23 results on '"Loreto É"'
Search Results
2. A new disk diffusion techniques method for the presumptive identification of Pythium insidiosum: P602
- Author
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Tondolo, J. S. M., Loreto, É. S., Denardi, L. B., Mario, D. A. N., Alves, S. H., and Santurio, J. M.
- Published
- 2012
3. Characterization of a hypermutable strain of Drosophila simulans
- Author
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Loreto, É. L. S, Zaha, A., Nichols, C., Pollock, J. A., and Valente, V. L. S.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
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4. Una reevaluación al rol de la imaginación en la primera meditación cartesiana
- Author
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Loreto Espinoza Marchant
- Subjects
imaginación ,ficción ,primera meditación ,descartes ,rol metódico ,Philosophy (General) ,B1-5802 - Abstract
Ciertas lecturas, orientadas por el argumento del sueño de la primera meditación de Descartes, insisten en marginar el rol de la imaginación apelando a que esta facultad va contra el objetivo del proyecto metafísico cartesiano. A lo anterior se le suma que dicha meditación suele ser casual y débilmente estudiada, como si la argumentación ofrecida ahí no tuviese la necesidad de una discusión pormenorizada. Sin embargo, en el presente artículo propongo que, al revisitar estos pasajes, existe la plausibilidad de rastrear un rol metódico de la imaginación, en la medida que esta se comprenda como ficción, es decir, como creadora de estructuras mentales que no tiene por condición necesaria la correspondencia con la realidad sensoperceptiva y la representación de imágenes en la mente. Esta orientación permite hacer notar que el rol metódico de la imaginación se ve manifestado en tres momentos esenciales para la meditación mencionada: la escena de la estufa, el argumento del sueño y la suposición del genio maligno.
- Published
- 2023
5. Insights Into the Function of the NuA4 Complex in Plants
- Author
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Loreto Espinosa-Cores, Laura Bouza-Morcillo, Javier Barrero-Gil, Verónica Jiménez-Suárez, Ana Lázaro, Raquel Piqueras, José A. Jarillo, and Manuel Piñeiro
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chromatin ,histone acetylation ,NuA4 ,TIP60 ,SWR1 ,Arabidopsis ,Plant culture ,SB1-1110 - Abstract
Chromatin remodeling plays a key role in the establishment and maintenance of gene expression patterns essential for plant development and responses to environmental factors. Post-translational modification of histones, including acetylation, is one of the most relevant chromatin remodeling mechanisms that operate in eukaryotic cells. Histone acetylation is an evolutionarily conserved chromatin signature commonly associated with transcriptional activation. Histone acetylation levels are tightly regulated through the antagonistic activity of histone acetyltransferases (HATs) and histone deacetylases (HDACs). In plants, different families of HATs are present, including the MYST family, which comprises homologs of the catalytic subunit of the Nucleosome Acetyltransferase of H4 (NuA4) complex in yeast. This complex mediates acetylation of histones H4, H2A, and H2A.Z, and is involved in transcriptional regulation, heterochromatin silencing, cell cycle progression, and DNA repair in yeast. In Arabidopsis and, other plant species, homologs for most of the yeast NuA4 subunits are present and although the existence of this complex has not been demonstrated yet, compelling evidence supports the notion that this type of HAT complex functions from mosses to angiosperms. Recent proteomic studies show that several Arabidopsis homologs of NuA4 components, including the assembly platform proteins and the catalytic subunit, are associated in vivo with additional members of this complex suggesting that a NuA4-like HAT complex is present in plants. Furthermore, the functional characterization of some Arabidopsis NuA4 subunits has uncovered the involvement of these proteins in the regulation of different plant biological processes. Interestingly, for most of the mutant plants deficient in subunits of this complex characterized so far, conspicuous defects in flowering time are observed, suggesting a role for NuA4 in the control of this plant developmental program. Moreover, the participation of Arabidopsis NuA4 homologs in other developmental processes, such as gametophyte development, as well as in cell proliferation and stress and hormone responses, has also been reported. In this review, we summarize the current state of knowledge on plant putative NuA4 subunits and discuss the latest progress concerning the function of this chromatin modifying complex.
- Published
- 2020
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6. Factores sociodemográficos y familiares en menores de España con medida judicial, cívicos e infractores
- Author
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María de la Villa Moral-Jiménez and Loreto Elvira Pelayo-Pérez
- Subjects
comportamiento antisocial ,conducta delictiva ,adolescencia ,género ,nivel educativo ,estructura familiar ,socialización familiar (tesauro isoc de psicología ,consejo superior de investigaciones científicas ,csic) ,Social Sciences ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
El objetivo de este estudio es analizar factores vinculados a la estructura y funcionalidad familiar, así como de carácter sociodemográfico, relacionados con el comportamiento delictivo en adolescentes. Para ello, seleccionamos aleatoriamente una muestra de escolares (n=118) del Principado de Asturias (España), divididos en dos grupos: cívico (n=87) y comportamiento delictivo (n=31), así como un grupo de adolescentes que cumplen Medida Judicial en Régimen Medio Abierto (n=22). Hallamos diferencias significativas en función de características individuales como edad, género y nivel de estudios, siendo los varones con mayor edad los que presentan más conductas delictivas. La formación académica de la madre, la separación conyugal y la ausencia del padre, son factores influyentes en el desarrollo de comportamientos delictivos que deriven en una sanción penal. Proponemos una discusión sobre las implicaciones de los resultados para la prevención de los comportamientos delictivos en menores.
- Published
- 2016
7. What do college science teachers say about content, methodology and assessment? An analysis from the educational practice.
- Author
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Eduardo Ravanal Moreno, Johanna Camacho González, Loreto Escobar Celis, and Natalia Jara Colicoy
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creencia, docente universitario, ciencias biológicas, contenido, metodología, evaluación ,Education - Abstract
The goal of this analysis was to explore the beliefs of science college teachers about content, methodology and evaluation. A Likert questionnaire was given to 13 college teachers and the data analysis was performed using a descriptive interpretative method. This was followed up by a case study to inquiry about the identified set of beliefs from the questionnaire and to establish how these relate to the teaching practice. The data was gathered by non-participatory observations of 2 lessons and examined using content analysis method with the Atlas Ti software. The main results indicate that the teaching practice is directed to teach academic knowledge of the discipline. Preliminary evidence indicate the existence of traditional beliefs about content, methodology and evaluation that are built from personal experience. As a result, the belief framework is what defines and sustains, in conscious or unconscious manner, the teaching practice of Science College Teachers. The evaluation of the findings calls for incorporation of a theoretical foundation to help college teachers gain awareness of their teaching practice.
- Published
- 2014
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8. ¿Qué dicen los profesores universitarios de ciencias sobre el contenido, metodología y evaluación? Análisis desde la acción educativa
- Author
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Eduardo Ravanal Moreno, Johanna Camacho González, Loreto Escobar Celis, Loreto Jesús Escobar Celis, and Natalia Jara Colicoy
- Subjects
creencia, docente universitario, ciencias biológicas, contenido, metodología, evaluación ,Education - Abstract
El objetivo de este estudio fue explorar las creencias del profesorado universitario de ciencias sobre el contenido, la metodología y la evaluación. Para tal fin primero se aplicó un cuestionario tipo Likert a 13 docentes universitario, el análisis de los datos se realizó desde una perspectiva descriptiva e interpretativa. Luego, se realizó un estudio de caso, de manera de indagar acerca de las creencias identificadas y cómo estás se relacionaban con la acción educativa, estos datos fueron obtenidos a través de la observación no participante de 2 lecciones de clase y posteriormente, sometidos a un análisis del contenido, utilizando el software Atlas ti. Los principales resultados, revelan que la acción educativa está orientada a enseñar el saber académico propio de la disciplina. Estos antecedentes preliminares, demuestran la existencia de creencias sobre contenido, metodología y evaluación desde perspectivas tradicionales, las cuales fueron construidas a partir de la experiencia, como se aprecia en el caso analizado. Dichas creencias son las que definen y sustentan, de manera consciente o no, la acción educativa de los profesores universitarios de ciencias. Aspecto relevante que llama a la necesidad de incorporar una fundamentación teórica que contribuya a comprender la acción educativa en el profesorado universitario.
- Published
- 2014
9. Salicylic Acid Signaling Networks
- Author
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Hua eLu, Jean T Greenberg, and Loreto eHoluigue
- Subjects
Reactive Oxygen Species ,development ,Circadian clock ,crosstalk ,effector ,Flowering Time Control ,Plant culture ,SB1-1110 - Published
- 2016
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10. Classification of single normal and Alzheimer’s disease individuals from cortical sources of resting state EEG rhythms
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Claudio eBabiloni, Antonio Ivano eTriggiani, Roberta eLizio, Giacomo eTattoli, Vitoantonio eBevilacqua, Andrea eSoricelli, Raffaele eFerri, Flavio eNobili, Loreto eGesualdo, Susanna eCordone, José Carlos eMillán-Calenti, Ana eBuján, Rosanna eTortelli, Valentina eCardinali, Orietta eBarulli, Antonio eGiannini, Pantaleo eSpagnolo, Silvia eArmenise, Grazia eBuenza, Gaetano eScianatico, Giancarlo eLogroscino, Giovanni B. Frisoni, and Claudio eDel Percio
- Subjects
Electroencephalography (EEG) ,ROC Curve ,Alzheimer’s disease (AD) ,Classification rate ,Delta rhythms ,Alpha rhythms. ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Previous studies have shown abnormal power and functional connectivity of resting state electroencephalographic (EEG) rhythms in groups of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) compared to healthy elderly (Nold) subjects. Here we tested the best classification rate of 120 AD patients and 100 matched Nold subjects using EEG markers based on cortical sources of power and functional connectivity of these rhythms. EEG data were recorded during resting state eyes-closed condition. Exact low-resolution brain electromagnetic tomography (eLORETA) estimated the power and functional connectivity of cortical sources in frontal, central, parietal, occipital, temporal, and limbic regions. Delta (2-4 Hz), theta (4-8 Hz), alpha 1 (8-10.5 Hz), alpha 2 (10.5-13 Hz), beta 1 (13-20 Hz), beta 2 (20-30 Hz), and gamma (30-40 Hz) were the frequency bands of interest. The classification rates of interest were those with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) higher than 0.7 as a threshold for a moderate classification rate (i.e. 70%). Results showed that the following EEG markers overcame this threshold: (i) central, parietal, occipital, temporal, and limbic delta/alpha 1 current density; (ii) central, parietal, occipital temporal, and limbic delta/alpha 2 current density; (iii) frontal theta/alpha 1 current density; (iv) occipital delta/alpha 1 inter-hemispherical connectivity; (v) occipital-temporal theta/alpha 1 right and left intra-hemispherical connectivity; and (vi) parietal-limbic alpha 1 right intra-hemispherical connectivity. Occipital delta/alpha 1 current density showed the best classification rate (sensitivity of 73.3%, specificity of 78%, accuracy of 75.5%, and AUROC of 82%). These results suggest that EEG source markers can classify Nold and AD individuals with a moderate classification rate higher than 80%.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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11. Responses of symbiotic nitrogen-fixing common bean to aluminum toxicity and delineation of nodule responsive microRNAs
- Author
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Ana Belén Mendoza-Soto, Loreto eNaya, Alfonso eLeija, and Georgina eHernandez
- Subjects
MicroRNAs ,common bean ,aluminum toxicity ,symbiotic nitrogen fixation ,nodules ,legume-rhizobia ,Plant culture ,SB1-1110 - Abstract
Aluminum (Al) toxicity is widespread in acidic soils where the common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris), the most important legume for human consumption, is produced and it is a limiting factor for crop production and symbiotic nitrogen fixation. We characterized the nodule responses of common bean plants inoculated with Rhizobioum tropici CIAT899 and the root responses of nitrate-fertilized plants exposed to excess Al in low pH, for long or short periods. A 43 - 50% reduction in nitrogenase activity indicates that Al toxicity highly affected nitrogen fixation in common bean. Bean roots and nodules showed characteristic symptoms for Al toxicity. In mature nodules Al accumulation and lipoperoxidation were observed in the infected zone, while callose deposition and cell death occurred mainly in the nodule cortex. Regulatory mechanisms of plant responses to metal toxicity involve microRNAs (miRNAs) along other regulators. Using a miRNA-macroarray hybridization approach we identified 28 (14 up-regulated) Al toxicity nodule-responsive miRNAs. We validated (qRT-PCR) the expression of eight nodule responsive miRNAs in roots and in nodules exposed to high Al for long or short periods. The inverse correlation between the target and miRNA expression ratio (stress:control) was observed in every case. Generally, miRNAs showed a higher earlier response in roots than in nodules. Some of the common bean Alt responsive miRNAs identified have also been reported as differentially expressed in other plant species subjected to similar stress condition. miRNA/target nodes analyzed in this work are known to be involved in relevant signaling pathways, thus we propose that the participation of miR164/NAC1 and miR393/TIR1 in auxin and of miR170/SCL in gibberellin signaling is relevant for common bean response/adaptation to Al stress. Our data provide a foundation for evaluating the individual roles of miRNAs in the response of common bean nodules to Al toxicity.
- Published
- 2015
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12. Salicylic acid and reactive oxygen species interplay in the transcriptional control of defense genes expression
- Author
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Ariel eHerrera-Vásquez, Paula eSalinas, and Loreto eHoluigue
- Subjects
Glutathione ,NPR1 ,reactive oxygen species (ROS) ,salicylic acid (SA) ,TGA Transcription factors ,Glutaredoxin GRXC9/GRX480 ,Plant culture ,SB1-1110 - Abstract
It is well established that salicylic acid (SA) plays a critical role in the transcriptional reprograming that occurs during the plant defense response against biotic and abiotic stress. In the course of the defense response, the transcription of different sets of defense genes is controlled in a spatio-temporal manner via SA-mediated mechanisms. Interestingly, different lines of evidence indicate that SA interplays with reactive oxygen species (ROS) and glutathione (GSH) in stressed plants. In this review we focus on the evidence that links SA, ROS and GSH signals to the transcriptional control of defense genes. We discuss how redox modifications of regulators and co-regulators involved in SA-mediated transcriptional responses control the temporal patterns of gene expression in response to stress. Finally, we examine how these redox sensors are coordinated with the dynamics of cellular redox changes occurring in the defense response to biotic and abiotic stress.
- Published
- 2015
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13. Over-activation of the Drosophila melanogaster hsp83 gene by selenium intoxication
- Author
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Golombieski, R. M., Graichen, D. Â S., Joao Batista Teixeira da Rocha, Da Silva Valente, V. L., and Da Silva Loreto, É L.
14. Antibacterial activity of essential oil of cinnamon and trans-cinnamaldehyde against Staphylococcus spp. Isolated from clinical mastitis of cattle and goats
- Author
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Dal Pozzo, M., Loreto, É S., Santurio, D. F., Alves, S. H., Rossatto, L., Vargas, A. C., JULIO VIEGAS, and Da Costa, M. M.
15. Transposable elements in South American populations of Drosophila simulans
- Author
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Zaha Arnaldo, Loreto Elgion, and Valente Vera
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Animal culture ,SF1-1100 ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Published
- 1998
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16. Stimulation of immature lung macrophages with intranasal interferon gamma in a novel neonatal mouse model of respiratory syncytial virus infection.
- Author
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Kerry M Empey, Jacob G Orend, R Stokes Peebles, Loreto Egaña, Karen A Norris, Tim D Oury, and Jay K Kolls
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the leading cause of bronchiolitis and viral death in infants. Reduced CD8 T-cells and negligible interferon gamma (IFNγ) in the airway are associated with severe infant RSV disease, yet there is an abundance of alveolar macrophages (AM) and neutrophils. However, it is unclear, based on our current understanding of macrophage functional heterogeneity, if immature AM improve viral clearance or contribute to inflammation and airway obstruction in the IFNγ-deficient neonatal lung environment. The aim of the current study was to define the age-dependent AM phenotype during neonatal RSV infection and investigate their differentiation to classically activated macrophages (CAM) using i.n. IFNγ in the context of improving viral clearance. Neonatal and adult BALB/cJ mice were infected with 1×10(6) plaque forming units (PFU)/gram (g) RSV line 19 and their AM responses compared. Adult mice showed a rapid and robust CAM response, indicated by increases in major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC II), CD86, CCR7, and a reduction in mannose receptor (MR). Neonatal mice showed a delayed and reduced CAM response, likely due to undetectable IFNγ production. Intranasal (i.n.) treatment with recombinant mouse IFNγ (rIFNγ) increased the expression of CAM markers on neonatal AM, reduced viral lung titers, and improved weight gain compared to untreated controls with no detectable increase in CD4 or CD8 T-cell infiltration. In vitro infection of J774A.1 macrophages with RSV induced an alternatively activated macrophage (AAM) phenotype however, when macrophages were first primed with IFNγ, a CAM phenotype was induced and RSV spread to adjacent Hep-2 cells was reduced. These studies demonstrate that the neonatal AM response to RSV infection is abundant and immature, but can be exogenously stimulated to express the antimicrobial phenotype, CAM, with i.n. rIFNγ.
- Published
- 2012
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- View/download PDF
17. Utilização do ágar suco de tomate (ágar V8) na identificação presuntiva de Candida dubliniensis
- Author
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Alves Sydney Hartz, Linares Carlos Eduardo, Loreto Érico Silva de, Rodrigues Magnus, Thomazi Diego I., Souza Felipe, and Santurio Janio M.
- Subjects
Candida dubliniensis ,Clamidoconídios ,Ágar suco de tomate ,Ágar V8 ,Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 - Abstract
Avaliou-se a capacidade do ágar suco de tomate (ágar V8) em diferenciar Candida dubliniensis de Candida albicans com base na produção de clamidoconídios. Noventa e três isolados de Candida albicans e vinte e seis de Candida dubliniensis foram incluídos; 100% de Candida dubliniensis formaram clamidoconídios e 92,5% de Candida albicans não evidenciaram estas estruturas. Estes resultados permitem sugerir este meio como recurso alternativo na identificação presuntiva de Candida dubliniensis.
- Published
- 2006
18. Mar, a MITE family of hAT transposons in Drosophila
- Author
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Deprá Maríndia, Ludwig Adriana, Valente Vera LS, and Loreto Elgion LS
- Subjects
MITEs ,Buster ,hAT ,Transposase ,Drosophila ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Abstract Background Miniature inverted-repeat transposable elements (MITEs) are short, nonautonomous DNA elements flanked by subterminal or terminal inverted repeats (TIRs) with no coding capacity. MITEs were originally recognized as important components of plant genomes, where they can attain extremely high copy numbers, and are also found in several animal genomes, including mosquitoes, fish and humans. So far, few MITEs have been described in Drosophila. Results Herein we describe the distribution and evolution of Mar, a MITE family of hAT transposons, in Drosophilidae species. In silico searches and PCR screening showed that Mar distribution is restricted to the willistoni subgroup of the Drosophila species, and a phylogenetic analysis of Mar indicates that this element may have originated prior to the diversification of these species. Most of the Mar copies in D. willistoni present conserved target site duplications and TIRs, indicating recent mobilization of these sequences. We also identified relic copies of potentially full-length Mar transposon in D. tropicalis and D. willistoni. The phylogenetic relationship among transposases from the putative full-length Mar and other hAT superfamily elements revealed that Mar is placed into the recently determined Buster group of hAT transposons. Conclusion On the basis of the obtained data, we can suggest that the origin of these Mar MITEs occurred before the subgroup willistoni speciation, which started about 5.7 Mya. The Mar relic transposase existence indicates that these MITEs originated by internal deletions and suggests that the full-length transposon was recently functional in D. willistoni, promoting Mar MITEs mobilization.
- Published
- 2012
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19. In vitro activity of diphenyl diselenide and ebselen alone and in combination with antifungal agents against Trichosporon asahii.
- Author
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Felli Kubiça T, Bedin Denardi L, Silva de Loreto É, Zeni G, Weiblen C, Oliveira V, Morais Santurio J, and Hartz Alves S
- Subjects
- Isoindoles, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Antifungal Agents pharmacology, Azoles pharmacology, Benzene Derivatives pharmacology, Drug Agonism, Drug Synergism, Organoselenium Compounds pharmacology, Trichosporon drug effects
- Abstract
This study evaluated the in vitro susceptibility of Trichosporon asahii strains to diphenyl diselenide (DPDS) and ebselen (EBS) alone and in combination with amphotericin B (AMB), fluconazole (FCZ), itraconazole (ITZ) and caspofungin (CAS) using the microdilution method. EBS showed in vitro activity against T asahii strains with minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) ranged from 0.25 to 8.0 μg/mL. For DPDS, the MIC ranged from 8.0 to 64 μg/mL. The combinations demonstrating the greatest synergism rate against fluconazole-resistant T asahii strains were the following: CAS + DPDS (96.67%), AMB + DPDS (93.33%), FCZ + DPDS (86.67%) and ITZ + DPDS (83.33%). The combinations AMB + DPDS and AMB + EBS exhibited the highest synergism rate against the fluconazole-susceptible (FS) T asahii strains (90%). Antagonism was observed in the following combinations: FCZ + EBS (80%) and FCZ + DPDS (13.33%) against the FS strains, and ITZ + EBS (20%) against the FR strains. Our findings suggest that the antimicrobial activity of DPDS and EBS against T. asahii and its use as an adjuvant therapy with antifungal agents warrant in vivo experimental investigation., (© 2019 Blackwell Verlag GmbH.)
- Published
- 2019
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20. In vitro activity of essential oils extracted from condiments against fluconazole-resistant and -sensitive Candida glabrata.
- Author
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Soares IH, Loreto ÉS, Rossato L, Mario DN, Venturini TP, Baldissera F, Santurio JM, and Alves SH
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- Antifungal Agents pharmacology, Candida glabrata growth & development, Drug Resistance, Microbial drug effects, Humans, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Plant Extracts pharmacology, Plant Oils pharmacology, Candida glabrata drug effects, Condiments, Fluconazole therapeutic use, Oils, Volatile pharmacology
- Abstract
In the present study, the antifungal activity of essential oils obtained from Origanum vulgare (oregano), Cinnamomum zeylanicum (cinnamon), Lippia graveolens (Mexican oregano), Thymus vulgaris (thyme), Salvia officinalis (sage), Rosmarinus officinalis (rosemary), Ocimum basilicum (basil) and Zingiber officinale (ginger) were assessed against Candida glabrata isolates. One group contained 30 fluconazole-susceptible C. glabrata isolates, and the second group contained fluconazole-resistant isolates derived from the first group after the in vitro induction of fluconazole-resistance, for a total of 60 tested isolates. The broth microdilution methodology was used. Concentrations of 50μg/mL, 100μg/mL, 200μg/mL, 400μg/mL, 800μg/mL, 1600μg/mL and 3200μg/mL of the essential oils were used, and the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) and minimum fungicidal concentration (MFC) were determined. Thyme, sage, rosemary, basil and ginger essential oils showed no antifungal activity at the tested concentrations. Antimicrobial activity less than or equal to 3200μg/mL was observed for oregano, Mexican oregano and cinnamon essential oils. Both the oregano and Mexican oregano essential oils showed high levels of antifungal activity against the fluconazole-susceptible C. glabrata group, whereas the cinnamon essential oil showed the best antifungal activity against the fluconazole-resistant C. glabrata isolates., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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- View/download PDF
21. In vitro activity of carvacrol and thymol combined with antifungals or antibacterials against Pythium insidiosum.
- Author
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Jesus FP, Ferreiro L, Bizzi KS, Loreto ÉS, Pilotto MB, Ludwig A, Alves SH, Zanette RA, and Santurio JM
- Subjects
- Cymenes, Drug Combinations, Drug Synergism, Humans, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Pythiosis microbiology, Pythium growth & development, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Antifungal Agents pharmacology, Monoterpenes pharmacology, Pythium drug effects, Thymol pharmacology
- Abstract
We describe the in vitro activities of the combinations of carvacrol and thymol with antibiotics (azithromycin, clarithromycin, minocycline and tigecycline) and antifungal agents (amphotericin B, caspofungin, itraconazole and terbinafine) against 23 isolates of the oomycete Pythium insidiosum. The assays were based on the M38-A2 technique and checkerboard microdilution. Based on the mean FICI values, the main synergies observed were combinations of carvacrol+itraconazole and thymol+itraconazole (96%), thymol+clarithromycin (92%), carvacrol+clarithromycin (88%), thymol+minocycline (84%), carvacrol+minocycline (80%), carvacrol+azithromycin (76%), thymol+azithromycin (68%), carvacrol+tigecycline (64%) and thymol+tigecycline (60%). In conclusion, we found that combinations of carvacrol or thymol with these antimicrobial agents might provide effective alternative treatments for cutaneous pythiosis due to their synergistic interactions. Future in vivo experiments are needed to elucidate the safety and therapeutic potential of these combinations., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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22. Insights into the pathophysiology of iron metabolism in Pythium insidiosum infections.
- Author
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Zanette RA, Bitencourt PER, Alves SH, Fighera RA, Flores MM, Wolkmer P, Hecktheuer PA, Thomas LR, Pereira PL, Loreto ÉS, and Santurio JM
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- Anemia, Hypochromic metabolism, Anemia, Hypochromic parasitology, Anemia, Hypochromic veterinary, Animals, Female, Humans, Pythiosis blood, Rabbits, Iron metabolism, Pythiosis metabolism, Pythiosis veterinary, Pythium metabolism
- Abstract
Pythium insidiosum causes life-threatening disease in mammals. Animals with pythiosis usually develop anemia, and most human patients are reported to have thalassemia and the major consequence of thalassemia, iron overload. Therefore, this study evaluated the iron metabolism in rabbits experimentally infected with P. insidiosum. Ten infected rabbits were divided into two groups: one groups received a placebo, and the other was treated with immunotherapy. Five rabbits were used as negative controls. The hematological and biochemical parameters, including the iron profile, were evaluated. Microcytic hypochromic anemia was observed in the infected animals, and this condition was more accentuated in the untreated group. The serum iron level was decreased, whereas the transferrin level was increased, resulting in low saturation. The level of stainable iron in hepatocytes was markedly decreased in the untreated group. A high correlation was observed between the total iron binding capacity and the lesion size, and this correlation likely confirms the affinity of P. insidiosum for iron. The data from this study corroborate the previous implications of iron in the pathogenesis of pythiosis in humans and animals., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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23. In vitro susceptibility of Pythium insidiosum isolates to aminoglycoside antibiotics and tigecycline.
- Author
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Mahl DL, de Jesus FP, Loreto É, Zanette RA, Ferreiro L, Pilotto MB, Alves SH, and Santurio JM
- Subjects
- Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Minocycline pharmacology, Tigecycline, Aminoglycosides pharmacology, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Minocycline analogs & derivatives, Pythium drug effects
- Abstract
This study evaluated the in vitro activity of aminoglycoside antibiotics and tigecycline against Pythium insidiosum. The susceptibility tests were carried out using the broth microdilution method in accordance with the CLSI document M38-A2. MIC values for gentamicin, neomycin, paromomycin, and streptomycin ranged from 32 to 64 mg/liter, and the minimal fungicidal concentration (MFC) ranged from 32 to 128 mg/liter, which are incompatible with safe concentrations of these drugs in plasma in vivo. Tigecycline showed the lowest MIC (0.25 to 2 mg/liter) and MFC (1 to 8 mg/liter) range values. The in vitro susceptibility observed to tigecycline makes this drug a good option in future tests in vitro and in vivo for the management of pythiosis.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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