Sentences with phrase «tularensis schu»

There are two varieties of tularemia bacteria found in the United States, Type B (Francisella tularensis biovar palearctica) and Type A (Francisella tularensis biovar tularensis).
There is a risk of damage to the ears due to ototoxicity with the specific antibiotics required to fight Francisella tularensis, but it is slight.
Lactobacillus spp had the greatest susceptibility to bacitracin, and tylosin; Pseudomonas spp, to tylosin, and sulfadiazine; Klebsiella spp, to tylosin, oxytetracycline, gentamicin; E. coli to tylosin; and Pasteurella canis and Francisella tularensis to all used antimicrobial agents.
Next in the order of isolation were Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Lactobacillus spp, Neisseria spp, Alcaligenes faecalis, Pasteurella canis, Klebsiella spp and Francisella tularensis.
Francisella tularensis, the organism that causes tularaemia, is one of the most infectious bacteria known.
We report the complete genome sequence of a highly virulent isolate of F. tularensis (1,892,819 bp).
The loss of biosynthetic pathways indicates that F. tularensis is an obligate host - dependent bacterium in its natural life cycle.
Using host - pathogen protein interactions to identify and characterize Francisella tularensis...
* Francisella tularensis, the cause of tularemia also known as Rabbit Fever, that was a College of American Pathologists (CAP) proficiency testing samples.
«Understanding the notorious infectivity of Francisella tularensis: Fresh approach to an old problem yields clues to tularemia virulence.»
Eshraghi, Peterson and colleagues are among those working to unlock how Francisella tularensis overcomes the body's defenses.
Scientists are gaining an insider's look behind the notorious infectivity of Francisella tularensis.
«Francisella tularensis is very pathogenic.
The low dose required for infectivity and the severity of the disease it causes had led the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to classify F. tularensis as a Category A bioterrorism agent, and to track tularemia cases nationwide, according to Dr. Brook Peterson, a senior scientist at the UW School of Medicine who also participated in the study.
Tularemia (also known as «rabbit fever») is an infectious disease caused by the bacterium Francisella tularensis.
Through a new study of the coccobacillus Francisella, Los Alamos National Laboratory researchers are working to use DNA markers to discern related but relatively harmless species as they are identified and to provide a means to distinguish them from the harmful F. tularensis.
Through detailed genome comparisons, sequence - alignment algorithms and other bioinformatics tools run on Los Alamos computers, the Los Alamos team identified features that differentiate among F. tularensis and other novel clinical and environmental Francisella isolates, providing a knowledge base for comparison of new sequences from clinical or environmental surveys.
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