56 results on '"Costantino V"'
Search Results
2. Association of Intima-Media Thickness Measured at the Common Carotid Artery With Incident Carotid Plaque : Individual Participant Data Meta-Analysis of 20 Prospective Studies
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Tschiderer, Lena, Seekircher, Lisa, Izzo, Raffaele, Mancusi, Costantino V., Manzi, Maria, Baldassarre, Damiano, Amato, Mauro, Tremoli, Elena, Veglia, Fabrizio, Tuomainen, Tomi-Pekka, Kauhanen, Jussi, Voutilainen, Ari, Iglseder, Bernhard, Lind, Lars, Rundek, Tatjana, Desvarieux, Moise, Kato, Akihiko, de Groot, Eric, Asci, Guelay, Ok, Ercan, Agewall, Stefan, Beulens, Joline W. J. D., Byrne, Christopher C., Calder, Philip C., Gerstein, Hertzel, Gresele, Paolo, Klingenschmid, Gerhard, Nagai, Michiaki H., Olsen, Michael, Parraga, Grace S., Safarova, Maya, Sattar, Naveed, Skilton, Michael, Stehouwer, Coen D. A., Uthoff, Heiko A., van Agtmael, Michiel A., van der Heijden, Amber A., Zozulinska-Ziolkiewicz, Dorota, Park, Hyun-Woong, Lee, Moo-Sik, Bae, Jang-Ho, Beloqui, Oscar F., Landecho, Manuel, Plichart, Matthieu, Ducimetiere, Pierre, Empana, Jean Philippe, Bokemark, Lena, Bergstroem, Goeran, Schmidt, Caroline, Castelnuovo, Samuela, Calabresi, Laura D., Norata, Giuseppe, Grigore, Liliana, Catapano, Alberico, Zhao, Dong, Wang, Miao, Liu, Jing, Ikram, M. Arfan, Kavousi, Maryam L., Bots, Michiel J., Sweeting, Michael W., Lorenz, Matthias, Willeit, Peter, Tschiderer, Lena, Seekircher, Lisa, Izzo, Raffaele, Mancusi, Costantino V., Manzi, Maria, Baldassarre, Damiano, Amato, Mauro, Tremoli, Elena, Veglia, Fabrizio, Tuomainen, Tomi-Pekka, Kauhanen, Jussi, Voutilainen, Ari, Iglseder, Bernhard, Lind, Lars, Rundek, Tatjana, Desvarieux, Moise, Kato, Akihiko, de Groot, Eric, Asci, Guelay, Ok, Ercan, Agewall, Stefan, Beulens, Joline W. J. D., Byrne, Christopher C., Calder, Philip C., Gerstein, Hertzel, Gresele, Paolo, Klingenschmid, Gerhard, Nagai, Michiaki H., Olsen, Michael, Parraga, Grace S., Safarova, Maya, Sattar, Naveed, Skilton, Michael, Stehouwer, Coen D. A., Uthoff, Heiko A., van Agtmael, Michiel A., van der Heijden, Amber A., Zozulinska-Ziolkiewicz, Dorota, Park, Hyun-Woong, Lee, Moo-Sik, Bae, Jang-Ho, Beloqui, Oscar F., Landecho, Manuel, Plichart, Matthieu, Ducimetiere, Pierre, Empana, Jean Philippe, Bokemark, Lena, Bergstroem, Goeran, Schmidt, Caroline, Castelnuovo, Samuela, Calabresi, Laura D., Norata, Giuseppe, Grigore, Liliana, Catapano, Alberico, Zhao, Dong, Wang, Miao, Liu, Jing, Ikram, M. Arfan, Kavousi, Maryam L., Bots, Michiel J., Sweeting, Michael W., Lorenz, Matthias, and Willeit, Peter
- Abstract
Background: The association between common carotid artery intima-media thickness (CCA-IMT) and incident carotid plaque has not been characterized fully. We therefore aimed to precisely quantify the relationship between CCA-IMT and carotid plaque development. Methods and Results: We undertook an individual participant data meta-analysis of 20 prospective studies from the Proof-ATHERO (Prospective Studies of Atherosclerosis) consortium that recorded baseline CCA-IMT and incident carotid plaque involving 21 494 individuals without a history of cardiovascular disease and without preexisting carotid plaque at baseline. Mean baseline age was 56 years (SD, 9 years), 55% were women, and mean baseline CCA-IMT was 0.71 mm (SD, 0.17 mm). Over a median follow-up of 5.9 years (5th-95th percentile, 1.9-19.0 years), 8278 individuals developed first-ever carotid plaque. We combined study-specific odds ratios (ORs) for incident carotid plaque using random-effects meta-analysis. Baseline CCA-IMT was approximately log-linearly associated with the odds of developing carotid plaque. The age-, sex-, and trial arm-adjusted OR for carotid plaque per SD higher baseline CCA-IMT was 1.40 (95% CI, 1.31-1.50; I-2=63.9%). The corresponding OR that was further adjusted for ethnicity, smoking, diabetes, body mass index, systolic blood pressure, low- and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and lipid-lowering and antihypertensive medication was 1.34 (95% CI, 1.24-1.45; I-2=59.4%; 14 studies; 16 297 participants; 6381 incident plaques). We observed no significant effect modification across clinically relevant subgroups. Sensitivity analysis restricted to studies defining plaque as focal thickening yielded a comparable OR (1.38 [95% CI, 1.29-1.47]; I-2=57.1%; 14 studies; 17 352 participants; 6991 incident plaques). Conclusions: Our large-scale individual participant data meta-analysis demonstrated that CCA-IMT is associated with the long-term risk of developing first-ever carotid plaque, independent
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- 2023
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3. Maximizing rehabilitation outcomes in geriatric hip fracture patients: the impact of surgical variables
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Amata, O., Ridolo, E., Costantino, V., Panella, L., Incorvaia, C., Caserta, A. V., and Callegari, C.
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Hip risk ,Functional recovery, Individual rehabilitation program, Surgical techniques, Hip risk, Weight bearing ,Weight bearing ,Functional recovery ,Individual rehabilitation program ,Surgical techniques - Published
- 2023
4. New specific skeletal muscle mass index cut-offs for the assessment of sarcopenia in patients with severe obesity
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Annalisa Bufano, Alessandra Cartocci, Nicoletta Benenati, Cristina Ciuoli, Maria Simon Batzibal, Alessio Bombardieri, Gabriele Iraci Sareri, Ida Sannino, Andrea Tirone, Costantino Voglino, Giuseppe Vuolo, and Maria Grazia Castagna
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obesity ,sarcopenia ,muscle ,SMI ,BIA ,Diseases of the endocrine glands. Clinical endocrinology ,RC648-665 - Abstract
IntroductionBioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) is the most used tool in clinical practice to evaluate body composition in patients with obesity. The skeletal muscle index (SMI) defined by BIA has been proposed for the identification of sarcopenia, but there are currently no univocal cutoffs for this condition. In this study, we aimed: 1) to determine the prevalence of sarcopenia in patients with severe obesity using the current cutoffs of SMI; 2) to define new specific cutoffs; 3) to validate the new cutoffs; and 4) to re-determine the prevalence of sarcopenia.MethodsA total of 300 patients, 74% women and 26% men (mean age = 42.6 ±; 9 years), with morbid obesity (mean BMI = 46.7 ±; 6.5 kg/m2) followed by the Unit of Endocrinology from January 2014 to December 2020 were retrospectively evaluated. SMI was calculated as the skeletal muscle mass normalized for squared height through the BIA equation by Janssen et al.ResultsThe prevalence of sarcopenic obesity calculated using the cutoff points reported by De Rosa et al. (7.3 kg/h2 for women and 9.5 kg/h2 for men) was 2.3%. The prevalence of sarcopenia was calculated using the new cutoffs: with the cutoff obtained from the standard deviation method (8.2 kg/h2 for women and 10.2 kg/h2 for men), a prevalence of 14.7% was observed, whereas the prevalence reached 47.6% when using the cutoff calculated through the K-means unsupervised cluster (9.2 kg/h2 for women and 11.3 kg/h2 for men). The new cutoffs were validated with a second sample consisting of 300 patients with morbid obesity (BMI = 44.9 ±; 6.7 kg/m2): the rate of sarcopenic patients was still higher than that observed in the training cohort (56%). After the matching procedure (by BMI and age), the rates of sarcopenic patients were similar in both groups (50.2% in the validation group and 53% in the training group, p = 0.6).ConclusionThe new cutoffs calculated with cluster analysis could better identify sarcopenia in morbidly obese patients. However, further studies are needed to validate these cutoffs in different patient cohorts.
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- 2024
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5. Microplastics on the surface of marine waters of the coast of Santa Catarina (Brazil): identification by stereomicroscope and FTIR-ATR spectrophotometer
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Elisangela Silva Lopes Ricardo, Überson Boaretto Rossa, Amarildo Otávio Martins, Eduardo Augusto Werneck Ribeiro, Costantino Vischetti, Cristiano Casucci, Gianluca Brunetti, Arianna De Bernardi, Enrica Marini, and Francesca Tagliabue
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polímeros ,águas ,resíduos ,metodologia ,monitoramento ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
The oceans are one of the final destinations for the vast majority of plastic waste; in this sense, particles smaller than 5 mm, classified as microplastics (MPs), represent an environmental challenge with global impact on several ecosystems. The work evaluated the presence of MPs in marine waters off the northern coast of Santa Catarina (Brazil), addressing sampling procedures, opening, characterization, and polymer identification. A low-cost equipment developed with easily accessible materials was tested in the sampling, showing excellent results in terms of buoyancy, stability, and mechanical strength. The concentration of MPs obtained in the study was 0.01 MPs per m3. The particles found were analyzed by stereomicroscopy and classified according to morphological aspects in relation to shape into fragments 58,00%, films 25,00%, and lines 17,00%, and regarding the aspect related to color, blue was predominant. The characterization and polymeric identification was performed by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy coupled to the total attenuated reflectance module (FTIR-ATR). The types of polymers identified were: polyethylene 33,33%; polypropylene 25,00%; butadiene-styrene copolymer 25,00%, and cellulose 16,66%. The work contributed to the evaluation of an area not yet studied in relation to the presence of MPs in marine waters, while at the same time described in detail the methodologies for analyzing microplastics proposed in the specialized literature.
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- 2024
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6. Biogas production and electricity generation from a quail manure wastewater treatment system per water depth
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Roosevelt Duarte Junior, Überson Boaretto Rossa, Luana Marcele Chiarello, Dilamara Riva Scharf, Cleder Alexandre Somensi, Costantino Vischetti, and Lilian Fernanda Sfendrych Gonçalves
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biodigestor ,potencial energético ,digestão anaeróbia ,pbm ,coturnicultura. ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
A coturnicultura, enquanto atividade que demanda baixo investimento e tem rápido retorno, mostra-se como possibilidade para o produtor rural familiar. Concomitantemente a isso, destaca-se o fato de que a utilização dos dejetos líquidos da coturnicultura, visando à geração de energia por digestão anaeróbia, pode significar uma tecnologia viável e promissora para a obtenção de biogás originado dos sistemas de produção de animais confinados. A crescente demanda por energia estabelece que novas fontes energéticas sejam mais aproveitadas, e uma grande oportunidade para o crescimento destas pode ser o uso da biomassa em sistemas de digestão anaeróbia, em que o substrato orgânico é degradado e transformado em energia e biofertilizante. O método aplicado foi o Potencial Bioquímico de Metano, por meio de biorreatores em bancada com volume de 250 mL,e em condições mesófilas se utilizou como inóculo o dejeto do tanque da esterqueira da granja de produção de ovos de codornas, os substratos utilizados para compor os tratamentos foram dejetos líquidos da coturnicultura do sistema de tratamento por lâmina d’água, com 15, 30 e 45 dias de deposição. Nos resultados obtidos, constatou-se que a melhor monodigestão utilizada foi inóculo+substrato de 30 dias de deposição, com tempo de retenção hídrica de 45 dias, apresentando maior produção acumulada de biogás (0,00078476 Nm3) e CH4 (0,000575 Nm3), bem como o maior potencial de biogás 0,0043 Nm3 (kg substrato)-1; e, quando convertido em energia elétrica, por meio de motogerador, utilizando como combustível o biogás produzido pelo dejetos líquidos da coturnicultura, obteve-se o valor 104,64 kwh (45 dias)-1.
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- 2023
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7. STERNAL WOUND INFECTION AFTER CARDIAC SURGERY: LOOKING FOR INTERACTIONS BETWEEN PERIOPERATIVE VARIABLES AND PATHOGEN AGENTS
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Gatti, G, Radesich, C, Savonitto, G, Rizzi, J, Munaretto, L, Maurel, C, Costantino, V, Gripshi, F, Franzese, I, Barbati, G, Rodriguez Garcia, A, Busetti, M, Luzzati, R, Sinagra, G, and Mazzaro, E
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- 2024
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8. Mapping the microbial diversity associated with different geochemical regimes in the shallow-water hydrothermal vents of the Aeolian archipelago, Italy
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Bernardo Barosa, Alessandra Ferrillo, Matteo Selci, Marco Giardina, Alessia Bastianoni, Monica Correggia, Luciano di Iorio, Giulia Bernardi, Martina Cascone, Rosaria Capuozzo, Michele Intoccia, Roy Price, Costantino Vetriani, Angelina Cordone, and Donato Giovannelli
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shallow-water vents ,Aeolian archipelago ,16S rRNA amplicon sequencing ,microbial diversity ,marine protected areas ,hydrothermal vents ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Shallow-water hydrothermal vents are unique marine environments ubiquitous along the coast of volcanically active regions of the planet. In contrast to their deep-sea counterparts, primary production at shallow-water vents relies on both photoautotrophy and chemoautotrophy. Such processes are supported by a range of geochemical regimes driven by different geological settings. The Aeolian archipelago, located in the southern Tyrrhenian sea, is characterized by intense hydrothermal activity and harbors some of the best sampled shallow-water vents of the Mediterranean Sea. Despite this, the correlation between microbial diversity, geochemical regimes and geological settings of the different volcanic islands of the archipelago is largely unknown. Here, we report the microbial diversity associated with six distinct shallow-water hydrothermal vents of the Aeolian Islands using a combination of 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing along with physicochemical and geochemical measurements. Samples were collected from biofilms, fluids and sediments from shallow vents on the islands of Lipari, Panarea, Salina, and Vulcano. Two new shallow vent locations are described here for the first time. Our results show the presence of diverse microbial communities consistent in their composition with the local geochemical regimes. The shallow water vents of the Aeolian Islands harbor highly diverse microbial community and should be included in future conservation efforts.
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- 2023
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9. Type 2 deiodinase p.Thr92Ala polymorphism does not affect the severity of obesity and weight loss after bariatric surgery
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Nicoletta Benenati, Annalisa Bufano, Silvia Cantara, Claudia Ricci, Carlotta Marzocchi, Cristina Ciuoli, Ida Sannino, Andrea Tirone, Costantino Voglino, Giuseppe Vuolo, and Maria Grazia Castagna
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract A single nucleotide polymorphism in the Type 2 deiodinase (DIO2) gene (p.Thr92Ala) was found to be associated with hypertension, type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), insulin resistance, and body mass index (BMI). We retrospectively evaluated 182 patients to assess whether the DIO2 p.Thr92Ala was associated with severe obesity and response to bariatric surgery. Genomic DNA was extracted from peripheral blood leukocytes before surgery. Glycemic control parameters, cardiometabolic risk biomarkers (waist circumference, lipid assessment and blood pressure) and hormonal parameters were assessed at baseline and after surgery. Based on genotype evaluation, 78/182 (42.9%) patients were homozygous wild-type (Thr/Thr), 83/182 (45.6%) heterozygous (Thr/Ala), and 21/182 (11.5%) rare homozygous (Ala/Ala). Age at the time of the first evaluation in our Unit was significantly lower in patients with DIO2 p.Thr92Ala. No significant association was observed between DIO2 p.Thr92Ala and BMI, excess weight, waist circumference, Homa Index. The prevalence of comorbidities was not associated with allele distribution except for hypertension that was more frequent in wild-type patients (p = 0.03). After bariatric surgery, excess weight loss (EWL) % and remission from comorbidities occurred without differences according to genotypes. DIO2 p.Thr92Ala does not affect the severity of obesity and its complications, but it seems to determine an earlier onset of morbid obesity. The presence of polymorphism seems not to impact on the response to bariatric surgery, both in terms of weight loss and remission of comorbidities.
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- 2022
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10. Effectiveness of Four Synthetic Fungicides in the Control of Post-Harvest Gray Mold of Strawberry and Analyses of Residues on Fruit
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Costantino Vischetti, Erica Feliziani, Lucia Landi, Arianna De Bernardi, Enrica Marini, and Gianfranco Romanazzi
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Botrytis cinerea ,Fragaria × ananassa ,fungicide residues ,post-harvest decay ,maximum residue level ,Agriculture - Abstract
Fungicides are usually applied on strawberries to manage gray mold, induced by the fungal pathogen Botrytis cinerea. In this study, four reduced-risk fungicides (formulations of pyrimethanil, PYR, 175 mL/hL; boscalid, BOS, 80 g/hL; combination fludioxonil, FLU, +cyprodinil, CYP, 110 g/hL) were applied before harvest for the management of post-harvest diseases of strawberries. The resulting fungicide residues on the strawberry fruit were also quantified. Strawberry fruits were harvested at 0, 4, 8, and 12 days following treatment (dft) and kept at 20 ± 1 °C for 4 days or cold-stored for 7 days at 0.5 ± 1 °C, followed by a 4-day shelf life at 20 ± 1 °C. All fungicides significantly reduced gray mold, according to the McKinney Index. At 0 dft and 4 days of shelf life, the FLU + CYP completely prevented post-harvest strawberry gray mold, while PYR and BOS reduced the disease by 88% and 42%, respectively, in comparison to the untreated control. For the duration of experiment, fungicide residues were always below the maximum residue levels, and FLU was the most degraded, thanks to the enzymatic pool of the strawberries. Monitoring fungicide residues in strawberries is essential to provide the consumer information on the safety of this widely consumed fruit. The present study points out the safety of strawberry fruits for consumers, even if the treatment strategy implies the use of fungicide mixtures before the consumption, with fungicide levels always being below the MRL.
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- 2023
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11. A Systematic Review on Earthworms in Soil Bioremediation
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Francesca Tagliabue, Enrica Marini, Arianna De Bernardi, Costantino Vischetti, and Cristiano Casucci
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vermiremediation ,phytoremediation ,bioaugmentation ,co-remediation ,Eisenia fetida ,organic contaminant ,Technology ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Bioremediation techniques are increasingly popular in addressing soil pollution. Despite this, using earthworms as first actors or adjuvants in decontamination is an open and little-discussed field. This paper focuses on vermiremediation effectiveness alone or combined with other bioremediation methods, such as phytoremediation and bioaugmentation. Literature was collected following the PRISMA criteria, setting the search with the following keywords: “(vermiremediation) AND (bioremediation OR phytoremediation OR plant*) AND (bioaugmentation OR bacteria)”. The investigation was performed on Google Scholar, Science Direct, SciFinder and Web of Science databases. The article data were collected, compared, elaborated, graphically summarised and discussed to assess if the earthworms’ activities play a critical role in tackling several soil pollutions. Furthermore, the review aimed to identify the most promising techniques in the function of the xenobiotic examined: organic, inorganic or both. Any gaps and criticism were highlighted to facilitate future research in this study area.
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- 2023
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12. Poststroke cognitive outcome is better accounted for by white matter abnormalities automated segmentation than visual analysis
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Lawson, B., Martin, J., Aarabi, A., Ouin, E., Tasseel-Ponche, S., Barbay, M., Andriuta, D., Roussel, M., Godefroy, O., Godefroy, O., Roussel, M., Barbay, M., Canaple, S., Lamy, C., Leclercq, C., Arnoux, A., Despretz-Wannepain, S., Despretz, P., Berrissoul, H., Picard, C., Diouf, M., Loas, G., Deramond, H., Taillia, H., Ardisson, A.-E., Nédélec-Ciceri, C., Bonnin, C., Thomas-Anterion, C., Vincent-Grangette, F., Varvat, J., Quaglino, V., Beaunieux, H., Moroni, C., Martens-Chazelles, A., Batier-Monperrus, S., Monteleone, C., Costantino, V., and Theunssens, E.
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The association between white matter abnormalities (WMA) and cognitive decline previously reported in poststroke patients has been mainly documented using visual scales. However, automated segmentation of WMA provides a precise determination of the volume of WMA. Nonetheless, it is rarely used in the stroke population and its potential advantage over visual scales is still unsettled. The objective of this study was to examine whether automated segmentation of WMA provides a better account than the visual Fazekas and Wahlund scales of the decline in executive functions and processing speed in stroke patients.
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- 2024
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13. The Genome of Varunaivibrio sulfuroxidans Strain TC8T, a Metabolically Versatile Alphaproteobacterium from the Tor Caldara Gas Vents in the Tyrrhenian Sea
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Sushmita Patwardhan, Jonathan Phan, Francesco Smedile, and Costantino Vetriani
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shallow-water vent ,Tyrrhenian Sea ,Tor Caldara ,chemolithotroph ,Alphaproteobacteria ,Thalassospiraceae ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Varunaivibrio sulfuroxidans type strain TC8T is a mesophilic, facultatively anaerobic, facultatively chemolithoautotrophic alphaproteobacterium isolated from a sulfidic shallow-water marine gas vent located at Tor Caldara, Tyrrhenian Sea, Italy. V. sulfuroxidans belongs to the family Thalassospiraceae within the Alphaproteobacteria, with Magnetovibrio blakemorei as its closest relative. The genome of V. sulfuroxidans encodes the genes involved in sulfur, thiosulfate and sulfide oxidation, as well as nitrate and oxygen respiration. The genome encodes the genes involved in carbon fixation via the Calvin–Benson–Bassham cycle, in addition to genes involved in glycolysis and the TCA cycle, indicating a mixotrophic lifestyle. Genes involved in the detoxification of mercury and arsenate are also present. The genome also encodes a complete flagellar complex, one intact prophage and one CRISPR, as well as a putative DNA uptake mechanism mediated by the type IVc (aka Tad pilus) secretion system. Overall, the genome of Varunaivibrio sulfuroxidans highlights the organism’s metabolic versatility, a characteristic that makes this strain well-adapted to the dynamic environmental conditions of sulfidic gas vents.
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- 2023
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14. Ecotoxicological effects of a synthetic and a natural insecticide on earthworms and soil bacterial community
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Arianna De Bernardi, Enrica Marini, Cristiano Casucci, Luca Tiano, Fabio Marcheggiani, Maurizio Ciani, Francesca Comitini, Eren Taskin, Edoardo Puglisi, and Costantino Vischetti
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Microbial community ,Earthworm ,Spinosad ,Chlorpyrifos ,Comet assay ,Next-generation sequencing ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Earthworms and microbial communities are essential non-target soil organisms that are useful to assess the collateral impact of pesticides. The present paper reports three laboratory experiments performed to investigate the effects of sub-lethal doses of two insecticides, a biologically-derived (spinosad) and a synthetic organophosphate (chlorpyrifos), on earthworm Eisenia foetida and microorganisms in organic soil. The effects were studied in terms of behaviour, reproduction, survival, and DNA damage (comet assay) in earthworms, and Next Generation Sequencing-Illumina was employed to detect the changes in the microbial community. In addition, the influence of earthworms on the degradation kinetics of insecticides and on microbial diversity was evaluated. The weights, reproductive activity and behaviour of earthworms were particularly compromised and followed a dose-dependent trend in chlorpyrifos trials, where the insecticide's degradation wasn't affected by the presence of Eisenia foetida. However, earthworms contributed to spinosad's metabolisation without significantly impacting their health. Early DNA damage was estimated in earthworms exposed to chlorpyrifos, while the impact of spinosad was significant only at the end of the toxicity test. The analysis on the microbial community indicated the buffering effect earthworms had on the bacterial communities starting from earliest sampling until the end of the trial, as well as bacterial community members' degradation response to pesticides over time.
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- 2022
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15. Microbial Biofilms Along a Geochemical Gradient at the Shallow-Water Hydrothermal System of Vulcano Island, Mediterranean Sea
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Valentina Sciutteri, Francesco Smedile, Salvatrice Vizzini, Antonio Mazzola, and Costantino Vetriani
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microbial biofilms ,active microbial communities ,ocean acidification ,Vulcano island ,sulfide oxidizing bacteria ,shallow-water hydrothermal vents ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Shallow water hydrothermal vents represent highly dynamic environments where strong geochemical gradients can shape microbial communities. Recently, these systems are being widely used for investigating the effects of ocean acidification on biota as vent emissions can release high CO2 concentrations causing local pH reduction. However, other gas species, as well as trace elements and metals, are often released in association with CO2 and can potentially act as confounding factors. In this study, we evaluated the composition, diversity and inferred functional profiles of microbial biofilms in Levante Bay (Vulcano Island, Italy, Mediterranean Sea), a well-studied shallow-water hydrothermal vent system. We analyzed 16S rRNA transcripts from biofilms exposed to different intensity of hydrothermal activity, following a redox and pH gradient across the bay. We found that elevated CO2 concentrations causing low pH can affect the response of bacterial groups and taxa by either increasing or decreasing their relative abundance. H2S proved to be a highly selective factor shaping the composition and affecting the diversity of the community by selecting for sulfide-dependent, chemolithoautotrophic bacteria. The analysis of the 16S rRNA transcripts, along with the inferred functional profile of the communities, revealed a strong influence of H2S in the southern portion of the study area, and temporal succession affected the inferred abundance of genes for key metabolic pathways. Our results revealed that the composition of the microbial assemblages vary at very small spatial scales, mirroring the highly variable geochemical signature of vent emissions and cautioning for the use of these environments as models to investigate the effects of ocean acidification on microbial diversity.
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- 2022
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16. Copper Monitoring in Vineyard Soils of Central Italy Subjected to Three Antifungal Treatments, and Effects of Sub-Lethal Copper Doses on the Earthworm Eisenia fetida
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Arianna De Bernardi, Enrica Marini, Cristiano Casucci, Luca Tiano, Fabio Marcheggiani, and Costantino Vischetti
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copper fungicide ,soil contamination ,ecotoxicology ,earthworms ,Eisenia fetida ,comet assay ,Chemical technology ,TP1-1185 - Abstract
The extensive employment of copper-based fungicides has increased copper concentration in vineyard soils. The present study’s objectives were to monitor copper concentration in two vineyard soils during two cropping seasons and study the ecotoxicological effects on the earthworm Eisenia fetida. Total, soluble, and bioavailable copper fractions were measured at the end of two cropping seasons and different depths in two vineyards of central Italy, characterised by three anticryptogamic control methods: copper compounds, chitosan, and combined treatments of them. A laboratory experiment to assess the effects on Eisenia fetida was conducted with soil samples collected in the vineyards with a mean copper concentration of 60 mg/kg and two higher concentrations of 90 and 150 mg/kg. Results showed low levels of total copper concentration in the first 20 cm of soils, regardless of antifungal treatment, highlighting prudent management of the vineyards under study, but the soluble fractions showed a significant increase in all samples during the two cropping seasons. At the dose of 150 mg/kg, earthworms suffer during the first two days, showing weight loss and DNA damage, but they are able to recover until day 28, showing no permanent harm at this copper concentration in soil.
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- 2022
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17. Fatty Acid Substitutions Modulate the Cytotoxicity of Puwainaphycins/Minutissamides Isolated from the Baltic Sea Cyanobacterium Nodularia harveyana UHCC-0300
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Kumar Saurav, Alessia Caso, Petra Urajová, Pavel Hrouzek, Germana Esposito, Kateřina Delawská, Markéta Macho, Jan Hájek, José Cheel, Subhasish Saha, Petra Divoká, Sila Arsin, Kaarina Sivonen, David P. Fewer, Valeria Costantino, University of Helsinki, Department of Microbiology, Helsinki Institute of Sustainability Science (HELSUS), Cyanobacteria research, Department of Food and Nutrition, Microbial Natural Products, Saurav, K., Caso, A., Urajova, P., Hrouzek, P., Esposito, G., Delawska, K., Macho, M., Hajek, J., Cheel, J., Saha, S., Divoka, P., Arsin, S., Sivonen, K., Fewer, D. P., and Costantino, V.
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11832 Microbiology and virology ,General Chemical Engineering ,General Chemistry ,CYCLIC LIPOPEPTIDES - Abstract
Puwainaphycins (PUW) and minutissamides (MIN) are structurally homologous cyclic lipopeptides that exhibit high structural variability and possess antifungal and cytotoxic activities. While only a minor variation can be found in the amino acid composition of the peptide cycle, the fatty acid (FA) moiety varies largely. The effect of FA functionalization on the bioactivity of PUW/MIN chemical variants is poorly understood. A rapid and selective liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry-based method led us to identify 13 PUW/MIN (1-13) chemical variants from the benthic cyanobacterium Nodularia harveyana strain UHCC-0300 from the Baltic Sea. Five new variants identified were designated as PUW H (1), PUW I (2), PUW J (4), PUW K (10), and PUW L (13) and varied slightly in the peptidic core composition, but a larger variation was observed in the oxo-, chloro-, and hydroxy-substitutions on the FA moiety. To address the effect of FA substitution on the cytotoxic effect, the major variants (3 and 5-11) together with four other PUW/MIN variants (14-17) previously isolated were included in the study. The data obtained showed that hydroxylation of the FA moiety abolishes the cytotoxicity or significantly reduces it when compared with the oxo-substituted C-18-FA (compounds 5-8). The oxo-substitution had only a minor effect on the cytotoxicity of the compound when compared to variants bearing no substitution. The activity of PUW/ MIN variants with chlorinated FA moieties varied depending on the position of the chlorine atom on the FA chain. This study also shows that variation in the amino acids distant from the FA moiety (position 4-8 of the peptide cycle) does not play an important role in determining the cytotoxicity of the compound. These findings confirmed that the lipophilicity of FA is essential to maintain the cytotoxicity of PUW/MIN lipopeptides. Further, a 63 kb puwainaphycin biosynthetic gene cluster from a draft genome of the N. harveyana strain UHCC-0300 was identified. This pathway encoded two specific lipoinitiation mechanisms as well as enzymes needed for the modification of the FA moiety. Examination on biosynthetic gene clusters and the structural variability of the produced PUW/MIN suggested different mechanisms of fatty-aryl-AMP ligase cooperation with accessory enzymes leading to a new set of PUW/MIN variants bearing differently substituted FA.
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- 2022
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18. A Glimpse at Siderophores Production by Anabaena flos-aquae UTEX 1444
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Roberta Teta, Germana Esposito, Karishma Kundu, Mariano Stornaiuolo, Silvia Scarpato, Antonino Pollio, Valeria Costantino, Teta, R., Esposito, G., Kundu, K., Stornaiuolo, M., Scarpato, S., Pollio, A., and Costantino, V.
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molecular networking ,natural product ,siderophore ,carboxylate ,Iron ,Pharmaceutical Science ,hydroxamate ,synechobactin ,cyanobacteria ,Anabaena ,Anabaena flos‐aquae ,schizokinen ,Drug Discovery ,siderophores ,iron ,Anabaena flos-aquae ,hydroxamates ,catecholates ,carboxylates ,synechobactins ,natural products ,biodiversity ,Dolichospermum flos-aquae ,catecholate ,Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics (miscellaneous) ,Ecosystem - Abstract
In this study, a strain of Anabaena flos-aquae UTEX 1444 was cultivated in six different concentrations of iron (III). Cultures were extracted with organic solvents and analyzed using our dereplication strategy, based on the combined use of high-resolution tandem mass spectrometry and molecular networking. The analysis showed the presence of the siderophores’ family, named synechobactins, only in the zero iron (III) treatment culture. Seven unknown synechobactin variants were present in the extract, and their structures have been determined by a careful HRMS/MS analysis. This study unveils the capability of Anabaena flos-aquae UTEX 1444 to produce a large array of siderophores and may be a suitable model organism for a sustainable scale-up exploitation of such bioactive molecules, for the bioremediation of contaminated ecosystems, as well as in drug discovery.
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- 2022
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19. Introduction
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G. Sammartino, S. Calabrò, R. Capozzi, V. Costantino, F. Galgano, G. Guerriero A. Santini, Aa. Vv., G. SAMMARTINO, Sammartino, G., Calabrò, S., Capozzi, R., Costantino, V., Galgano, F., and Santini, G. Guerriero A.
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- 2022
20. Computational Metabolomics Tools Reveal Subarmigerides, Unprecedented Linear Peptides from the Marine Sponge Holobiont Callyspongia subarmigera
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Andrea Castaldi, Roberta Teta, Germana Esposito, Mehdi A. Beniddir, Nicole J. De Voogd, Sébastien Duperron, Valeria Costantino, Marie-Lise Bourguet-Kondracki, Castaldi, A., Teta, R., Esposito, G., Beniddir, M. A., De Voogd, N. J., Duperron, S., Costantino, V., and Bourguet-Kondracki, M. -L.
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molecular networking ,Drug Discovery ,marine sponge holobiont ,Callyspongia subarmigera ,linear peptide ,cyanobacteria ,MS/MS ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics (miscellaneous) - Abstract
A detailed examination of a unique molecular family, restricted to the Callyspongia genus, in a molecular network obtained from an in-house Haplosclerida marine sponge collection (including Haliclona, Callyspongia, Xestospongia, and Petrosia species) led to the discovery of subarmigerides, a series of rare linear peptides from Callyspongia subarmigera, a genus mainly known for polyacetylenes and lipids. The structure of the sole isolated peptide, subarmigeride A (1) was elucidated through extensive 1D and 2D NMR spectroscopy, HRMS/MS, and Marfey’s method to assign its absolute configuration. The putative structures of seven additional linear peptides were proposed by an analysis of their respective MS/MS spectra and a comparison of their fragmentation patterns with the heptapeptide 1. Surprisingly, several structurally related analogues of subarmigeride A (1) occurred in one distinct cluster from the molecular network of the cyanobacteria strains of the Guadeloupe mangroves, suggesting that the true producer of this peptide family might be the microbial sponge-associated community, i.e., the sponge-associated cyanobacteria.
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- 2022
21. Dittrichia graveolens (L.) Greuter, a Rapidly Spreading Invasive Plant: Chemistry and Bioactivity
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Maria Ponticelli, Ludovica Lela, Daniela Russo, Immacolata Faraone, Chiara Sinisgalli, Mayssa Ben Mustapha, Germana Esposito, Hichem Ben Jannet, Valeria Costantino, Luigi Milella, Ponticelli, M., Lela, L., Russo, D., Faraone, I., Sinisgalli, C., Mustapha, M. B., Esposito, G., Jannet, H. B., Costantino, V., and Milella, L.
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Anti-Infective Agent ,Inula graveolens L ,Phenolic compound ,Pharmaceutical Science ,phenolic compounds ,Asteraceae ,Plant Extract ,Analytical Chemistry ,Dittrichia graveolens (L.) Greuter ,Antineoplastic Agent ,QD241-441 ,Drug Discovery ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Animal ,Terpenes ,Organic Chemistry ,Invasive specie ,borneol ,stinkwort ,Anti-Inflammatory Agent ,Chemistry (miscellaneous) ,Terpene ,Flavonoid ,Molecular Medicine ,Antioxidant ,Human - Abstract
Dittrichia graveolens L. Greuter belonging to the Asteraceae family, is an aromatic herbaceous plant native to the Mediterranean region. This plant species has been extensively studied for its biological activities, including antioxidant, antitumor, antimicrobial, antifungal, anti-inflammatory, anticholinesterase, and antityrosinase, and for its peculiar metabolic profile. In particular, bioactivities are related to terpenes and flavonoids metabolites, such as borneol (40), tomentosin (189), inuviscolide (204). However, D. graveolens is also well known for causing health problems both in animals and humans. Moreover, the species is currently undergoing a dramatic northward expansion of its native range related to climate change, now including North Europe, California, and Australia. This review represents an updated overview of the 52 literature papers published in Scopus and PubMed dealing with expansion, chemistry (262 different compounds), pharmacological effects, and toxicology of D. graveolens up to October 2021. The review is intended to boost further studies to determine the molecular pathways involved in the observed activities, bioavailability, and clinical studies to explore new potential applications.
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- 2022
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22. Aglianico grape pomace as a source of antioxidant and anti-proliferative biomolecules: Eco-friendly extraction and HRMS/MS-based molecular networking.
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Ponticelli M, Esposito G, Labanca F, Scognamiglio P, Sinisgalli C, Milella L, Faraone I, and Costantino V
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Grape pomace (GP), a by-product of the wine supply chain process, contains bioactive molecules with known healthy properties. This study examines the impact of different extraction techniques on three GPs of Aglianico cultivar [Cantine del Notaio, Barile, and Torrecuso]. Five eco-friendly extractive techniques [maceration (MAC), digestion (DIG), accelerated solvent extraction (ASE), microwaves (MW), and ultrasound (US)] were used with 50 % ethanol/water as solvent. Spectrophotometric assays showed that DIG and ASE extracts had the highest antioxidant activity and specialized metabolite content. Using the HRMS/MS-based molecular networking, DIG and ASE extract metabolome profiles were analyzed, identifying unknown compounds and known ones with validated antioxidant and chemopreventive effects. In vitro cell-based assay on HepG2 cells demonstrated that Barile GP DIG extract has the highest anti-proliferative activity. Hence, this work provides insight into the potential application of Barile GP DIG extract as a rich source of specialized metabolites with antioxidant and anti-proliferative activity., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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23. BioFire ® Joint Infection Panel for Samples Other than Synovial Fluid.
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Benvenuto N, Di Bella S, Principe L, Luppino D, Conti J, Costantino V, Di Santolo M, Busetti M, Luzzati R, and Zerbato V
- Abstract
Objectives : The early identification of infection-causing microorganisms through multiplex PCR panels enables prompt and targeted antibiotic therapy. This study aimed to assess the performance of the BioFire
® Joint Infection Panel (BF-JIP) in analysing non-synovial fluid samples. Methods : We conducted a retrospective cohort study at Trieste University Hospital, Italy, on hospitalised adults with non-synovial fluid samples tested by both BF-JIP and traditional culture methods (November 2022-April 2024). Results : We evaluated 48 samples from 45 patients, including 24 abscess drainage fluids and 10 tissue samples. The BF-JIP showed high concordance (85.4%) and enhanced detection (4.3%) compared to culture methods. The BF-JIP excelled in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) (100% accuracy and concordance) and in abscess drainage fluid (accuracy: 95.8%; concordance: 91.7%) identification and maintained high performance rates in patients under antibiotics. Conclusions : These findings suggest that BF-JIP is a valuable tool for accurate pathogen detection in various clinical samples, offering the additional advantage of being a rapid method.- Published
- 2024
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24. Prediction of 30-day mortality after surgery for infective endocarditis using risk scores: Insights from a European multicenter comparative validation study.
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Gatti G, Fiore A, Ismail M, Dralov A, Saade W, Costantino V, Barbati G, Lim P, Lepeule R, Franzese I, Minati A, Sponga S, Fabris E, Luzzati R, Sinagra G, Biondi-Zoccai G, Frati G, Perrotti A, Vendramin I, and Mazzaro E
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- Humans, Male, Female, Risk Assessment methods, Retrospective Studies, Middle Aged, Aged, Europe epidemiology, Cardiac Surgical Procedures mortality, Risk Factors, ROC Curve, Prognosis, Time Factors, Endocarditis mortality, Endocarditis surgery
- Abstract
Background: It remains unclear today whether risk scores created specifically to predict early mortality after cardiac operations for infective endocarditis (IE) outperform or not the European System for Cardiac Operative Risk Evaluation II (EuroSCORE II)., Methods: Perioperative data and outcomes from a European multicenter series of patients undergoing surgery for definite IE were retrospectively reviewed. Only the cases with known pathogen and without missing values for all considered variables were retained for analyses. A comparative validation of EuroSCORE II and 5 specific risk scores for early mortality after surgery for IE-(1) STS-IE (Society of Thoracic Surgeons for IE); (2) PALSUSE (Prosthetic valve, Age ≥70, Large intracardiac destruction, Staphylococcus spp, Urgent surgery, Sex (female), EuroSCORE ≥10); (3) ANCLA (Anemia, New York Heart Association class IV, Critical state, Large intracardiac destruction, surgery on thoracic Aorta); (4) AEPEI II (Association pour l'Étude et la Prévention de l'Endocardite Infectieuse II); (5) APORTEI (Análisis de los factores PROnósticos en el Tratamiento quirúrgico de la Endocarditis Infecciosa)-was carried out using calibration plot and receiver-operating characteristic curve analysis. Areas under the curve (AUCs) were compared 1:1 according to the Hanley-McNeil's method. The agreement between APORTEI score and EuroSCORE II of the 30-day mortality prediction after surgery was also appraised., Results: A total of 1,012 patients from 5 European university-affiliated centers underwent 1,036 cardiac operations, with a 30-day mortality after surgery of 9.7%. All IE-specific risk scores considered achieved better results than EuroSCORE II in terms of calibration; AEPEI II and APORTEI score showed the best performances. Despite poor calibration, EuroSCORE II overcame in discrimination every specific risk score (AUC, 0.751 vs 0.693 or less, P = .01 or less). For a higher/lesser than 20% expected mortality, the agreement of prediction between APORTEI score and EuroSCORE II was 86%., Conclusion: EuroSCORE II discrimination for 30-day mortality after surgery for IE was higher than 5 established IE-specific risk scores. AEPEI II and APORTEI score showed the best results in terms of calibration., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest Dr. Giuseppe Gatti, Prof. Gianfranco Sinagra and Prof. Roberto Luzzati are three out of the ANCLA score creators. Dr. Giuseppe Gatti and Prof. Andrea Perrotti are two out of the AEPEI score I and II creators., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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25. Nutraceutical Valorization of Exhausted Olive Pomace from Olea europaea L. Using Advanced Extraction Techniques.
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Carlucci V, Ponticelli M, Russo D, Labanca F, Costantino V, Esposito G, and Milella L
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Exhausted olive pomace (EOP) represents the principal residue of olive pomace. Several studies have optimized the extraction of specialized metabolites from the EOP of Olea europaea L., but a comparison between different extractive methods has not been made. For this reason, the present investigation aims to compare four different extractive methods by using water and 15% ethanol/water as extractive solvents. Specifically, based on extract antioxidant activity, the methods compared were maceration (MAC), microwave-assisted extraction (MAE), ultrasound-assisted extraction (UAE), and Accelerated Solvent Extraction (ASE). Between these, the UAE and ASE hydroalcoholic EOP extracts were demonstrated to have the highest antioxidant activity. Subsequently, these extracts were investigated for their hypoglycemic and antiradical activity using in vitro cell-free and cell-based assays, respectively. ASE hydroalcoholic EOP extract demonstrated the greatest ability to inhibit the α-amylase enzyme and an in vitro antioxidant activity comparable to N-acetyl cysteine in HepG2 cells. UAE and ASE extracts' phytochemical characterization was also performed, identifying seven phenolic compounds, including 3-hydroxytyrosol, tyrosol, and, for the first time, salidroside. The ASE hydroalcoholic EOP extract was the richest from a phytochemical point of view, thus confirming its major biological activity. Therefore, ASE and 15% ethanol/water may represent the best extractive method for EOP nutraceutical valorization.
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- 2024
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26. The public health and economic burden of long COVID in Australia, 2022-24: a modelling study.
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Costantino V, Grafton Q, Kompas T, Chu L, Honeyman D, Notaras A, and MacIntyre CR
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- Humans, Australia epidemiology, Adult, Middle Aged, Child, Preschool, Aged, Child, Adolescent, Infant, Young Adult, Public Health economics, SARS-CoV-2, Gross Domestic Product, Infant, Newborn, Post-Acute COVID-19 Syndrome, Female, Male, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 economics, Cost of Illness
- Abstract
Objective: To estimate the number of people in Australia with long COVID by age group, and the associated medium term productivity and economic losses., Study Design: Modelling study: a susceptible-exposed-infected-recovered (SEIR) model to estimate the number of people with long COVID over time following single infections, and a labour supply model to estimate productivity losses as a proportion of gross domestic product (GDP)., Setting: Australia, 2022-2024., Main Outcome Measures: Estimated number of people infected with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) during 2022-2023 (based on serosurvey data) who have long COVID, 2022-2024, by age group; estimated GDP loss during 2022 caused by reduced labour supply attributable to long COVID., Results: Our model projected that the number of people with long COVID following a single infection in 2022 would peak in September 2022, when 310 341-1 374 805 people (1.2-5.4% of Australians) would have symptoms of long COVID, declining to 172 530-872 799 people (0.7-3.4%) in December 2024, including 7902-30 002 children aged 0-4 years (0.6-2.2%). The estimated mean labour loss attributable to long COVID in 2022 was projected to be 102.4 million (95% confidence interval [CI], 50.4-162.2 million) worked hours, equivalent to 0.48% (95% CI, 0.24-0.76%) of total worked hours in Australia during the 2020-21 financial year. The estimated mean GDP loss caused by the projected decline in labour supply and reduced use of other production factors was $9.6 billion (95% CI, $4.7-15.2 billion), or 0.5% of GDP. The estimated labour loss was greatest for people aged 30-39 years (27.5 million [95% CI, 16.0-41.0 million] hours; 26.9% of total labour loss) and people aged 40-49 years (24.5 million [95% CI, 12.1-38.7 million] hours; 23.9% of total labour loss)., Conclusion: Widespread SARS-CoV-2 infections in Australia mean that even a small proportion of infected people developing long COVID-related illness and disability could have important population health and economic effects. A paradigm shift is needed, from a sole focus on the immediate effects of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) to preventing and treating COVID-19 and treating long COVID, with implications for vaccine and antiviral policy and other mitigation of COVID-19., (© 2024 The Author(s). Medical Journal of Australia published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of AMPCo Pty Ltd.)
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- 2024
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27. "Inhibitory immune checkpoints predict 7-day, in-hospital and 1-year mortality of internal medicine patients admitted with bacterial sepsis".
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Mearelli F, Nunnari A, Rombini A, Chitti F, Spagnol F, Casarsa C, Bolzan G, Martini I, Marinelli A, Rizzo S, Teso C, Macor A, Fiotti N, Barbati G, Tascini C, Costantino V, Di Bella S, Di Girolamo FG, Bove T, Orso D, Berlot G, Klompas M, and Biolo G
- Abstract
Background: Sepsis is a life-threatening syndrome with complex pathophysiology and great clinical heterogeneity which complicates the delivery of personalized therapies. Our goals were to demonstrate that some biomarkers identified as regulatory immune checkpoints in preclinical studies could 1)improve sepsis prognostication based on clinical variables and 2)guide the stratification of septic patients in subgroups with shared characteristics of immune response or survival outcomes., Methods: We assayed the soluble counterparts of 12 biomarkers of immune response in 113 internal medicine patients with bacterial sepsis., Results: IL-1 receptor-associated kinase M (IRAK-M) exhibited the highest hazard ratios (HRs) for increased 7-day (1.94 [1.17-3.20]) and 30-day mortality (1.61 [1.14-2.28]). HRs of IRAK-M and Galectin-1 for predicting 1-year mortality were 1.52 (1.20-1.92) and 1.64 (1.13-2.36), respectively. A prognostic model including IRAK-M, Galectin-1, and clinical variables (Charlson Comorbidty Index, multiple source of sepsis, and SOFA score) had high discrimination for death at 7 days and 30 days (area under the curve 0.90 [0.82-0.99]) and 0.86 [0.79-0.94], respectively). Patients with elevated serum levels of IRAK-M and Galectin-1 had clinical traits of immune suppression and low survival rates. None of the 12 biomarkers were independent predictors of 2-year mortality., Conclusions: Two inhibitory immune checkpoint biomarkers (IRAK-M and Galectin-1) helped identify 3 distinct sepsis phenotypes with distinct prognoses. These biomarkers shed light on the interplay between immune dysfunction and prognosis in patients with bacterial sepsis and may prove to be useful prognostic markers, therapeutic targets, and biochemical markers for targeted enrollment in targeted therapeutic trials., (Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America 2024.)
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- 2024
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28. Impact of vaccine coverage and disruption to health services on COVID-19 in Ukraine.
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Costantino V and MacIntyre CR
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- Ukraine epidemiology, Humans, Masks, Vaccination statistics & numerical data, COVID-19 prevention & control, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 Vaccines administration & dosage, Vaccination Coverage statistics & numerical data, SARS-CoV-2 immunology
- Abstract
COVID-19 surveillance in Ukraine ceased after the Russian invasion of the country in 2022, on a background of low vaccination rates of 34.5% for two doses at this time. We conducted a modelling study to estimate the epidemic trajectory of SARS-COV-2 in Ukraine after the start of the war. We use a COVID-19 deterministic Susceptible-Exposed-Infected-Recovered (SEIR) model for Ukraine to estimate the impact of increased vaccination coverage and masking as public health interventions. We fit the model output to case notification data between 6 January and 25 February 2022, then we forecast the COVID-19 epidemic trajectory in different scenarios of mask use and vaccine coverage. In the best-case scenario, 69% of the Ukrainian population would have been infected in the first half of 2022. Increasing mask use from 50 to 80% reduces cases and deaths by 17% and 30% respectively, while increasing vaccination rates to 60% and 9.6% for two and three doses respectively results in a 3% reduction in cases and 28% in deaths. However, if vaccination is increased to a higher coverage of 80% with two doses and 12.8% with three, or mask effectiveness is reduced to 40%, increasing vaccination coverage is more effective. The loss of health services, displacement, and destruction of infrastructure will amplify the risk of COVID-19 in Ukraine and make vaccine programs less feasible. Masks do not need the health infrastructure or cold-chain logistics required for vaccines and are more feasible for rapid epidemic control during war. However, increasing vaccine coverage will save more lives. Vaccination of refugees who have fled to other countries can be more feasibly achieved., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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29. Functionalization of Carbon Nanofibers with an Aromatic Diamine: Toward a Simple Electrochemical-Based Sensing Platform for the Selective Sensing of Glucose.
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Ferlazzo A, Celesti C, Iannazzo D, Ampelli C, Giusi D, Costantino V, and Neri G
- Abstract
Despite a variety of glucose sensors being available today, the development of nonenzymatic devices for the determination of this biologically relevant analyte is still of particular interest in several applicative sectors. Here, we report the development of an impedimetric, enzyme-free electrochemical glucose sensor based on carbon nanofibers (CNFs) functionalized with an aromatic diamine via a simple wet chemistry functionalization. The electrochemical performance of the chemically modified carbon-based screen-printed electrodes (SPCEs) was evaluated by electrical impedance spectroscopy (EIS), demonstrating a high selectivity of the sensor for glucose with respect to other sugars, such as fructose and sucrose. The sensing parameters to obtain a reliable calibration curve and the selective glucose sensing mechanism are discussed here, highlighting the performance of this novel electrochemical sensor for the selective sensing of this important analyte. Two linear trends were noted, one at low concentrations (0-1200 μM) and the other from 1200 to 5000 μM. The limit of detection (LOD), calculated as the (standard error/slope)*3.3, was 18.64 μM. The results of this study highlight the performance of the developed novel electrochemical sensor for the selective sensing of glucose., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing financial interest., (© 2024 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.)
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- 2024
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30. Synergistic Activity of Temocillin and Fosfomycin Combination against KPC-Producing Klebsiella pneumoniae Clinical Isolates.
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Costantino V, Principe L, Mehat J, Busetti M, Piccirilli A, Perilli M, Luzzati R, Zerbato V, Meliadò A, La Ragione R, and Di Bella S
- Abstract
Infections caused by KPC-producing K. pneumoniae continue to pose a significant clinical challenge due to their emerging resistance to new antimicrobials. We investigated the association between two drugs whose roles have been repurposed against multidrug-resistant bacteria: fosfomycin and temocillin. Temocillin exhibits unusual stability against KPC enzymes, while fosfomycin acts as a potent "synergizer". We conducted in vitro antimicrobial activity studies on 100 clinical isolates of KPC-producing K. pneumoniae using a combination of fosfomycin and temocillin. The results demonstrated synergistic activity in 91% of the isolates. Subsequently, we assessed the effect on Galleria mellonella larvae using five genetically different KPC-Kp isolates. The addition of fosfomycin to temocillin increased larvae survival from 73 to 97% (+Δ 32%; isolate 1), from 93 to 100% (+Δ 7%; isolate 2), from 63 to 86% (+Δ 36%; isolate 3), from 63 to 90% (+Δ 42%; isolate 4), and from 93 to 97% (+Δ 4%; isolate 10). Among the temocillin-resistant KPC-producing K. pneumoniae isolates (24 isolates), the addition of fosfomycin reduced temocillin MIC values below the resistance breakpoint in all isolates except one. Temocillin combined with fosfomycin emerges as a promising combination against KPC-producing K. pneumoniae , warranting further clinical evaluation.
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- 2024
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31. Human Campylobacter spp. infections in Italy.
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Zerbato V, Di Bella S, Pol R, Luzzati R, Sanson G, Ambretti S, Andreoni S, Aschbacher R, Bernardo M, Bielli A, Brigante G, Busetti M, Camarlinghi G, Carcione D, Carducci A, Clementi N, Carretto E, Chilleri C, Codda G, Consonni A, Costantino V, Cortazzo V, Di Santolo M, Dodaro S, Fiori B, García-Fernández A, Foschi C, Gobbato E, Greco F, La Ragione RM, Mancini N, Maraolo AE, Marchese A, Marcuccio D, Marrollo R, Mauri C, Mazzariol A, Morroni G, Mosca A, Nigrisoli G, Pagani E, Parisio EM, Pollini S, Sarti M, Sorrentino A, Trotta D, Villa L, Vismara C, and Principe L
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- Humans, Italy epidemiology, Female, Male, Adult, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Adolescent, Aged, Child, Child, Preschool, Infant, Feces microbiology, Drug Resistance, Bacterial, Aged, 80 and over, Infant, Newborn, Campylobacter jejuni drug effects, Campylobacter jejuni isolation & purification, Campylobacter Infections epidemiology, Campylobacter Infections microbiology, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Campylobacter drug effects, Campylobacter isolation & purification
- Abstract
Purpose: Campylobacter is a frequent cause of enteric infections with common antimicrobial resistance issues. The most recent reports of campylobacteriosis in Italy include data from 2013 to 2016. We aimed to provide national epidemiological and microbiological data on human Campylobacter infections in Italy during the period 2017-2021., Methods: Data was collected from 19 Hospitals in 13 Italian Regions. Bacterial identification was performed by mass spectrometry. Antibiograms were determined with Etest or Kirby-Bauer (EUCAST criteria)., Results: In total, 5419 isolations of Campylobacter spp. were performed. The most common species were C. jejuni (n = 4535, 83.7%), followed by C. coli (n = 732, 13.5%) and C. fetus (n = 34, 0.6%). The mean age of patients was 34.61 years and 57.1% were males. Outpatients accounted for 54% of the cases detected. Campylobacter were isolated from faeces in 97.3% of cases and in 2.7% from blood. C. fetus was mostly isolated from blood (88.2% of cases). We tested for antimicrobial susceptibility 4627 isolates (85.4%). Resistance to ciprofloxacin and tetracyclines was 75.5% and 54.8%, respectively; resistance to erythromycin was 4.8%; clarithromycin 2% and azithromycin 2%. 50% of C. jejuni and C. coli were resistant to ≥ 2 antibiotics. Over the study period, resistance to ciprofloxacin and tetracyclines significantly decreased (p < 0.005), while resistance to macrolides remained stable., Conclusion: Campylobacter resistance to fluoroquinolones and tetracyclines in Italy is decreasing but is still high, while macrolides retain good activity., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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32. When Synthesis Gets It Wrong: Unexpected Epimerization Using PyBOP in the Synthesis of the Cyclic Peptide Thermoactinoamide A.
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Di Matteo V, Esposito G, Costantino V, Della Sala G, Teta R, and Mangoni A
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- Molecular Structure, Cyclization, Biological Products chemistry, Biological Products chemical synthesis, Stereoisomerism, Thermoactinomyces chemistry, Peptides, Cyclic chemistry, Peptides, Cyclic chemical synthesis
- Abstract
Chemical synthesis is commonly seen as the final proof of the structure of complex natural products, but even a seemingly easy and well-established synthetic procedure may lead to an unexpected result. This is what happened with the synthesis of thermoactinoamide A ( 1a ), an antimicrobial and antitumor nonribosomal cyclic hexapeptide produced by the thermophilic bacterium Thermoactinomyces vulgaris . The synthetic thermoactinoamide A outsourced to a company and the one described in a synthetic paper showed spectroscopic data identical to each other but different from those of the natural product. After a detailed spectroscopic, degradative, and synthetic study, the synthetic compound was shown to be an epimer ( 1b ) of the intended target compound, originating during the cyclization reaction by extensive epimerization at the activated C-terminal amino acid. This allowed confirmation of the structure of the natural product.
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- 2024
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33. When surgical option is not provided: a successful multidisciplinary approach to a refractory case of sternal osteomyelitis following coronary surgery.
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Gatti G, Amato P, Dore F, Crisafulli C, Belgrano M, Maurel C, Costantino V, Luzzati R, and Mazzaro E
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- Humans, Sternum surgery, Surgical Wound Infection diagnosis, Surgical Wound Infection therapy, Coronary Artery Bypass adverse effects, Osteomyelitis diagnosis, Osteomyelitis drug therapy, Osteomyelitis surgery
- Abstract
Purpose: Sternal osteomyelitis is a major complication of cardiac operations performed through median sternotomy. The surgical treatment, which involves the debridement and removal of whole infected and necrotic tissue is the standard of care, although it is sometimes unachievable. This may occur, for instance, when the infectious-inflammatory process invades the anterior mediastinum and tenaciously incorporates one or more of vital anatomical structures., Methods and Results: An inoperable case of postoperative sternal osteomyelitis that involved the right ventricle and the right coronary artery, and that was successfully treated using a nonsurgical multidisciplinary approach, is reported here., Conclusion: For highly selected patients with sternal osteomyelitis for whom surgery is a too risky option, an approach including the contribution of various specialists might be a viable way out., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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34. Harnessing Cyanobacteria's Bioactive Potential: A Sustainable Strategy for Antioxidant Production.
- Author
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De Rosa T, Ponticelli M, Teta R, Carlucci V, Milella L, Esposito G, and Costantino V
- Abstract
Unsaturated diacylglycerols are a class of antioxidant compounds with the potential to positively impact human health. Their ability to combat oxidative stress through radical scavenger activity underscores their significance in the context of preventive and therapeutic strategies. In this paper we highlight the role of Anabaena flos-aquae as a producer of unsaturated mono and diacylglycerols, and then demonstrate the antioxidant activity of its methanolic extract, which has as its main components a variety of acylglycerol analogues. This finding was revealed using a sustainable strategy in which the One Strain Many Compounds (OSMAC) cultivation in microscale was coupled with a bioinformatic approach to analyze a large dataset of mass spectrometry data using the molecular networking analyses. This strategy reduces time and costs, avoiding long and expensive steps of purification and obtaining informative data on the metabolic composition of the extracts. This study highlights the role of Anabaena as a sustainable and green source of novel bioactive compounds.
- Published
- 2024
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35. Systematic review of influenza vaccine effectiveness against laboratory-confirmed influenza among older adults living in aged care facilities.
- Author
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Moa A, Kunasekaran M, Akhtar Z, Costantino V, and MacIntyre CR
- Subjects
- Aged, Humans, Influenza A Virus, H3N2 Subtype, Vaccine Efficacy, Vaccination methods, Seasons, Influenza, Human epidemiology, Influenza, Human prevention & control, Influenza, Human drug therapy, Influenza Vaccines
- Abstract
We estimated the effectiveness of influenza vaccines in preventing laboratory-confirmed influenza among older adults in aged care. Electronic database searches were conducted using search terms, and studies were selected as per the selection criteria. Fourteen studies were included for final review. The studies exhibited considerable variation in reported vaccine effectiveness (VE) across different seasons. Among the observational studies, VE ranged from 7.2% to 89.8% against laboratory-confirmed influenza across different vaccines. Randomized clinical trials demonstrated a 17% reduction in infection rates with the adjuvanted trivalent vaccine. The limitations include the small number of included studies conducted in different countries or regions, varied seasons, variations in diagnostic testing methods, a focus on the A/H3N2 strain, and few studies available on the effectiveness of enhanced influenza vaccines in aged care settings. Despite challenges associated with achieving optimal protection, the studies showed the benefits of influenza vaccination in the elderly residents.
- Published
- 2023
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36. Lake Avernus Has Turned Red: Bioindicator Monitoring Unveils the Secrets of "Gates of Hades".
- Author
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Esposito G, Glukhov E, Gerwick WH, Medio G, Teta R, Lega M, and Costantino V
- Subjects
- Environmental Biomarkers, Environmental Monitoring, Italy, Microcystins analysis, Cyanobacteria, Lakes microbiology
- Abstract
Lake Avernus is a volcanic lake located in southern Italy. Since ancient times, it has inspired numerous myths and legends due to the occurrence of singular phenomena, such as coloring events. Only recently has an explanation been found for them, i.e., the recurring color change over time is due to the alternation of cyanobacterial blooms that are a consequence of natural nutrient inputs as well as pollution resulting from human activities. This current report specifically describes the red coloring event that occurred on Lake Avernus in March 2022, the springtime season in this region of Italy. Our innovative multidisciplinary approach, the 'Fast Detection Strategy' (FDS), was devised to monitor cyanobacterial blooms and their toxins. It integrates remote sensing data from satellites and drones, on-site sampling, and analytical/bioinformatics analyses into a cohesive information flow. Thanks to FDS, we determined that the red color was attributable to a bloom of Planktothrix rubescens , a toxin-producing cyanobacterium. Here, we report the detection and identification of 14 anabenopeptins from this P. rubescens strain, seven of which are known and seven are newly reported herein. Moreover, we explored the mechanisms and causes behind this cyclic phenomenon, confirming cyanobacteria's role as reliable indicators of environmental changes. This investigation further validates FDS's effectiveness in detecting and characterizing cyanobacterial blooms and their associated toxins, expanding its potential applications.
- Published
- 2023
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37. Identification of IncA Plasmid, Harboring bla VIM-1 Gene, in S. enterica Goldcoast ST358 and C. freundii ST62 Isolated in a Hospitalized Patient.
- Author
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Piccirilli A, Di Marcantonio S, Costantino V, Simonetti O, Busetti M, Luzzati R, Principe L, Di Domenico M, Rinaldi A, Cammà C, and Perilli M
- Abstract
In the present study, we analyzed the genome of two S. enterica strains TS1 and TS2 from stool and blood cultures, respectively, and one strain of C. freundii TS3, isolated from a single hospitalized patient with acute myeloid leukemia. The S. enterica Goldcoast ST358 (O:8 (C2-C3) serogroup), sequenced by the MiSeq Illumina system, showed the presence of β-lactamase genes ( bla
VIM-1 , blaSHV-12 and blaOXA-10 ), aadA1 , ant(2″)-Ia , aac(6')-Iaa , aac(6')-Ib3 , aac(6')-Ib-cr , qnrVC6 , parC(T57S), and several incompatibility plasmids. A wide variety of insertion sequences (ISs) and transposon elements were identified. In C. freundii TS3, these were the blaVIM-1 , blaCMY-150 , and blaSHV-12 , aadA1 , aac(6')-Ib3 , aac(6')-Ib-cr , mph(A) , sul1 , dfrA14 , ARR-2 , qnrVC6 , and qnrB38 . IncA plasmid isolated from E.coli /K12 transconjugant and C. freundii exhibited a sequence identity >99.9%. The transfer of IncA plasmid was evaluated by conjugation experiments.- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Estimated health and economic impact of using high-dose influenza vaccine on respiratory and circulatory plus respiratory hospitalizations of older adults in Australia.
- Author
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Raina MacIntyre C, Kevin Yin J, Felter C, Menzies RI, Thommes E, Largeron N, Moa AM, Trent M, Costantino V, Choi S, and Alvarez FP
- Abstract
Background: Standard dose influenza vaccine provides moderate protection from infection, but with lower effectiveness among the elderly. High dose and adjuvanted vaccines (HD-TIV and aTIV) were developed to address this. This study aims to estimate the incremental health and economic impact of using HD-TIV (high dose trivalent vaccine) instead of aTIV (adjuvanted trivalent vaccine) on respiratory and circulatory plus respiratory hospitalizations of older people (≥65 years) in Australia., Methods: This is a modelling study comparing predicted hospitalization outcomes in people receiving HD-TIV or aTIV during an average influenza season in Australia. Hospitalization records of Australian adults ≥65 years of age from 01 April to 30 November during 15 influenza seasons (2002-2017 excluding 2009, which was a pandemic) were extracted from the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare [AIHW] and used to calculate hospitalisation rates during an average season. Relative vaccine effectiveness data for aTIV and HD-TIV were used to estimate morbidity burden related to influenza., Results: Between 2002 and 2017, the average respiratory hospitalization rate among older people during influenza season (April-November) was 3,445/100,000 population-seasons, with an average cost of AU$ 7,175 per admission. The average circulatory plus respiratory hospitalization rate among older Australian people during that time was 10,393/100,000 population-seasons, with an average cost of AU$ 7829 per admission. For older Australians, HD-TIV may avert an additional 6,315-9,410 respiratory admissions each year, with an incremental healthcare cost saving of AU$ 15.9-38.2 million per year compared to aTIV. Similar results were also noted for circulatory plus respiratory hospitalizations., Conclusions: From the modelled estimations, HD-TIV was associated with less economic burden and fewer respiratory, and circulatory plus respiratory hospitalizations than aTIV for older Australians., Competing Interests: 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. JKY, CF, RIM, ET, FPA, SC and NL are employees of Sanofi, a company that manufactures and commercializes influenza vaccines. C Raina MacIntyre receives funding from Sanofi for investigator-driven research on influenza epidemiology. She is on the WHO COVID-19 Vaccine Composition Technical Advisory Group and WHO Smallpox and Monkeypox Working Group, and received funding from the National Health and Medical Research Council and Medical Research Futures Fund., (© 2023 The Authors.)
- Published
- 2023
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39. A urokinase-associated outbreak of Ralstonia mannitolilytica bloodstream infections in haemodialysis patients in north-eastern Italy, January to April 2023.
- Author
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Fabricci M, Trinca A, Talotti L, Busetti M, Fotakis EA, Merakou C, Koncan R, Ghiotti A, Negri C, Di Maso V, Bosco M, Antonelli A, Coppi M, Rossolini GM, Giuliani C, Scarpis E, Gregoretti B, Licastro D, Luzzati R, and Costantino V
- Subjects
- Humans, Urokinase-Type Plasminogen Activator genetics, Urokinase-Type Plasminogen Activator therapeutic use, Renal Dialysis adverse effects, Disease Outbreaks, Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections diagnosis, Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections drug therapy, Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections epidemiology, Sepsis epidemiology
- Abstract
An outbreak of Ralstonia mannitolilytica bloodstream infections occurred in four hospitals in north-eastern Italy, involving 20 haemodialysis patients with tunnelled central vascular catheter access. We identified as the outbreak source a batch of urokinase vials imported from India contaminated with R. mannitolilytica. Whole genome sequences of the clinical and urokinase strains were highly related, and only urokinase-treated patients were reported with R. mannitolilytica infections (attack rate = 34%; 95% confidence interval: 22.1-47.4). Discontinuation of the contaminated urokinase terminated the outbreak.
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
40. Maximizing rehabilitation outcomes in geriatric hip fracture patients: the impact of surgical variables.
- Author
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Amata O, Ridolo E, Costantino V, Panella L, Incorvaia C, Caserta AV, and Callegari C
- Subjects
- Humans, Aged, Hospitalization, Treatment Outcome, Patient Discharge, Activities of Daily Living, Hip Fractures
- Abstract
Background and Aim: Hip fracture is a major traumatic event with high mortality and disability rate. Its management in the acute setting and in the rehabilitation process is highly debated. This study evaluates the possible determinants of hip fracture rehabilitation outcome, among which surgical intervention type, weight-bearing status and hospitalization length Methods: The data of 738 hip fracture patients, who completed rehabilitation process in our centre, were collected and patients' functional abilities at the time of admission and discharge were analysed., Results: It has been observed that functional recovery depends on several factors: the type of surgery, the post-operative course and related complications, the hospitalisation time, the surgeon's techniques and expertise and the Orthopaedics centre where the operation is performed., Conclusions: In conclusion, data integration in perspective of an individualised rehabilitation program appears crucial for the functional recovery of the hip fracture patient.
- Published
- 2023
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41. Candida lipolytica Bloodstream Infection in an Adult Patient with COVID-19 and Alcohol Use Disorder: A Unique Case and a Systematic Review of the Literature.
- Author
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Simonetti O, Zerbato V, Sincovich S, Cosimi L, Zorat F, Costantino V, Di Santolo M, Busetti M, Di Bella S, Principe L, and Luzzati R
- Abstract
Candida lipolytica is an uncommon Candida species causing invasive fungemia. This yeast is mainly associated with the colonisation of intravascular catheters, complicated intra-abdominal infections, and infections in the paediatric population. Here, we report a case of C. lipolytica bloodstream infection in a 53-year-old man. He was admitted for an alcohol withdrawal syndrome and mild COVID-19. Among the primary risk factors for candidemia, only the use of broad-spectrum antimicrobials was reported. The empiric treatment was commenced with caspofungin and then targeted with intravenous fluconazole. Infective endocarditis was ruled out using echocardiography, and PET/TC was negative for other deep-seated foci of fungal infection. The patient was discharged after blood culture clearance and clinical healing. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first case of C. lipolytica candidemia in a patient with COVID-19 and alcohol use disorder. We performed a systematic review of bloodstream infections caused by C. lipolytica . Clinicians should be aware of the possibility of C. lipolytica bloodstream infections in patients with alcohol use disorder, especially in a COVID-19 setting.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Novel Insights in the Potential of Halogenated Polyketide-Peptide Molecules as Lead Compounds in Cancer Drug Discovery.
- Author
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Pellicioni V, Esposito G, Greco G, Cruz-Chamorro I, Ferrini F, Sestili P, Teta R, Fimognari C, and Costantino V
- Subjects
- Animals, Chromatography, Liquid, Tandem Mass Spectrometry, Peptides pharmacology, Peptides metabolism, Drug Discovery, Polyketides pharmacology, Polyketides metabolism, Porifera chemistry, Antineoplastic Agents pharmacology, Antineoplastic Agents metabolism, Neoplasms drug therapy
- Abstract
In this interdisciplinary study, we selected two compounds, namely, smenamide A, a peptide-polyketide, and smenolactone D, a polyketide, as models because they are representative of two different classes of molecules isolated from the marine sponge Smenospongia aurea . The organic extract of Smenospongia aurea was analyzed using a combination of high-resolution LC-MS/MS and molecular networking, a recently developed method for automated LC-MS data analysis. The analyses were targeted to highlight clusters made by chlorinated compounds present in the extracts. Then, the two model compounds were analyzed for their bioactivity. Data reported here show that smenamide A did not exhibit a cytotoxic effect, while smenolactone D was cytotoxic on different tumor cell lines and was able to induce different types of cell death, including ferroptosis and apoptosis.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. A Four-Step Platform to Optimize Growth Conditions for High-Yield Production of Siderophores in Cyanobacteria.
- Author
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Kundu K, Teta R, Esposito G, Stornaiuolo M, and Costantino V
- Abstract
In response to Iron deprivation and in specific environmental conditions, the cyanobacteria Anabaena flos aquae produce siderophores, iron-chelating molecules that in virtue of their interesting environmental and clinical applications, are recently gaining the interest of the pharmaceutical industry. Yields of siderophore recovery from in vitro producing cyanobacterial cultures are, unfortunately, very low and reach most of the times only analytical quantities. We here propose a four-step experimental pipeline for a rapid and inexpensive identification and optimization of growth parameters influencing, at the transcriptional level, siderophore production in Anabaena flos aquae . The four-steps pipeline consists of: (1) identification of the promoter region of the operon of interest in the genome of Anabaena flos aquae ; (2) cloning of the promoter in a recombinant DNA vector, upstream the cDNA coding for the Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP) followed by its stable transformation in Escherichia Coli ; (3) identification of the environmental parameters affecting expression of the gene in Escherichia coli and their application to the cultivation of the Anabaena strain; (4) identification of siderophores by the combined use of high-resolution tandem mass spectrometry and molecular networking. This multidisciplinary, sustainable, and green pipeline is amenable to automation and is virtually applicable to any cyanobacteria, or more in general, to any microorganisms.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Molecular Networking Revealed Unique UV-Absorbing Phospholipids: Favilipids from the Marine Sponge Clathria faviformis .
- Author
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Scarpato S, Teta R, De Cicco P, Borrelli F, Pawlik JR, Costantino V, and Mangoni A
- Subjects
- Animals, Tandem Mass Spectrometry, Molecular Structure, Porifera chemistry, Biological Products chemistry
- Abstract
Analysis of extracts of the marine sponge Clathria faviformis by high-resolution LC-MS
2 and molecular networking resulted in the discovery of a new family of potentially UV-protecting phospholipids, the favilipids. One of them, favilipid A ( 1 ), was isolated and its structure determined by mass and tandem mass spectrometry, NMR, electronic circular dichroism (ECD), and computational studies. Favilipid A, which has no close analogues among natural products, possesses an unprecedented structure characterized by a 4-aminodihydropiridinium core, resulting in UV-absorbing properties that are very unusual for a phospholipid. Consequently, favilipid A could inspire the development of a new class of molecules to be used as sunscreen ingredients. In addition, favilipid A inhibited by 58-48% three kinases (JAK3, IKKβ, and SYK) involved in the regulation of the immune system, suggesting a potential use for treatment of autoimmune diseases, hematologic cancers, and other inflammatory states.- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Modeling on the Effects of Deliberate Release of Aerosolized Inhalational Bacillus anthracis (Anthrax) on an Australian Population.
- Author
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Costantino V, Bahl P, Doolan C, de Silva C, Heslop D, Chen X, Lim S, and MacIntyre CR
- Subjects
- Humans, Australia, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Bioterrorism prevention & control, Bacillus anthracis, Anthrax prevention & control
- Abstract
This study aimed to determine optimal mitigation strategies in the event of an aerosolized attack with Bacillus anthracis , a category A bioterrorism agent with a case fatality rate of nearly 100% if inhaled and untreated. To simulate the effect of an anthrax attack, we used a plume dispersion model for Sydney, Australia, accounting for weather conditions. We determined the radius of exposure in different sizes of attack scenarios by spore quantity released per second. Estimations of different spore concentrations were then used to calculate the exposed population to inform a Susceptible-Exposed-Infected-Recovered (SEIR) deterministic mathematical model. Results are shown as estimates of the total number of exposed and infected people, along with the burden of disease, to quantify the amount of vaccination and antibiotics doses needed for stockpiles. For the worst-case scenario, over 500,000 people could be exposed and over 300,000 infected. The number of deaths depends closely on timing to start postexposure prophylaxis. Vaccination used as a postexposure prophylaxis in conjunction with antibiotics is the most effective mitigation strategy to reduce deaths after an aerosolized attack and is more effective when the response starts early (2 days after release) and has high adherence, while it makes only a small difference when started late (after 10 days).
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Design and characterization of a new pressurized flat panel photobioreactor for microalgae cultivation and CO 2 bio-fixation.
- Author
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Carone M, Alpe D, Costantino V, Derossi C, Occhipinti A, Zanetti M, and Riggio VA
- Subjects
- Biomass, Carbon Dioxide, Photobioreactors, Chlorophyceae, Microalgae
- Abstract
Microalgae-based biorefinery processes are gaining particular importance as a biotechnological tool for direct carbon dioxide fixation and production of high-quality biomass and energy feedstock for different industrial markets. However, despite the many technological advances in photobioreactor designs and operations, microalgae cultivation is still limited due to the low yields achieved in open systems and to the high investment and operation costs of closed photobioreactors. In this work, a new alveolar flat panel photobioreactor was designed and characterized with the aim of achieving high microalgae productivities and CO
2 bio-fixation rates. Moreover, the energy efficiency of the employed pump-assisted hydraulic circuit was evaluated. The 1.3 cm thick alveolar flat-panels enhance the light utilization, whereas the hydraulic design of the photobioreactor aims to improve the global CO2 gas-liquid mass transfer coefficient (kL aCO2 ). The mixing time, liquid flow velocity, and kL aCO2 as well as the uniformity matrix of the artificial lighting source were experimentally calculated. The performance of the system was tested by cultivating the green microalga Acutodesmus obliquus. A volumetric biomass concentration equal to 1.9 g L-1 was achieved after 7 days under controlled indoor cultivation conditions with a CO2 bio-fixation efficiency of 64% of total injected CO2 . The (gross) energy consumption related to substrate handling was estimated to be between 27 and 46 Wh m-3 , without any cost associated to CO2 injection and O2 degassing. The data suggest that this pilot-scale cultivation system may constitute a relevant technology in the development of microalgae-based industrial scenario for CO2 mitigation and biomass production., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest 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 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Effectiveness of facemasks for opening a university campus in Mississippi, United States - a modelling study.
- Author
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MacIntyre CR, Costantino V, Bian L, and Bethel C
- Subjects
- United States epidemiology, Humans, Universities, Masks, Mississippi epidemiology, Students, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: Universities are at risk for COVID-19 and Fall semester begins in August 2020 for most campuses in the United States. The Southern States, including Mississippi, are experiencing a high incidence of COVID-19. Aims: The objective of this study is to model the impact of face masks and hybrid learning on the COVID-19 epidemic on Mississippi State University (MSU) campus. Methods: We used an age structured deterministic mathematical model of COVID-19 transmission within the MSU campus population, accounting for asymptomatic transmission. We modeled facemasks for the campus population at varying proportions of mask use and effectiveness, and Hyflex model of partial online learning with reduction of people on campus. Results: Facemasks can substantially reduce cases and deaths, even with modest effectiveness. Even 20% uptake of masks will halve the epidemic size. Facemasks combined with Hyflex reduces epidemic size even more. Conclusions: Universal use of face masks and reducing the number of people on campus may allow safer universities reopening.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Computational Metabolomics Tools Reveal Subarmigerides, Unprecedented Linear Peptides from the Marine Sponge Holobiont Callyspongia subarmigera .
- Author
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Castaldi A, Teta R, Esposito G, Beniddir MA, De Voogd NJ, Duperron S, Costantino V, and Bourguet-Kondracki ML
- Subjects
- Animals, Tandem Mass Spectrometry, Peptides, Metabolomics, Molecular Structure, Callyspongia microbiology, Porifera chemistry
- Abstract
A detailed examination of a unique molecular family, restricted to the Callyspongia genus, in a molecular network obtained from an in-house Haplosclerida marine sponge collection (including Haliclona , Callyspongia , Xestospongia , and Petrosia species) led to the discovery of subarmigerides, a series of rare linear peptides from Callyspongia subarmigera , a genus mainly known for polyacetylenes and lipids. The structure of the sole isolated peptide, subarmigeride A ( 1 ) was elucidated through extensive 1D and 2D NMR spectroscopy, HRMS/MS, and Marfey's method to assign its absolute configuration. The putative structures of seven additional linear peptides were proposed by an analysis of their respective MS/MS spectra and a comparison of their fragmentation patterns with the heptapeptide 1 . Surprisingly, several structurally related analogues of subarmigeride A ( 1 ) occurred in one distinct cluster from the molecular network of the cyanobacteria strains of the Guadeloupe mangroves, suggesting that the true producer of this peptide family might be the microbial sponge-associated community, i.e., the sponge-associated cyanobacteria.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Modelling of COVID-19 vaccination strategies and herd immunity, in scenarios of limited and full vaccine supply in NSW, Australia.
- Author
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MacIntyre CR, Costantino V, and Trent M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Aged, Australia epidemiology, COVID-19 Vaccines, Humans, Immunity, Herd, New South Wales epidemiology, SARS-CoV-2, Vaccination, COVID-19 prevention & control, Vaccines
- Abstract
Several vaccines for SARS-CoV-2 are expected to be available in Australia in 2021. Initial supply is limited and will require a judicious vaccination strategy until supply is unrestricted. If vaccines have efficacy as post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) in contacts, this provides more policy options. We used a deterministic mathematical model of epidemic response with limited supply (age-targeted or ring vaccination) and mass vaccination for the State of New South Wales (NSW) in Australia. For targeted vaccination, the effectiveness of vaccinating health workers, young people and older adults was compared. For mass vaccination, we tested varying vaccine efficacy (VE) and distribution capacities. With a limited vaccine stockpile enough for 1 million people in NSW, if there is efficacy as PEP, the most efficient way to control COVID-19 will be ring vaccination, however at least 90% of contacts per case needs to be traced and vaccinated. Health worker vaccination is required for health system resilience. Age based strategies with restricted doses make minimal impact on the epidemic, but vaccinating older people prevents more deaths. Herd immunity can only be achieved with mass vaccination. With 90% VE against all infection, herd immunity can be achieved by vaccinating 66% of the population. A vaccine with less than 70% VE cannot achieve herd immunity and will result in ongoing risk of outbreaks. For mass vaccination, distributing at least 60,000 doses per day is required to achieve control. Slower rates of vaccination will result in the population living with COVID-19 longer, and higher cases and deaths., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: CR MacIntyre has been on an advisory board for COVID-19 vaccine for Seqirus and consulted for Astra Zeneca Australia on COVID-19 vaccines. She has been on advisory boards for influenza, RSV and pneumococcal vaccines in the last 3 years for Seqirus, Sanofi, Pfizer and Janssen. The other authors have no conflicts to declare., (Copyright © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. A Glimpse at Siderophores Production by Anabaena flos-aquae UTEX 1444.
- Author
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Teta R, Esposito G, Kundu K, Stornaiuolo M, Scarpato S, Pollio A, and Costantino V
- Subjects
- Ecosystem, Iron, Siderophores, Anabaena, Dolichospermum flos-aquae
- Abstract
In this study, a strain of Anabaena flos-aquae UTEX 1444 was cultivated in six different concentrations of iron (III). Cultures were extracted with organic solvents and analyzed using our dereplication strategy, based on the combined use of high-resolution tandem mass spectrometry and molecular networking. The analysis showed the presence of the siderophores' family, named synechobactins, only in the zero iron (III) treatment culture. Seven unknown synechobactin variants were present in the extract, and their structures have been determined by a careful HRMS/MS analysis. This study unveils the capability of Anabaena flos-aquae UTEX 1444 to produce a large array of siderophores and may be a suitable model organism for a sustainable scale-up exploitation of such bioactive molecules, for the bioremediation of contaminated ecosystems, as well as in drug discovery.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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