995 resultados para Ipomoea carnea subsp. fistulosa
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Mycobacterium avium subsp. avium (Maa) is an intracellular pathogen belonging to the Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare complex (MAC). Reservoirs of MAC are the natural environment, wildlife and domestic animals. In adult bovine, MAC infections are typically caused by Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (Map). Maa infections in bovine are rarely reported but may cause clinical disease and pathological lesions similar to those observed in paratuberculosis or those induced by members of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTBC). Therefore, differentiation of MAC from MTBC infection should be attempted, especially if unusual mycobacterial lesions are encountered. Four veal calves from a fattening farm dying with clinical signs of otitis media, fever, and weight loss were submitted for necropsy. Samples from affected organs were taken for histologic investigation, bacteriologic culture, and bacterial specification using PCR. Macroscopic thickening of the intestinal mucosa was induced by granulomatous enteritis and colitis. Intracytoplasmic acid-fast bacteria were detected by Ziehl-Neelsen stains and PCR revealed positive results for Mycobacterium avium subsp. avium. Clinical and pathological changes of Maa infection in veal calves had features of Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis and the MTBC. Therefore, Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex infection should be considered in cases of granulomatous enteritis in calves.
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Aeromonas salmonicida subsp. salmonicida is the causal agent of furunculosis in salmonids. We recently identified a group of genomic islands (AsaGEI) in this bacterium. AsaGEI2a, one of these genomic islands, has almost exclusively been identified in isolates from North America. To date, Aeromonas salmonicida subsp. salmonicida JF3224, a strain isolated from a wild brown trout (Salmo trutta) caught in Switzerland, was the only European isolate that appeared to bear AsaGEI2a. We analyzed the genome of JF3224 and showed that the genomic island in JF3224 is a new variant of AsaGEI, which we have called AsaGEI2b. While AsaGEI2b shares the same integrase gene and insertion site as AsaGEI2a, it is very different in terms of many other features. Additional genomic investigations combined with PCR genotyping revealed that JF3224 is sensitive to growth at 25°C, leading to insertion sequence-dependent rearrangement of the locus on the pAsa5 plasmid that encodes a type three secretion system, which is essential for the virulence of the bacterium. The analysis of the JF3224 genome confirmed that AsaGEIs are accurate indicators of the geographic origins of A. salmonicida subsp. salmonicida isolates and is another example of the susceptibility of the pAsa5 plasmid to DNA rearrangements.
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Members of the Mycoplasma mycoides cluster' represent important livestock pathogens worldwide. Mycoplasma mycoides subsp. mycoides is the etiologic agent of contagious bovine pleuropneumonia (CBPP), which is still endemic in many parts of Africa. We report the genome sequences and annotation of two frequently used challenge strains of Mycoplasma mycoides subsp. mycoides, Afadé and B237. The information provided will enable downstream 'omics' applications such as proteomics, transcriptomics and reverse vaccinology approaches. Despite the absence of Mycoplasma pneumoniae like cyto-adhesion encoding genes, the two strains showed the presence of protrusions. This phenotype is likely encoded by another set of genes.
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Contagious caprine pleuropneumonia (CCPP) is a highly contagious disease caused by Mycoplasma capricolum subsp. capripneumoniae that affects goats in Africa and Asia. Current available methods for the diagnosis of Mycoplasma infection, including cultivation, serological assays, and PCR, are time-consuming and require fully equipped stationary laboratories, which make them incompatible with testing in the resource-poor settings that are most relevant to this disease. We report a rapid, specific, and sensitive assay employing isothermal DNA amplification using recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA) for the detection of M. capricolum subsp. capripneumoniae. We developed the assay using a specific target sequence in M. capricolum subsp. capripneumoniae, as found in the genome sequence of the field strain ILRI181 and the type strain F38 and that was further evidenced in 10 field strains from different geographical regions. Detection limits corresponding to 5 × 10(3) and 5 × 10(4) cells/ml were obtained using genomic DNA and bacterial culture from M. capricolum subsp. capripneumoniae strain ILRI181, while no amplification was obtained from 71 related Mycoplasma isolates or from the Acholeplasma or the Pasteurella isolates, demonstrating a high degree of specificity. The assay produces a fluorescent signal within 15 to 20 min and worked well using pleural fluid obtained directly from CCPP-positive animals without prior DNA extraction. We demonstrate that the diagnosis of CCPP can be achieved, with a short sample preparation time and a simple read-out device that can be powered by a car battery, in <45 min in a simulated field setting.
Resumo:
Contagious bovine pleuropneumonia (CBPP) is a serious respiratory disease of cattle caused by Mycoplasma mycoides subsp. mycoides. Current vaccines against CBPP induce short-lived immunity and can cause severe postvaccine reactions. Previous studies have identified the N terminus of the transmembrane lipoprotein Q (LppQ-N') of M. mycoides subsp. mycoides as the major antigen and a possible virulence factor. We therefore immunized cattle with purified recombinant LppQ-N' formulated in Freund's adjuvant and challenged them with M. mycoides subsp. mycoides. Vaccinated animals showed a strong seroconversion to LppQ, but they exhibited significantly enhanced postchallenge glomerulonephritis compared to the placebo group (P = 0.021). Glomerulonephritis was characterized by features that suggested the development of antigen-antibody immune complexes. Clinical signs and gross pathological scores did not significantly differ between vaccinated and placebo groups. These findings reveal for the first time the pathogenesis of enhanced disease as a result of antibodies against LppQ during challenge and also argue against inclusion of LppQ-N' in a future subunit vaccine for CBPP.
Resumo:
Classical quorum-sensing (autoinduction) regulation, as exemplified by the lux system of Vibrio fischeri, requires N-acyl homoserine lactone (AHL) signals to stimulate cognate transcriptional activators for the cell density-dependent expression of specific target gene systems. For Pantoea stewartii subsp. stewartii, a bacterial pathogen of sweet corn and maize, the extracellular polysaccharide (EPS) stewartan is a major virulence factor, and its production is controlled by quorum sensing in a population density-dependent manner. Two genes, esaI and esaR, encode essential regulatory proteins for quorum sensing. EsaI is the AHL signal synthase, and EsaR is the cognate gene regulator. esaI, DeltaesaR, and DeltaesaI-esaR mutations were constructed to establish the regulatory role of EsaR. We report here that strains containing an esaR mutation produce high levels of EPS independently of cell density and in the absence of the AHL signal. Our data indicate that quorum-sensing regulation in P. s. subsp. stewartii, in contrast to most other described systems, uses EsaR to repress EPS synthesis at low cell density, and that derepression requires micromolar amounts of AHL. In addition, derepressed esaR strains, which synthesize EPS constitutively at low cell densities, were significantly less virulent than the wild-type parent. This finding suggests that quorum sensing in P. s. subsp. stewartii may be a mechanism to delay the expression of EPS during the early stages of infection so that it does not interfere with other mechanisms of pathogenesis.
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Bactericera cockerelli (Sulc) (Homoptera: Psyllidae) es una plaga importante de solanaceas en México; para su control, la utilización de plaguicidas es el principal método, por lo que el uso de enemigos naturales bajo un sistema de manejo integrado, ha sido poco utilizado. Tal es el caso de Chrysoperla carnea (Stephens) (Neuroptera: Chrysopidae), agente de control biológico reportado para esta plaga; sin embargo, se carece de estudios para conocer su potencial. El objetivo del presente trabajo consistió en determinar el tipo y los parámetros de respuesta funcional de C. carnea sobre ninfas de B. cockerelli. El análisis de regresión logística reveló que la respuesta funcional de los tres instares larvales de C. carnea sobre ninfas de B. cockerelli fue de tipo II. Los tres instares consumieron ninfas de B. cockerelli, sin embargo el tercer instar tuvo mayor consumo, menor tiempo de manipuleo y mayor coeficiente de ataque. Estos resultados demostraron que C. carnea fue voraz y su capacidad depredadora está en función de su estado de desarrollo. El tercer instar reveló altas posibilidades para reducir las poblaciones de esta plaga, lo que sugiere que puede ser incluido en sistemas de manejo integrado de plagas basados en el control biológico aumentativo.
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The figure of protection "micro-reserves" was created in the Region of Valencia (ANONYMOUS, 1994) with the aim of protecting endangered plant species. This is one of the areas of greatest floristic richness and uniqueness of the western Mediterranean. In this area rare, endemic or threatened vascular flora has a peculiar distribution: they appear to form small fragments spread over the entire region (LAGUNA, 1994; LAGUNA, 2001) The protection of every these small populations of great scientific value has significant challenges. It doesn´t try to protect every species that set out in Annex IV of the by then existing Law 4 / 1989 (repealed in 2007), or to protect to the most ecological level with the creation of Natural Protected Area but an intermediate level: the plant community of small size. According to the decree: “as Micro-Reserve will be declared the natural parcels of land under 20 hectares that contain a high concentration of rare plants, endemic, threatened or of high scientific interest” (ANONYMOUS, 1994) . Of course, the statement of an area as micro-reserve carries certain prohibitions that are harmful to the vegetal community
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Field studies were conducted in walk-in tunnels to determine the flying capacity in the presence and absence of crop, of the parasitoid Psyttalia concolor and the predator Chrysoperla carnea under a UV-absorbent net (Bionet®). Yellow sticky cards were used for insect recovery but neither P. concolor nor C. carnea were very attracted to them, thus captures were too low to permit any meaningful comparisons. Bionet® did not seem to affect the mobility of any natural enemy irrespective of the trap location and monitoring hour. Climatic conditions inside nets were very extreme (average temperatures very high and relative humidity very low) threatening insect survival. New experiments are being developed, trying to find new attractants that permit a significant capture of both natural enemies.
Resumo:
La Directiva 2009/128/CE sobre Uso Sostenible de Plaguicidas establece que los Programas de Manejo Integrado de Plagas (MIP) deben dar prioridad a los métodos de control físicos y biológicos, y que las materias activas insecticidas aplicadas deberán ser selectivas con la plaga y respetuosas con los organismos beneficiosos. El neuróptero generalista Chrysoperla carnea (Stephens) (Neuroptera: Chrysopidae) es ampliamente utilizado en MIP porque controla eficazmente pulgones y otros pequeños artrópodos. Además, se trata de una de las especies de referencia consideradas por la OILB en la evaluación de los efectos secundarios de plaguicidas, cuando en la primera secuencia de evaluación resultan tóxicos los compuestos. En este trabajo se evaluó la compatibilidad de nuevos insecticidas con diferentes modos de acción sobre larvas L3 y adultos del depredador C. carnea. Las materias activas ensayadas están incluidas, o en proceso de inclusión en el Anexo I de la Directiva 91/414/EEC: flonicamida (inhibidor selectivo de la alimentación), flubendiamida (modulador del receptor de rianodina), metaflumizona (bloqueador del canal de sodio), spirotetramat (inhibidor de lípidos), sulfoxaflor (modo de acción desconocido) y deltametrina (modulador del canal de sodio). Los ensayos se realizaron exponiendo los insectos a residuo fresco de los diferentes compuestos sobre placa de vidrio tratada, en condiciones de laboratorio, aplicando la dosis máxima de campo recomendada de cada insecticida mediante Torre de Potter. Se evaluó mortalidad larvaria (24-48-72 h), pupación, emergencia y mortalidad de adultos, así como fecundidad y fertilidad (durante 7 días). En adultos se evaluó mortalidad (24-48-72 h), fecundidad y fertilidad (durante 7 días).
Resumo:
To further develop Integrated Pest Management (IPM) strategies against crop pests, it is important to evaluate the effects of insecticides on biological control agents. Therefore, we tested the toxicity and sublethal effects (fecundity and fertility) of flonicamid, flubendiamide, metaflumizone, spirotetramat, sulfoxaflor and deltamethrin on the natural enemies Chrysoperla carnea and Adalia bipunctata. The side effects of the active ingredients of the insecticides were evaluated with residual contact tests for the larvae and adults of these predators in the laboratory. Flonicamid, flubendiamide, metaflumizone and spirotetramat were innocuous to last instar larvae and adults of C. carnea and A. bipunctata. Sulfoxaflor was slightly toxic to adults of C. carnea and was highly toxic to the L4 larvae of A. bipunctata. For A. bipunctata, sulfoxaflor and deltamethrin were the most damaging compounds with a cumulative larval mortality of 100%. Deltamethrin was also the most toxic compound to larvae and adults of C. carnea. In accordance with the results obtained, the compounds flonicamid, flubendiamide, metaflumizone and spirotetramat might be incorporated into IPM programs in combination with these natural enemies for the control of particular greenhouse pests. Nevertheless, the use of sulfoxaflor and deltamethrin in IPM strategies should be taken into consideration when releasing either of these biological control agents, due to the toxic behavior observed under laboratory conditions. The need for developing sustainable approaches to combine the use of these insecticides and natural enemies within an IPM framework is discussed.
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La cancrosis o chancro bacteriano de los cítricos (CBC) causada por Xanthomonas citri subsp. citri (Xcc) y X. fuscans subsp. aurantifolii, afecta a un gran número de especies dentro de la familia de las rutáceas, especialmente cítricos. Esta enfermedad produce graves pérdidas económicas allí donde está presente, principalmente porque la comercialización de cítricos desde las zonas afectadas hacía zonas libres de cancrosis, está sujeta a fuertes medidas cuarentenarias. La cancrosis se encuentra distribuida a nivel mundial pero no se ha localizado ni en la Unión Europea ni en ningún área del Mediterráneo. Se han descrito tres tipos de cancrosis en función de la gama de huésped y de las características fenotípicas y genotípicas de las bacterias que las producen. La más extendida es la cancrosis tipo A producida por Xcc, dentro de la cual se distinguen los subtipos Aw y A*, originarios de Florida y Sudeste Asiático, respectivamente, que de forma natural solo son capaces de producir enfermedad en lima mejicana. En este trabajo se presentan estudios sobre mecanismos implicados en las primeras etapas de la infección, como la quimiotaxis y formación de biopelículas, en la cancrosis de los cítricos. La quimiotaxis es el proceso por el cual las bacterias se dirigen hacia zonas favorables para su supervivencia y desarrollo. Los perfiles quimiotácticos obtenidos frente a distintas fuentes de carbono, así como los estudios en relación al contenido de proteínas aceptoras de grupos metilo (MCPs), permitieron agrupar a las cepas de Xanthomonas estudiadas en este trabajo, de acuerdo a la enfermedad producida y a su gama de huésped. Todas las cepas mostraron quimiotaxis positiva frente a extractos de hoja y apoplasto de diferentes especies, sin embargo, Xcc 306, X. alfalfae subsp. citrumelonis (Xac) y X. campestris pv. campestris (Xc) manifestaron respuestas más específicas frente a extractos de apoplasto de hojas de naranjo dulce, lima y col china, respectivamente. Dicho resultado nos permite asociar el mecanismo de quimiotaxis con la capacidad de las cepas de Xanthomonas para colonizar estos huéspedes de forma específica. Las cepas estudiadas fueron capaces de realizar movimiento tipo swimming, twitching y sliding en distintos medios, siendo el movimiento swimming el único en el que se encontraron diferencias entre las cepas de Xcc con distinta gama de huésped. En este trabajo se ha estudiado además la formación de biopelículas en superficies bióticas y abióticas, un mecanismo importante tanto para la supervivencia en superficie vegetal como para el desarrollo de la infección. Las cepas de Xanthomonas estudiadas fueron capaces de formar biopelículas in vitro, siendo mayor en un medio que simula el apoplasto y que contiene una baja concentración de nutrientes en comparación con medios que contenían alta concentración de nutrientes. La formación de biopelículas en superficie vegetal se encontró relacionada, en las cepas patógenas de cítricos, con la capacidad para infectar un tejido o huésped determinado. Se han caracterizado algunos de los componentes de la matriz extracelular producida por Xcc, que compone hasta un 90% de las bipoelículas. Entre ellos destaca el ADN extracelular, que tiene un papel como adhesina en las primeras etapas de formación de biopelículas y estructural en biopelículas maduras. Además, se han identificado el pilus tipo IV como componente importante en las biopelículas, que también participa en motilidad. Finalmente, se han realizado estudios sobre la expresión de genes implicados en motilidad bacteriana y formación de biopelículas que han confirmado las diferencias existentes entre cepas de Xcc de amplia y limitada gama de huésped, así como el papel que juegan elementos como el pilus tipo IV o el flagelo en estos procesos. ABSTRACT Xanthomonas citri subsp. citri (Xcc) and X. fuscans subsp. aurantifolii are the causal agents of Citrus Bacterial Canker (CBC) which is one of the most important citrus diseases. CBC affects all Citrus species as well as other species from Rutaceae family. CBC produces strong economic losses; furthermore the commercialization of plants and fruits is restricted from infested to citrus canker free areas. The disease is worldwide distributed in tropical and subtropical areas, however it is not present in the European Union. Three types of CBC have been described according to the host range and phenotypic and genotypic characteristics. CBC type A caused by Xcc is he widest distributed. Within CBC A type two subtypes Aw and A* were described from Florida and Iran respectively, both infecting only Mexican lime. Herein mechanisms connected to early events in the citrus bacterial canker disease such as chemotaxis and biofilm formation, were studied. Chemotaxis allows bacteria to move towards the more suitable environments for its survival, host colonization and infection. Studies performed on citrus pathogenic Xanthomonas and X. campestris pv. campestris (Xc), a crucifer pathogen, have shown different chemotactic profiles towards carbon compound as well as different MCPs profile, which clustered strains according to host range and disease caused. Every strain showed positive chemotaxis toward leaf extracts and apoplastic fluids from sweet orange, Mexican lime and Chinese cabbage leaves. However, a more specific response was found for strains Xcc 306, X. alfalfae subsp. citrumelonis and Xc towards sweet orange, Mexican lime and Chinese cabbage apoplastic fluids, respectively. These results relate chemotaxis with the higher ability of those strains to specifically colonize their proper host. Xanthomonas strains studied were able to perform swimming, sliding and twitching motilities. The ability to swim was variable among CBC strains and seemed related to host range. Biofilm formation is an important virulence factor for Xcc because it allows a better survival onto the plant surface as well as facilitates the infection process. The studied Xanthomonas strains were able to form biofilm in vitro, on both nutrient rich and apoplast mimicking media, furthermore the biofilm formation by all the strains was higher in the apoplast mimicking media. The ability to form biofilm in planta by Xcc and Xac strains was dependent of the host and the tissue colonized. The wide host range CBC strain was able to form biofilm onto several citrus leaves and fruits, however the limited host range CBC strain produced biofilm solely onto Mexican lime leaves and fruits. Furthermore Xac strain, which solely infects leaves of young plants, was not able to develop biofilms on fruits. Some components of the extracellular matrix produced by Xcc strains have been characterized. Extracellular DNA acted as an adhesin at the very early stages of biofilm formation and as structural component of mature biofilm for citrus pathogenic Xanthomonas. Furthermore type IV pilus has been identified as a component of the extracellular matrix in biofilm and motility. Transcriptional studies of genes related with biofilm formation and motility have confirmed the differential behavior found among wide and limited host range CBC strains as well as the role of type IV pili and flagellum on those processes.