17 results on '"Tornos, J."'
Search Results
2. Electrolyte Gated Synaptic Transistor based on an Ultra-Thin Film of La0.7Sr0.3MnO3
- Author
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López A., Tornos J., Peralta A., Barbero I., Fernandez-Canizares F., Sanchez-Santolino G., Varela M., Rivera A., Camarero, Julio, León C., Santamaría J., Romera M., López A., Tornos J., Peralta A., Barbero I., Fernandez-Canizares F., Sanchez-Santolino G., Varela M., Rivera A., Camarero, Julio, León C., Santamaría J., and Romera M.
- Published
- 2023
3. Large Magnetoresistance of Isolated Domain Walls in La2/3Sr1/3MnO3 Nanowires
- Author
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Orfila G., Sanchez-Manzano D., Arora A., Cuellar F., Ruiz-Gómez S., Rodriguez-Corvillo S., López S., Peralta A., Carreira S.J., Gallego F., Tornos J., Rouco V., Riquelme J.J., Munuera C., Mompean F.J., Garcia-Hernandez M., Sefrioui Z., Villegas J.E., Perez L., Rivera-Calzada A., Leon C., Valencia S., Santamaria J., Orfila G., Sanchez-Manzano D., Arora A., Cuellar F., Ruiz-Gómez S., Rodriguez-Corvillo S., López S., Peralta A., Carreira S.J., Gallego F., Tornos J., Rouco V., Riquelme J.J., Munuera C., Mompean F.J., Garcia-Hernandez M., Sefrioui Z., Villegas J.E., Perez L., Rivera-Calzada A., Leon C., Valencia S., and Santamaria J.
- Published
- 2023
4. Reversible metal-insulator transition in SrIrO3 ultrathin layers by field effect control of inversion symmetry breaking
- Author
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Gallego F., Tornos J., Beltran J.I., Peralta A., Garcia-Barriocanal J., Yu G., Rojas G., Munuera C., Cabero M., Sanchez-Manzano D., Cuellar F., Sanchez-Santolino G., Sefrioui Z., Rivera-Calzada A., Mompean F.J., Garcia-Hernandez M., Leon C., del Carmen Muñoz M., Santamaria J., Gallego F., Tornos J., Beltran J.I., Peralta A., Garcia-Barriocanal J., Yu G., Rojas G., Munuera C., Cabero M., Sanchez-Manzano D., Cuellar F., Sanchez-Santolino G., Sefrioui Z., Rivera-Calzada A., Mompean F.J., Garcia-Hernandez M., Leon C., del Carmen Muñoz M., and Santamaria J.
- Published
- 2023
5. Interfacial effects on the tunneling magnetoresistance in La_(0.7)Sr_(0.3)MnO_(3)/MgO/Fe tunneling junctions
- Author
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Galceran, R., Balcells, Ll., Martínez-Boubeta, C., Bozzo, B., Cisneros-Fernández, J., Mata, M. de la, Magén, C., Arbiol, J., Tornos, J., Cuéllar Jiménez, Fabián Andrés, Sefrioui, Zouhair, Cebollada, A., Golmar, F., Huesos, L.E., Casanova, F., Santamaría Sánchez-Barriga, Jacobo, Martínez, B., Galceran, R., Balcells, Ll., Martínez-Boubeta, C., Bozzo, B., Cisneros-Fernández, J., Mata, M. de la, Magén, C., Arbiol, J., Tornos, J., Cuéllar Jiménez, Fabián Andrés, Sefrioui, Zouhair, Cebollada, A., Golmar, F., Huesos, L.E., Casanova, F., Santamaría Sánchez-Barriga, Jacobo, and Martínez, B.
- Abstract
© 2015 American Physical Society. We acknowledge financial support from the Spanish MINECO through grants (MAT2012-33207, MAT2011- 27470-C02, MAT2012-37638 and Consolider Ingenio 2010 - CSD2009-00013 (Imagine)), from CAM through Grant No. S2009/MAT-1756 (Phama) and Basque Government (PI2011- 1). Financial support from EC through FEDER program and Marie Curie Actions (256470-ITAMOSCINOM) is also acknowledged. C.M.B. thanks the Spanish MINECO for the financial support through the RyC program. The authors would like to thank the technical staff of the ICMAB for their assistance, We report on magnetotransport properties on La_(0.7)Sr_(0.3)MnO_(3)/MgO/Fe tunnel junctions grown epitaxially on top of (001)-oriented SrTiO_(3) substrates by sputtering. It is shown that the magnetoresistive response depends critically on the MgO/Fe interfacial properties. The appearance of an FeOX layer by the interface destroys the 1 symmetry filtering effect of the MgO/Fe system and only a small negative tunneling magnetoresistance (TMR) (∼ −3 %) is measured. However, in annealed samples a switchover from positive TMR (∼ +25% at 70 K) to negative TMR (∼ −1 %) is observed around 120 K. This change is associated with the transition from semiconducting at high T to insulating at low T taking place at the Verwey transition (TV ∼ 120 K) in Fe3O4, thus suggesting the formation of a very thin slab of magnetite at the MgO/Fe interface during annealing treatments. These results highlight the relevance of interfacial properties on the tunneling conduction process and how it can be substantially modified through appropriate interface engineering., Comunidad de Madrid, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (MINECO), Basque Government, FEDER program, Marie Curie Actions, Depto. de Estructura de la Materia, Física Térmica y Electrónica, Fac. de Ciencias Físicas, TRUE, pub
- Published
- 2023
6. Exotic magnetic anisotropy map in epitaxial La_(0.7)Ca_(0.3)MnO_(3) films on BaTiO_(3)
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Nemes, Norbert Marcel, Tornos, J., León Yebra, Carlos, Santamaría Sánchez-Barriga, Jacobo, Nemes, Norbert Marcel, Tornos, J., León Yebra, Carlos, and Santamaría Sánchez-Barriga, Jacobo
- Abstract
© 2011 American Physical Society. Artículo firmado por 13 autores. We acknowledge financial support from MICINN grants MAT2008-06517-C02-01, CSD2009-00013, MAT2008-06517-C02-02, and PI2010-60E013 and provision of beamtime by the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility., We report the observation between 40 and 120 K of anomalous magnetic hysteresis loops in thin epitaxial films of La_(0.7)Ca_(0.3)MnO_(3) grown on ferroelectric BaTiO_(3). These hysteresis loops display extremely unusual features: after switching at coercivity, the magnetization overshoots the eventual high-field value. We study the strains in the film and substrate with x-ray diffraction and propose a model of two magnetic moment populations with different magnetoelastic anisotropies. The relative weights of both populations can be estimated by comparison with twin samples of La_(0.7)Ca_(0.3)MnO_(3) films on nonferroelectric SrTiO_(3). We propose that the observed magnetization overshoots the result from differences in the magnetostriction balance as the applied magnetic field increases. The picture of a nonuniform strain field in La_(0.7)Ca_(0.3)MnO_(3) on BaTiO_(3), caused by the corrugation of the ferroelectric domains in the rhombohedric phase of BaTiO_(3), is compatible with the magnetic granular behavior observed in the temperature and field dependences of the magnetization as well as in the low temperature magnetoresistance exhibited by the epitaxial film., MICINN, Depto. de Estructura de la Materia, Física Térmica y Electrónica, Fac. de Ciencias Físicas, TRUE, pub
- Published
- 2023
7. Insight into spin transport in oxide heterostructures from interface-resolved magnetic mapping.
- Author
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Bruno, Flavio Yair, Grisolia, M. N., Visani, C., Valencia, S., Varela del Arco, María, Aburdan, R., Tornos, J., Rivera Calzada, Alberto Carlos, Ünal, A. A., Pennycook, S. J., Sefrioui, Zouhair, León Yebra, Carlos, Villegas, J. E., Santamaría Sánchez-Barriga, Jacobo, Barthélémy, A., Bibes, M., Bruno, Flavio Yair, Grisolia, M. N., Visani, C., Valencia, S., Varela del Arco, María, Aburdan, R., Tornos, J., Rivera Calzada, Alberto Carlos, Ünal, A. A., Pennycook, S. J., Sefrioui, Zouhair, León Yebra, Carlos, Villegas, J. E., Santamaría Sánchez-Barriga, Jacobo, Barthélémy, A., and Bibes, M.
- Abstract
© 2015 Macmillan Publishers Limited. We acknowledge financial support from the European Research Council (ERC Advanced Grant FEMMES, No. 267579) and the Labex NanoSaclay project FIRET. The ALICE project is supported by the BMBF Contract No. 05K10PC2. The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Community’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007–2013) under grant agreement no. 226716. Work at UCM was supported by grants MAT2011-27470-C02 and Consolider Ingenio 2010—CSD2009- 00013 (Imagine), by CAM through grant S2009/MAT-1756 (Phama) and by the ERC starting Investigator Award, grant #239739 STEMOX. Microscopy at ORNL (M.V.) was supported by the US Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences, Materials Science and Engineering Division. We thank N.M. Nemes and M. Garcı´a- Herna´ndez for collaboration and assistance with the preliminary magnetic characterization of the LSMO/LFO structures and V. Garcia for his constructive comments. Author contributions: F.Y.B., J.S., A.B. and M.B. designed and conceived the experiment. F.Y.B. and A.R.-C. were involved in sample growth and characterization. F.Y.B. and C.V were involved in lithography process and transport measurements. S.V. conceived the synchrotron experiments. F.Y.B., S.V., R.A., J.T., A.A.U¨ . and A.R.-C. were involved in synchrotron measurements and data analysis. M.V. and S.J.P. performed electron microscopy. M.N.G. and M.B performed tunnelling magneto-resistance simulations. F.Y.B., M.N.G., C.V., Z.S., C.L., J.E.V., J.S., A.B. and M.B analyzed the data and discussed the manuscript. F.Y.B. and M.B. wrote the article with inputs from all co-authors. Competing financial interests: The authors declare no competing financial interests., At interfaces between complex oxides, electronic, orbital and magnetic reconstructions may produce states of matter absent from the materials involved, offering novel possibilities for electronic and spintronic devices. Here we show that magnetic reconstruction has a strong influence on the interfacial spin selectivity, a key parameter controlling spin transport in magnetic tunnel junctions. In epitaxial heterostructures combining layers of antiferromagnetic LaFeO_3 (LFO) and ferromagnetic La_0.7Sr_0.3MnO_3 (LSMO), we find that a net magnetic moment is induced in the first few unit planes of LFO near the interface with LSMO. Using X-ray photoemission electron microscopy, we show that the ferromagnetic domain structure of the manganite electrodes is imprinted into the antiferromagnetic tunnel barrier, endowing it with spin selectivity. Finally, we find that the spin arrangement resulting from coexisting ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic interactions strongly influences the tunnel magnetoresistance of LSMO/LFO/LSMO junctions through competing spin-polarization and spin-filtering effects., Unión Europea. FP7, Comunidad Autónoma de Madrid, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (MINECO), Labex NanoSaclay project FIRET, ALICE Project (BMBF), Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (BMBF), Alemania, European Research Council, Programa Consolider-Ingenio (Imagine), MINECO, España, ERC starting Investigator Award STEMOX, US Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences, Materials Science and Engineering Division, PHOTONIC ADVANCED MATERIALS: PHAMA 2.0-CM PROGRAMME, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), España, Depto. de Estructura de la Materia, Física Térmica y Electrónica, Fac. de Ciencias Físicas, TRUE, pub
- Published
- 2023
8. Anisotropic magnetotransport in SrTiO_3 surface electron gases generated by Ar^+ irradiation
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Bruno, Flavio Yair, Tornos, J., Gutierrez del Olmo, M., Sánchez Santolino, G., Nemes, N.M., Gárcia Hernández, M., Méndez Martín, Bianchi, Piqueras de Noriega, Javier, Antorrena, G., Morellon, L., De Teresa, J. M., Clement, M., Iborra, E., León, C., Santamaría Sánchez-Barriga, Jacobo, Bruno, Flavio Yair, Tornos, J., Gutierrez del Olmo, M., Sánchez Santolino, G., Nemes, N.M., Gárcia Hernández, M., Méndez Martín, Bianchi, Piqueras de Noriega, Javier, Antorrena, G., Morellon, L., De Teresa, J. M., Clement, M., Iborra, E., León, C., and Santamaría Sánchez-Barriga, Jacobo
- Abstract
©2011 American Physical Society. This work was supported by Spanish MICINN Grant No. MAT 2008 06517, Consolider Ingenio Grant No. CSD2009-00013 (IMAGINE), and CAM Grant No. S2009-MAT 1756 (PHAMA)., Metallic surface layers are fabricated by doping (100) SrTiO_3 (STO) single crystals with oxygen vacancies generated by bombardment with Ar ions from an rf plasma source. The presence of oxygen vacancies is confirmed by cathodoluminescence and x-ray photoemission spectroscopy. This technique produces a surface electron gas with high values of the sheet carrier density (n_(2D) = 2.45x10^17 cm^(-2)). A strong increase (300%) of the low-temperature magnetoresistance is observed when the magnetic field is rotated away from the surface, characteristic of orbital effects of confined electrons. We estimate the width of the confinement region to be in the 200-300 nm range. When a magnetic field is applied in the surface plane and parallel to the current direction, a large negative magnetoresistance is found below the structural transition of the STO, which is discussed in terms of spin-orbit scattering. On further reduction of temperature, there is a change to a positive magnetoresistance regime due to the scattering of charge carriers at the disordered surface region., Comunidad de Madrid, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (MICINN), Depto. de Física de Materiales, Fac. de Ciencias Físicas, TRUE, pub
- Published
- 2023
9. Induced Ti magnetization at La_(0.7)Sr_(0.3)MnO_(3) and BaTiO_(3) interfaces
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Liu, Yaohua, Tornos, J., te Velthuis, S. G. E., Freeland, J. W., Zhou, H., Steadman, P., Bencok, P., León Yebra, Carlos, Santamaría Sánchez-Barriga, Jacobo, Liu, Yaohua, Tornos, J., te Velthuis, S. G. E., Freeland, J. W., Zhou, H., Steadman, P., Bencok, P., León Yebra, Carlos, and Santamaría Sánchez-Barriga, Jacobo
- Abstract
© 2016 Author(s). We thank J. Pearson for assistance with SQUID magnetometry study. Work at ORNL is supported by the Division of Scientific User Facilities of the Office of Basic Energy Sciences (BES), US Department of Energy (DOE). Work at MSD, ANL was supported by the U.S. DOE, Office of Science, BES, Materials Sciences and Engineering Division. Research at UCM was supported by Spanish MICINN through Grant Nos. MAT2014-52405-C02-01 and Consolider Ingenio 2010-CSD2009-00013 (Imagine), by CAM through Grant No. S2014/MAT-PHAMA II. This research used resources of the Advanced Photon Source, a U.S. DOE Office of Science User Facility operated for the DOE Office of Science by Argonne National Laboratory under Contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357. We also thank Diamond Light Source for access to beamline I10., In artificial multiferroics hybrids consisting of ferromagnetic La_(0.7)Sr_(0.3)MnO_(3) (LSMO) and ferroelectric BaTiO_(3) epitaxial layers, net Ti moments are found from polarized resonant soft x-ray reflectivity and absorption. The Ti dichroic reflectivity follows the Mn signal during the magnetization reversal, indicating exchange coupling between the Ti and Mn ions. However, the Ti dichroic reflectivity shows stronger temperature dependence than the Mn dichroic signal. Besides a reduced ferromagnetic exchange coupling in the interfacial LSMO layer, this may also be attributed to a weak Ti-Mn exchange coupling that is insufficient to overcome the thermal energy at elevated temperatures., Division of Scientific User Facilities of the Office of Basic Energy Sciences (BES), US Department of Energy (DOE), U.S. DOE, Office of Science, BES, Materials Sciences and Engineering Division, Spanish MICINN, Consolider Ingenio 2010, CAM, Argonne National Laboratory, Depto. de Estructura de la Materia, Física Térmica y Electrónica, Fac. de Ciencias Físicas, TRUE, pub
- Published
- 2023
10. Large Magnetoresistance of Isolated Domain Walls in La2/3Sr1/3MnO3 Nanowires
- Author
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Orfila, G., Sanchez-Manzano, D., Arora, A., Cuellar, F., Ruiz-Gómez, S., Rodriguez-Corvillo, S., López, S., Peralta, A., Carreira, S.J., Gallego, F., Tornos, J., Rouco, V., Riquelme, J.J., Munuera, C., Mompean, F. J., García-Hernández, Mar, Sefrioui, Zouhair, Villegas, J.E., Perez, L., Rivera-Calzada, Alberto, León, Carlos, Valencia, S., Santamaría, Jacobo, Orfila, G., Sanchez-Manzano, D., Arora, A., Cuellar, F., Ruiz-Gómez, S., Rodriguez-Corvillo, S., López, S., Peralta, A., Carreira, S.J., Gallego, F., Tornos, J., Rouco, V., Riquelme, J.J., Munuera, C., Mompean, F. J., García-Hernández, Mar, Sefrioui, Zouhair, Villegas, J.E., Perez, L., Rivera-Calzada, Alberto, León, Carlos, Valencia, S., and Santamaría, Jacobo
- Abstract
Generation, manipulation, and sensing of magnetic domain walls are cornerstones in the design of efficient spintronic devices. Half-metals are amenable for this purpose as large low field magnetoresistance signals can be expected from spin accumulation at spin textures. Among half metals, La1−xSrxMnO3 (LSMO) manganites are considered as promising candidates for their robust half-metallic ground state, Curie temperature above room temperature (Tc = 360 K, for x = 1/3), and chemical stability. Yet domain wall magnetoresistance is poorly understood, with large discrepancies in the reported values and conflicting interpretation of experimental data due to the entanglement of various source of magnetoresistance, namely, spin accumulation, anisotropic magnetoresistance, and colossal magnetoresistance. In this work, the domain wall magnetoresistance is measured in LSMO cross-shape nanowires with single-domain walls nucleated across the current path. Magnetoresistance values above 10% are found to be originating at the spin accumulation caused by the mistracking effect of the spin texture of the domain wall by the conduction electrons. Fundamentally, this result shows the importance on non-adiabatic processes at spin textures despite the strong Hund coupling to the localized t2g electrons of the manganite. These large magnetoresistance values are high enough for encoding and reading magnetic bits in future oxide spintronic sensors. © 2023 The Authors. Advanced Materials published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.
- Published
- 2023
11. Large Magnetoresistance of Isolated Domain Walls in LSMO Nanowires
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Orfila, Gloria, primary, Sanchez‐Manzano, David, additional, Arora, Ashima, additional, Cuellar, Fabian, additional, Ruiz‐Gómez, Sandra, additional, Rodriguez‐Corvillo, S., additional, López, Sandra, additional, Peralta, A., additional, Gallego, Fernando, additional, Tornos, J., additional, Rouco, V., additional, Riquelme, J. J., additional, Munuera, C., additional, Mompean, F., additional, Garcia‐Hernandez, M., additional, Sefrioui, Z., additional, Villegas, J. E., additional, Perez, L., additional, Rivera, A., additional, Leon, C., additional, Valencia, S., additional, and Santamaria, J., additional
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- 2023
- Full Text
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12. Unexpected Delayed Incursion of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza H5N1 (Clade 2.3.4.4b) Into the Antarctic Region.
- Author
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Lisovski S, Günther A, Dewar M, Ainley D, Aldunate F, Arce R, Ballard G, Bauer S, Belliure J, Banyard AC, Boulinier T, Bennison A, Braun C, Cary C, Catry P, Clessin A, Connan M, Correia E, Cox A, Cristina J, Elrod M, Emerit J, Ferreiro I, Fowler Z, Gamble A, Granadeiro JP, Hurtado J, Jongsomjit D, Lesage C, Lejeune M, Kuepfer A, Lescroël A, Li A, McDonald IR, Menéndez-Blázquez J, Morandini V, Moratorio G, Militão T, Moreno P, Perbolianachis P, Pennycook J, Raslan M, Reid SM, Richards-Babbage R, Schmidt AE, Sander MM, Smyth L, Soutullo A, Stanworth A, Streith L, Tornos J, Varsani A, Herzschuh U, Beer M, and Wille M
- Subjects
- Antarctic Regions, Animals, Disease Outbreaks, Humans, Influenza, Human virology, Influenza, Human epidemiology, Influenza A Virus, H5N1 Subtype genetics, Influenza A Virus, H5N1 Subtype pathogenicity, Influenza A Virus, H5N1 Subtype isolation & purification, Influenza in Birds virology, Influenza in Birds epidemiology, Birds virology
- Abstract
The current highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N1 panzootic is having substantial impacts on wild birds and marine mammals. Following major and widespread outbreaks in South America, an incursion to Antarctica occurred late in the austral summer of 2023/2024 and was confined to the region of the Antarctic Peninsula. To infer potential underlying processes, we compiled H5N1 surveillance data from Antarctica and sub-Antarctic Islands prior to the first confirmed cases., (© 2024 The Author(s). Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2024
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13. Rapid loss of maternal immunity and increase in environmentally mediated antibody generation in urban gulls.
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Lamb JS, Tornos J, Lejeune M, and Boulinier T
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- Animals, Humans, Antibodies, Viral, Chickens, Charadriiformes, Influenza in Birds, Influenza A virus
- Abstract
Monitoring pathogen circulation in wildlife sentinel populations can help to understand and predict the spread of disease at the wildlife-livestock-human interface. Immobile young provide a useful target population for disease surveillance, since they can be easily captured for sampling and their levels of antibodies against infectious agents can provide an index of localized circulation. However, early-life immune responses include both maternally-derived antibodies and antibodies resulting from exposure to pathogens, and disentangling these two processes requires understanding their individual dynamics. We conducted an egg-swapping experiment in an urban-nesting sentinel seabird, the yellow-legged gull, and measured antibody levels against three pathogens of interest (avian influenza virus AIV, Toxoplasma gondii TOX, and infectious bronchitis virus IBV) across various life stages, throughout chick growth, and between nestlings raised by biological or non-biological parents. We found that levels of background circulation differed among pathogens, with AIV antibodies widely present across all life stages, TOX antibodies rarer, and IBV antibodies absent. Antibody titers declined steadily from adult through egg, nestling, and chick stages. For the two circulating pathogens, maternal antibodies declined exponentially after hatching at similar rates, but the rate of linear increase due to environmental exposure was significantly higher in the more prevalent pathogen (AIV). Differences in nestling antibody levels due to parental effects also persisted longer for AIV (25 days, vs. 14 days for TOX). Our results suggest that yellow-legged gulls can be a useful sentinel population of locally transmitted infectious agents, provided that chicks are sampled at ages when environmental exposure outweighs maternal effects., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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14. Erysipelothrix amsterdamensis sp. nov., associated with mortalities among endangered seabirds.
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Zhong J, Medvecky M, Tornos J, Clessin A, Le Net R, Gantelet H, Gamble A, Forde TL, and Boulinier T
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- Animals, Sequence Analysis, DNA, DNA, Bacterial genetics, Bacterial Typing Techniques, Fatty Acids chemistry, Phylogeny, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics, Base Composition, Chickens, Nucleotides, Erysipelothrix
- Abstract
Infectious diseases threaten endangered species, particularly in small isolated populations. Seabird populations on the remote Amsterdam Island in the Indian Ocean have been in decline for the past three decades, with avian cholera caused by Pasteurella multocida proposed as the primary driver. However, Erysipelothrix species have also been sporadically detected from albatrosses on Amsterdam Island and may be contributing to some of the observed mortality. In this study, we genomically characterized 16 Erysipelothrix species isolates obtained from three Indian yellow-nosed albatross ( Thalassarche carteri ) chick carcasses in 2019. Histological analyses suggest that they died of bacterial septicaemia. Two isolates were sequenced using both Illumina short-read and MinION long-read approaches, which - following hybrid assembly - resulted in closed circular genomes. Mapping of Illumina reads from the remaining isolates to one of these new reference genomes revealed that all 16 isolates were closely related, with a maximum of 13 nucleotide differences distinguishing any pair of isolates. The nucleotide diversity of isolates obtained from the same or different carcasses was similar, suggesting all three chicks were likely infected from a common source. These genomes were compared with a global collection of genomes from Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae and other species from the same genus. The isolates from albatrosses were phylogenetically distinct, sharing a most recent common ancestor with E. rhusiopathiae . Based on phylogenomic analysis and standard thresholds for average nucleotide identity and digital DNA-DNA hybridization, these isolates represent a novel Erysipelothrix species, for which we propose the name Erysipelothrix amsterdamensis sp. nov. The type strain is A18Y020d
T (=CIP 112216T =DSM 115297T ). The implications of this bacterium for albatross conservation will require further study.- Published
- 2024
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15. Large Magnetoresistance of Isolated Domain Walls in La 2/3 Sr 1/3 MnO 3 Nanowires.
- Author
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Orfila G, Sanchez-Manzano D, Arora A, Cuellar F, Ruiz-Gómez S, Rodriguez-Corvillo S, López S, Peralta A, Carreira SJ, Gallego F, Tornos J, Rouco V, Riquelme JJ, Munuera C, Mompean FJ, Garcia-Hernandez M, Sefrioui Z, Villegas JE, Perez L, Rivera-Calzada A, Leon C, Valencia S, and Santamaria J
- Abstract
Generation, manipulation, and sensing of magnetic domain walls are cornerstones in the design of efficient spintronic devices. Half-metals are amenable for this purpose as large low field magnetoresistance signals can be expected from spin accumulation at spin textures. Among half metals, La
1- x Srx MnO3 (LSMO) manganites are considered as promising candidates for their robust half-metallic ground state, Curie temperature above room temperature (Tc = 360 K, for x = 1/3), and chemical stability. Yet domain wall magnetoresistance is poorly understood, with large discrepancies in the reported values and conflicting interpretation of experimental data due to the entanglement of various source of magnetoresistance, namely, spin accumulation, anisotropic magnetoresistance, and colossal magnetoresistance. In this work, the domain wall magnetoresistance is measured in LSMO cross-shape nanowires with single-domain walls nucleated across the current path. Magnetoresistance values above 10% are found to be originating at the spin accumulation caused by the mistracking effect of the spin texture of the domain wall by the conduction electrons. Fundamentally, this result shows the importance on non-adiabatic processes at spin textures despite the strong Hund coupling to the localized t2g electrons of the manganite. These large magnetoresistance values are high enough for encoding and reading magnetic bits in future oxide spintronic sensors., (© 2023 The Authors. Advanced Materials published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Complete Genome Sequences of Two Pasteurella multocida Isolates from Seabirds.
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Hashish A, Johnson TJ, Chundru D, Williams ML, Sato Y, Macedo NR, Clessin A, Gantelet H, Bost C, Tornos J, Gamble A, LeCount KJ, Ghanem M, Boulinier T, and El-Gazzar M
- Abstract
Pasteurella multocida is one of the major causes of mass mortalities in wild birds. Here, we report the complete genome sequences of two P. multocida isolates from wild populations of two endangered seabird species, the Indian yellow-nosed albatrosses (Thalassarche carteri) and the northern rockhopper penguins (Eudyptes moseleyi).
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- 2023
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17. Climate change in the Arctic: Testing the poleward expansion of ticks and tick-borne diseases.
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McCoy KD, Toty C, Dupraz M, Tornos J, Gamble A, Garnier R, Descamps S, and Boulinier T
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- Animals, Climate Change, Genetics, Population, Ixodes genetics, Ixodes microbiology, Charadriiformes, Lyme Disease, Tick-Borne Diseases
- Abstract
Climate change is most strongly felt in the polar regions of the world, with significant impacts on the species that live there. The arrival of parasites and pathogens from more temperate areas may become a significant problem for these populations, but current observations of parasite presence often lack a historical reference of prior absence. Observations in the high Arctic of the seabird tick Ixodes uriae suggested that this species expanded poleward in the last two decades in relation to climate change. As this tick can have a direct impact on the breeding success of its seabird hosts and vectors several pathogens, including Lyme disease spirochaetes, understanding its invasion dynamics is essential for predicting its impact on polar seabird populations. Here, we use population genetic data and host serology to test the hypothesis that I. uriae recently expanded into Svalbard. Both black-legged kittiwakes (Rissa tridactyla) and thick-billed murres (Uria lomvia) were sampled for ticks and blood in Kongsfjorden, Spitsbergen. Ticks were genotyped using microsatellite markers and population genetic analyses were performed using data from 14 reference populations from across the tick's northern distribution. In contrast to predictions, the Spitsbergen population showed high genetic diversity and significant differentiation from reference populations, suggesting long-term isolation. Host serology also demonstrated a high exposure rate to Lyme disease spirochaetes (Bbsl). Targeted PCR and sequencing confirmed the presence of Borrelia garinii in a Spitsbergen tick, demonstrating the presence of Lyme disease bacteria in the high Arctic for the first time. Taken together, results contradict the notion that I. uriae has recently expanded into the high Arctic. Rather, this tick has likely been present for some time, maintaining relatively high population sizes and an endemic transmission cycle of Bbsl. Close future observations of population infestation/infection rates will now be necessary to relate epidemiological changes to ongoing climate modifications., (© 2023 The Authors. Global Change Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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