15 results on '"Z. Dombrádi"'
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2. Fast neutron generation with few-cycle, relativistic laser pulses at 1 Hz repetition rate.
- Author
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Osvay K, Singh PK, Varmazyar P, Füle M, Gilinger T, Kis B, Lehotai L, Nagy B, Stuhl L, Elekes Z, Halász Z, Korkulu Z, Kuti I, Biró B, Fenyvesi A, Fülöp Z, Csedreki L, Dombrádi Z, Bembibre A, Benlliure J, Peñas J, Börzsönyi A, Csontos J, Farkas A, Mohacsi A, Somoskői T, Szabó G, and Tóth S
- Abstract
Laser-driven deuterons generate neutrons with a mean energy of 2.5 MeV, through the
2 H(d,n) fusion reaction in a deuterated polyethylene (dPE) tablet. The deuterium ions are accelerated by 12 fs, 21 mJ laser pulses interacting with a 0.2 µm thin dPE foil at a peak intensity of 1018 W/cm2 . The laser was operated at 1 Hz repetition rate in bursts of 75 shots. The interaction was characterized and recorded for each laser shot. The ion spectra were measured in the forward and backward directions by Thomson ion spectrometers. Neutron events were detected by a time-of-flight (ToF) system consisting of four plastic scintillators positioned at various angles around the experimental chamber. The maximum cut-off energy of the forward accelerated protons and deuterons was close to 1.4 MeV and 1 MeV, while the mean values are 428 ± 63 keV and 433 ± 80 keV, respectively. Analysis of ToF distributions from 3128 shots resulted in an average yield of 1142 ± 59 neutrons per shot in the energy range of 1.5-4 MeV. The energy distribution of forward-directed neutrons peaks between 3 and 3.5 MeV. Angular dependence analysis showed a perpendicular minimum and a maximum along the deuteron beam, consistent with the expected distribution from the literature and our simulation results., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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3. Magicity versus Superfluidity around ^{28}O viewed from the Study of ^{30}F.
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Kahlbow J, Aumann T, Sorlin O, Kondo Y, Nakamura T, Nowacki F, Revel A, Achouri NL, Al Falou H, Atar L, Baba H, Boretzky K, Caesar C, Calvet D, Chae H, Chiga N, Corsi A, Delaunay F, Delbart A, Deshayes Q, Dombrádi Z, Douma CA, Elekes Z, Gašparić I, Gheller JM, Gibelin J, Gillibert A, Harakeh MN, Hirayama A, Holl M, Horvat A, Horváth Á, Hwang JW, Isobe T, Kalantar-Nayestanaki N, Kawase S, Kim S, Kisamori K, Kobayashi T, Körper D, Koyama S, Kuti I, Lapoux V, Lindberg S, Marqués FM, Masuoka S, Mayer J, Miki K, Murakami T, Najafi M, Nakano K, Nakatsuka N, Nilsson T, Obertelli A, Orr NA, Otsu H, Ozaki T, Panin V, Paschalis S, Rossi DM, Saito AT, Saito T, Sasano M, Sato H, Satou Y, Scheit H, Schindler F, Schrock P, Shikata M, Shimada K, Shimizu Y, Simon H, Sohler D, Stuhl L, Takeuchi S, Tanaka M, Thoennessen M, Törnqvist H, Togano Y, Tomai T, Tscheuschner J, Tsubota J, Uesaka T, Wang H, Yang Z, Yasuda M, and Yoneda K
- Abstract
The neutron-rich unbound fluorine isotope ^{30}F_{21} has been observed for the first time by measuring its neutron decay at the SAMURAI spectrometer (RIBF, RIKEN) in the quasifree proton knockout reaction of ^{31}Ne nuclei at 235 MeV/nucleon. The mass and thus one-neutron-separation energy of ^{30}F has been determined to be S_{n}=-472±58(stat)±33(sys) keV from the measurement of its invariant-mass spectrum. The absence of a sharp drop in S_{n}(^{30}F) shows that the "magic" N=20 shell gap is not restored close to ^{28}O, which is in agreement with our shell-model calculations that predict a near degeneracy between the neutron d and fp orbitals, with the 1p_{3/2} and 1p_{1/2} orbitals becoming more bound than the 0f_{7/2} one. This degeneracy and reordering of orbitals has two potential consequences: ^{28}O behaves like a strongly superfluid nucleus with neutron pairs scattering across shells, and both ^{29,31}F appear to be good two-neutron halo-nucleus candidates.
- Published
- 2024
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4. Publisher Correction: First observation of 28 O.
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Kondo Y, Achouri NL, Falou HA, Atar L, Aumann T, Baba H, Boretzky K, Caesar C, Calvet D, Chae H, Chiga N, Corsi A, Delaunay F, Delbart A, Deshayes Q, Dombrádi Z, Douma CA, Ekström A, Elekes Z, Forssén C, Gašparić I, Gheller JM, Gibelin J, Gillibert A, Hagen G, Harakeh MN, Hirayama A, Hoffman CR, Holl M, Horvat A, Horváth Á, Hwang JW, Isobe T, Jiang WG, Kahlbow J, Kalantar-Nayestanaki N, Kawase S, Kim S, Kisamori K, Kobayashi T, Körper D, Koyama S, Kuti I, Lapoux V, Lindberg S, Marqués FM, Masuoka S, Mayer J, Miki K, Murakami T, Najafi M, Nakamura T, Nakano K, Nakatsuka N, Nilsson T, Obertelli A, Ogata K, de Oliveira Santos F, Orr NA, Otsu H, Otsuka T, Ozaki T, Panin V, Papenbrock T, Paschalis S, Revel A, Rossi D, Saito AT, Saito TY, Sasano M, Sato H, Satou Y, Scheit H, Schindler F, Schrock P, Shikata M, Shimizu N, Shimizu Y, Simon H, Sohler D, Sorlin O, Stuhl L, Sun ZH, Takeuchi S, Tanaka M, Thoennessen M, Törnqvist H, Togano Y, Tomai T, Tscheuschner J, Tsubota J, Tsunoda N, Uesaka T, Utsuno Y, Vernon I, Wang H, Yang Z, Yasuda M, Yoneda K, and Yoshida S
- Published
- 2023
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5. First observation of 28 O.
- Author
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Kondo Y, Achouri NL, Falou HA, Atar L, Aumann T, Baba H, Boretzky K, Caesar C, Calvet D, Chae H, Chiga N, Corsi A, Delaunay F, Delbart A, Deshayes Q, Dombrádi Z, Douma CA, Ekström A, Elekes Z, Forssén C, Gašparić I, Gheller JM, Gibelin J, Gillibert A, Hagen G, Harakeh MN, Hirayama A, Hoffman CR, Holl M, Horvat A, Horváth Á, Hwang JW, Isobe T, Jiang WG, Kahlbow J, Kalantar-Nayestanaki N, Kawase S, Kim S, Kisamori K, Kobayashi T, Körper D, Koyama S, Kuti I, Lapoux V, Lindberg S, Marqués FM, Masuoka S, Mayer J, Miki K, Murakami T, Najafi M, Nakamura T, Nakano K, Nakatsuka N, Nilsson T, Obertelli A, Ogata K, de Oliveira Santos F, Orr NA, Otsu H, Otsuka T, Ozaki T, Panin V, Papenbrock T, Paschalis S, Revel A, Rossi D, Saito AT, Saito TY, Sasano M, Sato H, Satou Y, Scheit H, Schindler F, Schrock P, Shikata M, Shimizu N, Shimizu Y, Simon H, Sohler D, Sorlin O, Stuhl L, Sun ZH, Takeuchi S, Tanaka M, Thoennessen M, Törnqvist H, Togano Y, Tomai T, Tscheuschner J, Tsubota J, Tsunoda N, Uesaka T, Utsuno Y, Vernon I, Wang H, Yang Z, Yasuda M, Yoneda K, and Yoshida S
- Abstract
Subjecting a physical system to extreme conditions is one of the means often used to obtain a better understanding and deeper insight into its organization and structure. In the case of the atomic nucleus, one such approach is to investigate isotopes that have very different neutron-to-proton (N/Z) ratios than in stable nuclei. Light, neutron-rich isotopes exhibit the most asymmetric N/Z ratios and those lying beyond the limits of binding, which undergo spontaneous neutron emission and exist only as very short-lived resonances (about 10
-21 s), provide the most stringent tests of modern nuclear-structure theories. Here we report on the first observation of28 O and27 O through their decay into24 O and four and three neutrons, respectively. The28 O nucleus is of particular interest as, with the Z = 8 and N = 20 magic numbers1,2 , it is expected in the standard shell-model picture of nuclear structure to be one of a relatively small number of so-called 'doubly magic' nuclei. Both27 O and28 O were found to exist as narrow, low-lying resonances and their decay energies are compared here to the results of sophisticated theoretical modelling, including a large-scale shell-model calculation and a newly developed statistical approach. In both cases, the underlying nuclear interactions were derived from effective field theories of quantum chromodynamics. Finally, it is shown that the cross-section for the production of28 O from a29 F beam is consistent with it not exhibiting a closed N = 20 shell structure., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.)- Published
- 2023
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6. N-Terminal guanidine derivatives of teicoplanin antibiotics strongly active against glycopeptide resistant Enterococcus faecium.
- Author
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Szűcs Z, Bereczki I, Rőth E, Milánkovits M, Ostorházi E, Batta G, Nagy L, Dombrádi Z, Borbás A, and Herczegh P
- Subjects
- Gram-Positive Bacteria drug effects, Gram-Positive Bacterial Infections drug therapy, Humans, Microbial Sensitivity Tests methods, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Drug Resistance, Microbial drug effects, Enterococcus faecium drug effects, Glycopeptides pharmacology, Guanidines pharmacology, Teicoplanin pharmacology
- Abstract
Antibiotic resistance is one of the major challenges in healthcare of our time. To meet this challenge, we designed and prepared guanidine and lipophilic guanidine derivatives of the glycopeptide antibiotic teicoplanin to armed them with activity against the most threatening nosocomial bacteria, multiresistant enterococci. From teicoplanin and its pseudoaglycone, a series of N-terminal guanidine derivatives have been prepared with free and amide C-terminal parts. Six aliphatic and aromatic lipophilic carbodiimides were prepared and used for the synthesis of lipophilic guanidine teicoplanin conjugates. All new N-terminal guanidine antibiotics showed high activity against a standard panel of Gram-positive bacteria. Four selected derivatives displayed excellent antibacterial activity against a series of nosocomial VanA Enterococcus faecium strains.
- Published
- 2020
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7. Assessing the intestinal carriage rates of vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) at a tertiary care hospital in Hungary.
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Franyó D, Kocsi B, Bukta EE, Szabó J, and Dombrádi Z
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Carrier State epidemiology, Child, Child, Preschool, Feces microbiology, Female, Genotype, Gram-Positive Bacterial Infections drug therapy, Gram-Positive Bacterial Infections epidemiology, Humans, Hungary epidemiology, Male, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Tertiary Care Centers, Young Adult, Carrier State microbiology, Gram-Positive Bacterial Infections microbiology, Intestines microbiology, Vancomycin Resistance genetics, Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococci isolation & purification
- Abstract
Excessive use of antibiotics contributes to the selection of resistant bacteria and intestinal colonization with multiresistant pathogens poses a risk factor for subsequent infections. The present study assessed vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) carriage rates in patients admitted to our tertiary care hospital. Stool samples sent for routine culturing were screened with vancomycin containing solid or broth enrichment media. VRE isolates were identified with matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry and antibiotic susceptibilities were tested by E-test. Vancomycin resistance genes were detected by polymerase chain reaction. Medical records of carriers were examined for suspected risk factors for colonization. Altogether 3025 stool specimens were analyzed. Solid media identified a VRE carriage rate of 2.2% while broth enrichment detected 5.8%. Seventy percent of the isolates were Enterococcus faecium. VanB genotype was detected in 38.2%, VanA in 37.3%, VanC1 in 22.6%, and VanC2 in 1.9%. All VRE were sensitive to linezolid, daptomycin, and tigecycline. Collective risk factors for carriage were diabetes, normal flora absence, Clostridioides difficile positivity, longer hospital stay, and advanced age. 78.5% of the carriers received antibiotic therapy which was metronidazole in most cases (47.3%). We recommend regular screening of risk groups such as patients with diabetes, history of recent hospitalization, or former C. difficile infection as an imperative step for preventing VRE dissemination.
- Published
- 2020
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8. Extending the Southern Shore of the Island of Inversion to ^{28}F.
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Revel A, Sorlin O, Marqués FM, Kondo Y, Kahlbow J, Nakamura T, Orr NA, Nowacki F, Tostevin JA, Yuan CX, Achouri NL, Al Falou H, Atar L, Aumann T, Baba H, Boretzky K, Caesar C, Calvet D, Chae H, Chiga N, Corsi A, Crawford HL, Delaunay F, Delbart A, Deshayes Q, Dombrádi Z, Douma CA, Elekes Z, Fallon P, Gašparić I, Gheller JM, Gibelin J, Gillibert A, Harakeh MN, He W, Hirayama A, Hoffman CR, Holl M, Horvat A, Horváth Á, Hwang JW, Isobe T, Kalantar-Nayestanaki N, Kawase S, Kim S, Kisamori K, Kobayashi T, Körper D, Koyama S, Kuti I, Lapoux V, Lindberg S, Masuoka S, Mayer J, Miki K, Murakami T, Najafi M, Nakano K, Nakatsuka N, Nilsson T, Obertelli A, de Oliveira Santos F, Otsu H, Ozaki T, Panin V, Paschalis S, Rossi D, Saito AT, Saito T, Sasano M, Sato H, Satou Y, Scheit H, Schindler F, Schrock P, Shikata M, Shimizu Y, Simon H, Sohler D, Stuhl L, Takeuchi S, Tanaka M, Thoennessen M, Törnqvist H, Togano Y, Tomai T, Tscheuschner J, Tsubota J, Uesaka T, Yang Z, Yasuda M, and Yoneda K
- Abstract
Detailed spectroscopy of the neutron-unbound nucleus ^{28}F has been performed for the first time following proton/neutron removal from ^{29}Ne/^{29}F beams at energies around 230 MeV/nucleon. The invariant-mass spectra were reconstructed for both the ^{27}F^{(*)}+n and ^{26}F^{(*)}+2n coincidences and revealed a series of well-defined resonances. A near-threshold state was observed in both reactions and is identified as the ^{28}F ground state, with S_{n}(^{28}F)=-199(6) keV, while analysis of the 2n decay channel allowed a considerably improved S_{n}(^{27}F)=1620(60) keV to be deduced. Comparison with shell-model predictions and eikonal-model reaction calculations have allowed spin-parity assignments to be proposed for some of the lower-lying levels of ^{28}F. Importantly, in the case of the ground state, the reconstructed ^{27}F+n momentum distribution following neutron removal from ^{29}F indicates that it arises mainly from the 1p_{3/2} neutron intruder configuration. This demonstrates that the island of inversion around N=20 includes ^{28}F, and most probably ^{29}F, and suggests that ^{28}O is not doubly magic.
- Published
- 2020
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9. Investigation of silver nanoparticles on titanium surface created by ion implantation technology.
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Lampé I, Beke D, Biri S, Csarnovics I, Csik A, Dombrádi Z, Hajdu P, Hegedűs V, Rácz R, Varga I, and Hegedűs C
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- Animals, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Cell Survival drug effects, Coated Materials, Biocompatible pharmacology, Ions, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Particle Size, Staphylococcus aureus drug effects, Stem Cells cytology, Stem Cells drug effects, Stem Cells ultrastructure, Surface Properties, Dental Implantation methods, Metal Nanoparticles chemistry, Silver pharmacology, Titanium pharmacology
- Abstract
Objectives: Using dental Ti implants has become a well-accepted and used method for replacing missing dentition. It has become evident that in many cases peri-implant inflammation develops. The objective was to create and evaluate the antibacterial effect of silver nanoparticle (Ag-NP) coated Ti surfaces that can help to prevent such processes if applied on the surface of dental implants. Methods: Annealing I, Ag ion implantation by the beam of an Electron Cyclotron Resonance Ion Source (ECRIS), Ag Physical Vapor Deposition (PVD), Annealing II procedures were used, respectively, to create a safely anchored Ag-NP layer on 1x1 cm
2 Grade 2 titanium samples. The antibacterial effect was evaluated by culturing Staphylococcus aureus (ATCC 29213) on the surfaces of the samples for 8 hours, and comparing the results to that of glass as control and of pure titanium samples. Alamar Blue assay was carried out to check cytotoxicity. Results: It was proved that silver nanoparticles were present on the treated surfaces. The average diameter of the particles was 58 nm, with a 25 nm deviation and Gaussian distribution, the the filling factor was 25%. Antibacterial evaluation revealed that the nanoparticle covered samples had an antibacterial effect of 64.6% that was statistically significant. Tests also proved that the nanoparticles are safely anchored to the titanium surface and are not cytotoxic. Conclusion: Creating a silver nanoparticle layer can be an option to add antibacterial features to the implant surface and to help in the prevention of peri-implant inflammatory processes. Recent studies demonstrated that silver nanoparticles can induce pathology in mammal cells, thus safe fixation of the particles is essential to prevent them from getting into the circulation., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest in this work.- Published
- 2019
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10. Experimental Evidence for Transverse Wobbling in ^{105}Pd.
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Timár J, Chen QB, Kruzsicz B, Sohler D, Kuti I, Zhang SQ, Meng J, Joshi P, Wadsworth R, Starosta K, Algora A, Bednarczyk P, Curien D, Dombrádi Z, Duchêne G, Gizon A, Gizon J, Jenkins DG, Koike T, Krasznahorkay A, Molnár J, Nyakó BM, Paul ES, Rainovski G, Scheurer JN, Simons AJ, Vaman C, and Zolnai L
- Abstract
New rotational bands built on the ν(h_{11/2}) configuration have been identified in ^{105}Pd. Two bands built on this configuration show the characteristics of transverse wobbling: the ΔI=1 transitions between them have a predominant E2 component and the wobbling energy decreases with increasing spin. The properties of the observed wobbling bands are in good agreement with theoretical results obtained using constrained triaxial covariant density functional theory and quantum particle rotor model calculations. This provides the first experimental evidence for transverse wobbling bands based on a one-neutron configuration, and also represents the first observation of wobbling motion in the A∼100 mass region.
- Published
- 2019
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11. Dissemination of VanA-Type Enterococcus faecium Isolates in Hungary.
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Melegh S, Nyul A, Kovács K, Kovács T, Ghidán Á, Dombrádi Z, Szabó J, Berta B, Lesinszki V, Pászti J, Tóth Á, and Mestyán G
- Subjects
- Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Bacterial Proteins genetics, Enterococcus faecium drug effects, Enterococcus faecium isolation & purification, Gram-Positive Bacterial Infections drug therapy, Gram-Positive Bacterial Infections microbiology, Humans, Hungary, Multilocus Sequence Typing methods, Plasmids genetics, Vancomycin Resistance genetics, DNA, Bacterial genetics, Enterococcus faecium genetics
- Abstract
Although vanA carrying Enterococcus faecium human clinical isolates have been rarely found in Hungary before 2012, they have been detected in continuously increasing numbers since then. To identify factors associated with their dissemination, we investigated the clonal relatedness and plasmids of 30 vanA carrying E. faecium isolates originating from different Hungarian healthcare institutions from 2012 to 2014. Molecular typing of the isolates (n = 30) was performed with pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), multilocus sequence typing, Tn1546 polymerase chain reaction mapping, plasmid restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis, and sequencing. A single Tn1546 variant was detected in all of the isolates. It harbored IS1251 in the vanS-vanH intergenic region, had an entire deletion of the transposase gene and a partial deletion of the resolvase gene, and was located on a pRUM-like plasmid. Based on PFGE, the isolates could be grouped into 13 pulsotypes. Representative strains of these pulsotypes belonged to ST17, ST18, ST80, ST117, and ST203, which are known to be part of the hospital-adapted clades. The increase in the number of vanA carrying E. faecium clinical isolates in Hungary could be explained by the dissemination of pRUM-like vancomycin resistance plasmids in hospital-adapted clonal lineages.
- Published
- 2018
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12. Characterization of Clinical Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococcus faecium Isolated in Eastern Hungary.
- Author
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Franyó D, Kocsi B, Lesinszki V, Pászti J, Kozák A, Bukta EE, Szabó J, and Dombrádi Z
- Abstract
Objectives: The aim of our study was to characterize and elicit the genetic relatedness of emerging vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) isolated between 2012 and 2015 at a teaching hospital in Debrecen, Hungary., Results: Altogether 43 nonduplicate vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium (VREfm) clinical isolates were obtained. Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry was used for species identification. Isolates showed 100% resistance to ampicillin and ciprofloxacin while 81.4% were resistant to gentamicin. PCR analysis revealed the presence of VanB in 40 and VanA in 3 isolates. Among ace, agg, and esp virulence genes only esp was found in seven cases. Modified microtiter-plate test showed 13 weak and 4 moderate biofilm producer isolates. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis revealed nine pulsotypes. According to multilocus sequence typing all of the tested isolates belonged to clonal complex 17 (CC17)., Conclusions: We report on the alarming emergence of multidrug-resistant VREfm belonging to CC17 at a tertiary hospital in Eastern Hungary. This is the first report of sequence types 412 and 364 from this region. Although outbreak did not occur the increasing prevalence of VREfm is of concern and dissemination must be prevented with proper infection control measures and regular VRE screening.
- Published
- 2018
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13. Role of the Δ Resonance in the Population of a Four-Nucleon State in the ^{56}Fe→^{54}Fe Reaction at Relativistic Energies.
- Author
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Podolyák Z, Shand CM, Lalović N, Gerl J, Rudolph D, Alexander T, Boutachkov P, Cortés ML, Górska M, Kojouharov I, Kurz N, Louchart C, Merchán E, Michelagnoli C, Pérez-Vidal RM, Pietri S, Ralet D, Reese M, Schaffner H, Stahl C, Weick H, Ameil F, de Angelis G, Arici T, Carroll R, Dombrádi Z, Gadea A, Golubev P, Lettmann M, Lizarazo C, Mahboub D, Pai H, Patel Z, Pietralla N, Regan PH, Sarmiento LG, Wieland O, Wilson E, Birkenbach B, Bruyneel B, Burrows I, Charles L, Clément E, Crespi FC, Cullen DM, Désesquelles P, Eberth J, González V, Habermann T, Harkness-Brennan L, Hess H, Judson DS, Jungclaus A, Korten W, Labiche M, Maj A, Mengoni D, Napoli DR, Pullia A, Quintana B, Rainovski G, Reiter P, Salsac MD, Sanchis E, and Valiente Dóbon JJ
- Abstract
The ^{54}Fe nucleus was populated from a ^{56}Fe beam impinging on a Be target with an energy of E/A=500 MeV. The internal decay via γ-ray emission of the 10^{+} metastable state was observed. As the structure of this isomeric state has to involve at least four unpaired nucleons, it cannot be populated in a simple two-neutron removal reaction from the ^{56}Fe ground state. The isomeric state was produced in the low-momentum (-energy) tail of the parallel momentum (energy) distribution of ^{54}Fe, suggesting that it was populated via the decay of the Δ^{0} resonance into a proton. This process allows the population of four-nucleon states, such as the observed isomer. Therefore, it is concluded that the observation of this 10^{+} metastable state in ^{54}Fe is a consequence of the quark structure of the nucleons.
- Published
- 2016
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14. Foodborne Listeria monocytogenes: A Real Challenge in Quality Control.
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Pusztahelyi T, Szabó J, Dombrádi Z, Kovács S, and Pócsi I
- Abstract
Listeria monocytogenes is a foodborne pathogen, and the detection and differentiation of this bacterium from the nonpathogenic Listeria species are of great importance to the food industry. Differentiation of Listeria species is very difficult, even with the sophisticated MALDI-TOF MS technique because of the close genetic relationship of the species and the usual gene transfer. The present paper emphasizes the difficulties of the differentiation through the standardized detection and confirmation according to ISO 11290-1:1996 and basic available L. monocytogenes detection methods and tests (such as API Listeria test, MALDI-TOF MS analysis, and hly gene PCR). With the increase of reports on the pathogenesis of atypical Listeria strains in humans, the significance of species level determination has become questionable, especially in food quality control, and the detection of pathogenic characteristics seems to be more relevant.
- Published
- 2016
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15. Re-evaluation of in vitro activity of primycin against prevalent multiresistant bacteria.
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Feiszt P, Mestyán G, Kerényi M, Dobay O, Szabó J, Dombrádi Z, Urbán E, and Emődy L
- Subjects
- Gram-Negative Bacteria drug effects, Humans, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Microbial Viability drug effects, Mutation, Selection, Genetic, Serial Passage, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial, Gram-Positive Bacteria drug effects, Macrolides pharmacology
- Abstract
With the increasing emergence of antibiotic resistances old antibiotics became a valuable source to find agents suitable to address this problem. More than 20 years after the last report, our purpose was to re-evaluate the in vitro antibacterial activity of the topical agent primycin against current important bacterial pathogens. Minimal inhibitory concentrations (MIC) and minimal bactericidal concentrations (MBC) of primycin were tested in comparison with agents widely applied topically, and with those of mupirocin and vancomycin, the topical and the non-topical gold-standard anti-MRSA agents. Primycin was ineffective (MIC>64 μg/ml) against all the Gram-negative isolates tested. On the other hand, all the tested Gram-positive isolates were susceptible with MIC90 values of 0.06 μg/ml for staphylococci and 0.5-1 μg/ml for enterococci, streptococci, and P. acnes isolates, including all the multiresistant strains. Against MRSA isolates primycin showed slightly higher activity than mupirocin, and inhibited the mupirocin-resistant strains also. MBC90 values ranged from 0.25 to 2 μg/ml for the investigated Gram-positive species. The bactericidal effect proved to be concentration-dependent in time-kill experiments. Spontaneous resistant mutants did not emerge in single-step mutation experiments and the resistance development was very slow by serial passaging. Passaged S. aureus strains showing increased primycin MIC values exhibited elevated vancomycin and daptomycin MIC values also. Though elucidation of the mechanisms behind warrants further investigations, these correlations can be related to development of vancomycin-intermediate phenotype. From the point of view of medical practice it is noteworthy that the increased primycin MIC values remained far below the concentration accessible by local application of the agent. These data make primycin a remarkable object of further investigations as well as a promising candidate for topical application against multiresistant Gram-positive pathogens., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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