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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.
171

Wireless Signal Conditioning

Valero, Daniel 08 1900 (has links)
This thesis presents a new approach to extend and reduce the transmission range in wireless systems. Conditioning is defined as purposeful electromagnetic interference that affects a wireless signal as it propagates through the air. This interference can be used constructively to enhance a signal and increase its energy, or destructively to reduce energy. The constraints and limitations of the technology are described as a system model, and a flow chart is used to describe the circuit process. Remaining theoretical in nature, practical circuit implementations are foregone in the interest of elementary simulations depicting the interactions of modulated signals as they experience phase mismatch. Amplitude modulation and frequency modulation are explored with using both positive and negative conditioning, and conclusions to whether one is more suitable than the other are made.
172

Degenerate Oligonucleotide Primed - Polymerase Chain Reaction Evaluation And Optimization To Improve Downstream Forensic STR Analysis Of Low Quality/Low Quantity DNA

Thompson, Lindsay Paige 01 January 2006 (has links)
When forensic biological samples yield low quality/low quantity DNA, thecurrent STR analysis methods do not generate acceptable profiles. Whole genomeamplification can be used to pre-amplify the entire genome for downstream analyses. A commercially available kit for DOP-PCR, a form of WGA, is currently being used in the clinical for downstream single locus targets. Forensic analyses utilize a multiplex amplification. This study determined that the "home brew" created by our lab performs the same as the commercially available kit. Future optimization studies of DOP-PCR can utilize this "home brew". Additionally, this research determined that a 10 second increase in electrokinetic injection time onto the Capillary Electrophoresis (CE) in combination with a post-STR amplification purification and elution into formamide produces a slightly higher percent STR allele success over the standard protocol. After future optimization studies, this may be a useful method to obtain more accurate and complete STR profiles from low quality/low quantity biological samples.
173

Single-Step, Optical Biosensors for the Rapid and Sensitive Detection of Bacterial and Viral Pathogens

Nicolini, Ariana Marie, Nicolini, Ariana Marie January 2016 (has links)
This dissertation discusses the development of inexpensive, easy-to-use, and field-deployable diagnostic techniques and devices for the early detection of various pathogens, commonly found in clinical samples and contaminated food and water. Infectious diseases account for about 90% of world health problems, killing approximately 14 million people annually, the majority of which reside in developing countries. In 2012, the World Health Organization (WHO) published data on the top 10 causes of death across the globe. Although communicable disease is a prevalent cause of fatality, both low-income and high-income countries, pathogen species and transmission are very different. Nearly 60% of deaths in developing countries are caused by food, water, air or blood-borne pathogens. The most prevalent illnesses are diarrheal disease, malaria, and HIV/AIDS. By contrast, the leading causes of death in developed countries (heart disease, cancer, and stroke) are not communicable and are often preventable. However, there is an increasing need for the development of rapid and accurate methods for pathogen identification in clinical samples, due to the growing prevalence of antibiotic-resistant strains. Incorrect, or unneeded antibiotic therapies result in the evolution of extremely aggressive nosocomial (hospital-acquired) infections, such as methicillin- (MRSA) and vancomycin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (VRSA). The implementation of rapid, easy to use and cost-effective diagnostics will reduce the frequency of pathogen-related deaths in underdeveloped countries, and improve targeted antibiotic treatment in hospital settings, thus decreasing the potential development of more treatment-resistant "super bugs". This research includes novel techniques utilizing two major sensing modalities: serological (i.e. immunological), and nucleic acid amplification testing (NAATs). We first developed a highly sensitive (limit-of-detection = 100 CFU mL-1) particle immunoassay that takes advantage of elastic and inelastic light scatter phenomena, for optical detection of target antigens. This assay is performed upon a unique nanofibrous substrate that promotes multiplexing on a user-friendly platform. We then developed a novel technique, termed emulsion loop-mediated isothermal amplification (eLAMP), in which the target amplicon is detected in real-time, again utilizing light scattering detection and quantification. Both techniques require no sample pre-treatments, and can be combined with smartphone imaging for detection of targets in under 15 minutes. These methods have the potential to improve the speed and sensitivity of early pathogenic identification, thus leading to a reduction in preventative deaths and a decrease in global economic costs associated with infectious disease in clinical and other settings.
174

Analysis of Nanopore Detector Measurements using Machine Learning Methods, with Application to Single-Molecule Kinetics

Landry, Matthew 18 May 2007 (has links)
At its core, a nanopore detector has a nanometer-scale biological membrane across which a voltage is applied. The voltage draws a DNA molecule into an á-hemolysin channel in the membrane. Consequently, a distinctive channel current blockade signal is created as the molecule flexes and interacts with the channel. This flexing of the molecule is characterized by different blockade levels in the channel current signal. Previous experiments have shown that a nanopore detector is sufficiently sensitive such that nearly identical DNA molecules were classified successfully using machine learning techniques such as Hidden Markov Models and Support Vector Machines in a channel current based signal analysis platform [4-9]. In this paper, methods for improving feature extraction are presented to improve both classification and to provide biologists and chemists with a better understanding of the physical properties of a given molecule.
175

Molecular Point-of-Care diagnostic for Treponema pallidum subsp. pertenue (yaws)

Laud Anthony Basing (6640481) 14 May 2019 (has links)
<div>The eradication of yaws a neglected tropical disease caused by Treponema pallidum subsp. pertenue, which affects children living in very deprived hard to reach rural communities is constrained by the lack of rapid, accurate diagnosis. I sought to develop a molecular point-of-care test for the diagnosis of yaws. A Loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) assay with primers targeting the conserved gene, tp0967, with visual detection by lateral flow test strip was developed and optimized. The limit of detection was evaluated while 63 samples from clinical cases of yaws and 5 samples with PCR-confirmed syphilis were used to determine the sensitivity and specificity of the assay compared to the current molecular testing protocol. Reagents were dried in tubes and tested up to 14 days. The developed LAMP assay was found to be optimal when run at 65oC in a water bath for 30 minutes. The limit of detection was 2.7*104 DNA copies/ml. The sensitivity of the LAMP assay using unextracted and DNA extracted samples were 0.67 and 1.00 respectively. None of the syphilis samples tested positive in any of the assays. We show the development of a fast and sensitive LAMP assay for yaws detected by lateral flow test strip. Using extracted DNA, the assay sensitivity is at par with gold standard detection. The assay can be adapted to minimal sample processing required for in-field detection without DNA extraction.</div><div><br></div>
176

Expressão de Cry1F, controle de Spodoptera frugiperda (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) e produtividade de grãos em híbridos de milho homozigotos e hemizigotos transgênicos /

Moraes, Kian Eghrari. January 2017 (has links)
Orientador: Gustavo Vitti Môro / Banca: Rinaldo Cesar de Paula / Banca: Bruno Henrique Sardinha de Souza / Resumo: Os híbridos de milho transgênicos, em geral, apresentam o locus transgênico em hemizigose. O objetivo do trabalho foi avaliar o efeito do número de alelos transgênicos em híbridos de milho em relação à expressão de Cry1F nas folhas, ataque de Spodoptera frugiperda (J.E. Smith) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) e a produtividade de grãos, utilizando cinco híbridos isogênicos nas versões transgênicas homozigota e hemizigota, além da versão convencional de um dos híbridos. O nível de expressão da proteína Cry1F (PRYF) foi quantificado pela técnica de ELISA. Nos experimentos de campo, conduzidos na primeira e segunda safras do ano agrícola 2015/2016, avaliou-se o ataque de S. frugiperda em campo (ALC), por infestação natural, e a produtividade de grãos (PG). Dois bioensaios foram realizados em laboratório para avaliar a sobrevivência larval de S. frugiperda de 1º instar (SL) alimentadas com as folhas dos híbridos. Os híbridos transgênicos, homozigotos e hemizigotos, não apresentaram silenciamento gênico. Os híbridos homozigotos apresentaram maior concentração de proteína Cry1F. Quando houve elevado ALC, na primeira safra, os híbridos transgênicos foram superiores à testemunha convencional na PG, entretanto, não houve diferença entre os híbridos homozigotos e hemizigotos. Os híbridos transgênicos também foram superiores à testemunha convencional nos bioensaios, sendo que os homozigotos apresentaram as menores médias de SL. A presença de um alelo transgênico a mais nos híbridos homozigotos ... (Resumo completo, clicar acesso eletrônico abaixo) / Abstracts: Genetically modified (GM) maize hybrids, in general, possess the transgenic locus in a hemizygous state. The aim of the study was to assess the effect of the number of transgenic alleles in maize hybrids regarding the Cry1F leaf expression, Spodoptera frugiperda (J.E. Smith) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) attack and grain yield, through the evaluation of five isogenic hybrids in the homozygous and hemizygous transgenic versions and a non-GM hybrid. Cry1F protein expression levels (PRYF) were quantified by ELISA. In field experiments conducted during the summer and autumn seasons of 2015/2016, we assessed the leaf-feeding injury of S. frugiperda in the field (LFI) by natural infestation and grain yield (GY). Two bioassays were carried out in the laboratory to evaluate the survival of first-instar S. frugiperda larvae (SL) fed with the maize hybrids. Transgenic hybrids did not present gene silencing. Homozygous hybrids presented higher Cry1F expression levels than hemizygous hybrids. With high LFI during the summer season, transgenic hybrids were superior to the non-GM for GY, however, there was no difference between homozygous and hemizygous hybrids. The transgenic hybrids were superior to the non-GM hybrid in the bioassays, and the homozygotes caused the highest mortality of S. frugiperda. The addition of one transgenic allele in the homozygous hybrids provided an additive genetic effect, increasing PRYF and S. frugiperda control, whereas GY was not affected. In conclusion, there are no limitations to the use of transgenic homozygous maize hybrids, which presented better S. frugiperda control comparing to hemizygous hybrid. / Mestre
177

Identificação de Amaranthus palmeri, caracterização da resistência múltipla a herbicidas inibidores da ALS e da EPSPS e controle químico baseado no uso das novas tecnologias transgênicas / Identification of Amaranthus palmeri, characterization of multiple-resistance to ALS and EPSPS inhibitors herbicides and chemical control based on the use of genetically modified herbicide-tolerant crops technologies

Borgato, Ednaldo Alexandre 28 February 2018 (has links)
A planta daninha Amaranthus palmeri é nativa dos Estados Unidos, porém foi pela primeira vez relatada no Brasil no ano de 2015. Embora comprovadamente com resistência múltipla aos herbicidas inibidores da ALS e da EPSPS, até o momento não foram investigadas as bases moleculares da resistência. Além disso, por causa da recente introdução da planta daninha no país, alternativas de manejo com culturas tolerantes a herbicidas necessitam ser estudadas. Sendo assim, os objetivos desse trabalho são de caracterizar a espécie de planta daninha introduzida no país, identificar os mecanismos de resistência aos herbicidas inibidores da ALS e da EPSPS presentes no biótipo, e propor abordagens de manejo em ambientes dos novos eventos transgênicos resistentes a herbicidas. Um bioensaio utilizando marcadores genéticos foi desenvolvido para confirmar que a população coletada no estado do Mato Grosso (BR-R) é A. palmeri, e não A. tuberculatus, outra espécie dióica do gênero Amaranthus. Os resultados de experimentos de curvas de dose-resposta e acúmulo de chiquimato indicaram que a BR-R possui alto nível de resistência, com DL50 de 4.426 e 3.400 g glyphosate ha-1 no primeiro e segundo experimento, respectivamente, mais que o dobro da dose típicamente recomendada para o controle da espécie e, adicionalmente, observou se acúmulo mínimo de chiquimato a concentração de 1 mM nos tecidos das plantas tratadas com o herbicida. BR-R também foi resistente a herbicidas dos grupos químicos das sulfoniluréias e imidazolinonas. O mecanismo de resistência ao glyphosate encontrado nesta população foi a super expressão gência, através do aumento no número de cópias do gene da EPSPS no genoma da planta BR-R, entre 50 e 179 cópias adicionais. Além disso, duas substituições de aminoácidos foram observadas na sequência da ALS, W574L e S653N, conferindo resistência tanto a sulfoniluréias quanto a imidazolinonas. No experimento utilizandos os herbicidas correspondentes às culturas geneticamente modificadas com novos traits de tolerância a herbicidas observou se, de uma forma geral, que as associações de herbicidas apresentaram níveis de controle mais satisfatórios. Assim, esta pesquisa confirma a introdução de da espécie A. palmeri no Brasil, assim como a resistência múltipla aos herbicidas inibidores da EPSPS e da ALS. Seu manejo é mais eficaz através da associação de herbicidas, garantindo assim o uso racional das novas tecnologias de culturas geneticamente modificadas com tolerância a herbicidas. / Palmer Amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri) is a weed species native to the United States, but it was reported in Brazil for the first time in 2015. Despite this population being resistant to EPSPS and ALS inhibitors, the molecular basis of its multiple resistance is unknown up to date. Because of this species introduction to Brazil, alternatives of management with the new herbicide-tolerant crops technologies need to be studied. The objectives of this research are to characterize the weed species introduced to Brazil, identify the mechanisms conferring resistance to ALS and EPSPS inhibitors herbicides, and to propose management approaches in environments with the new genetically modified herbicide-tolerant crops. A genotyping bioassay using genetic markers was developed to confirm that the species collected in the state of Mato Grosso (BR-R) is indeed A. palmeri and not A. tuberculatus, another dioceous species in the Amaranthus genus. Dose-response experiments and shikimate accumulation bioassay data indicate high level of resistance, with LD50 of 4,426 and 3,400 g glyphosate ha-1 in the first and second experiments, respectively, higher than the double rate tipically recommended to control it, and minimal accumulation in BR-R with 1 mM of glyphosate in treated plants in the leaf disks assay. BR-R also was resistanto to sulfonilurea and imidazolinone herbicides. The mechanism conferring resistance to glyphosate identified in this population was gene amplification, with increased EPSPS copy number - between 50 and 179 more copies in BR-R. Besides, two target-site mutations were identified in the ALS gene sequencing, W574L and S653N, conferring resistance to sulfonilureas and imidazolinones. The weed control experiment, overal, herbicide tank mixtures achieved higher levels of control. Therefore, this research confirms the introduction of A. palmeri to Brazil, as well as its multiple resistance to EPSPS and ALS inhibitor herbicides. Its control is more efficient with herbicide mixtures, which guarantees more susteinable use of the new herbicide-tolerant crop technologies.
178

Assay Development and Characterization of <i>Mycoplasma ovis</i>

Kathy Ann Johnson (6615560) 10 June 2019 (has links)
<p><a>The hemotrophic mycoplasma<i>, Mycoplasma ovis</i>, is found in sheep and goats throughout the world. This pathogenic bacterium is capable of causing an acute, life-threatening infection as well as chronic or subclinical infections in these animals. The purposes of the present studies were to develop <i>M. ovis</i>-specific assays for detection of this hemoplasma, and to better understand infection dynamics within pregnant ewes and lambs. </a>The first study describes the development and validation of a SYBR<sup>®</sup> Green quantitative PCR (qPCR) assay, which was subsequently used to determine the prevalence of <i>M. ovis</i> infection within a population of goats and to evaluate risk factors for infection. This highly sensitive and specific assay consistently detected as few as 10 copies of plasmid/reaction. Convenience-based sampling of 362 goats from 61 farms located in Indiana revealed a prevalence of infection of 18% (95% confidence interval (CI), 14% to 22%). Bacterial loads of <i>M. ovis</i> ranged from 1.05 x 10<sup>3</sup> to 1.85 x 10<sup>5 </sup>copies/mL of blood with a mean of 1.31 x 10<sup>4 </sup>copies/mL of blood. The only risk factor associated with hemoplasma infection was the production use of the goat; dairy goats had a 3.3 fold increase compared with the prevalence in goats used for meat. This study not only demonstrates that <i>M. ovis</i> infection is common in goats in Indiana, but shows the variability of bacterial loads that can be found in chronically-infected animals. While sub-clinically infected goats may have a bacteremia, levels are characteristically less than 2.0 x 10<sup>5 </sup>copies/mL.</p><p> The second project utilized a combination of cross-sectional and longitudinal studies to estimate the prevalence of <i>M. ovis</i> infection from a cohort of naturally-infected pregnant ewes, assess changes in their bacterial loads, and determine the incidence of <i>M. ovis</i> in lambs pre- and post-weaning. The prevalence of <i>M. ovis</i> infection in ewes was not found to be significantly different during pregnancy, and before and after weaning of the lambs, with prevalence estimates of 45% (95% CI, 23.1 – 68.5), 36% (95% CI, 17.9 – 57.4), and 44%, (95% CI, 24.4 – 65.1), respectively. Bacterial loads of the ewes from the cross-sectional study ranged from 10<sup>4 </sup>to 10<sup>9 </sup>copies/mL of blood, with the median bacterial load at 10<sup>5</sup> copies/mL of blood. While higher bacterial loads are typical of an acute infection, none of the ewes in this study had overt clinical signs. The data suggest that <i>M. ovis</i> loads may be higher in pregnant sheep, particularly in ewes half-way through pregnancy. Most of the <i>M. ovis</i> infections in the study lambs were detected post-weaning which suggests that transplacental or transmammary infection of <i>M. ovis</i> are unlikely routes.</p><p> In the third study, a subset of <i>M. ovis</i> genes for use in a multi-locus sequence typing assay (MLST) were evaluated. Next-generation sequencing was performed to generate data from pooled DNA amplicons in order to identify single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) of <i>M. ovis </i>from five genes. Evaluation of the quality and depths of coverage for the reads and SNPs indicated that the pooled DNA amplicons produced reads and SNPs having high quality and sufficient depth. This pooling technique is a cost-effective alternative to whole-genome sequencing. While the MLST has good discriminatory power and may be used to identify genetically distant and divergent clusters of <i>M. ovis</i> from different geographical origins, within a herd the discrimination power is low, which may hamper its usefulness in transmission studies. </p><p> The fourth and final study was the development of a loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) assay targeting the dnaK gene of <i>M. ovis</i>, with comparison of the assay to conventional PCR (cPCR). The metal ion indicator hydroxynaphthol blue (HNB) was added prior to the reaction, which allowed for visual detection of LAMP-positive samples as indicated by a color change from violet to sky blue. <i>Mycoplasma ovis</i> was consistently detected in 45 minutes with the LAMP assay at a reaction temperature of 64°C, with more infected sheep being detected than by cPCR. Therefore, the LAMP assay is fast and reliable in the detection of <i>M. ovis</i>. The developed LAMP assay may have applications in diagnostics, surveillance and disease management as well as prevalence studies. However, a more robust molecular technique is necessary for <i>M. ovis</i> isolate or stain discrimination to investigate transmission or disease spread in an outbreak.</p><p> </p><p> In conclusion, three new molecular tools for the detection of <i>M. ovis</i> in goats and sheep were developed as results of these studies. We have shown that the qPCR assay is an efficient tool for detection and quantification of <i>M. ovis</i> loads in blood from both of these species. On the other hand, the value of the LAMP assay is for reliable detection of infection (not quantification), especially in resource-limited situations. The five-locus MLST protocol developed herein, a typing assay based on the polymorphism of five gene sequences, is a laborious technique requiring DNA extraction, PCR amplification, purification and sequencing of target loci. The value of this technique is not as a routine diagnostic, but rather it may be used to better understand the genetic diversity of <i>M. ovis</i> and investigate strain variations. Most importantly, the scheme is sufficiently robust to allow direct genotyping of <i>M. ovis</i> in total blood DNA extracts without culture isolation. The MLST approach may prove useful as a tool for future investigations of transmission and disease spread. These studies have also expanded our understanding of the infection dynamics of <i>M. ovis</i> in pregnant sheep and lambs. It is shown herein that despite the high prevalence and sometimes high bacterial loads in pregnant ewes, <i>M. ovis</i> does not appear to be transmitted to the lambs in utero or during the perinatal period. The lambs become infected mostly after weaning; this may suggest a protective effect during the pre-weaning period and/or subsequent exposure/infection from their environment. </p><br>
179

Direction and directedness in language change : an evolutionary model of selection by trend-amplification

Stadler, Kevin January 2017 (has links)
Human languages are not static entities. Linguistic conventions, whose social and communicative meaning are understood by all members of a speech community, are gradually altered or replaced, whether by changing their forms, meanings, or by the loss of or introduction of altogether new distinctions. How do large speech communities go about re-negotiating arbitrary associations in the absence of centralised coordination? This thesis first provides an overview of the plethora of explanations that have been given for language change. Approaching language change in a quantitative and evolutionary framework, mathematical and computational modelling is put forward as a tool to investigate and compare these different accounts and their purported underlying mechanisms in a rigorous fashion. The central part of the thesis investigates a relatively recent addition to the pool of mechanisms that have been proposed to influence language change: I will compare previous accounts with a momentum-based selection account of language change, a replicator-neutral model where the popularity of a variant is modulated by its momentum, i.e. its change in frequency of use in the recent past. I will discuss results from a multi-agent model which show that the dynamics of a trend-amplifying mechanism like this are characteristic of language change, in particular by exhibiting spontaneously generated s-shaped transitions. I will also discuss several empirical predictions made by a momentum-based selection account which contrast with those that can be derived from other accounts of language change. Going beyond theoretical arguments for the role of trends in language change, I will go on to present fieldwork data of speakers’ awareness of ongoing syntactic changes in the Shetland dialect of Scots. Data collected using a novel questionnaire methodology show that individuals possess explicit knowledge about the direction as well as current progression of ongoing changes, even for grammatical structures which are very low in frequency. These results complement previous experimental evidence which showed that individuals both possess and make use of implicit knowledge about age-dependent usage differences during ongoing sound changes. Echoing the literature on evolutionary approaches to language change, the final part of the thesis stresses the importance of explicitly situating different pressures either in the domain of the innovation of new or else the selection of existing variants. Based on a modification of the Wright-Fisher model from population genetics, I will argue that trend-amplification selection mechanisms provide predictions that neatly match empirical facts, both in terms of the diachronic dynamics of language change, as well as in terms of the synchronic distribution of linguistic traits that we find in the world.
180

Isolamento e caracterização de gene que confere resistência à terbinafina em leishmania major / Identification and characterization of a terbinafine resistance gene in L. major.

Marchini, Julio Flávio Meirelles 13 June 2008 (has links)
A amplificação gênica pode ser compreendida como um mecanismo de regulação de expressão protéica em Leishmania. A exposição a concentrações não letais de diferentes drogas isoladamente, como o metotrexato, a primaquina, cloroquina e antimônio levam à amplificação de regiões específicas como as localizadas no cromossomo 6 e no cromossomo 23. Essas linhagens tornam-se resistentes a estas drogas e eventualmente apresentam resistência cruzada a outras. A terbinafina é uma substância sintética utilizada como antifúngico que age pela inibição da esqualeno epoxidase impedindo a síntese de ergosterol, componente da membrana celular de Leishmania. A exposição do parasita à terbinafina leva à amplificação da região H. A fragmentação da região H permitiu delimitar a resistência a 2,8 kb; fragmento T1. Por mutagênese insercional o gene de resistência à terbinafina foi definido e nomeado HTBF. A proteína codificada pelo HTBF possui uma extremidade N-terminal hidrofílica e C-terminal hidrofóbica com quatro alfa-hélices sendo, supostamente, uma proteína integral de membrana. Possui semelhança com a proteína Yip de Saccharomyces cerevisiae, que participa do transporte vesicular do retículo endoplasmático para o complexo de Golgi. O gene HTBF foi detectado em linhagem sensível de L. major e de outras espécies de Leishmania e seu transcrito em linhagens sensíveis e resistentes de L. major. Levantou-se a hipótese de se tratar de locus de resistência a múltiplas drogas já que as regiões amplificadas, mesmo que induzidas por uma determinada droga, podem levar a resistência a outras. A co-transfecção do gene de resistência ao antimonial MRPA no transfectante portador do HTBF levou à diminuição em até cinco vezes da capacidade de resistência ao antimônio. Apesar dos genes de resistência amplificarem juntos na região H, foi constatado que possuem ação contrária. Sendo que a terbinafina interfere na integridade da membrana celular, levantou-se hipótese na qual a resistência envolveria o mecanismo de reparo de membrana. A perda do fenótipo de resistência pela falta de cálcio sugerindo a inativação desse mecanismo é um fenômeno previsto corroborando a hipótese. / Gene amplification can be recognized as a protein regulation mechanism in Leishmania. Exposure to non-lethal concentrations of different drugs in isolated manner, such as, methotrexate, primaquine, chloroquine and antimony drives the amplification of specific regions. Examples for amplified regions are contained in chromosomes six and 23. The strains become resistant to these drugs and eventu-ally to other drugs as well. Terbinafine is a synthetic substance used as an antifungal agent. Its mechanism of action is by squalene epoxidase inhibition, blocking ergosterol synthesis, a cell membrane component in Leishmania. Parasite exposure to terbinafine elicits H region amplification. H region fragmentation allowed resistance delimitation to 2.8kb, T1 fragment. By insertional mutagenesis terbinafine resistance gene was defined and termed HTBF. HTBF coded protein has a hydrophilic N-terminal and a hydrophobic C-terminal containing four alpha-helixes, putatively, an integral membrane protein. It possesses homology to Saccharomyces cerevisiae Yip protein, which takes part in the vesicular transport from the endoplasmic reticulum to Golgi apparatus. HTBF gene was detected in sensitive L. major strains and other Leishmania species and its transcript was detected in both resistant and sensitive L. major strains. We raised the hypothesis of a multiple drug resistance locus, since amplified regions induced by one drug could elicit resistance to a second drug. Co-transfection of MRPA to the HTBF transfectant led to a five-fold decrease to antimonial resistance level. Even though these resistance genes amplify together in the H region, they have antagonizing mechanisms of action. Since terbinafine action disrupts membrane integrity, we raised a hypothesis in which resistance involves enhancement of membrane repair machinery. Loss of phenotype caused by the lack of calcium suggests the inactivation of this machinery is a predicted phenomenon, corroborating the hypothesis.

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