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Microbiology Commons

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University of Nevada, Las Vegas

2010

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Articles 1 - 12 of 12

Full-Text Articles in Microbiology

Vertical Transmission Of West Nile Virus In Culex Spp. Mosquitoes Of Clark County, Nevada, Vivek K. Raman Dec 2010

Vertical Transmission Of West Nile Virus In Culex Spp. Mosquitoes Of Clark County, Nevada, Vivek K. Raman

UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones

West Nile Virus (WNV) is an RNA arbovirus that cycles between mosquitoes and birds, but also infects and causes disease in humans, horses and other vertebrate species. Although most infections are asymptomatic, WNV has emerged as the most common cause of epidemic meningoencephalitis in North America and the leading cause of arboviral encephalitis in the United States.

Mosquitoes of the genus Culex are the most active vectors of WNV in North America. Approximately 85% of human WNV infections in the United States occur in late summer with a peak number of cases in August and September. Vertical transmission is defined …


Transcriptional Regulation Of Shigella Virulence Plasmid-Encoded Genes By Virb And Crp, Christopher Thomas Hensley Dec 2010

Transcriptional Regulation Of Shigella Virulence Plasmid-Encoded Genes By Virb And Crp, Christopher Thomas Hensley

UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones

Shigella flexneri is a species of Gram-negative intracellular pathogens that causes bacillary dysentery in humans. Shigella relies on the precise transcriptional regulation of virulence genes, encoded by a large virulence plasmid, for invasion and infection of human colonic epithelial cells. The transcription of most identified virulence genes are regulated through a cascade controlled by the primary regulator of virulence genes, VirF, and the global transcriptional regulator, VirB. Currently, few studies have addressed how individual Shigella virulence genes are precisely regulated for optimal expression during specific stages of pathogenesis and within the constraints of the regulatory cascade. This work addresses how …


Time Will Tell: Community Acceptability Of Hiv Vaccine Research Before And After The "Step Study" Vaccine Discontinuation, Paula M. Frew, Mark J. Mulligan, Su-I Hou, Kayshin Chan, Carlos Del Rio Sep 2010

Time Will Tell: Community Acceptability Of Hiv Vaccine Research Before And After The "Step Study" Vaccine Discontinuation, Paula M. Frew, Mark J. Mulligan, Su-I Hou, Kayshin Chan, Carlos Del Rio

Environmental & Occupational Health Faculty Publications

Objective This study examines whether men-who-have-sex-with-men (MSM) and transgender (TG) persons’ attitudes, beliefs, and risk perceptions toward human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) vaccine research have been altered as a result of the negative findings from a phase 2B HIV vaccine study. Design We conducted a cross-sectional survey among MSM and TG persons (N = 176) recruited from community settings in Atlanta from 2007 to 2008. The first group was recruited during an active phase 2B HIV vaccine trial in which a candidate vaccine was being evaluated (the “Step Study”), and the second group was recruited after product futility was widely reported …


Evaluating Snow Microbial Assemblages, Jenny Lam, Jessica K. Guy, Ryan Brock, Matt Oates, Alison E. Murray Aug 2010

Evaluating Snow Microbial Assemblages, Jenny Lam, Jessica K. Guy, Ryan Brock, Matt Oates, Alison E. Murray

Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP)

Psychrophiles are organisms that grow optimally below 20C (1). The US Great Basin is home to many mountain peaks with an abundance of alpine snow environments perfect for psychrophilic habitation. We analyzed samples from three different locations, Wheeler Peak, Pacific Crest Trail, and Mount Conness, characterizing and comparing the psychrophilic communities at varying depth intervals in the snow. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) showed no notable difference in community structure with depth, but there was a distinct difference when comparing different snow environments (i.e. shaded vs. full sun exposure). The chlorophyll concentration decreased as the …


Evaluation Of Virb Binding Site Contribution To The Regulation Of The Icsp Promoter In Shigella Flexneri, Juan C. Duhart, Maria I. Castellanos, Helen J. Wing Aug 2010

Evaluation Of Virb Binding Site Contribution To The Regulation Of The Icsp Promoter In Shigella Flexneri, Juan C. Duhart, Maria I. Castellanos, Helen J. Wing

Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP)

Shigella species are gram-negative, rod-shaped bacteria that are closely related to Escherichia coli. Virulent Shigella spp. are intracellular pathogens that invade, replicate and spread through epithelial cells of the lower intestine and cause bacillary dysentery in humans. This disease is characterized by a robust inflammatory response that results in fever, abdominal pain, and bloody diarrhea (3). According to the CDC, approximately 14,000 cases are reported each year in the United States alone. This number however, does not reflect the actual incidence of this disease as many cases go unreported. The molecular pathogenesis of these bacteria lies in the large virulence …


Modifying The Amino Acid Sequence In The Surface-Exposed Loops Of The Omptin Family Of Proteins To Determine Their Effect On Function, Natiera Magnuson, Eun-Hae Kim, Christian Ross, Helen J. Wing Aug 2010

Modifying The Amino Acid Sequence In The Surface-Exposed Loops Of The Omptin Family Of Proteins To Determine Their Effect On Function, Natiera Magnuson, Eun-Hae Kim, Christian Ross, Helen J. Wing

Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP)

The omptin family of proteins consists of proteases which lie in the outer membrane of some gram-negative, pathogenic bacteria such as Escherichia coli (OmpT), Shigella flexneri (IcsP), Salmonella typhimurium (PgtE), and Yersinia pestis (Pla). These proteases are highly conserved, sharing approximately 50% sequence identity and a β-barrel shape (fig. 1D). The differences in the structure of these four proteins are in the surface-exposed loop region surrounding the active site, but not in the active site itself [4]. These proteases are important for the virulence of many bacteria. For example, OmpT of E. coli cleaves an antimicrobial peptide secreted by epithelial …


Antibiotic Resistance In Bacillus Subtilis As Affected By Transcriptional Derepression And The Stringent Response, Brandon Eisinger, Ronald E. Yasbin, Eduardo A. Robleto Aug 2010

Antibiotic Resistance In Bacillus Subtilis As Affected By Transcriptional Derepression And The Stringent Response, Brandon Eisinger, Ronald E. Yasbin, Eduardo A. Robleto

Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP)

Bacterial cells under conditions of starvation or prolonged non-lethal selective pressures accumulate mutations in highly transcribed genes. This process is part of cellular programs to increase genetic diversity in conditions of stress, also known as stationary phase or stress-induced mutagenesis. This experiment investigated mutation frequencies for antibiotic resistance as affected by the stringent response. The stringent response is a global cellular process that initiates at the cessation of growth and mediates changes in gene expression that repress synthesis of ribosome components. We used Bacillus subtilis strains that differ in RelA proficiency. The relA gene controls the synthesis of (p)ppGpp, the …


The Small Regulatory Rna Ryhb Regulates Icsa Expression In Shigella Flexneri, Nick Egan, Helen J. Wing Aug 2010

The Small Regulatory Rna Ryhb Regulates Icsa Expression In Shigella Flexneri, Nick Egan, Helen J. Wing

Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP)

Shigella flexneri is a gram negative non-motile, non-spore forming, rod-shaped bacterium responsible for bacillary dysentery in humans. The master regulator, VirF, initiates a cascade of virulence gene activation by acting as a transcription factor for the gene encoding the global regulator, VirB (1). Production of VirB is also negatively regulated by the regulatory small RNA (sRNA), RyhB 2). Regulatory sRNAs are untranslated RNA molecules involved in the regulation of both transcription and translation. RyhB, a 90 nt sRNA, was first identified in E. coli and subsequently found in all Shigella species. In Shigella this sRNA is maximally expressed in response …


Examination Of Germination Receptors Of B. Subtilis And B. Megaterium, Shruti Patel, Alessio Luinetti, Ernesto Abel-Santos, Eduardo Robleto Aug 2010

Examination Of Germination Receptors Of B. Subtilis And B. Megaterium, Shruti Patel, Alessio Luinetti, Ernesto Abel-Santos, Eduardo Robleto

Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP)

Many bacterial species including those in the Bacilli group form spores as a mechanism to survive harsh conditions such as extreme temperature, radiation, chemicals, and nutrient starvation. By forming spores, they can remain metabolically dormant for an extended period and revert to their vegetative form when environment becomes favorable. This resumption of metabolism and growth is marked by a process called germination that is triggered by exogenous nutrients such as amino acids, sugars, and nucleotides. The (Ger) germination receptors that are postulated to respond to these germinants, in the case of B. subtilis and B. megaterium, are a complex of …


Transcriptional Regulation Of The Shigella Flexneri Icsp Promoter: Silencing And Anti-Silencing By H-Ns And Virb, Dustin Harrison Aug 2010

Transcriptional Regulation Of The Shigella Flexneri Icsp Promoter: Silencing And Anti-Silencing By H-Ns And Virb, Dustin Harrison

UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones

Shigella species are gram-negative intracellular pathogens that cause bacillary dysentery in humans. Many genes required for virulence of Shigella are carried on a large 230 kb plasmid and many of these are under the transcriptional control of the histone-like nucleoid structuring protein (H-NS) and by the major virulence regulator VirB. At the non-permissive temperature of 30⁰C, H-NS represses transcription, while at 37⁰C VirB alleviates this repression. This mechanism of gene regulation has been coined "silencing/anti-silencing" and is commonly found in many important bacterial pathogens including Salmonella spp. and Yersinia spp. The icsP gene, encoded by the Shigella virulence plasmid, is …


Bacillus Cereus And Bacillus Anthracis Germination Kinetics: A Michaelis-Menten Approach, Helen Luu May 2010

Bacillus Cereus And Bacillus Anthracis Germination Kinetics: A Michaelis-Menten Approach, Helen Luu

UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones

Bacillus species are rod-shaped, gram-positive bacteria that are capable of producing endospores. In this dormant stage, the endospores can persist in hostile physical and chemical environments. Once conditions become favorable, the spores germinate into actively dividing cells, vegetative cells. Germination is a crucial step for the pathogenicity of the Bacilli in affecting a host organism.

Our study applies mathematical approaches to spore germination to determine whether the binding of one germinant will affect the binding of another germinant. We pursued this approach with two different species, B. cereus and B. anthracis, both pathogenic organisms. B. cereus is a widely known …


The Role Of Transcription In Stationary Phase Mutagenesis In Bacillus Subtilis, Holly Anne Martin Apr 2010

The Role Of Transcription In Stationary Phase Mutagenesis In Bacillus Subtilis, Holly Anne Martin

UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones

Stationary phase mutagenesis, also known as stress-induced or adaptive mutagenesis, is defined as the accumulation of mutations during conditions of no net growth or conditions of stress. This process has been implicated in acquiring antibiotic resistance and evasion of host immune responses in microbial pathogens and in the generation of mutations that lead to neoplasia in animal cells. Previous work has shown that defects in DNA synthesis and repair systems contribute to the formation of adaptive mutations; however the role of transcription in the accumulation of mutations is still being examined. It is speculated that transcriptional derepression leads to an …