K
Kittipong Chaisiri
Researcher at Mahidol University
Publications - 74
Citations - 1298
Kittipong Chaisiri is an academic researcher from Mahidol University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Species richness & Biology. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 65 publications receiving 949 citations. Previous affiliations of Kittipong Chaisiri include University of Liverpool & Kasetsart University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Worldwide emergence of colistin resistance in Klebsiella pneumoniae from healthy humans and patients in Lao PDR, Thailand, Israel, Nigeria and France owing to inactivation of the PhoP/PhoQ regulator mgrB: an epidemiological and molecular study.
Abiola Olumuyiwa Olaitan,Seydina M. Diene,Marie Kempf,Meryem Berrazeg,Sofiane Bakour,Sushim K. Gupta,Boupha Thongmalayvong,Kongsap Akkhavong,Silaphet Somphavong,Phimpha Paboriboune,Kittipong Chaisiri,Chalit Komalamisra,Olawale Olufemi Adelowo,O. E. Fagade,Omowunmi Abosede Banjo,Adeyeye James Oke,Amos Adler,Marc V. Assous,Serge Morand,Didier Raoult,Jean-Marc Rolain +20 more
TL;DR: Inactivation of the PhoP/PhoQ regulator gene mgrB is associated with ≥40% of colistin resistance among the CRKP isolates observed in this study, which is warranted to prevent an uncontrollable pandemic.
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Habitat fragmentation alters the properties of a host–parasite network: rodents and their helminths in South-East Asia
Frédéric Bordes,Serge Morand,Serge Morand,Shai Pilosof,Julien Claude,Boris R. Krasnov,Jean-François Cosson,Yannick Chaval,Alexis Ribas,Kittipong Chaisiri,Kim R. Blasdell,Vincent Herbreteau,Stéphane Dupuy,Annelise Tran +13 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that parasite sharing among host species may become more difficult to maintain with the increase of habitat disturbance and a link between spatiotemporal changes in habitat and the architecture of host-parasite networks is predicted.
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Symbiosis in an overlooked microcosm: a systematic review of the bacterial flora of mites.
TL;DR: This review provides a comprehensive overview of mite-associated bacteria and is a valuable reference database for future research on mites of agricultural, veterinary and/or medical importance.
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Changing landscapes of Southeast Asia and rodent-borne diseases: decreased diversity but increased transmission risks.
Serge Morand,Serge Morand,Kim R. Blasdell,Frédéric Bordes,Philippe Buchy,Philippe Buchy,B. Carcy,Kittipong Chaisiri,Yannick Chaval,Julien Claude,Jean-François Cosson,Marc Desquesnes,Sathaporn Jittapalapong,Tawisa Jiyipong,Tawisa Jiyipong,Anamika Karnchanabanthoen,Anamika Karnchanabanthoen,Pumhom Pornpan,Jean-Marc Rolain,Annelise Tran +19 more
TL;DR: Investigating the relationship between human alteration of the environment and the occurrence of generalist and synanthropic rodent species in relation to the diversity and prevalence of rodent-borne pathogens in Southeast Asia found that some major pathogens are favored by environmental characteristics associated with human alteration including irrigation, habitat fragmentation, and increased agricultural land cover.
Journal ArticleDOI
Assessing the distribution of disease‐bearing rodents in human‐modified tropical landscapes
Serge Morand,Frédéric Bordes,Kim R. Blasdell,Shai Pilosof,Jean-François Cornu,Kittipong Chaisiri,Yannick Chaval,Jean-François Cosson,Julien Claude,Tristan Feyfant,Vincent Herbreteau,Stéphane Dupuy,Annelise Tran +12 more
TL;DR: Habitat diversity and its alteration were found to favour the presence of synanthropic rodent species such as Rattus tanezumi, known to damage crops and host important rodent-borne diseases, and Bartonella spp.