Results 231 to 240 of about 93,176 (255)
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2018
Combining high-throughput mass spectrometry with isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantification (iTRAQ) allows for the identification and relative quantification of proteins from multiple samples. Furthermore, low-abundance proteins that are usually not detected can be enriched by using only the relevant fraction of the proteome, e.g ...
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Combining high-throughput mass spectrometry with isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantification (iTRAQ) allows for the identification and relative quantification of proteins from multiple samples. Furthermore, low-abundance proteins that are usually not detected can be enriched by using only the relevant fraction of the proteome, e.g ...
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2002
Publisher Summary Vibrio cholerae is the aetiological agent of epidemic cholera, which in its most severe manifestation causes profuse, watery diarrhoea that can result in rapid dehydration and death. V. cholcrae is also a member of the estuarine environment and, along with cholera, may be associated with occasional extra-intestinal for mild ...
Okeke, Iruka N.+3 more
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Publisher Summary Vibrio cholerae is the aetiological agent of epidemic cholera, which in its most severe manifestation causes profuse, watery diarrhoea that can result in rapid dehydration and death. V. cholcrae is also a member of the estuarine environment and, along with cholera, may be associated with occasional extra-intestinal for mild ...
Okeke, Iruka N.+3 more
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Iron acquisition in Vibrio cholerae
BioMetals, 2007Vibrio cholerae, the causative agent of cholera, has an absolute requirement for iron and must obtain this element in the human host as well as in its varied environmental niches. It has multiple systems for iron acquisition, including the TonB-dependent transport of heme, the endogenous siderophore vibriobactin and several siderophores that are ...
Alexandra R. Mey+2 more
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Origin of Vibrio cholerae in Haiti
The Lancet Infectious Diseases, 2011As pointed out in the December, 2010, editorial, the ongoing cholera outbreak in Haiti placed this diarrhoeal infectious disease at the forefront of the global public health agenda. As of Dec 3, 2010, WHO reported 121 518 cases, and 2591 deaths associated with cholera infection.
CECCARELLI, Daniela+4 more
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Vibrio cholerae meningitis in a neonate
The Journal of Pediatrics, 1981the delays before renal failure developed showed wide variations, and ranged from two to 16 years. 12, 13 In the present family, the two youngest patients died from nonrenal causes, so that the course of the renal disease remains unknown. Two siblings reported by Moncrieff et al ~' developed a NS at 11 months and had normal renal function 22 and 13 ...
Lorry G. Rubin+7 more
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The Ecology of Vibrio cholerae [PDF]
Until the late 1970s and early 1980s, Vibrio cholerae was believed to be highly host-adapted and incapable of surviving longer than a few hours or days outside the human intestine. This view, enunciated by Felsenfeld,1 was that “some authors claimed that cholera vibrios may survive in water, particularly seawater, for as long as 2 months.
Rita R. Colwell, William M. Spira
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A Non-Cholera Vibrio Resembling the True Cholera Vibrio and a Pigment-Forming Vibrio
Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1914a marked resemblance in many respects to the Koch vibrio, but have failed to answer to all the requirements, failing always in the agglutination and bacteriolytic tests and some in being hemolytic and possessing more than one flagellum. In some of these cases in observing the marked similarity the question has arisen whether these vibrios may not be ...
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2014
Publisher Summary The members of the genus Vibrio are: short, bent rods, sometimes almost straight; motile by means of a single polar flagellum; aerobes, growing well on ordinary media; frequently liquefy gelatin; do not form spores; Gram-negative; some species are pathogenic to man and animals.
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Publisher Summary The members of the genus Vibrio are: short, bent rods, sometimes almost straight; motile by means of a single polar flagellum; aerobes, growing well on ordinary media; frequently liquefy gelatin; do not form spores; Gram-negative; some species are pathogenic to man and animals.
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Vibrio cholerae, Vibrio parahaemolyticus, and Vibrio vulnificus
2018Although cholera is considered an old-world disease, it continues to be a serious problem in developing and economically impoverished countries. The infections caused by other vibrios are also increasing worldwide especially in developed countries and are increasingly being recognized as emerging diseases.
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