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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Extenzivně rezistentní Acinetobacter baumannii v České republice: populačně genetická struktura a mechanizmy rezistence ke karbapenemům a aminoglykosidům / Extensively resistant Acinetobacter baumannii in the Czech Republic: population genetic structure and mechanisms of resistance to carbapenems and aminoglycosides

Švandová, Ladislava January 2018 (has links)
This study focuses on the question of the epidemiology of resistance to antibiotics in Acinetobacter baumannii, which is nowadays one of the most problematic bacterial patho- gens associated with failing antimicrobial therapy. Its aim was to define population-genetic properties, epidemiology and the nature of multidrug resistance for a sample of the current population of A. baumannii from Czechia. A total of 55 isolates were collected in eight medi- cal facilities in central Bohemia from October 2016 to May 2018. The isolates were assessed for their identity at the species, clonal and strain levels as well as resistance phenotype and genotype; they were classified into five clonal groups, each of which encompassed isolates that were likely to be epidemiologically related. The 55 isolates studied belonged, nearly exclusively, to global clone ECII, with 53 % of them forming a genetically relatively homoge- neous group characterized by extensive resistance to antibiotics (susceptible only to col- istin), the presence of genes encoding ArmA a OXA-23 (resistance to all aminoglycosides and carbapenems) and spread in all locations. The in-depth epidemiological analysis of isolates from the city of Příbram and its vicinity indicated the regional spread of two strains, one of which belonged to the...
2

Le clone épidémique "Bourg-en-Bresse" de l’espèce Burkholderia cenocepacia : origine, positionnement phylétique et phénomènes génétiques liés à son émergence / The "Bourg-en-Bresse" epidemic clone of Burkholderia cenocepacia : origin, phylogenetic position and genetic events associated with its emergence

Graindorge, Arnault 25 November 2009 (has links)
Le complexe Burkholderia cepacia (Bcc) englobe 17 espèces retrouvées dans les infections pulmonaires d'individus atteints de mucoviscidose. Les bactéries de ce complexe sont présentes dans les sols, la rhizosphère de grandes cultures, les eaux usées et peuvent également être rencontrées dans le cadre d'infections nosocomiales. En France, les espèces B. multivorans et B. cenocepacia (Bcen) sont les espèces majoritaires au niveau des infections de patients atteints de mucoviscidose. Divers clones épidémiques ont été décrits au sein de l’espèce Bcen dont le clone ET12 associé au "syndrome cepacia". En 2004, une épidémie nosocomiale impliquant un clone du Bcc est survenue dans un hôpital de l’Ain. Durant ce travail, l’origine de ce clone (B&B), sa classification au sein du Bcc et certains phénomènes génétiques liés à son émergence ont été étudiés. Cela a permis d’identifier ce clone comme appartenant à l’espèce Bcen et une forte proximité de celui-ci avec la lignée ET12. L’étude des facteurs transcriptionnels de la famille σ70 au sein du Bcc a mis en évidence une structure génétique similaire entre la lignée ET12 et ce clone, mais différente de celle observée chez les autres espèces du Bcc. L’analyse d’éléments génétiques répétés de la famille des séquences d’insertion (IS) a cependant permis d’observer une organisation génomique distincte de la lignée ET12. Celle-ci a été reliée à des phénomènes d’instabilité génétique notamment à des phénomènes d’acquisition d’éléments génétiques mobiles de type îlot génomique. L’ensemble de ce travail a permis de caractériser un ensemble de phénomènes génétiques pouvant expliquer l’émergence de clones épidémiques tels que le clone B&B. / The Burkholderia cepacia complex (Bcc) comprises 17 species found in lung infections of individuals with cystic fibrosis. The bacteria of this complex are present in the soil, the rhizosphere of field crops, wastewater and may also be encountered in nosocomial infections. In France, the B. multivorans and B. cenocepacia species are the major species in infections of cystic fibrosis patients. Various epidemic clones have been described within the B. cenocepacia species whose ET12 clone associated with "cepacia syndrome". In 2004, a nosocomial outbreak involving a clone of Bcc occurred in a French hospital. During this outbreak, origin of this clone (B&B clone), its classification within the Bcc and several genetic events associated with its emergence have been studied. These investigations have identified this clone as belonging to the species B. cenocepacia with a strong proximity with the ET12 lineage. The study of transcriptional factors of σ70 family within the Bcc has revealed a similar genetic structure between the ET12 lineage and this clone, but different from that observed in other species of Bcc. Analysis of genetic elements repeated family of insertion sequences (IS), however, allowed to observe a distinct genomic organization of the ET12 lineage. It has been linked to phenomen of genetic instability including acquisition of mobile genetic elements like genomic island (GI). All of this work has helped to characterize a set of genetic events may explain the emergence of epidemic clones such as clone B&B.

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