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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.
21

Experimentální vakcinace králíků rekombinantními trávicími peptidázami klíštěte \kur{Ixodes ricinus} / Experimental vaccinations of rabbits with recombinant digestive peptidases of the tick \kur{Ixodes ricinus}

FRANTA, Petr January 2011 (has links)
Blood-feeding and digestion are crucial for the tick reproduction because they provide nutrients for anabolic processes such as vitellogenesis, molting and eggs production. Digestion in ticks is mediated by a network of cystein and aspartic peptidases. Therefore, tick digestive peptidases could be a relevant anti-tick vaccine candidates.
22

The utilisation of mast cells for exploration of immunomodulatory effects of tick salivary proteins

KOUDELKOVÁ, Šárka January 2012 (has links)
No description available.
23

Identification and characterization of histidine-rich peptides from hard ticks \kur{Ixodes ricinus} and \kur{Ixodes scapularis}. / Identification and characterization of histidine-rich peptides from hard ticks \kur{Ixodes ricinus} and \kur{Ixodes scapularis}.

DORŇÁKOVÁ, Veronika January 2011 (has links)
Antimicrobial (cationic) proteins play an important role in innate imunity. Such proteins can possess antibacterial, antiendotoxic or fungicidal abilities. The rising resistence of microbes to common antibiotics evokes acute need of studying more endogenous proteins to reveal new potential antibiotics. Ticks, the blood-feeding ectoparasites with effectual defense system, present an endless source of newly described and unknown antimicrobial peptides/proteins with significant theurapeutic potential. This study represents identification of histidine-rich proteins detected in Ixodes ricinus and Ixodes scapularis, that are related to recently described new family of proteins isolated from Rhipicephalus microplus (protein microplusin) and Amblyomma hebraeum (protein heraein). Analysis and characterization of newly identified histidine rich proteins, study of their antimicrobial and protease inhibitory effect are the main goals of this study.
24

Modeling human exposure to Babesia spp. utilizing a hunting dog cohort in the United States

Anderson, Bryan 01 August 2017 (has links)
Babesiosis is a disease caused by parasites of Babesia species that is spread through ticks. Babesiosis can affect humans and many other mammals all over the world. In the United States, babesiosis is mainly caused by Babesia microti with additional species of Babesia infecting dogs. Dogs have long been known to be a good indicator species for human tick-borne infection due to the shared spaces they have with humans and their tendency to explore and pick up diseases in the environment. This study used a group of hunting dogs to determine the presence of Babesia infection. The goal was to determine a predictive model for human infection. Infection was defined as having a positive antibody test or molecular test for Babesia species in blood samples. Blood samples were taken at two time points, tested, and compared. Statistical methods were used to analyze the results of the tests and compare them with variables such as region, gender, age, and other diseases the dogs were exposed to. Of 214 dogs, 56 had Babesia infections, with a prevalence rate of 26.2%. At the first time point the model showed age and infection with Anaplasma platys as being significant. At the 2nd time point, 29 dogs were lost to follow up, leaving a total of 185 dogs sampled with 63 testing positive for Babesia spp. The rate for the 2nd time point was 34.1%. No variables were found to be significant in the model for the 2nd time point. Despite differences in Babesia that infect humans and dogs, the hunting dog cohort reflects a model that validates the environmental exposures, coinfections, and demographic variables that affect transmission of the pathogen. Furthermore, findings of this study cast doubt on the ability of Ixodes scapularis to act as capable vector for canine-infecting Babesia species.
25

Comparison of the bacteria within ticks from allopatric and sympatric populations of Dermacentor andersoni and Dermacentor variabilis near their northern distributional limits in Canada

Dergousoff, Shaun J. 17 August 2011
Understanding the ecology and epidemiology of tick-borne diseases requires detailed knowledge of the complex interactions among the tick vector, the microorganisms they carry and the vertebrate hosts used by ticks, as well as the environmental conditions experienced by all three groups of organisms in this triad. In this thesis, I addressed questions relating to the biology and vector ecology of the Rocky Mountain wood tick (Dermacentor andersoni) and the American dog tick (Dermacentor variabilis). Comparisons were made of the distribution of both tick species, the vertebrate hosts used by immature ticks, and the types and prevalence of bacteria in individual ticks from multiple localities near the northern extent of their geographic ranges in western Canada. The results revealed that the distributions of both D. andersoni and D. variabilis have expanded since the 1960s, and there is now a broad zone of sympatry in southern Saskatchewan. In this zone of sympatry, D. andersoni and D. variabilis immatures were found to use the same species of small mammals as hosts and, in some cases, the same host individuals. This provides for the possibility of cross-transmission of bacteria from one tick species to the other. Bacteria of several genera (e.g. Rickettsia, Francisella, Arsenophonus and Anaplasma) were detected in D. andersoni and/or D. variabilis, some of which represented new tick-bacteria associations. However, most bacterial species were highly host (tick)-specific, except for three examples of apparent host switching from one tick species to the other at localities where the two tick species occurred in sympatry. The findings of this thesis provide a basis for understanding microbial transmission, the structure of tick-borne microbial communities, the risk of tick-borne disease in humans and animals, and the vector potential of D. andersoni and D. variabilis in geographical areas where they have not been studied previously.
26

Comparison of the bacteria within ticks from allopatric and sympatric populations of Dermacentor andersoni and Dermacentor variabilis near their northern distributional limits in Canada

Dergousoff, Shaun J. 17 August 2011 (has links)
Understanding the ecology and epidemiology of tick-borne diseases requires detailed knowledge of the complex interactions among the tick vector, the microorganisms they carry and the vertebrate hosts used by ticks, as well as the environmental conditions experienced by all three groups of organisms in this triad. In this thesis, I addressed questions relating to the biology and vector ecology of the Rocky Mountain wood tick (Dermacentor andersoni) and the American dog tick (Dermacentor variabilis). Comparisons were made of the distribution of both tick species, the vertebrate hosts used by immature ticks, and the types and prevalence of bacteria in individual ticks from multiple localities near the northern extent of their geographic ranges in western Canada. The results revealed that the distributions of both D. andersoni and D. variabilis have expanded since the 1960s, and there is now a broad zone of sympatry in southern Saskatchewan. In this zone of sympatry, D. andersoni and D. variabilis immatures were found to use the same species of small mammals as hosts and, in some cases, the same host individuals. This provides for the possibility of cross-transmission of bacteria from one tick species to the other. Bacteria of several genera (e.g. Rickettsia, Francisella, Arsenophonus and Anaplasma) were detected in D. andersoni and/or D. variabilis, some of which represented new tick-bacteria associations. However, most bacterial species were highly host (tick)-specific, except for three examples of apparent host switching from one tick species to the other at localities where the two tick species occurred in sympatry. The findings of this thesis provide a basis for understanding microbial transmission, the structure of tick-borne microbial communities, the risk of tick-borne disease in humans and animals, and the vector potential of D. andersoni and D. variabilis in geographical areas where they have not been studied previously.
27

Potential application of a Gulf Coast Tick, Amblyomma maculatum Koch, Aggregation-Attachment-Pheromone for surveillance of free-living adults

Kim, Hee Jung 17 February 2005 (has links)
The aggregation-attachment-pheromone (AAP) of two geographic strains of the Gulf Coast tick, Amblyomma maculatum Koch, was investigated to evaluate practicality of using solid-phase-microextraction (SPME) in an AAP study of Gulf Coast tick. Solid-phase microextraction was used to compare the AAP production in two strains of fed male Gulf Coast tick and demonstrate and confirm the presence of AAP in bioassays. A solid-phase-microextraction (SPME) headspace collection technique was sufficient to capture volatile organic compounds produced by fed and unfed male Gulf Coast ticks. Gas chromatography analysis revealed three major volatile organic compounds were produced in significantly greater amounts (p < 0.05) by fed males than those produced by unfed males. These volatile compounds were produced in significantly higher amount by the third day of feeding by male ticks. However, two of these volatiles remained relatively constant in their production while the primary volatile compound increased in its production until the eighth day of feeding by male Gulf Coast ticks. Also, the relative abundances of these three volatile organic compounds were different between Oklahoma and Texas strains of Gulf Coast ticks. The activity of AAP from fed male Gulf Coast ticks was confirmed using two bioassay techniques. A petri dish bioassay revealed significantly higher numbers of female Gulf Coast ticks attracted to fed-males which also produced significantly greater amounts (p < 0.001) of volatile organic compounds detected by GC analysis. The Ytube olfactometer bioassay revealed that significantly higher numbers of females responded to fed-males or to CO2 when compared to purified air (p < 0.001), but the differences in female response to fed-males and CO2 were not significant (p < 0.391 in Oklahoma strain and p < 0.458 in Texas strain). However, female responses to stimuli containing both fed-males and CO2 were significantly higher when compared to either stimulus alone (p < 0.001).
28

Vliv klíštěcích slin na replikaci viru klíšťové encefalitidy \kur{in vitro} a vliv klíštěcích cystatinů na genovou expresi interferon regulačních faktorů / The influence of tick saliva on the replication of tick-borne encephalitis virus \kur{in vitro} and the influence of tick cystatins on gene expression of interferon regulated factors

ŠIRMAROVÁ, Jana January 2012 (has links)
This study was focused on the influence of hard tick from Ixodes ricinus on the replication of tick-borne encephalitis virus in vivo and the on the accompained changes in the levels of inflammatory cytokines which were determined in serum of infected mice. Futher the effect of tick cystatins, the inhibitors of cysteine proteases, on gene expression of interferon regulated factors was investigated in dendritic cells upon stimulation with Toll-like receptor ligands.
29

The interaction between ticks and arboviruses

Davies, C. R. January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
30

Developmental hormones in adult and embryonic forms of the cattle tick, Boophilus microplus

Crosby, T. January 1987 (has links)
No description available.

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