963 resultados para Sumaré (SP) - Atlas
Resumo:
Three strains of a previously undescribed catalase-positive Actinomyces-like bacterium were isolated from dogs. Biochemical testing and PAGE analysis of whole-cell proteins indicated that the strains were phenotypically highly related to each other but different from previously described Actinomyces and Arcanobacterium species. Sequencing of 16S rRNA showed that the unknown bacterium represents a new subline within a cluster of species which includes Actinomyces hyovaginalis, Actinomyces georgiae, Actinomyces meyeri, Actinomyces odontolyticus, Actinomyces radingae and Actinomyces turicensis. On the basis of phenotypic evidence and 16S rRNA sequence divergence levels (greater than 5% with recognized Actinomyces species) it is proposed that the unknown strains from canine sources be classified as a new species with the name Actinomyces canis sp. nov. The type strain of Actinomyces canis is CCUG 41706T (= CIP 106351T).
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A polyphasic taxonomic study was performed on two strains of an unknown Gram-positive, catalase-negative, coccus-shaped bacterium isolated from a dead seal and a harbour porpoise. Comparative 16S rRNA gene sequencing demonstrated that the unknown bacterium represents a new subline within the genus Vagococcus close to, but distinct from, Vagococcus fluvialis, Vagococcus lutrae and Vagococcus salmoninarum. The unknown bacterium was readily distinguished from the three currently recognized Vagococcus species by biochemical tests and electrophoretic analysis of whole-cell proteins. Based on phylogenetic and phenotypic evidence, it is proposed that the unknown bacterium be classified as a new species, Vagococcus fessus. The type strain of Vagococcus fessus is CCUG 41755T.
Resumo:
Blumeria graminis is an economically important obligate plant-pathogenic fungus, whose entire genome was recently sequenced and manually annotated using ab initio in silico predictions [7]. Employing large scale proteogenomic analysis we are now able to verify independently the existence of proteins predicted by 24% of open reading frame models. We compared the haustoria and sporulating hyphae proteomes and identified 71 proteins exclusively in haustoria, the feeding and effector-delivery organs of the pathogen. These proteins are ‘significantly smaller than the rest of the protein pool and predicted to be secreted. Most do not share any similarities with Swiss–Prot or Trembl entries nor possess any identifiable Pfam domains. We used a novel automated prediction pipeline to model the 3D structures of the proteins, identify putative ligand binding sites and predict regions of intrinsic disorder. This revealed that the protein set found exclusively in haustoria is significantly less disordered than the rest of the identified Blumeria proteins or random (and representative) protein sets generated from the yeast proteome. For most of the haustorial proteins with unknown functions no good templates could be found, from which to generate high quality models. Thus, these unknown proteins present potentially new protein folds that can be specific to the interaction of the pathogen with its host.
Resumo:
Os tripanossomatídeos são caracterizados por processos moleculares diferenciados como a transcrição policistrônica e regulação pós-transcricional da expressão gênica. Em mamíferos, a tradução se inicia com a ligação do complexo eIF4F (formado pelos eIF4A, eIF4E e eIF4G) a extremidade 5' dos mRNAs, o que facilita seu reconhecimento pelo ribossomo. A atividade do eIF4F é reforçada pela proteína de ligação a cauda poli-A (PABP), na extremidade 3' dos mRNAs, que interage com o eIF4G. Dois complexos do tipo eIF4F foram identificados em tripanossomatídeos: o primeiro formado pelos EIF4G3, EIF4E4 e EIF4AI com a PABP1; e um outro baseado na interação do EIF4G4 com o EIF4E3 e o EIF4A1. Este trabalho buscou caracterizar as interações entre as subunidades destes complexos e sua associação com PABPs de Leishmania, avaliando o efeito de mutações em motivos específicos. Proteínas recombinantes foram geradas fusionadas a GST e avaliadas quanto a sua habilidade de interagir com parceiros marcados radioativamente em ensaios do tipo pull-down. Para o EIF4G3, mutações individuais em dois resíduos vizinhos (I8A e R9A), afetaram a interação com o EIF4E4 e a mutação de ambos os resíduos equivalentes do EIF4G4 (IL25-26AA) também impediu sua ligação ao EIF4E3, sugerindo um motivo comum para a ligação aos seus parceiros. As proteínas EIF4E3 e EIF4E4 foram avaliadas quanto à capacidade de interagir com a PABP2 e PABP1 respectivamente, e mutações em motivos conservados nas regiões N-terminais dos EIF4E (Boxes A, B e C) aboliram sua interação com os homólogos da PABP. Para identificar que regiões da PABP1 estão relacionadas às interações com o parceiro EIF4E4, foram obtidas proteínas PABP1 mutantes em motivos conservados e observou-se que a mutação no motivo TGM, C-terminal, aboliu sua interação com o EIF4E4. Com estas abordagens conseguiu-se avançar na definição das interações entre as referidas subunidades do eIF4F e PABP, identificando-se diferenças relevantes em relação a outros eucariotos
Resumo:
Os tripanossomatídeos são organismos caracterizados pelo controle póstranscricional da expressão gênica, principalmente em nível de tradução. Na tradução em eucariotos, tem grande destaque o complexo eIF4F, sendo um de seus principais componentes o fator de iniciação da tradução eIF4E. Já foram descritos em tripanossomatídeos seis homólogos para o eIF4E, nomeados EIF4E1 a 6. Em um estudo com Leishmania amazonensis, focado no EIF4E3, percebeu-se que seu perfil de expressão se alterava rapidamente numa curva de crescimento, com este apresentando ao menos duas bandas. As mudanças observadas sugeriam modificações pós-traducionais do tipo fosforilação, algo posteriormente confirmado. Analisando-se a sequência do EIF4E3 de Leishmania, foi possível identificar a presença de possíveis sítios de fosforilação e de ligação a parceiros funcionais como homólogos do eIF4G, outro componente do complexo eIF4F, e da proteína de ligação á cauda poli-A (PABP). No presente estudo foi analisado o perfil de expressão e a capacidade de ligação a parceiros funcionais do EIF4E3 de Leishmania superexpresso em células transfectadas e no qual foram introduzidas mutações em motivos específicos. Os resultados mostraram um perfil de expressão de ao menos três bandas para o EIF4E3 de L. amazonensis e duas para L. infantum, com o sítio S75, presente apenas na primeira, sendo o responsável por esta diferença. Em ensaios de imunoprecipitação, foi identificado um motivo que, quando mutado, aboliu a ligação do EIF4E3 com a PABP3, sugerindo este como o sítio de interação entre os fatores. Com a análise do efeito de mutações no EIF4E3 de L. amazonensis, foi percebido que ao se mutar três motivos implicados na à PABP e o possível sítio de ligação ao EIF4G, sua fosforilação diminuiu drasticamente, sugerindo a necessidade destas interações para que a fosforilação ocorra. Estes resultados indicam um complexo mecanismo de modificações pós-traducionais responsáveis pela regulação do EIF4E3 e contribuem a para a caracterização da sua função em Leishmania
Resumo:
This Atlas presents statistical analyses of the simulations submitted to the Aqua-Planet Experiment (APE) data archive. The simulations are from global Atmospheric General Circulation Models (AGCM) applied to a water-covered earth. The AGCMs include ones actively used or being developed for numerical weather prediction or climate research. Some are mature, application models and others are more novel and thus less well tested in Earth-like applications. The experiment applies AGCMs with their complete parameterization package to an idealization of the planet Earth which has a greatly simplified lower boundary that consists of an ocean only. It has no land and its associated orography, and no sea ice. The ocean is represented by Sea Surface Temperatures (SST) which are specified everywhere with simple, idealized distributions. Thus in the hierarchy of tests available for AGCMs, APE falls between tests with simplified forcings such as those proposed by Held and Suarez (1994) and Boer and Denis (1997) and Earth-like simulations of the Atmospheric Modeling Intercomparison Project (AMIP, Gates et al., 1999). Blackburn and Hoskins (2013) summarize the APE and its aims. They discuss where the APE fits within a modeling hierarchy which has evolved to evaluate complete models and which provides a link between realistic simulation and conceptual models of atmospheric phenomena. The APE bridges a gap in the existing hierarchy. The goals of APE are to provide a benchmark of current model behaviors and to stimulate research to understand the cause of inter-model differences., APE is sponsored by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) joint Commission on Atmospheric Science (CAS), World Climate Research Program (WCRP) Working Group on Numerical Experimentation (WGNE). Chapter 2 of this Atlas provides an overview of the specification of the eight APE experiments and of the data collected. Chapter 3 lists the participating models and includes brief descriptions of each. Chapters 4 through 7 present a wide variety of statistics from the 14 participating models for the eight different experiments. Additional intercomparison figures created by Dr. Yukiko Yamada in AGU group are available at http://www.gfd-dennou.org/library/ape/comparison/. This Atlas is intended to present and compare the statistics of the APE simulations but does not contain a discussion of interpretive analyses. Such analyses are left for journal papers such as those included in the Special Issue of the Journal of the Meteorological Society of Japan (2013, Vol. 91A) devoted to the APE. Two papers in that collection provide an overview of the simulations. One (Blackburn et al., 2013) concentrates on the CONTROL simulation and the other (Williamson et al., 2013) on the response to changes in the meridional SST profile. Additional papers provide more detailed analysis of the basic simulations, while others describe various sensitivities and applications. The APE experiment data base holds a wealth of data that is now publicly available from the APE web site: http://climate.ncas.ac.uk/ape/. We hope that this Atlas will stimulate future analyses and investigations to understand the large variation seen in the model behaviors.
Resumo:
Three strains of a Gram-positive, catalase-positive, fermentative, non-lipophilic, previously unknown bacterium were isolated from urogenital samples taken from mares in Scotland (M401624/00/1) and Sweden (VM 2074 and VM 2298T). All were deposited with the CCUG with tentative identifications as Corynebacterium spp. The strains were characterized using a polyphasic taxonomic approach. Biochemically, the strains were very similar to each other, but phylogenetically distinct from Corynebacterium species with validly published names (≤95% sequence similarity). rpoB gene sequence data confirmed the strains belonged to the same species (>99% sequence similarity) and were distinct from species with validly published names (>13% sequence divergence). On the basis of phenotypic and sequence data, the strains represent a novel species within the genus Corynebacterium, for which the name Corynebacterium uterequi is proposed. The type strain is VM 2298T (=CCUG 61235T = DSM 45634T), isolated from equine uterus.
Resumo:
The international response to SARS-CoV has produced an outstanding number of protein structures in a very short time. This review summarizes the findings of functional and structural studies including those derived from cryoelectron microscopy, small angle X-ray scattering, NMR spectroscopy, and X-ray crystallography, and incorporates bioinformatics predictions where no structural data is available. Structures that shed light on the function and biological roles of the proteins in viral replication and pathogenesis are highlighted. The high percentage of novel protein folds identified among SARS-CoV proteins is discussed.
Resumo:
Summary Reasons for performing study: Metabonomics is emerging as a powerful tool for disease screening and investigating mammalian metabolism. This study aims to create a metabolic framework by producing a preliminary reference guide for the normal equine metabolic milieu. Objectives: To metabolically profile plasma, urine and faecal water from healthy racehorses using high resolution 1H-NMR spectroscopy and to provide a list of dominant metabolites present in each biofluid for the benefit of future research in this area. Study design: This study was performed using seven Thoroughbreds in race training at a single time-point. Urine and faecal samples were collected non-invasively and plasma was obtained from samples taken for routine clinical chemistry purposes. Methods: Biofluids were analysed using 1H-NMR spectroscopy. Metabolite assignment was achieved via a range of 1D and 2D experiments. Results: A total of 102 metabolites were assigned across the three biological matrices. A core metabonome of 14 metabolites was ubiquitous across all biofluids. All biological matrices provided a unique window on different aspects of systematic metabolism. Urine was the most populated metabolite matrix with 65 identified metabolites, 39 of which were unique to this biological compartment. A number of these were related to gut microbial host co-metabolism. Faecal samples were the most metabolically variable between animals; acetate was responsible for the majority (28%) of this variation. Short chain fatty acids were the predominant features identified within this biofluid by 1H-NMR spectroscopy. Conclusions: Metabonomics provides a platform for investigating complex and dynamic interactions between the host and its consortium of gut microbes and has the potential to uncover markers for health and disease in a variety of biofluids. Inherent variation in faecal extracts along with the relative abundance of microbial-mammalian metabolites in urine and invasive nature of plasma sampling, infers that urine is the most appropriate biofluid for the purposes of metabonomic analysis.
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Traditional knowledge about medicinal plants from a poorly studied region, the High Atlas in Morocco, is reported here for the first time; this permits consideration of efficacy and safety of current practices whilst highlighting species previously not known to have traditional medicinal use. Our study aims to document local medicinal plant knowledge among Tashelhit speaking communities through ethnobotanical survey, identifying preferred species and new medicinal plant citations and illuminating the relationship between emic and etic ailment classifications. Ethnobotanical data were collected using standard methods and with prior informed consent obtained before all interactions, data were characterized using descriptive indices and medicinal plants and healing strategies relevant to local livelihoods were identified. 151 vernacular names corresponding to 159 botanical species were found to be used to treat 36 folk ailments grouped in 14 biomedical use categories. Thirty-five (22%) are new medicinal plant records in Morocco, and 26 described as used for the first time anywhere. Fidelity levels (FL) revealed low specificity in plant use, particularly for the most commonly reported plants. Most plants are used in mixtures. Plant use is driven by local concepts of disease, including “hot” and “cold” classification and beliefs in supernatural forces. Local medicinal plant knowledge is rich in the High Atlas, where local populations still rely on medicinal plants for healthcare. We found experimental evidence of safe and effective use of medicinal plants in the High Atlas; but we highlight the use of eight poisonous species.