75 results on '"P, Ruybal"'
Search Results
2. 13 New Light Curves and Updated Mid-Transit Time and Period for Hot Jupiter WASP-104 b with EXOTIC
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Hewitt, Heather B., Noguer, Federico, Corley, Suber, Ball, James, Chastain, Claudia, Cochran-White, Richard, Collins, Kendall, Ganzel, Kris, Gray, Kimberly Merriam, Logan, Mike, Marquez-Perez, Steve, Merchant, Chyna, Pedone, Matthew, Plumey, Gina, Rice, Matthew, Ruybal, Zachary, Simon, Molly N., Huckabee, Isabela, Zellem, Robert T., and Pearson, Kyle A.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Using the EXOplanet Transit Interpretation Code (EXOTIC), we reduced 52 sets of images of WASP-104 b, a Hot Jupiter-class exoplanet orbiting WASP-104, in order to obtain an updated mid-transit time (ephemeris) and orbital period for the planet. We performed this reduction on images taken with a 6-inch telescope of the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian MicroObservatory. Of the reduced light curves, 13 were of sufficient accuracy to be used in updating the ephemerides for WASP-104 b, meeting or exceeding the three-sigma standard for determining a significant detection. Our final mid-transit value was 2457805.170208 +/- 0.000036 BJD_TBD and the final period value was 1.75540644 +/- 0.00000016 days. The true significance of our results is in their derivation from image sets gathered over time by a small, ground-based telescope as part of the Exoplanet Watch citizen science initiative, and their competitive results to an ephemeris generated from data gathered by the TESS telescope. We use these results to further show how such techniques can be employed by amateur astronomers and citizen scientists to maximize the efficacy of larger telescopes by reducing the use of expensive observation time. The work done in the paper was accomplished as part of the first fully online Course-Based Undergraduate Research Experience (CURE) for astronomy majors in the only online Bachelor of Science program in Astronomical and Planetary Sciences., Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, published in JAAVSO
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- 2023
3. First identification of Strongyloides stercoralis infection in a pet dog in Argentina, using integrated diagnostic approaches
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Borrás, Pablo, Pérez, Matías Gastón, Repetto, Silvia, Barrera, Juan Pedro, Risso, Marikena Guadalupe, Montoya, Ana, Miró, Guadalupe, Fernandez, Federico, Telesca, Laura, Britton, Collette, and Ruybal, Paula
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- 2023
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4. PacBio long-read amplicon sequencing enables scalable high-resolution population allele typing of the complex CYP2D6 locus
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Charnaud, Sarah, Munro, Jacob E., Semenec, Lucie, Mazhari, Ramin, Brewster, Jessica, Bourke, Caitlin, Ruybal-Pesántez, Shazia, James, Robert, Lautu-Gumal, Dulcie, Karunajeewa, Harin, Mueller, Ivo, and Bahlo, Melanie
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- 2022
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5. A Rebuttal-Based Social Norms-Tailored Cannabis Intervention for At-Risk Adolescents
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Donaldson, Candice D., Alvaro, Eusebio M., Ruybal, Andrea L., Coleman, Michael, Siegel, Jason T., and Crano, William D.
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- 2021
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6. Geographic variation in the response of Culex pipiens life history traits to temperature
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Ruybal, Jordan E, Kramer, Laura D, and Kilpatrick, A Marm
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Microbiology ,Medical Microbiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Biological Sciences ,Vector-Borne Diseases ,Vaccine Related ,Infectious Diseases ,Prevention ,Infection ,Climate Action ,Animals ,Culex ,Feeding Behavior ,Larva ,Spatial Analysis ,Survival Analysis ,Temperature ,United States ,Climate change ,West Nile virus ,Thermal response ,Vector-borne disease ,Local adaptation ,Reaction norm ,Chikungunya virus ,Dengue ,Public Health and Health Services ,Mycology & Parasitology ,Tropical Medicine ,Medical microbiology - Abstract
BackgroundClimate change is predicted to alter the transmission of many vector-borne pathogens. The quantitative impact of climate change is usually estimated by measuring the temperature-performance relationships for a single population of vectors, and then mapping this relationship across a range of temperatures or locations. However, life history traits of different populations often differ significantly. Specifically, performance across a range of temperatures is likely to vary due to local adaptation to temperature and other factors. This variation can cause spatial variation in pathogen transmission and will influence the impact of climate change on the transmission of vector-borne pathogens.MethodsWe quantified variation in life history traits for four populations of Culex pipiens (Linnaeus) mosquitoes. The populations were distributed along altitudinal and latitudinal gradients in the eastern United States that spanned ~3 °C in mean summer temperature, which is similar to the magnitude of global warming expected in the next 3-5 decades. We measured larval and adult survival, development rate, and biting rate at six temperatures between 16 and 35 °C, in a common garden experiment.ResultsTemperature had strong and consistent non-linear effects on all four life history traits for all four populations. Adult female development time decreased monotonically with increasing temperature, with the largest decrease at cold temperatures. Daily juvenile and adult female survival also decreased with increasing temperature, but the largest decrease occurred at higher temperatures. There was significant among-population variation in the thermal response curves for the four life history traits across the four populations, with larval survival, adult survival, and development rate varying up to 45, 79, and 84 % among populations, respectively. However, variation was not correlated with local temperatures and thus did not support the local thermal adaptation hypothesis.ConclusionThese results suggest that the impact of climate change on vector-borne disease will be more variable than previous predictions, and our data provide an estimate of this uncertainty. In addition, the variation among populations that we observed will shape the response of vectors to changing climates.
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- 2016
7. Morphological and molecular characterization of Bertiella sp. (Cestoda, Anoplocephalidae) infection in a human and howler monkeys in Argentina
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Servián, Andrea, Zonta, María Lorena, Cociancic, Paola, Falcone, Andrea, Ruybal, Paula, Capasso, Sofía, and Navone, Graciela Teresa
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- 2020
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8. Parental Influences on Adolescent Major Depressive Symptoms and Marijuana Use
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Ruybal, Andrea L. and Crano, William D.
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- 2020
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9. Cosmic Ray Muon Flux at the Sanford Underground Laboratory at Homestake
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Gray, F. E., Ruybal, C., Totushek, J., Mei, D. -M., Thomas, K., and Zhang, C.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Measuring the muon flux is important to the Sanford Underground Laboratory at Homestake, for which several low background experiments are being planned. The nearly-vertical cosmic ray muon flux was measured in three locations at this laboratory: on the surface (1.149 \pm 0.017 x 10^-2 cm^-2 s^-1 sr^-1), at the 800-ft (0.712 km w.e.) level (2.67 \pm 0.06 x 10^-6 cm^-2 s^-1 sr^-1), and at the 2000-ft (1.78 km w.e.) level (2.56 \pm 0.25 x 10^-7 cm^-2 s^-1 sr^-1). These fluxes agree well with model predictions., Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures; to be published in Nucl. Instr. and Meth. A
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- 2010
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10. Population genomics of virulence genes of Plasmodium falciparum in clinical isolates from Uganda
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Ruybal-Pesántez, Shazia, Tiedje, Kathryn E., Tonkin-Hill, Gerry, Rask, Thomas S., Kamya, Moses R., Greenhouse, Bryan, Dorsey, Grant, Duffy, Michael F., and Day, Karen P.
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- 2017
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11. Immunogenicity of Hypothetical Highly Conserved Proteins as Novel Antigens in Anaplasma marginale
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Nuñez, Pablo A., Moretta, Rosalia, Ruybal, Paula, Wilkowsky, Silvina, and Farber, Marisa D.
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- 2014
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12. The Influence Of Climate Change And Evolution On Mosquito Life History Traits And Pathogen Transmission
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Ruybal, Jordan
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Ecology ,climate change ,Disease Ecology ,mosquito borne disease ,mosquito evolution ,temperature tolerance - Abstract
Many aspects of mosquito biology are highly sensitive to variation in temperature, which has led to predictions that climate change will alter the transmission of many vector-borne pathogens. However, it is unknown how mosquitoes will evolve in response to changing climates. We utilized common garden experiments and novel time-compressed climate change scenarios to examine standing geographic variation, species variation, and evolutionary change in the temperature dependence of four life history traits of mosquitoes (larval and adult survival, development rate, and biting rate). First, we quantified spatial variation in life history traits for four populations of Culex pipiens mosquitoes, a primary vector of West Nile Virus in North America, to examine the extent to which mosquitoes might be adapted to local thermal environments. We found substantial variation in life history traits among mosquito populations that was uncorrelated with local thermal conditions. This variation will shape the response of mosquito species to changing climates and will make the impact of climate change on vector-borne disease more variable and less predictable than previously thought.Second, we quantified variation in life history traits and vectorial capacity for the two dominant mosquito vectors of Zika, dengue, chikungunya, and yellow fever viruses, Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus. Differences in life history traits were mixed with Ae. albopictus having faster development, higher larval survival, and more frequent feeding, whereas Ae. aegypti had higher adult survival. Ae. aegypti was a slightly more efficient vector of all four viruses, and vectorial capacity was highest for yellow fever virus followed by Zika, Chikungunya and dengue.Lastly, we reared Ae. aegypti under three rates of temperature increase (+2°C, +4°C, and +5°C) and three control conditions (a 2°C decrease, and two temperature profiles with no net change) for one year to examine the potential evolutionary response to climate change. Although there was significant among-treatment variation in four life history traits between the starting population and the six climate treatments, these differences were uncorrelated with the temperature regime the mosquitoes experienced, suggesting that the mosquitoes were adapting more to the increased variance in temperatures in the experiment than the differences in mean temperature.
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- 2016
13. Characterization of the immunophenotype and the metastatic properties of a murine T-lymphoma cell line. Unexpected expression of cytoplasmatic CD4
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Mongini, C., Ruybal, P., Gravisaco, M. J., Croci, M., Lockhart, M. Sánchez, Fabris, V., and Waldner, C.
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- 2001
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14. Community Assessment: An Epidemiological Approach
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Ruybal, Sally E.
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The course described was planned to give students preparing to become community health nurses a sound basis for nursing practice as well as provide them with a systematic approach toward assessing the community, mobilizing existing health resources, cooperating with other professionals, and utilizing existing resources. (AJ)
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- 1975
15. Chagas disease panniculitis in a patient with AIDS
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C. Giuliano, C. Lopez, A. Angulo, P. Ruybal, and A. Gersztein
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Microbiology (medical) ,Chagas disease ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Infectious Diseases ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,business.industry ,medicine ,General Medicine ,Panniculitis ,medicine.disease ,business ,Dermatology - Published
- 2018
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16. Apoptosis in gut-associated lymphoid tissue: a response to injury or a physiologic mechanism?
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Pablo Argibay, H. Garcia Rivello, A. Escalada, Esteban Mocetti, P. Ruybal, Silvia Christiansen, and C. Mongini
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Cellular immunity ,Programmed cell death ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lymphoid Tissue ,Gut-associated lymphoid tissue ,Apoptosis ,Spleen ,DNA Fragmentation ,Thymus Gland ,Biology ,Pathogenesis ,Ischemia ,Intestine, Small ,medicine ,Animals ,Rats, Wistar ,Electrophoresis, Agar Gel ,Transplantation ,Rats ,Lymphatic system ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Reperfusion ,Female ,Surgery ,Lymph Nodes - Published
- 1998
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17. Evaluation of Groundwater Levels in the Arapahoe Aquifer Using Spatiotemporal Regression Kriging
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Ruybal, Christopher J., Hogue, Terri S., and McCray, John E.
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Groundwater monitoring is fundamental to understanding system dynamics, trends in storage, and the long‐term sustainability of an aquifer. Water‐level data are the key source of information used to understand the response. However, groundwater‐level data are often irregularly sampled, leading to temporal gaps in the record, and are not adequately distributed spatially across an aquifer. This presents challenges when spatially interpolating potentiometric surfaces and creating groundwater maps due to data availability. We present a spatiotemporal kriging methodology to improve spatial and temporal confidence in groundwater‐level predictions at unsampled locations. The space–time data set consists of a trend and residual component modeled with a linear regression and utilize a sum‐metric model to represent spatiotemporal covariances. The Arapahoe aquifer is used as a case study to demonstrate the benefits of spatiotemporal kriging over spatial kriging across a sparsely gauged and irregularly sampled aquifer. The Arapahoe aquifer is a major source of water for many residents along the Rocky Mountain Front Range in Colorado. The results show superior performance of spatiotemporal kriging to predict groundwater levels over the traditional spatial kriging. Spatiotemporal kriging represents realistic temporal and spatial changes in water levels and avoids some of the problems inherent to spatial kriging. This study demonstrates the power of spatiotemporal kriging to help inform system dynamics in irregularly sampled aquifers. Groundwater is an important water resource that requires monitoring to understand changes and ensure that adequate resources will exist in the future. However, monitoring data are often not collected at the same time and frequency, leading to challenges when creating groundwater maps due to data gaps. Traditionally, groundwater maps are created using data that are collected or grouped to about the same time period. However, this approach does not use past or future information to help create maps for the time period of interest and fill data gaps. In this study, we use a technique that examines where monitoring data are collected and when the data are collected and combines this information to better provide estimates about groundwater in areas and times with no direct measurements. The Arapahoe aquifer in Colorado is used as a case study to show the benefits of this approach. The results show how the approach used in this study leads to more accurate potentiometric surface maps and helps inform system dynamics which can be used to improve management of regional groundwater resources. Spatiotemporal kriging leverages data from space–time neighbors, allowing for more information to infer the kriging predictionsSpatiotemporal kriging allows estimation of groundwater levels during times when data are not availableThe approach highlights the problems and challenges of using observed data that varies throughout time to create spatial groundwater maps
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- 2019
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18. How effective is caffeine plus an analgesic compared with analgesic alone for the treatment of acute headache pain in adults?
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Maeder, Greg, Vester, Amanda DO, Ruybal, Dominick DO, Torczynski, Amanda, Ebner, Mollie DO, and Kaldan, Gabriela DO
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- 2021
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19. Association of Sputum Eosinophilia With Easily Measured Type-2 Inflammatory Biomarkers in Untreated Mild Persistent Asthma
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Covar, Ronina, Lazarus, Stephen C., Krishnan, Jerry A., Blake, Kathryn V., Sorkness, Christine A., Dyer, Anne-Marie, Lang, Jason E., Lugogo, Njira L., Mauger, David T., Wechsler, Michael E., Wenzel, Sally E., Cardet, Juan Carlos, Castro, Mario, Israel, Elliot, Phipatanakul, Wanda, King, Tonya S., Ali-Dinar, Tarig, Baab, Kendall, Bach, Julia, Bacharier, Leonard, Bagley, Jennifer, Bartnikas, Lisa, Batalla, Jenny, Baxi, Sachin, Bime, Christian, Blake, Kathryn, Bloss, Valerie, Boomer, Jonathan, Boushey, Homer, Bracken, Nina, Bruce, Alice, Cabana, Michael, Caldwell, Wanda, Cardet, Juan Carlos, Carr, Tara, Castro, Mario, Cernadas, Manuela, Chinchilli, Vernon, Chmiel, James, Covar, Ronina, Cunningham, Amparito, Curtis, Vanessa, Daines, Cori, Daines, Michael, David, Sarah, DeClue, Huiqing Yin, DeLisa, Julie, Denlinger, Loren, Dickson, Mariela, Dilley, Meredith, DiMango, Emily, Dioneda, Brittney, Dyer, Anne-Marie, Engle, Linda, Fahy, John, Fandino, Nicolas, Fitzpatrick, Anne, Flexas, Iliana, Foster, Susan, Francisco, Dave, Gaffin, Jonathan, Gallopp, William, Gentile, Deborah, Gill, Mary, Goodwin, Jamie, Grossman, Nicole, Gyori, Elizabeth, Hastie, Annette, Hauptman, Marissa, Hixon, Jenny, Hmieleski, Bob, Holguin, Fernando, Hron, Bridget, Ilnicki, Melissa, Israel, Elliot, Jackson, Daniel, Kalhan, Ravi, Kantor, David, King, Tonya, Kolakowski, Tena, Koridek-Phillips, Kristen, Kraft, Monica, Krishnan, Jerry, LaForce, Craig, Lane, James, Lang, Jason, Lazarus, Stephen, Lemanske, Robert, Lima, John, Littlefield, Michelle, Logan, Laurie, Lopez, Silvia, Lucier, Jennifer, Lugogo, Njira, Manne, Akarsh, Mantia, Tarisa, Martinez, Fernando, Mauger, David, Mazzola, Geneline, Merchlinski, Aimee, Miller, Barbara, Misplay, Sarah, Moore, Wendy, Morgan, Wayne, Moseid, Cynthia, Moy, James, Myers, Ross, Narula, Surinder, Navin, Melissa, Nelson, Kyle, Nettles, Carrie, Norris, Tina, Norsworthy, Kelly, Norwick, Lourdes, Odewole, Mobolaji, Pak, Juno, Patterson, Brenda, Peters, Stephen, Phipatankul, Wanda, Pongracic, Jacqueline, Priefert, Janette, Prieto-Centurion, Valentin, Provencio, Natalie, Que, Loretta, Ramsey, Pamela, Rector, Brian, Robison, Rachel G., Roginski, Christopher, Rook, Shannon, Rosenberg, Sharon, Ross, Kristie, Ruybal, Joseph, Ryan, Elizabeth, Schierembergg, Doris, Schneider, Lynda, Scheuerman, Melissa, Sexton, Ann, Sheehan, William, Silva, Julian, Silver, Marlyne, Smith, Lewis, Sorkness, Christine, Sossong, Nicole, Sparatta, Alyssa, Stevens, Allen, Sundstrom, D., Szefler, Stanley, Tekely, Daniel, Trantow, Constance, Trasatt, Kathryn, Updegrave, Angela, Vasquez, Monica, Veri, Laura, Voigt, Thomas, Volonte, Brian, Wechsler, Michael, Wences, Jesus, Wenzel, Sally, White, Michael, Williamson, Lisa, Wilmoth, Cheryl, Wirth, Tiffany, Woodruff, Prescott, Wright, Lakeia, Yongue, Camille, Yu, Jessica, Zeller, Jennifer, and Zimmerman, Ronald
- Abstract
A multicenter clinical trial in patients with mild persistent asthma indicated that response to inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) is limited to those with sputum eosinophilia. However, testing for sputum eosinophilia is impractical in most clinical settings.
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- 2024
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20. Lack of Geospatial Population Structure Yet Significant Linkage Disequilibrium in the Reservoir of Plasmodium falciparum in Bongo District, Ghana.
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Ruybal-Pesántez, Shazia, Tiedje, Kathryn E., Rorick, Mary M., Amenga-Etego, Lucas, Ghansah, Anita, Oduro, Abraham R., Koram, Kwadwo A., and Day, Karen P.
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- 2017
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21. RANKL expression in a case of follicular lymphoma
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V, Barcala, P, Ruybal, H, Garcia Rivello, C, Waldner, A, Ascione, and C, Mongini
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Male ,Membrane Glycoproteins ,Receptor Activator of Nuclear Factor-kappa B ,RANK Ligand ,Bone Neoplasms ,Middle Aged ,Flow Cytometry ,Immunohistochemistry ,Immunophenotyping ,Neoplasm Proteins ,Humans ,Neoplasm Invasiveness ,Lymph Nodes ,Carrier Proteins ,Lymphoma, Follicular - Abstract
The TNF-family molecule, RANKL, is a key regulator of bone remodeling and essential for the development and activation of osteoclasis. Bone involvement signals diesease activity in non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and influences the progenesis. The molecular mechanism and soluble factors involved in osteoclastic activation in haematological malignancies remain unclear except for Multiple Myeloma and Adult T-cell Leukemia. The aim of this paper is to report the first case of Follicular Lymphoma with bone involvement displaying an aberrant expression of RANKL in malignant cells. The detection of RANKL in Follicullar Lymphoma may help to prevent bone lesion in patients by determining an appropriate treatment.
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- 2003
22. Simplified MLST scheme for direct typing of Leptospirahuman clinical samples
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Varni, Vanina, Chiani, Yosena, Nagel, Ariel, Ruybal, Paula, Vanasco, Norma Bibiana, and Caimi, Karina
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ABSTRACTLeptospirosis is a globally distributed zoonosis. Epidemiological data are scarce and present major challenge because of the varied clinical presentations. Multilocus Sequence Typing has already proven to be a robust molecular typing method providing accurate results for strain characterization. We have adapted our MLST scheme by reducing the set of loci to facilitate Leptospiratyping directly from human clinical samples. The application of this 3-locus scheme provides Leptospiraspecies and allelic profiles of the samples retaining the power of discrimination of the whole scheme. Moreover, an approach to the serogroups was also achieved. Our results contribute to the epidemiological study of Leptospirosis, since the direct typing on clinical specimens could detect and update allelic variants and serogroups present in a region. The simplified scheme allowed at the same time to take advantage of limited genetic material available in clinical samples that may increase the sources of information for epidemiological monitoring.
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- 2018
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23. Characterization of the immunophenotype and the metastatic properties of a murine T-lymphoma cell line. Unexpected expression of cytoplasmatic CD4
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C, Mongini, P, Ruybal, M J, Gravisaco, M, Croci, M, Sánchez Lockhart, V, Fabris, and A C, Waldner
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Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Thymus Gland ,Flow Cytometry ,Lymphoma, T-Cell ,Immunophenotyping ,Mice ,Liver ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,Karyotyping ,CD4 Antigens ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,Animals ,Lymph Nodes ,Neoplasm Metastasis ,Neoplasm Transplantation ,Spleen - Abstract
We report the first characterization of a mouse T-lymphoma cell line that surprisingly expresses cytoplasmatic (cy) yCD4. Phenotypically, LBC cells are CD5+, CD8+, CD16+, CD24+, CD25+, CD2-/dim, CD3-/dim, TCRbeta-/dim, TCRgammadelta, CD154 , CD40-, and CD45R. Coexpress cyTCRbeta, cyCD3, cyCD4, and yet lack surface CD4 expression. Transplantation of LBC cells into mice resulted in an aggressive T-lymphoblastic lymphoma that infiltrated lymph nodes, thymus, spleen, liver, ovary, and uterus but not peripheral blood or bone marrow. LBC cells display a modal chromosome number of 39 and a near-diploid karyotype. Based on the characterization data, we demonstrated that the LBC cell line was derived from an early T-cell lymphocyte precursor. We propose that the malignant cell transformation of LBC cells could coincide with the transition stage from late double-negative, DN3 (CD4- CD8 CD44-/low, CD25+) or DN4 (CD4-low, CD8-/low, CD44-, CD25-) to double-positive (DP: CD4+CD8+) stage of T-cell development. LBC cells provide a T-lymphoblastic lymphoma model derived from a malignant early T-lymphocyte that can be potentially useful as a model to study both cellular regulation and differentiation of T-cells. In addition, LBC tumor provides a short latency neoplasm to study cellular regulation and to perform preclinical trials of lymphoma-relatel clisorders.
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- 2001
24. CCR3 Blockade Attenuates Eosinophilic Ileitis and Associated Remodeling
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Masterson, Joanne C., McNamee, Eóin N., Jedlicka, Paul, Fillon, Sophie, Ruybal, Joseph, Hosford, Lindsay, Rivera-Nieves, Jesús, Lee, James J., and Furuta, Glenn T.
- Abstract
Intestinal remodeling and stricture formation is a complication of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) that often requires surgical intervention. Although eosinophils are associated with mucosal remodeling in other organs and are increased in IBD tissues, their role in IBD-associated remodeling is unclear. Histological and molecular features of ileitis and remodeling were assessed using immunohistochemical, histomorphometric, flow cytometric, and molecular analysis (real-time RT-PCR) techniques in a murine model of chronic eosinophilic ileitis. Collagen protein was assessed by Sircol assay. Using a spontaneous eosinophilic Crohn's-like mouse model SAMP1/SkuSlc, we demonstrate an association between ileitis progression and remodeling over the course of 40 weeks. Mucosal and submucosal eosinophilia increased over the time course and correlated with increased histological inflammatory indices. Ileitis and remodeling increased over the 40 weeks, as did expression of fibronectin. CCR3-specific antibody-mediated reduction of eosinophils resulted in significant decrease in goblet cell hyperplasia, muscularis propria hypertrophy, villus blunting, and expression of inflammatory and remodeling genes, including fibronectin. Cellularity of local mesenteric lymph nodes, including T- and B-lymphocytes, was also significantly reduced. Thus, eosinophils participate in intestinal remodeling, supporting eosinophils as a novel therapeutic target.
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- 2011
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25. Conformational Analysis of Spiro-bis-dithiepins: A Peculiar Case of Axial Chirality
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O. Wade, Edmir, A. Valiulin, Roman, A. Ruybal, Leslie, and G. Kutateladze, Andrei
- Abstract
Spiro-bis-dithiepins are synthesized via dehydrative ring expansion in -hydroxyalkyl spiro-bis-dithianes. Atypical of spiranes possessing axial chirality, the two most stable conformers of substituted spiro-bis-dithiepin have virtually colinear double bonds; i.e., each enantiomer exists in a form of two energy degenerate syn and anti conformations. Because of the high polarizability of the vinyl sulfide moiety, spiro-bis-dithiepins bearing electron-withdrawing substituents offer access to two-state systems possessing large dipole moments, which can be modulated by conformational events.
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- 2006
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26. How effective is topical efinaconazole solution in the treatment of onychomycosis?
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Maeder, Gregory, Lohr, Adriana DO, Garbo, Oliver DO, Cochran, Scott DO, Baham, Ethan DO, and Ruybal, Dominick DO
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- 2019
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27. Factors Contributing to Adherence to Dietary Treatment of Eosinophilic Gastrointestinal Diseases
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Henry, Michelle L., Atkins, Dan, Fleischer, David, Pan, Zhaoxing, Ruybal, Joseph, and Furuta, Glenn T.
- Abstract
The purpose of the present study was to identify barriers to dietary adherence found in the treatment of children with eosinophilic gastrointestinal diseases (EGIDs) and food allergy. A prospective study using a self-administered survey to parents of children with EGIDs at a national advocacy meeting was completed. Responses from 45 participants describing children ages 1 to 18 years (69% boys) identified that 63% were adherent to food restrictions. Physicians provided dietary instructions more often than dietitians. Nonadherence was associated with lack of school support (P< 0.027). Access to a dietitian may improve the care of children with EGIDs.
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- 2012
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28. Final 11.21.16.
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Ruybal, Karlen
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- FINAL 11.21.16 (Poem), RUYBAL, Karlen
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The poem "Final 11.21.16" by Karlen Ruybal is presented. First Line: Some drafts of haikus; Last Line: too ashamed to share.
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- 2017
29. As You Like It.
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Ruybal, Consuelo
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A personal narrative is presented which describes the author's thoughts about masculinity in her appearance, discovery of her clitoris as a point of sexual excitement and the rediscovering of her feminine identity.
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- 2015
30. The Esophageal String Test (Est): A Novel Minimally Invasive Method for Measuring Esophageal Inflammation in Eosinophilic Esophagitis (EoE).
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Furuta, Glenn, Kagalwalla, Amir, Lee, James J., Fillon, Sophie A., Moore, Wendy, Masterson, Joanne C., Robinson, Zachary, Alumkal, Preeth, Protheroe, Cheryl A., Hosford, Lindsay, Schroeder, Shauna, Ruybal, Joe, Ochkur, Sergei, Atkins, Dan, Fleischer, David M., Jacques, Katie, Capocelli, Kelley, Maybruck, Brian, Kelly, Caleb J., and Kwatia, Mark A.
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- 2011
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31. Dietary Adherence in Food Allergic Children with Eosinophilic Gastrointestinal Diseases.
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Henry, M., Atkins, D., Pan, Z., Ruybal, J., Moore, W., and Furuta, G.T.
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- 2011
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32. Tandem repeats in the genome of Toxoplasma gondii display compositional bias that impacts in protein structure.
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Hjelt V, Goldman A, Martin V, Ruybal P, and Moretta R
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- Genome, Protozoan, Base Composition, Toxoplasma genetics, Tandem Repeat Sequences genetics, Protozoan Proteins genetics, Protozoan Proteins chemistry, Protozoan Proteins metabolism
- Abstract
Repetitive elements in DNA sequences are a hallmark of Apicomplexan protozoa. A genome-wide screening for Tandem Repeats was conducted in Toxoplasma gondii and related Coccidian parasites with a novel strategy to assess compositional bias. A conserved pattern of GC skew and purine-pyrimidine bias was observed. Compositional bias was also present at the protein level. Glutamic acid was the most abundant amino acid in the purine (GA) rich cluster, while Serine prevailed in pyrimidine (CT) rich cluster. Purine rich repeats, and consequently glutamic acid abundance, correlated with high scores for intrinsically disordered protein regions/domains. Finally, variability was established for repetitive regions within a well-known rhoptry antigen (ROP1) and an uncharacterized hypothetical protein with similar features. The approach we present could be useful to identify potential antigens bearing repetitive elements., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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33. Higher diversity of Brucella canis in Latin America, according to an MLVA_13 Bc analysis.
- Author
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Boeri EJ, Ruybal P, Dominguez ML, Fernandez NM, Becker P, Elena S, Escobar GI, Ayala SM, Hasan DB, and Trangoni MD
- Subjects
- Animals, Dogs, Latin America epidemiology, Minisatellite Repeats, Disease Outbreaks, Genotype, Multilocus Sequence Typing, Brucella canis genetics, Brucellosis epidemiology, Brucellosis veterinary
- Abstract
Brucella canis is the main causative agent of canine brucellosis, which affects domestic and wild canids and leads to clinical signs and symptoms of the reproductive and locomotor systems. Owing to the scarce information on this pathogen, here we addressed the genetic diversity of the circulating strains of this species in Argentina by following an MVLA_13 Bc scheme. The analyzed sample set consisted of 101 strains of B. canis isolates collected between 2006 and 2020 from canines of the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires (CABA) and other regions of Argentina, as well as 235 isolates from North America. The analysis yielded 336 variants (Hunter-Gaston Diversity Index, HGDI equal to 1.0) showing high diversity on a global scale. The analysis of the six most variable markers also reveled high diversity and allowed further analysis regarding variant relationships. Although the diversity obtained using both schemes (all or the 6 most variable markers) was higher for the Latin American than for the North American strains, we cannot discard that this was due to biases in the sampling methodology or to the different health policies employed in these regions regarding the management of infected individuals. Altogether, the Argentine circulating strains are genetically diverse, but with no apparent geographical association. The markers used in the MLVA_13 Bc are variable and highly useful for the evaluation of outbreaks. Furthermore, the reduced panel of 6 markers (MLVA_6 Bc) proposed in this study is convenient for the study of B. canis strain diversity., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest This research involved no conflicts of interest. The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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34. Interleukin 10 Polymorphisms as Risk Factors for Progression to Chagas Disease Cardiomyopathy: A Case-Control Study and Meta-Analysis.
- Author
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Grijalva A, Gallo Vaulet L, Agüero RN, Toledano A, Risso MG, Quarroz Braghini J, Sosa D, Ruybal P, Repetto S, and Alba Soto CD
- Subjects
- Case-Control Studies, Humans, Interleukin-10 genetics, Risk Factors, Chagas Cardiomyopathy genetics, Chagas Disease genetics
- Abstract
Background: Chagas disease is a lifelong infection caused by the protozoa Trypanosoma cruzi endemic in Latin-America and emergent worldwide. Decades after primary infection, 20-30% of infected people develop chronic Chagas cardiomyopathy (CCC) while the others remain asymptomatic. CCC pathogenesis is complex but associated with sustained pro-inflammatory response leading to tissue damage. Hence, levels of IL-10 could have a determinant role in CCC etiology. Studies with Latin-American populations have addressed the association of genetic variants of IL-10 and the risk of developing CCC with inconsistent results. We carried out a case control study to explore the association between IL-10-1082G>A (rs18008969), -819C>T (rs1800871), -592A>C (rs1800872) polymorphisms and CCC in a population attending a hospital in Buenos Aires Argentina. Next, a systematic review of the literature and a meta-analysis were conducted combining present and previous studies to further study this association., Methods: Our case control study included 122 individuals with chronic T. cruzi infection including 64 patients with any degree of CCC and 58 asymptomatic individuals. Genotyping of IL-10 -1082G>A, -819C>T, -592A>C polymorphisms was performed by capillary sequencing of the region spanning the three polymorphic sites and univariate and multivariate statistical analysis was undertaken. Databases in English, Spanish and Portuguese language were searched for papers related to these polymorphisms and Chagas disease up to December 2021. A metanalysis of the selected literature and our study was performed based on the random effect model., Results: In our cohort, we found a significant association between TT genotype of -819 rs1800871 and AA genotype of -592 rs1800872 with CCC under the codominant (OR=5.00; 95%CI=1.12-23.87 P=0,04) and the recessive models (OR=5.37; 95%CI=1.12-25.68; P=0,03). Of the genotypes conformed by the three polymorphic positions, the homozygous genotype ATA was significantly associated with increased risk of CCC. The results of the meta-analysis of 754 cases and 385 controls showed that the TT genotype of -819C>T was associated with increased CCC risk according to the dominant model (OR=1.13; 95% CI=1.02-1.25; P=0,03)., Conclusion: The genotype TT at -819 rs1800871 contributes to the genetic susceptibility to CCC making this polymorphism a suitable candidate to be included in a panel of predictive biomarkers of disease progression., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Grijalva, Gallo Vaulet, Agüero, Toledano, Risso, Quarroz Braghini, Sosa, Ruybal, Repetto and Alba Soto.)
- Published
- 2022
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35. Molecular typing of Strongyloides stercoralis in Latin America, the clinical connection.
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Repetto SA, Quarroz Braghini J, Risso MG, Argüello LB, Batalla EI, Stecher DR, Sierra MF, Burgos JM, Radisic MV, González Cappa SM, and Ruybal P
- Subjects
- Animals, Dogs, Feces, Humans, Latin America epidemiology, Molecular Typing, Prospective Studies, Strongyloides stercoralis genetics, Strongyloidiasis diagnosis, Strongyloidiasis drug therapy, Strongyloidiasis epidemiology
- Abstract
This study analysed Strongyloides stercoralis genetic variability based on a 404 bp region of the cox1 gene from Latin-American samples in a clinical context including epidemiological, diagnosis and follow-up variables. A prospective, descriptive, observational study was conducted to evaluate clinical and parasitological evolution after ivermectin treatment of 41 patients infected with S. stercoralis. Reactivation of the disease was defined both by clinical symptoms appearance and/or direct larvae detection 30 days after treatment or later. We described 10 haplotypes organized in two clusters. Most frequent variants were also described in the Asian continent in human (HP24 and HP93) and canine (HP24) samples. Clinical presentation (intestinal, severe, cutaneous and asymptomatic), immunological status and eosinophil count were not associated with specific haplotypes or clusters. Nevertheless, presence of cluster 1 haplotypes during diagnosis increased the risk of reactivation with an odds ratio (OR) of 7.51 [confidence interval (CI) 95% 1.38–44.29, P = 0.026]. In contrast, reactivation probability was 83 times lower if cluster 2 (I152V mutation) was detected (OR = 0.17, CI 95% 0.02–0.80, P = 0.02). This is the first analysis of S. stercoralis cox1 diversity in the clinical context. Determination of clusters during the diagnosis could facilitate and improve the design of follow-up strategies to prevent severe reactivations of this chronic disease.
- Published
- 2022
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36. Development of a New LAMP Assay for the Detection of Ancylostoma caninum DNA (Copro-LAMPAc) in Dog Fecal Samples.
- Author
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Avila HG, Risso MG, Cabrera M, Ruybal P, Repetto SA, Butti MJ, Trangoni MD, Santillán G, Pérez VM, and Periago MV
- Abstract
Ancylostoma caninum is a zoonotic nematode which is able to affect animals and humans. Diagnosis in the definitive host and environmental detection are key to prevent its dissemination and achieve control. Herein, a new coprological LAMP method for the detection of A. caninum (Copro-LAMPAc) DNA was developed. DNA extraction was performed using a low-cost method and a fragment of the cox -1 gene was used for primer design. The analytical sensitivity, evaluated with serial dilutions of genomic DNA from A. caninum adult worms, was 100 fg. A specificity of 100% was obtained using genomic DNA from the host and other pathogens. The Copro-LAMPAc was evaluated using environmental canine fecal samples. When compared with gold standard optical microscopy in epidemiological studies, it proved to be more sensitive. This new LAMP assay can provide an alternative protocol for screening and identification of A. caninum for epidemiological studies in endemic areas., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Avila, Risso, Cabrera, Ruybal, Repetto, Butti, Trangoni, Santillán, Pérez and Periago.)
- Published
- 2021
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37. Development of a low-cost copro-LAMP assay for simultaneous copro-detection of Toxocara canis and Toxocara cati .
- Author
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Avila HG, Risso MG, Ruybal P, Repetto SA, Butti MJ, Trangoni MD, Grune Löffler S, Pérez VM, and Periago MV
- Subjects
- Animals, Cat Diseases parasitology, Cats, Dog Diseases parasitology, Dogs, Feces parasitology, Molecular Diagnostic Techniques methods, Nucleic Acid Amplification Techniques methods, Toxocara canis isolation & purification, Toxocariasis parasitology, Cat Diseases diagnosis, Dog Diseases diagnosis, Molecular Diagnostic Techniques veterinary, Nucleic Acid Amplification Techniques veterinary, Toxocara isolation & purification, Toxocariasis diagnosis
- Abstract
Toxocariasis is a zoonotic disease caused mainly by Toxocara canis and Toxocara cati and diagnosis in dogs and cats is an important tool for its control. For this reason, a new coprological loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) assay was developed for the simultaneous detection of these species. The primer set was designed on a region of the mitochondrial cox-1 gene. Amplification conditions were evaluated using a temperature gradient (52°C to 68°C), different incubation times (15–120 min), and different concentrations of malachite green dye (0.004–0.4% w/v). The analytical sensitivity was evaluated with serial dilutions of genomic DNA from T. canis and T. cati adult worms, and with serial dilutions of DNA extracted from feces using a low-cost in-house method. The specificity was evaluated using genomic DNA from Canis lupus familiaris, Felis catus, Escherichia coli, Toxascaris leonina, Ancylostoma caninum, Echinococcus granulosus sensu stricto and Taenia hydatigena. The LAMP assay applied to environmental fecal samples from an endemic area showed an analytical sensitivity of 10–100 fg of genomic DNA and 10−5 serial dilutions of DNA extracted from feces using the low-cost in-house method; with a specificity of 100%. Additionally, the total development of the assay was carried out in a basic laboratory and per-reaction reagent cost decreased by ~80%. This new, low-cost tool can help identify the most common agents of toxocariasis in endemic areas in order to manage prevention strategies without having to rely on a laboratory with sophisticated equipment.
- Published
- 2021
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38. Leptospira spp., a genus in the stage of diversity and genomic data expansion.
- Author
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Caimi K and Ruybal P
- Subjects
- Animals, Ecosystem, Evolution, Molecular, Genome, Bacterial genetics, Genomics methods, Humans, Leptospirosis microbiology, Phylogeny, Leptospira genetics
- Abstract
Leptospirosis is a widespread global zoonotic bacterial disease with a noteworthy human-animal-ecosystem interface. The disease presents different clinical manifestations and a high mortality and morbidity rates in humans and animals throughout the world. Characterization and correct classification of Leptospira isolates is essential for a better understanding the epidemiological properties of the disease. In the last ten years, molecular typing tools have been developed and applied to this field. These methods together with the availability of hundreds of new whole genome sequences that belong to known and new described species are shaping the understanding and structure of the entire genus., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest None., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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39. Cellular localization, cloning and expression of Leishmania braziliensis Phospholipase A 1 .
- Author
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Bott E, López MG, Lammel EM, Carfagna IE, Durante de Isola EL, Ruybal P, Taboga O, Gimenez G, and Belaunzarán ML
- Subjects
- Animals, Baculoviridae genetics, Cloning, Molecular methods, Gene Expression, Genes, Protozoan, Latin America, Leishmaniasis, Cutaneous parasitology, Phylogeny, Recombinant Proteins isolation & purification, Recombinant Proteins metabolism, Sf9 Cells, Leishmania braziliensis genetics, Leishmania braziliensis metabolism, Phospholipases A1 genetics, Phospholipases A1 isolation & purification, Phospholipases A1 metabolism
- Abstract
Leishmaniasis is caused by several species of protozoan parasites of the genus Leishmania and represents an important global health problem. Leishmania braziliensis in particular is responsible of cutaneous and mucocutaneous forms of this parasitosis, with prevalence in Latin America. In the present work, we describe in L. braziliensis promastigotes and amastigotes the presence of a Phospholipase A
1 (PLA1 ) activity, an enzyme that catalyses extensive deacylation of phospholipids like phosphatidylcholine. In order to deepen the knowledge about L. braziliensis PLA1 , the cloning and expression of the gene that codifies for this enzyme was carried out in a baculovirus expression system with the obtaintion of a purified recombinant protein that displayed PLA1 activity. Given that this is the first molecular and functional protein characterization of a PLA1 in the Leishmania genus, we also performed a phylogenetic analysis of this gene throughout 12 species whose genome sequences were available. The results presented here will contribute to increase the knowledge about trypanosome phospholipases, which could be novel and valuable as potential targets to fight neglected diseases like Leishmaniasis., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2020
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40. Development of a Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) scheme for Pan-Leishmania.
- Author
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Lauthier JJ, Ruybal P, Barroso PA, Hashiguchi Y, Marco JD, and Korenaga M
- Subjects
- Leishmania classification, Phylogeny, Leishmania genetics, Multilocus Sequence Typing methods
- Abstract
Since the description of the Leishmania genus, its identification and organization have been a challenge. A high number of molecular markers have been developed to resolve phylogenetic differences at the species level and for addressing key epidemiological and population genetics questions. Based on Multilocus enzyme electrophoresis (MLEE), Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) schemes have been developed using different gene candidates. From 38 original gene targets proposed by other authors, 27 of them were chosen. In silico selection was made by analyzing free access genomic sequence data of 33 Leishmania species, one Paraleishmania representative, and one outgroup, in order to select the best 15 loci. De novo amplifications and primers redesign of these 15 genes were analyzed over a panel of 20 reference strains and isolates. Phylogenetic analysis was made at every step. Two MLST schemes were selected. The first one was based on the analysis of three-gene fragments, and it is suitable for species assignment as well as basic phylogenetic studies. By the addition of seven-genes, an approach based on the analysis of ten-gene fragments was also proposed. This is the first work that two optimized MLST schemes have been suggested, validated against a phylogenetically diverse panel of Leishmania isolates. MLST is potentially a powerful phylogenetic approach, and most probably the new gold standard for Leishmania spp. characterization., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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41. Genotyping of Toxoplasma gondii: The advantages of variable number tandem repeats within coding regions.
- Author
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Moretta R, Sanchez VR, Fenoy IM, Goldman A, Ruybal P, and Martin V
- Subjects
- Animals, Chlorocebus aethiops, Genetic Variation, Polymorphism, Genetic, Vero Cells parasitology, Genotyping Techniques methods, Minisatellite Repeats, Toxoplasma genetics
- Abstract
Toxoplasma gondii is an intracellular protozoan which is widely distributed. Infection occurs as a result of ingestion of uncooked meat and exposure to cat feces. Immunocompetent individuals are generally asymptomatic, while severe disease may occur in immunocompromised subjects and in congenital toxoplasmosis, which is caused by transplacental acquisition of T. gondii. Genetic diversity of T. gondii has often been studied using a PCR-RFLP scheme based on nine molecular markers. These studies led to the description of a clonal population structure with three main lineages (I, II and III) in North America and Europe and higher genetic diversity in South America. The aim of this study was to develop molecular markers that could allow the discrimination of genetic variants within each clonal lineage. We analyzed the genome of T. gondii to identify genes containing variable number tandem repeats (VNTRs). The coding sequences of T. gondii ME49 genome were processed with Tandem Repeat Finder software. A panel of candidate markers was selected based on the following parameters: the repeat unit size (>9 bp) and composition (to avoid single and dinucleotide runs), the number of copies (<20), and the absence of introns within the repeat region. The selected panel of eight molecular markers was analyzed in PRU and RH strains. As a first step, the variability of the sequence size allowed us to differentiate PRU from ME49 (two type II strains) and RH from GT1 (two type I strains). Additionally, amplification products from PRU and RH strains were sequenced to study intra-lineage variability. Aside from size polymorphisms in the amplification products we were able to identify sequence variability in polymorphic markers., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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42. Reply to Buonfrate and Bisoffi.
- Author
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Repetto SA, Ruybal P, Batalla E, López C, Fridman V, Sierra M, Radisic M, Bravo PM, Risso MG, González Cappa SM, and Alba Soto CD
- Subjects
- Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Ivermectin, Strongyloidiasis
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Simplified MLST scheme for direct typing of Leptospira human clinical samples.
- Author
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Varni V, Chiani Y, Nagel A, Ruybal P, Vanasco NB, and Caimi K
- Subjects
- Humans, Leptospira isolation & purification, Molecular Epidemiology methods, Sensitivity and Specificity, Leptospira classification, Leptospira genetics, Leptospirosis microbiology, Multilocus Sequence Typing methods
- Abstract
Leptospirosis is a globally distributed zoonosis. Epidemiological data are scarce and present major challenge because of the varied clinical presentations. Multilocus Sequence Typing has already proven to be a robust molecular typing method providing accurate results for strain characterization. We have adapted our MLST scheme by reducing the set of loci to facilitate Leptospira typing directly from human clinical samples. The application of this 3-locus scheme provides Leptospira species and allelic profiles of the samples retaining the power of discrimination of the whole scheme. Moreover, an approach to the serogroups was also achieved. Our results contribute to the epidemiological study of Leptospirosis, since the direct typing on clinical specimens could detect and update allelic variants and serogroups present in a region. The simplified scheme allowed at the same time to take advantage of limited genetic material available in clinical samples that may increase the sources of information for epidemiological monitoring.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Strongyloidiasis Outside Endemic Areas: Long-term Parasitological and Clinical Follow-up After Ivermectin Treatment.
- Author
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Repetto SA, Ruybal P, Batalla E, López C, Fridman V, Sierra M, Radisic M, Bravo PM, Risso MG, González Cappa SM, and Alba Soto CD
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Endemic Diseases, Eosinophilia, Female, Humans, Immunocompromised Host, Male, Middle Aged, Antiparasitic Agents therapeutic use, Ivermectin therapeutic use, Strongyloidiasis drug therapy, Strongyloidiasis epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Strongyloides stercoralis affects 30-100 million people worldwide. The first-line therapy is ivermectin. Cure is defined as the absence of larvae by parasitological methods 1 year after treatment. To date, no longitudinal parasitological studies for longer periods of time have been conducted to confirm its cure. Here, we evaluated treatment response in long-term follow-up patients with chronic infection using parasitological and molecular methods for larvae or DNA detection., Methods: A prospective, descriptive, observational study was conducted between January 2009 and September 2015 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Twenty-one patients with S. stercoralis diagnosis were evaluated 30, 60, and 90 days as well as 1, 2, 3, and/or 4 years after treatment by conventional methods (fresh stool, Ritchie method, agar plate culture), S. stercoralis-specific polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in stool DNA, and eosinophil values., Results: During follow-up, larvae were detected by conventional methods in 14 of 21 patients. This parasitological reactivation was observed starting 30 days posttreatment (dpt) and then at different times since 90 dpt. Eosinophil values decreased (P = .001) 30 days after treatment, but their levels were neither associated with nor predicted these reactivations. However, S. stercoralis DNA was detected by PCR in all patients, both in their first and subsequent stool samples, thus reflecting the poor efficacy of ivermectin at eradicating parasite from host tissues. Asymptomatic eosinophilia was the most frequent clinical form among chronically infected patients., Conclusions: These results suggest that the parasitological cure is unlikely. Strongyloidiasis must be considered a chronic infection and ivermectin administration schedules should be reevaluated.
- Published
- 2018
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45. Leptospira species molecular epidemiology in the genomic era.
- Author
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Caimi K, Repetto SA, Varni V, and Ruybal P
- Subjects
- Bayes Theorem, Evolution, Molecular, Genome, Bacterial, Phylogeny, Whole Genome Sequencing, Leptospira classification, Leptospira genetics, Multilocus Sequence Typing methods
- Abstract
Leptospirosis is a zoonotic disease which global burden is increasing often related to climatic change. Hundreds of whole genome sequences from worldwide isolates of Leptospira spp. are available nowadays, together with online tools that permit to assign MLST sequence types (STs) directly from raw sequence data. In this work we have applied R7L-MLST to near 500 genomes and strains collection globally distributed. All 10 pathogenic species as well as intermediate were typed using this MLST scheme. The correlation observed between STs and serogroups in our previous work, is still satisfied with this higher dataset sustaining the implementation of MLST to assist serological classification as a complementary approach. Bayesian phylogenetic analysis of concatenated sequences from R7-MLST loci allowed us to resolve taxonomic inconsistencies but also showed that events such as recombination, gene conversion or lateral gene transfer played an important role in the evolution of Leptospira genus. Whole genome sequencing allows us to contribute with suitable epidemiologic information useful to apply in the design of control strategies and also in diagnostic methods for this illness., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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46. First Genome Sequence of Leptospira interrogans Serovar Pomona, Isolated from a Bovine Abortion.
- Author
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Varni V, Koval A, Nagel A, Ruybal P, Caimi K, and Amadio AF
- Abstract
Leptospirosis is a widespread zoonosis and a re-emergent disease of global distribution with major relevance in veterinary production. Here, we report the whole-genome sequence of Leptospira interrogans serovar Pomona strain AKRFB, isolated from a bovine abortion during a leptospirosis outbreak in Argentina., (Copyright © 2016 Varni et al.)
- Published
- 2016
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47. Comparison between PCR and larvae visualization methods for diagnosis of Strongyloides stercoralis out of endemic area: A proposed algorithm.
- Author
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Repetto SA, Ruybal P, Solana ME, López C, Berini CA, Alba Soto CD, and Cappa SM
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Algorithms, Animals, Argentina, Cohort Studies, Endemic Diseases, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Reproducibility of Results, Young Adult, Diagnostic Tests, Routine, Eosinophilia blood, Feces parasitology, Larva, Strongyloides stercoralis genetics, Strongyloides stercoralis isolation & purification, Strongyloidiasis diagnosis
- Abstract
Underdiagnosis of chronic infection with the nematode Strongyloides stercoralis may lead to severe disease in the immunosuppressed. Thus, we have set-up a specific and highly sensitive molecular diagnosis in stool samples. Here, we compared the accuracy of our polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based method with that of conventional diagnostic methods for chronic infection. We also analyzed clinical and epidemiological predictors of infection to propose an algorithm for the diagnosis of strongyloidiasis useful for the clinician. Molecular and gold standard methods were performed to evaluate a cohort of 237 individuals recruited in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Subjects were assigned according to their immunological status, eosinophilia and/or history of residence in endemic areas. Diagnosis of strongyloidiasis by PCR on the first stool sample was achieved in 71/237 (29.9%) individuals whereas only 35/237(27.4%) were positive by conventional methods, requiring up to four serial stool samples at weekly intervals. Eosinophilia and history of residence in endemic areas have been revealed as independent factors as they increase the likelihood of detecting the parasite according to our study population. Our results underscore the usefulness of robust molecular tools aimed to diagnose chronic S. stercoralis infection. Evidence also highlights the need to survey patients with eosinophilia even when history of an endemic area is absent., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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48. Genetic and clinical characterization of canine leishmaniasis caused by Leishmania (Leishmania) infantum in northeastern Argentina.
- Author
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Barroso PA, Nevot MC, Hoyos CL, Locatelli FM, Lauthier JJ, Ruybal P, Cardozo RM, Russo PD, Vassiliades CN, Mora MC, Estévez JO, Hashiguchi Y, Korenaga M, Basombrío MA, and Marco JD
- Subjects
- Animals, Argentina epidemiology, Disease Reservoirs, Dogs, Female, Leishmania infantum genetics, Leishmaniasis, Visceral epidemiology, Male, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Zoonoses, Dog Diseases epidemiology, Leishmania infantum isolation & purification, Leishmaniasis, Visceral veterinary
- Abstract
Leishmaniases comprise zoonotic diseases caused by protozoan flagellates of the Leishmania genus. They are endemic to South America, and the visceral form has been recently reported in Argentina. Dogs can play different roles in the Leishmania transmission cycles, depending mainly on the species of parasite involved. Here we focused on the clinical characterization of canine leishmaniasis (CanL) in Northeast Argentina and on the molecular typing of its etiological agent. The nested polymerase chain reaction and sequence analysis of the Leishmania cytochrome b (cyt b) gene was performed on DNA templates purified from lymph nodes, bone marrow or spleen aspirates obtained from 48 dogs previously diagnosed by the observation of Leishmania amastigotes on smears from these aspirates. Their clinical and epidemiological data were also recorded. Systemic abnormalities were observed in 46 subjects (95.8%), most frequently lymphadenopathy, and emaciation (89.6 and 75%). Furthermore, 87% also presented tegumentary abnormalities, such as alopecia (54.2%) or secondary skin lesions (47.9%), among others. Twenty three dogs were positive for cyt b amplification. The sequence analysis showed the presence of two genotypes, LiA1 and LiA2, assigned to Leishmania (Leishmania) infantum, with 99.9 and 100% homology with the reference strain MHOM/TN/80/IPT1 respectively. LiA1 was identified in 18 cases (78.3%) and LiA2 in five (21.7%). Two cyt b variants of L. (L.) infantum were incriminated as the causative agents of CanL cases from three cities: Posadas, Garupá, and Ituzaingó. All three cities are located in the northeastern area of the country, where these parasites seem to be spreading in urban areas., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. LAMP technology: Rapid identification of Brucella and Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis.
- Author
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Trangoni MD, Gioffré AK, Cerón Cucchi ME, Caimi KC, Ruybal P, Zumárraga MJ, and Cravero SL
- Subjects
- Animals, Bacteriological Techniques methods, Brucella genetics, Brucellosis diagnosis, DNA Primers genetics, Humans, Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis genetics, Paratuberculosis diagnosis, Time Factors, Brucella isolation & purification, Molecular Diagnostic Techniques methods, Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis isolation & purification, Nucleic Acid Amplification Techniques methods
- Abstract
In this study, we developed new sets of primers to detect Brucella spp. and M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis (MAP) through isothermal amplification. We selected a previously well-characterized target gene, bscp31, specific for Brucella spp. and IS900 for MAP. The limits of detection using the loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) protocols described herein were similar to those of conventional PCR targeting the same sequences. Hydroxynaphtol blue and SYBR Green(TM) allowed direct naked-eye detection with identical sensitivity as agarose gel electrophoresis. We included the LAMP-based protocol in a rapid identification scheme of the respective pathogens, and all tested isolates were correctly identified within 2 to 3 h. In addition, both protocols were suitable for specifically identifying the respective pathogens; in the case of Brucella, it also allowed the identification of all the biovars tested. We conclude that LAMP is a suitable rapid molecular typing tool that could help to shorten the time required to identify insidious bacteria in low-complexity laboratories, mainly in developing countries.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Molecular typing of Argentinian Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis isolates by multiple-locus variable number-tandem repeat analysis.
- Author
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Gioffré A, Correa Muñoz M, Alvarado Pinedo MF, Vaca R, Morsella C, Fiorentino MA, Paolicchi F, Ruybal P, Zumárraga M, Travería GE, and Romano MI
- Subjects
- Animals, Argentina epidemiology, Cattle, Cattle Diseases microbiology, Genotype, Goat Diseases microbiology, Goats, Molecular Epidemiology, Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis isolation & purification, Sheep, Sheep Diseases microbiology, Genetic Variation, Minisatellite Repeats, Molecular Typing methods, Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis classification, Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis genetics, Paratuberculosis microbiology
- Abstract
Multiple-locus variable number-tandem repeat analysis (MLVA) of Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis (MAP) isolates may contribute to the knowledge of strain diversity in Argentina. Although the diversity of MAP has been previously investigated in Argentina using IS900-RFLP, a small number of isolates were employed, and a low discriminative power was reached. The aim of the present study was to test the genetic diversity among MAP isolates using an MLVA approach based on 8 repetitive loci. We studied 97 isolates from cattle, goat and sheep and could describe 7 different patterns: INMV1, INMV2, INMV11, INMV13, INMV16, INMV33 and one incomplete pattern. INMV1 and INMV2 were the most frequent patterns, grouping 76.3% of the isolates. We were also able to demonstrate the coexistence of genotypes in herds and co-infection at the organism level. This study shows that all the patterns described are common to those described in Europe, suggesting an epidemiological link between the continents.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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