scholarly journals Uromyces appendiculatus in Honduras: Pathogen Diversity and Host Resistance Screening

Plant Disease ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 97 (5) ◽  
pp. 652-661 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maricelis Acevedo ◽  
James R. Steadman ◽  
Juan C. Rosas

Bean rust, caused by the fungus Uromyces appendiculatus, is a major constraint for common bean production worldwide. Virulence of U. appendiculatus collected from wild and cultivated Phaseolus spp. was examined in 28 locations across Honduras. Host accessions representing wild and domesticated Phaseolus spp. collected at the same sampling locations were evaluated for resistance against U. appendiculatus. In total, 91 pathotypes were identified from 385 U. appendiculatus isolates according to their virulence on each of the 12 host differentials. No significant difference in pathogen total virulence, measured as the mean disease score, was found between locations. However, significant differences were found in pathotype virulence among isolates collected from different Phaseolus spp. within a location. Moreover, when locations were compared on the basis of pathotype occurrence and frequency, differences among locations were evident. No two locations had the same pathotype composition. The most common pathotype was virulent on 9 of the 12 differential lines. A high number of resistant accessions were identified in Phaseolus coccineus and P. lunatus. Although most wild P. vulgaris accessions were highly susceptible, rust resistance was observed in P. vulgaris landraces collected from farmer's fields. Thirty-two (52%) of the accessions screened showed intermediate to high levels of resistance and, of those, 16% were P. coccineus accessions. Our findings support the hypothesis that interaction of U. appendiculatus in host populations composed of diverse Phaseolus spp. and genotypes has favored highly diverse and virulent pathotypes, creating a center for virulence diversity of the pathogen in Honduras. The high percentage of intermediate and highly resistant accessions identified in the present study supports the strategy of collecting plants from the center of diversity of a pathogen or in locations with high incidence of disease and pathogen diversity to maximize the probability of identifying new sources of resistance.

2021 ◽  
Vol 42 (2) ◽  
pp. 294-301
Author(s):  
E.S. Okwuonu ◽  
C.M. Eneh ◽  
E.N. Elijah ◽  
F.N. Nnaji ◽  
F.A. Andong ◽  
...  

Eimeria infection has been considered the most important protozoan infection of the poultry industry in Nigeria because of its high incidence. A total of 400 faecal samples were collected from 10 farms in Nsukka LGA and analyzed using the Wisconsin’s faecal floatation technique. Data on the management practices of these farms were collected using a wellstructured questionnaire. Eimeria tenella was the only identified species. A total of 158 (39.5%) of the domestic chickens sampled were infected with the protozoan parasite. There was significant difference (p < 0.0001) of E. tenella between towns and between the studied farms. Of the 5 towns sampled, the prevalence was highest at Obukpa town 52 (65.0%) and in birds aged 7 weeks 20 (83.3%) and least at Edem 2 (2.5%) and in birds aged 32 weeks 2 (5.0%). The mean intensity of infection was highest at Obukpa (9.35 ± 9.24) and in birds aged 4weeks (11.50 ± 11.09) and least in Edem town and in birds aged 32 weeks. The difference in prevalence between birds of different ages was significant (p <0.0001). Majority of the farms practiced deep litter housing compared to battery cage users (90% vs. 10%). The most used vaccine was combination 7 (70%). Fifty percent of the farms employed the expertise of veterinary doctors in vaccine administration. Eimeria infection, the main cause of coccidiosis in chicken, has continued to be a major challenge in poultry production and management. Conclusively, the prevalence of Eimeria infection is moderately low as a result of the widespread use of vaccines and anticoccidials.


Author(s):  
Suratni Suratni ◽  
Yusi Anggriani ◽  
Agusdini Banun

Dengue fever is an infectious disease caused by virus transmitted through Aedes aegypty. The high incidence dengue fever can lead to increased healthcare costs. This study was conducted to analyze the effectiveness and direct cost of medical patients dengue fever without shock use fluid therapy by comparing crystalloid and crystalloid colloid combination. The subjects were 171 patients divided into two groups: 106 patients with crystalloid and 65 patients with crystalloid colloid combination. Assessed of effectiveness treatment and the mean medical costs. The results showed reviewed from hematocrit value no difference (p>0.05) in both study groups. The mean total cost of treatment for crystalloid Rp 4.005.223, the crystalloid colloid combination Rp 5.525.407. The highest cost of drug costs was 31.75% of the total cost crystalloid, 40.9% of the total cost crystalloid colloid combination. There was a significant difference between mean cost and two study groups (p0.05) with effectiveness treatment. Conclusion crystalloid have the same effectiveness as crystalloid colloid combination fluids at lower costs.


2021 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 113-121
Author(s):  
M. Koleva ◽  
Iv. Kiryakov

Bean rust, caused by Uromyces appendiculatus, is a major disease in common bean which occurs annually in The Rhodope Mountains and sporadic in the plains of Bulgaria. The present study aims to find sources of resistance in common bean to the pathogen for using in a breeding program. The reaction of fifty-five Phaseolus vulgaris accessions to the pathogen was monitored under field condition. Infection type, disease intensity and area under the disease progress curve were calculated. Twelve common bean cultivars were inoculated with eight pathotypes of races 20-2, 20-16, and 20-18 in the greenhouse, and infection type was estimated. Twelve accessions had an immune reaction, eight accessions had resistant a reaction, two accessions had a middle resistant reaction, and seven accessions had a susceptible reaction to U. appendiculatus population in both field estimations. Five cultivars showed resistant phenotype to the eight pathotypes in the greenhouse, four of which were resistant in the field (Abritus, Beslet, Trakiya, and Prelom). Five cultivars had a susceptible or resistant reaction to the pathotypes of the same race, resulting from different interaction between resistant genes in the host and virulent genes in the pathogen. Nine accessions showed race-nonspecific resistance in the field expressed in low disease intensity and susceptible/resistant phenotype.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 3344-3344
Author(s):  
Grace M. Lee ◽  
Ian Welsby ◽  
Barbara Phillips Bute ◽  
Thomas L. Ortel ◽  
Gowthami M Arepally

Abstract Abstract 3344 INTRO: Protamine (PRT) is routinely used to reverse heparin (H) anticoagulation during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). Previous studies have shown that PRT interacts with H to form ultra-large complexes that are immunogenic in mice (Chudasama 2010). Given the high levels of PRT and H used during CPB, we hypothesized that patients undergoing CPB will develop antibodies (Abs) to PRT/H complexes. To test this, we examined the serologic and clinical characteristics of 500 patients undergoing CPB from a recently completed prospective clinical trial (HIT 5801 study). METHOD: With IRB approval, we analyzed samples and clinical outcomes from patients at baseline, 3–7, and 30 days after CPB. Control subjects included healthy volunteers without diabetes, prior cardiac surgery, prior H exposure or chronic medications (n=101). PRT/H Abs were measured by enzyme linked-immunoassay (ELISA). RESULT: The mean A450nm for control subjects in the PRT/H ELISA was 0.39 ± 0.28, yielding a positive cut-off value (≥ mean A450nm +3 standard deviations (SD)) for the PRT/H ELISA of 1.2 (Fig A). Using this cut-off, PRT/H Abs were present in 2/101 (2%) of control subjects. New seroconversions were seen in 6/497 (1%) subjects at day 3–7 and 143/489 (29%) at day 30. The mean PRT/H reactivity of control subjects (mean A450nm ± SD; 0.39 ± 0.28) did not differ from that of patients at day 0 (0.28 ± 0.26) or day 3–7 (0.26 ± 0.37), but differed significantly from that at day 30 (1.06 ± 0.96, p < 0.0001). Serologic features of PRT/H Abs were examined on patients with high positivity in the screening ELISA (mean A450nm > 3.0, n = 32). These patients expressed high PRT/H Ab titers ranging from 1:1800–1:175,000 (mean 1:14,744). As seen in Fig B, high-titer PRT/H Abs bound to PRT alone and/or PRT/H complexes, but showed minimal binding to human platelet factor 4 (hPF4), hPF4/H complexes, or albumin (p < 0.0001 for PRT/H vs hPF4, PRT/H vs hPF4/H, and PRT/H vs albumin). Because Ab binding was significantly higher with PRT/H complexes than with PRT alone, we examined the effects of excess H (100 U/mL) on binding. All Abs with the exception of one, showed decreased binding in the presence of excess H (range: 8%-76%, mean inhibition = 45%). To determine the effects of Abs on platelet activation, a SRA was performed on patients (n=3) with high-titer Abs and control subjects. PRT/H seropositive plasma did not activate platelets in the presence of buffer or H (0.25 or 1 U/ml), but robustly activated platelets in the presence of PRT (1.25μg/mL) alone, with decreasing 14C release in the presence of PRT and increasing amounts of H (Fig C). Platelet activation in the presence of PRT was inhibited by IV.3, which blocks platelet activation via the platelet FcgRIIA. There was a high incidence of PF4/H seroconversion after CPB (362/500 or 72%). While the majority of PRT/H seropositive patients (n=154) were also positive for PF4/H Abs (120/154 or 78%), the converse was not true. Of the 362 PF4/H seropositive patients, only 120 (33%) were positive for PRT/H. A minority of subjects were seronegative for both (104/500 or 21%). Results in one assay were not predictive of the other. In analyzing long-term outcomes (>30 days), there was a trend towards an association between PRT/H Ab positivity at baseline and event free survival (p = 0.07; hazard ratio (HR) = 1.65 (0.96–2.82); days to major adverse cardiac event). Seropositivity at other time points was not associated with decreased event free survival. There was no significant difference between platelet counts by Ab status. CONCLUSION: Our studies are the first to comprehensively characterize a new class of H-dependent Abs, PRT/H Abs, in a large cohort of patients undergoing CPB. We show that PRT is a highly sensitizing drug, associated with formation of high-titer, antigen-specific Abs to PRT/H complexes that are capable of platelet activation. We show that the majority of seroconversions occurred after discharge and in the absence of circulating antigen (at day 30) was not associated with adverse clinical events. However, several features of PRT/H Abs, including high-titer expression and PRT-dependent platelet activation, suggest that additional studies are needed to determine the clinical significance of these Abs in the context of PRT re-exposure. Disclosures: Arepally: Teva Pharmaceuticals: Research Funding.


Plant Disease ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 92 (3) ◽  
pp. 401-408 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Jochua ◽  
M. I. V. Amane ◽  
J. R. Steadman ◽  
X. Xue ◽  
K. M. Eskridge

There is a dearth of information on pathogen variation within an individual field. In this study, virulence diversity of Uromyces appendiculatus, cause of bean rust, within individual fields was investigated. From six bean fields in the United States, Honduras, Dominican Republic, and South Africa, 380 U. appendiculatus isolates were differentiated into 65 virulence phenotypes on bean lines containing Andean- and Middle American-derived rust resistance genes. Race variation among bean rust isolates from different geographic regions was found, and virulence phenotypes found in fields from tropical and subtropical regions were more virulent and diverse than those found in fields from temperate regions. The variance components between fields was greater than the variance within a field based on mean disease score on 12 differentials but the variance components within a field were greater than the variances between fields based on number of virulence phenotypes. This is the first report that multiple site samples are needed to represent the fungal virulence diversity in a diseased field. In developing sampling plans, the entire cost of sampling one field is higher than the cost of taking more samples; therefore, to estimate virulence diversity variation, we recommend selecting fewer fields and collecting more samples per field.


1970 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 715-724 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard L. Powell ◽  
Oscar Tosi

Vowels were segmented into 15 different temporal segments taken from the middle of the vowel and ranging from 4 to 60 msecs, then presented to 6 subjects with normal hearing. The mean temporal-segment recognition threshold of 15 msecs with a range from 9.3 msecs for the /u/ to 27.2 milliseconds for the /a/. Misidenti-fication of vowels was most often confused with the vowel sound adjacent to it on the vowel-hump diagram. There was no significant difference between the cardinal and noncardinal vowels.


1991 ◽  
Vol 30 (05) ◽  
pp. 183-188
Author(s):  
A. Aydrner ◽  
A. Oto ◽  
E. Oram ◽  
O. Gedik ◽  
C. F. Bekdik ◽  
...  

Left ventricular function including regional wall motion (RWM) was evaluated by 99mTc first-pass and equilibrium gated blood pool ventriculography and glycohemoglobin (HbA1c) blood levels determined by a quantitative column technique in 25 young patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus without clinical evidence of heart disease, and in healthy controls matched for age and sex. Phase analysis revealed abnormal RWM in 19 of 21 diabetic patients. The mean left ventricular global ejection fraction, the mean regional ejection fraction and the mean 1/3 filling fraction were lower and the time to peak ejection, the time to peak filling and the time to peak ejection /cardiac cycle were longer in diabetics than in controls. We found high HbA1c levels in all diabetics. There was no significant difference between patients with and without retinopathy and with and without peripheral neuropathy in terms of left ventricular function and HbA1c levels.


1996 ◽  
Vol 75 (05) ◽  
pp. 772-777 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sybille Albrecht ◽  
Matthias Kotzsch ◽  
Gabriele Siegert ◽  
Thomas Luther ◽  
Heinz Großmann ◽  
...  

SummaryThe plasma tissue factor (TF) concentration was correlated to factor VII concentration (FVIIag) and factor VII activity (FVIIc) in 498 healthy volunteers ranging in age from 17 to 64 years. Immunoassays using monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) were developed for the determination of TF and FVIIag in plasma. The mAbs and the test systems were characterized. The mean value of the TF concentration was 172 ± 135 pg/ml. TF showed no age- and gender-related differences. For the total population, FVIIc, determined by a clotting test, was 110 ± 15% and the factor VIlag was 0.77 ± 0.19 μg/ml. FVII activity was significantly increased with age, whereas the concentration demonstrated no correlation to age in this population. FVII concentration is highly correlated with the activity as measured by clotting assay using rabbit thromboplastin. The ratio between FVIIc and FVIIag was not age-dependent, but demonstrated a significant difference between men and women. Between TF and FVII we could not detect a correlation.


1993 ◽  
Vol 69 (01) ◽  
pp. 035-040 ◽  
Author(s):  
A M H P van den Besselaar ◽  
R M Bertina

SummaryFour thromboplastin reagents were tested by 18 laboratories in Europe, North-America, and Australasia, according to a detailed protocol. One thromboplastin was the International Reference Preparation for ox brain thromboplastin combined with adsorbed bovine plasma (coded OBT/79), and the second was a certified reference material for rabbit brain thromboplastin, plain (coded CRM 149R). The other two thromboplastin reagents were another rabbit plain brain thromboplastin (RP) with a lower ISI than CRM 149R and a rabbit brain thromboplastin combined with adsorbed bovine plasma (RC). Calibration of the latter two reagents was performed according to methods recommended by the World Health Organization (W. H. O.).The purpose of this study was to answer the following questions: 1) Is the calibration of the RC reagent more precise against the bovine/combined (OBT/79) than against the rabbit/plain reagent (CRM 149R)? 2) Is the precision of calibration influenced by the magnitude of the International Sensitivity Index (ISI)?The lowest inter-laboratory variation of ISI was observed in the calibration of the rabbit/plain reagent (RP) against the other rabbit/plain reagent (CRM 149R) (CV 1.6%). The highest interlaboratory variation was obtained in the calibration of rabbit/plain (RP) against bovine/combined (OBT/79) (CV 5.1%). In the calibration of the rabbit/combined (RC) reagent, there was no difference in precision between OBT/79 (CV 4.3%) and CRM 149R (CV 4.2%). Furthermore, there was no significant difference in the precision of the ISI of RC obtained with CRM 149R (ISI = 1.343) and the rabbit/plain (RP) reagent with ISI = 1.14. In conclusion, the calibration of RC could be performed with similar precision with either OBT/79 or CRM 149R, or RP.The mean ISI values calculated with OBT/79 and CRM 149R were practically identical, indicating that there is no bias in the ISI of these reference preparations and that these reference preparations have been stable since their original calibration studies in 1979 and 1987, respectively.International Normalized Ratio (INR) equivalents were calculated for a lyophilized control plasma derived from patients treated with oral anticoagulants. There were small but significant differences in the mean INR equivalents between the bovine and rabbit thromboplastins. There were no differences in the interlaboratory variation of the INR equivalents, when the four thromboplastins were compared.


2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. ACCEPTED
Author(s):  
Rho-Jeong Rae

This study investigated the boreal digging frog, Kaloula borealis, to determine the egg hatching period and whether the hatching period is affected by incubation temperature. The results of this study showed that all the eggs hatched within 48 h after spawning, with 28.1% (±10.8, n=52) hatching within 24 h and 99.9% (±0.23, n=49) within 48 h after spawning. A significant difference was noted in the mean hatching proportion of tadpoles at different water temperatures. The mean hatching rates between 15 and 24 h after spawning was higher at a water temperature of 21.1 (±0.2) °C than at 24.1 (±0.2) °C. These results suggest that incubation temperature affected the early life stages of the boreal digging frog, since they spawn in ponds or puddles that form during the rainy season.


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