scholarly journals Molecular characterization of Prototheca in 11 symptomatic dogs

2020 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 156-161
Author(s):  
Christian Falcaro ◽  
Tommaso Furlanello ◽  
Diana Binanti ◽  
Alessandra Fondati ◽  
Ugo Bonfanti ◽  
...  

Protothecosis is an uncommon disease caused by algae of the genus Prototheca. In dogs, the infection is usually first localized to the colon but has the propensity to later disseminate hematogenously to many other organs, with marked tropism for the eyes and central nervous system. Diagnosis is established by culture and/or evidence of Prototheca organisms in cytologic or histologic preparations. Species characterization, however, requires molecular investigations. Our laboratory set up a real-time PCR targeting portion D1/D2 of the 28S rRNA for identification of Prototheca species from both positive cultures (of rectal swabs and urine) and formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue. Prototheca bovis, P. ciferrii, and P. wickerhamii were characterized in 11 dogs with systemic or cutaneous protothecosis. Prototheca identifications were phylogenetically consistent with the new taxonomy proposed for this genus based on the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene. As a pilot study, we screened feces and rectal scrapes from 200 asymptomatic dogs, using 2 cohorts of stray and owned animals, to determine the prevalence of intestinal carriage of Prototheca spp. The Prototheca-negative results from both cohorts of healthy dogs suggest that predisposing factors related to the host probably contribute more to the acquisition of clinical disease than exposure to contaminated environments.

2021 ◽  
pp. 104063872098688
Author(s):  
Andrea M. Camargo-Castañeda ◽  
Lauren W. Stranahan ◽  
John F. Edwards ◽  
Daniel G. Garcia-Gonzalez ◽  
Leonardo Roa ◽  
...  

In male dogs, Brucella canis frequently causes epididymitis, ultimately resulting in testicular atrophy and infertility. Although B. canis predominantly affects the epididymis, the misleading term “orchitis” is still commonly used by clinicians. Of additional concern, diagnosis in dogs remains challenging because of variable sensitivity and specificity of serologic assays and fluctuations in bacteremia levels in infected dogs, reducing the sensitivity of blood culture. We describe here the histologic lesions in the scrotal contents of 8 dogs suspected of being infected with B. canis and clinically diagnosed with orchitis. We explored the possibility of using immunohistochemistry (IHC) and real-time PCR (rtPCR) in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissues to detect the presence of B. canis. Epididymitis of variable chronicity was identified in all 8 dogs, with only 3 also exhibiting orchitis. Using rtPCR, the presence of B. canis was identified in 4 of 8 dogs, with 3 of these 4 dogs also positive by IHC. These results suggest that rtPCR and IHC are promising techniques that can be used in FFPE tissues to detect B. canis when other detection techniques are unavailable. Additionally, accurate recognition of epididymitis rather than orchitis in suspect cases could aid in accurate diagnosis.


2020 ◽  
pp. mcp.TIR120.002216
Author(s):  
Daniel J. Geiszler ◽  
Andy T. Kong ◽  
Dmitry M Avtonomov ◽  
Fengchao Yu ◽  
Felipe da Veiga Leprevost ◽  
...  

Open searching has proven to be an effective strategy for identifying both known and unknown modifications in shotgun proteomics experiments. Rather than being limited to a small set of user-specified modifications, open searches identify peptides with any mass shift that may correspond to a single modification or a combination of several modifications. Here we present PTM-Shepherd, a bioinformatics tool that automates characterization of PTM profiles detected in open searches based on attributes such as amino acid localization, fragmentation spectra similarity, retention time shifts, and relative modification rates. PTM-Shepherd can also perform multi-experiment comparisons for studying changes in modification profiles, e.g. in data generated in different laboratories or under different conditions. We demonstrate how PTM-Shepherd improves the analysis of data from formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded samples, detects extreme underalkylation of cysteine in some datasets, discovers an artefactual modification introduced during peptide synthesis, and uncovers site-specific biases in sample preparation artifacts in a multi-center proteomics profiling study.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 4754-4754
Author(s):  
Hermine Agis ◽  
Maria T. Krauth ◽  
Leonhard Muellauer ◽  
Lawrence B. Schwartz ◽  
Hans P. Horny ◽  
...  

Abstract Basophils are highly specialized granulocytes that express a unique profile of antigens and increase in myeloproliferative disorders. In chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), basophilia is an independent prognostic variable. So far, however, no reliable immunohistochemical approach for routine-detection and enumeration of bone marrow (bm) basophils has become available. To overcome this disadvantage, we have applied the anti-basophil antibody 2D7 on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections of normal bm and bm from patients (pts) with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML; chronic phase, n=21; accelerated phase, n=9), other myeloproliferative disorders (idiopathic myelofibrosis [IMF], n=3; polycythemia vera [PV], n=7; essential thrombocythemia [ET], n=7), and normal / reactive bm (n=32). As assessed by serial section-staining of bm specimens, the 2D7 antibody was found to be a basophil-specific immunohistochemical reagent. In serial bm sections, 2D7+ basophils co-expressed histidine decarboxylase, CD15, and CD43, but did not express B- or T-cell restricted antigens corresponding to the phenotype of normal blood basophils. Bm basophils were found to increase in number in pts with CML and other myeloproliferative disorders compared to normal bm (median 2D7+ cells/mm2 bm: normal bm: 7; CML: 46; IMF: 26; PV: 21; ET: 21, p<.05). The highest numbers of bm basophils were recorded in pts with accelerated phase CML (111 2D7+ cells/mm2). Together, we have established a useful immunohistochemical staining procedure for basophil detection in normal bm and pts with myeloid neoplasms. This approach should enable the quantification of basophils in these pts and the monitoring of bm basophil counts during follow up examinations and anti-leukemic therapies.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 2832-2832
Author(s):  
N. Scott Reading ◽  
Josef T. Prchal ◽  
Ronald Hoffman ◽  
Mohamed E Salama

Abstract Background: Gene expression profiling studies have demonstrated aberrant expression of inflammatory response genes in myeloproliferative neoplasm (MPN) granulocytes and/or CD34+ cells. Our understanding of the immune response to primary myelofibrosis (PMF) hematopoietic stem cells and tissue-specific microenvironments is not complete due to a limited availability of bone marrow (BM) aspirates and fresh spleen samples from PMF patients. In order to overcome this obstacle, we utilized a novel approach with mRNA enrichment analysis which utilizes formalin fixed, paraffin embedded (FFPE) specimens of BM and spleen from PMF patients to identify immune and other microenvironment cell types and to construct pathway activation patterns. Methods: We applied enzyme-free NanoString nCounter® PanCancer Immune Profiling Panel system (NanoString Technologies, Inc., Seattle, WA) consisting of 770 standard gene panel and 20 custom gene panel for identification of immune cells and assessing immunological milieus in the microenvironement of matched, archival FFPE spleen and BM samples from MPN patients.. Up to 500ng of RNA (at 100ng/ul) isolated from FFPE BM and/or spleen specimens from PMF patients was used for digital expression profiling in accordance with the manufacturer's protocol. The panel included 109 genes that define 24 immune cell types and populations, and 40 housekeeping genes that facilitate sample-to-sample normalization. Data analysis was performed using nSolver software 2.5 and the PanCancer Immune Profiling Advanced Analysis Module (v.1.0.22). Findings identified from the digital expression profiles on cells types were confirmed via immunohistochemical evaluation. Results: Twenty-six archival FFPE tissue samples (13 BM and 13 spleen) obtained from PMF patients who had undergone therapeutic splenectomy and BM biopsy at the same time, and normal tissue controls, were analyzed as described previously (Liew et al 2015). Following data normalization, genes were selected based on P < 0.05 (unpaired t -test) and fold change > 2.0 differentially expressed mRNA levels in the BM (n=208) and spleen (n=108). These genes were distributed across several functional categories including: TNF superfamily (e.g. TNFRS13C, CD70, LTB), signal ligands (cytokine, chemokine) (e.g. JAK3, IFI16, SPP1), B and T cell functions (TIGIT, CXCR5, CXCL14), and cell adhesion (e.g. ITGB3). In supervised clustering of the significantly expressed genes, the first bifurcation of the dendrogram separated controls from PMF samples in both BM and spleen. Twenty-seven genes were significantly differentially expressed by both PMF BM and spleen, compared to control specimens. Interestingly, the PMF BM samples were further separated in a second bifurcation of the dendrogram into 3 subgroups, indicating immune transcriptional diversity within PMF samples (Figure 1). Further characterization of these subgroups and potential clinical relevance are being studied in a larger number of specimens in order to achieve statistical power. Cell type analysis indicated a significant (P =<0.05) difference in activated CD4 T-cells, T helper-1 cells, CD8 T-cells, and B-cells across all BM and spleen samples. Macrophages (P =<0.001) were increased in the spleen, and neutrophils (P =0.01) were increased only in BM samples. A decrease in CD8-positive T-cells in PMF samples (p =0.009) was confirmed using immunohistochemistry with computer assisted image analysis. Heterogeneity of Tregs in PMF spleen samples (n=10) was further confirmed by immunohistochemistry (n-3). Conclusions: Digital immune expression profiling coupled with immunohistochemistry is a novel approach for characterization of tumor microenvironment in fibrotic PMF marrow and spleen. Our preliminary findings indicate a consistent decrease in cytotoxic CD8 T-cells but varying expression of Tregs. In addition, we identified several genes in various immune functional categories within PMF patients that could potentially serve as therapy targets. Disclosures Hoffman: All Cells, LLC: Consultancy, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Promedior: Research Funding; Geron: Consultancy, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees. Salama:Promedior: Consultancy.


2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 2017-2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Enrico Franceschi ◽  
Dario De Biase ◽  
Alexandro Paccapelo ◽  
Antonella Mura ◽  
Alicia Tosoni ◽  
...  

2017 Background: Molecular characterization of low grade gliomas (LGG) is essential for diagnosis and treatment of these diseases. LGG patients (pts) with IDH mutation and 1p19q codeletion (codel) are characterized by a median OS (mOS) longer than 10 years. Thus, the role of treatments and side effects should be carefully evaluated. Methods: We evaluated LGG pts from our data warehouse (n=679 pts) who received surgery and had sufficient tissue to assess biomarkers characterization. Pts with gliomatosis were excluded. IDH1/2 assessment was performed on formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded samples by qPCR. In wild type cases we performed NGS. 1p/19 codel analysis was performed by FISH. Results: 93 consecutive LGG with IDH mutation and codel were included. The median follow up (FU) was 96.1 months. Mean age was 40 yrs (range: 25-66); 8 pts (8.6%) underwent biopsy, 61 pts (65.6%) partial resection, 24 pts (25.8%) complete resection. 84 pts (90.3%) were considered high risk using RTOG criteria (>40 years and/or incomplete resection). Fifty pts (53.7%) received only FU, 17 pts (18.3%) received chemotherapy (CT), 18 pts (19.4%) received radiotherapy (RT), 8 pts (8.6%) received RT + CT. Median PFS (mPFS) was 59.6 months (95%CI: 41.8-77.4) and was significantly longer in pts who received postsurgical treatments (79.5 months, 95%CI: 66.4-92.7) than pts who received FU (46.3 months, 95%CI: 36.0-56.5; P=0.001). mPFS was 50.8 months (95%CI: 17.4-84.3), 103.6 months (95%CI: 11.7-195.6) and 120.2 months (95%CI: 40.5-199.8) in pts treated with CT alone, RT alone and RT + CT, respectively. Multivariate analysis showed that receiving a post-surgical treatment (P<0.001), and the extent of resection (P=0.043) were significantly correlated with PFS. Conclusions: Our study evaluated the role of treatments in LGG pts assessed with NGS and FISH. Post-surgical treatments are crucial to extend PFS in pts with IDH mutation and codel. The choice of post-surgical treatments seems to have a role, being CT alone less effective than RT and RT+CT. Longer FU is needed to provide information about OS.


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