scholarly journals A new disease of strawberry, fruit rot, caused by Geotrichum candidum in China.

2018 ◽  
Vol 54 (No. 2) ◽  
pp. 92-100 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ma Wenyue ◽  
Zhang Ya ◽  
Wang Chong ◽  
Liu Shuangqing ◽  
Liao Xiaolan

A new disease of strawberry (Fragaria ananassa Duch.) was discovered in the Lianqiao strawberry planting base in Shaodong County, in Hunan Province, China. In the early disease stage, leaves showed small black spots surrounded by yellow halos, while in the late stage, a white fluffy layer of mold appeared. Fruits were covered with a white layer of mold. The symptoms were observed using in vitro inoculation experiments. After the spray-inoculation of stabbed leaves, small black spots surrounded by yellow halos occurred on leaves, with no clear boundary between diseased and healthy areas. In the late stage, disease spots gradually expanded and a white fluffy layer of mold formed under humid conditions. Unstabbed leaves had almost no disease occurrence after spray-inoculation. After the spray-inoculation of stabbed fruits, by the late stage, a dense white layer of mold formed. According to Koch’s postulates, the isolated strain was verified as a pathogen. The pathogenic strain, designated SDLQ16, was isolated from diseased fruit by dilution method and tentatively identified as G. candidum based on the culture characteristics, morphologies, physio-biochemical analysis, and phylogenetic analysis of the rDNA-ITS sequence. The fungus was able to grow on different culture mediums, with a broad range of nutrition. The colonies on PDA medium were raised and pale white, with a neat edge and visible hyphae. The hyphae were friable but the spores were developing. Basal hyphae rapidly grew close to the medium to 3.2–4.2 µm in diameter, with septa and forked branches at acute angles. The solitary or beaded spores with smooth surfaces were 3.5–7.5 µm in length and 3.5–4.5 µm in width. This strain was able to gelatin liquefaction, proteolysis, grease, peptonised milk, urea, and so on. The pathogenicity on strawberry from strong to weak was: fruit > leaf > stem. A BLAST algorithm was used to query SDLQ16’s rDNA-ITS sequence (cloned and deposited as GenBank number KU373122) against the NCBI database, and it was located in the Acinetobacter sp. branch of a phylogenetic tree. SDLQ16 was most closely related to Geotrichum candidum ATCC34614 (GQ4580314.1), with a sequence similarity of 99%.

2019 ◽  
Vol 220 (7) ◽  
pp. 1172-1177 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark J Siedner ◽  
Mwebesa Bosco Bwana ◽  
Stephen Asiimwe ◽  
Gideon Amanyire ◽  
Nicholas Musinguzi ◽  
...  

Abstract Chronic inflammation predicts complications in persons with human immunodeficiency virus infection. We compared D-dimer, soluble CD14, and interleukin 6 levels before and 12 months after antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation, among individuals starting ART during earlier-stage (CD4 T-cell count >350/µL) or late-stage disease (CD4 T-cell count <200/µL). Female sex, older age, viral load, and late-stage disease were associated with pre-ART biomarkers (n = 661; P < .05). However, there were no differences in biomarkers by disease stage after 12 months of ART (n = 438; P > .05), owing to loss from observation and greater declines in biomarkers in late-stage initiators (P < .001). Earlier initiation of ART is associated with decreased inflammation, but levels seem to converge between earlier and later initiators surviving to 12 months.


2017 ◽  
Vol 30 (11) ◽  
pp. 762 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana Harfouche ◽  
Silvia Silva ◽  
João Faria ◽  
Rui Araújo ◽  
António Gouveia ◽  
...  

Introduction: Breast cancer is the second most common oncological disease worldwide. To analyse the new disease specific funding programme (breast cancer) implemented at the Francisco Gentil Portuguese Institute of Oncology, Lisbon Center (Instituto Português de Oncologia de Lisboa Francisco Gentil), the actual costs of the patients were examined using activity-based costing as a costing methodology. This study addresses the following question: “How much does it cost to treat breast cancer per ‘patient-month’ compared to the monthly fixed ‘funding envelope’?”.Materials and Methods: The study cohort consisted of 807 patients, corresponding to all the patients eligible for the new disease specific funding programme and who were enrolled during the first year of implementation. Activity-based costing was used to calculate the total real costs per stage of disease and per ‘patient-month’ as well as the deviation from the monthly fixed ‘funding envelope’.Results: The total costs were 6.6 M€, whereas the total funding was 5.2 M€ for a total of 5648 ‘patient-months’. In 2014, the balance difference between the funding obtained and the actual costs was -1.4 €M for the cohort of 807 patients.Discussion: The extreme cases of differences in cost per ‘patient-month’ compared to the monthly fixed ‘funding envelope’ were (i) stage 0/Tis, with higher funding at 415.23 € per ‘patient-month’, and (ii) stage IIIC, with lower funding at 1062.79 € per ‘patient-month’.Conclusion: The ‘patient-month’ cost, regardless of disease stage was 1170.29 €. The median deviation per ‘patient-month’ was negative (241.21 €) compared to the monthly fixed ‘funding envelope’ of 929.08 € in the first year. Establishing activity-based costing - funding models will be crucial for the future sustainability of the healthcare sector.


2013 ◽  
Vol 31 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e16529-e16529
Author(s):  
Jessica E. Stine ◽  
Stuart Pierce ◽  
Paola A. Gehrig ◽  
John Nakayama ◽  
Laura Jean Havrilesky ◽  
...  

e16529 Background: Women with uterine papillary serous carcinoma (UPSC) are at increased risk for breast cancer and the converse is true. A genetic association between breast cancer and UPSC was recently described and counseling women faced with more than one cancer diagnosis can be difficult. Our objective was to evaluate recurrence rates of women with UPSC to those with UPSC and a personal history of breast cancer (UPSCBR). Methods: Data was collected for UPSCBR patients at two academic institutions between 7/1990 and 7/2012. Patient demographics, pathology, disease stage, and treatments were recorded. A UPSC literature review was performed focusing on recurrences per number of at-risk patients by stage. We used the fixed effect Mantel-Haenszel method to estimate the common pooled effect (recurrence rate) for the UPSC studies and compared these to UPSCBR patients. Results: Forty-three UPSCBR patients were identified. Median age at diagnosis was 72 (49-93). Twenty-six patients were Caucasian, 14 African-American and 3 other. Twenty-four (56%) had early stage at diagnosis (IA-IC) and 19 (44%) had late stage (III-IV). All but one underwent surgical staging/debulking; 36 (90%) were optimally debulked. Twelve (50%) early stage and 17 (89.5%) late stage patients underwent adjuvant therapy with radiation and/or chemotherapy. Nine studies were identified with available recurrence data for early stage UPSC; 8 for late stage. The recurrence rate for stage IA UPSCBR patients was 2/11 (18%) [95% CI: 2 to 52%] compared to 11% [95% CI: 9.8 to 13%] in the UPSC literature. In IB/IC UPSCBR patients we had 3/13 (23%) [95% CI: 5 to 54%] recur versus 21% [95% CI: 19 to 23%]. In later stages III/IV, 7/19 (37%) [95% CI:16 to 62%] UPSCBR patients had recurrences compared to 58% [95% CI: 56 to 60%] of UPSC patients. Conclusions: There is an association between breast cancer and UPSC with regard to incidence. We failed to find evidence of an appreciable difference in recurrence rates between our UPSCBR patients and UPSC patient groups from other reported studies. While diagnosis with two primary malignancies can be challenging for patients, this does not appear to impact their risk of recurrence.


Author(s):  
Jie Yang ◽  
Jie Zhao ◽  
Bobo Wang ◽  
Zhisheng Yu

Anaerobic cellulolytic microbes in gastrointestinal tract (GT) of ruminants have been well-documented, however, knowledge of aerobic microbes with cellulolytic activities in ruminant GT is comparably limited. Here, we unraveled aerobic cultivable cellulolytic microbes in GT of Ujimqin sheep (Ovis aries) and evaluated the cellulolytic potential of promising isolates. Twenty-two strains were found to possess cellulose degrading potential by Congo-red staining and phylogenetic analysis of the 16S rDNA/ITS sequence revealed that all strains belonged to nine genera, i.e., Bacillus, Streptomyces, Pseudomonas, Lactobacillus, Brachybacterium, Sanguibacter, Rhizobium, Fusarium, and Aspergillus. Strains with high cellulolytic activities were selected to further evaluate the various enzyme activities on lignocellulosic alfalfa hay (Medicago sativa). Among them, isolate Bacillus subtilis RE2510 showed the highest potential of cellulose degradation considering the high endoglucanase (0.1478 ± 0.0014 IU ml-1), exoglucanase (0.1735 ± 0.0012 IU ml-1) and β-glucosidase (0.3817 ± 0.0031 IU ml-1) after 10-day incubation with alfalfa hay. A significant destruction effect of the cellulose structure and the attachment of B. subtilis RE2510 to the hay were also revealed by using scanning electron microscope. This study expands our knowledge of aerobic cellulolytic isolates from GT of sheep and also highlights their potential application as microbial additive in the aerobic process of cellulose bioconversion.


2008 ◽  
Vol 43 (4) ◽  
pp. 513-520 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andréa Almeida Carneiro ◽  
Eliane Aparecida Gomes ◽  
Claudia Teixeira Guimarães ◽  
Fernando Tavares Fernandes ◽  
Newton Portilho Carneiro ◽  
...  

The objective of this work was to evaluate the pathogenicity of 24 Beauveria isolates to Spodoptera frugiperda larvae, and characterize them molecularly through rDNA-ITS sequencing and RAPD markers. Sequencing of rDNA-ITS fragments of 570 bp allowed the identification of isolates as B. bassiana or B. brongniarti by sequence comparison to GenBank. Sixty seven polymorphic RAPD fragments were capable to differentiate 20 among 24 Beauveria isolates, grouping them according to the derived host insect and to pathogenicity against maize fall armyworm larvae. Three RAPD markers were highly associated to the pathogenicity against S. frugiperda, explaining up to 67% of the phenotypic variation. Besides identification and molecular characterization of Beauveria isolates, ITS sequence and RAPD markers proved to be very useful in selecting the isolates potentially effective against S. frugiperda larvae and in monitoring field release of these microorganisms in biocontrol programs.


2010 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 72-75
Author(s):  
Sui-Qing CHEN ◽  
Cheng-Xue PAN ◽  
Xiao-Lei LU ◽  
Li-Li WANG

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