نتایج جستجو برای: peltophorum africanum

تعداد نتایج: 672  

2015
Adwoa Asante-Poku Dorothy Yeboah-Manu Isaac Darko Otchere Samuel Y. Aboagye David Stucki Jan Hattendorf Sonia Borrell Julia Feldmann Emelia Danso Sebastien Gagneux

Mycobacterium africanum is a member of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTBC) and an important cause of human tuberculosis in West Africa that is rarely observed elsewhere. Here we genotyped 613 MTBC clinical isolates from Ghana, and searched for associations between the different phylogenetic lineages of MTBC and patient variables. We found that 17.1% (105/613) of the MTBC isolates belo...

Journal: :Endocrine 2007
Nader S Shenouda Mary S Sakla Leslie G Newton Cynthia Besch-Williford Norman M Greenberg Ruth S MacDonald Dennis B Lubahn

BACKGROUND Prostate cancer is an important public health problem. It is an excellent candidate disease for chemoprevention because prostate cancer is typically slow growing and is usually diagnosed in elderly males. Pygeum africanum (Prunus africana or Rosaceae) is an African prune (plum) tree found in tropical Africa. An extract from the bark of Pygeum africanum has been used in Europe as a pr...

2010
Sidra E Gonçalves Vasconcellos Richard C Huard Stefan Niemann Kristin Kremer Adalberto R Santos Philip N Suffys John L Ho

BACKGROUND Mycobacterium tuberculosis is the principal etiologic agent of human tuberculosis (TB) and a member of the M. tuberculosis complex (MTC). Additional MTC species that cause TB in humans and other mammals include Mycobacterium africanum and Mycobacterium bovis. One result of studies interrogating recently identified MTC phylogenetic markers has been the recognition of at least two dist...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 2009
Bouke C de Jong Martin Antonio Timothy Awine Kunle Ogungbemi Ype P de Jong Sebastien Gagneux Kathryn DeRiemer Thierry Zozio Nalin Rastogi Martien Borgdorff Philip C Hill Richard A Adegbola

Mycobacterium africanum, first described in Senegal in 1968, causes up to half of the smear-positive pulmonary tuberculosis cases in West Africa, but it has not been found in other geographical areas except among recent West African migrants. The reasons for the geographic restriction of M. africanum are unknown. We used molecular tools to determine the population structure of the Mycobacterium...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 2004
S Niemann T Kubica F C Bange O Adjei E N Browne M A Chinbuah R Diel J Gyapong R D Horstmann M L Joloba C G Meyer R D Mugerwa A Okwera I Osei E Owusu-Darbo S K Schwander S Rüsch-Gerdes

The findings of recent studies addressing the molecular characteristics of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex isolates have initiated a discussion on the classification of M. africanum, especially of those isolates originating from East Africa (cluster F, subtype II) and displaying phenotypic and biochemical characteristics more similar to those of M. tuberculosis. To further address this quest...

2012
Stephen D. Bentley Iñaki Comas Josephine M. Bryant Danielle Walker Noel H. Smith Simon R. Harris Scott Thurston Sebastien Gagneux Jonathan Wood Martin Antonio Michael A. Quail Florian Gehre Richard A. Adegbola Julian Parkhill Bouke C. de Jong

BACKGROUND M. africanum West African 2 constitutes an ancient lineage of the M. tuberculosis complex that commonly causes human tuberculosis in West Africa and has an attenuated phenotype relative to M. tuberculosis. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS In search of candidate genes underlying these differences, the genome of M. africanum West African 2 was sequenced using classical capillary sequen...

2016
U. A. Hurtado J. S. Solano A. Rodriguez J. Robledo F. Rouzaud

Mycobacterium africanum is a member of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex. Most commonly found in West African countries, it has scarcely been described in South America. Here, we report the first genome sequence of a Colombian M. africanum clinical isolate. It is composed of 4,493,502 bp, with 4,069 genes.

2011
Thorsten Thye Stefan Niemann Kerstin Walter Susanne Homolka Christopher D. Intemann Margaret Amanua Chinbuah Anthony Enimil John Gyapong Ivy Osei Ellis Owusu-Dabo Sabine Rüsch-Gerdes Rolf D. Horstmann Stefan Ehlers Christian G. Meyer

Structural variants of the Mannose Binding Lectin (MBL) cause quantitative and qualitative functional deficiencies, which are associated with various patterns of susceptibility to infectious diseases and other disorders. We determined genetic MBL variants in 2010 Ghanaian patients with pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) and 2346 controls and characterized the mycobacterial isolates of the patients. As...

Journal: :BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine 2006
Veeramuthu Duraipandiyan Muniappan Ayyanar Savarimuthu Ignacimuthu

BACKGROUND Antimicrobial activity of 18 ethnomedicinal plant extracts were evaluated against nine bacterial strains (Bacillus subtilis, Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus epidermidis, Enterococcus faecalis, Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumonia, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Ervinia sp, Proteus vulgaris) and one fungal strain (Candida albicans). The collected ethnomedicinal plants were used in fo...

2012
Michel K. Gomgnimbou Guislaine Refrégier Serge P. Diagbouga Sanou Adama Antoinette Kaboré Adama Ouiminga Christophe Sola

Using Ziehl-Neelsen-positive slides collected from tuberculosis diagnostic centers in Burkina Faso, we showed that 20% of 80 spoligotyping-positive DNA samples had a characteristic Mycobacterium africanum-specific genomic signature. This result suggests that M. africanum is still present in Burkina Faso at almost the same prevalence as 15-20 years ago.

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