineralization was observed in samples of the wastewater treatment plant when applying a long incubation period (40 days). More precisely, 76% and 37% of the initial radioactivity applied as 14C-OC was recovered as 14CO2 from samples of the biological tank and effluent water, respectively. Two bacterial strains growing on OC as sole carbon source were isolated and used for its removal from synthetic medium and environmental samples, including surface water and wastewater. Inoculation of water and wastewater samples with the two OC-degrading strains showed that mineralization of OC was significantly higher in both inoculated water and wastewater, than in uninoculated controls. Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis and quantitative PCR analysis showed that OC would not affect the microbial population of surface water and wastewater. The capacity of the ligninolytic fungus Phanerochaete chrysosporium to degrade a wide variety of environmentally persistent xenobiotics has been largely reported in literature. In a series of laboratory experiments, the efficiency of a formulation using P. chrysosporium was evaluated for the removal of selected pharmaceuticals from wastewater samples. Addition of the fungus to samples of the wastewater treatment plant of Bologna significantly increased (P < 0.05) the removal of OC and three antibiotics, erythromycin, sulfamethoxazole, and ciprofloxacin. Similar effects were also observed in effluent water. OC was the most persistent of the four pharmaceuticals. After 30 days of incubation, approximately two times more OC was removed in bioremediated samples than in controls. The highest removal efficiency of the formulation was observed with the antibiotic ciprofloxacin. The studies included environmental aspects of soil contamination with two emerging veterinary contaminants, such as doramectin and oxibendazole, wich are common parasitic treatments in cattle farms.

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Il virus dell’Epatite E (HEV) e i calicivirus (norovirus e sapovirus) causano rispettivamente epatite acuta e gastroenterite. Questi virus sono considerati agenti eziologici emergenti rappresentando un problema di sanità pubblica e di sicurezza alimentare. Per HEV, è ormai confermata la trasmissione zoonotica, e il suino è considerato il principale serbatoio asintomatico. Norovirus e sapovirus infettano sia i bambini che gli adulti. Sebbene questi virus siano stati identificati anche negli animali, la possibile trasmissione zoonotica non è stata dimostrata in modo conclusivo. Il lavoro sperimentale condotto durante il Dottorato di Ricerca è stato focalizzato sullo studio degli aspetti biologici ed epidemiologici dell’infezioni causate da HEV e da calicivirus. Per la prima volta in Italia, i risultati ottenuti hanno dimostrato la presenza del virus HEV nei fegati di suini in fase di macellazione ed hanno confermato, attraverso la ricerca di anticorpi, un’elevata esposizione degli animali al virus. Inoltre, mediante la produzione di antigeni e reattivi immunologici, sono stati messi a punto test diagnostici per la ricerca di anticorpi contro HEV nel suino e nei cinghiali. Il lavoro svolto per la ricerca di calicivirus nel suino e nel bovino ha dimostrato la circolazione dei sapovirus in popolazioni di suini asintomatici e la presenza di norovirus nei vitelli affetti da diarrea acuta.Sono stati inoltre sviluppati reattivi immunologici, utilizzando proteine del capside di norovirus umano e bovino espresse con il sistema ricombinante baculovirus. Questi hanno permesso di evidenziare la presenza di anticorpi contro norovirus umano e bovino, in sieri di veterinari professionalmente esposti. Inoltre, sono stati utilizzati per sviluppare metodi per la concentrazione dei virus da matrici a bassa concentrazione.Infine, le VLP sono state utilizzate per valutare l’attivazione del sistema immunitario umano ex vivo. I risultati hanno dimostrato che le VLP di NoV stimolano il sistema immunitario attivando risposte di tipo Th1 e Th2 .