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Yakhya Dieye
Researcher at University of Malaya
Publications - 29
Citations - 828
Yakhya Dieye is an academic researcher from University of Malaya. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Biology. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 21 publications receiving 739 citations. Previous affiliations of Yakhya Dieye include Ohio State University & Institut national de la recherche agronomique.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Design of a Protein-Targeting System for Lactic Acid Bacteria
TL;DR: An expression and export system that enabled the targeting of a reporter protein (the staphylococcal nuclease Nuc) to specific locations in Lactococcus lactis cells, providing the first report of a targeting system in lactic acid bacteria in which the final location of a protein is controlled and biological activity is maintained.
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Production and Targeting of the Brucella abortus Antigen L7/L12 in Lactococcus lactis: a First Step towards Food-Grade Live Vaccines against Brucellosis
Luciana A. Ribeiro,Luciana A. Ribeiro,Vasco Azevedo,Yves Le Loir,Sergio C. Oliveira,Yakhya Dieye,Jean-Christophe Piard,Alexandra Gruss,Philippe Langella +8 more
TL;DR: This is the first example of a B. abortus antigen produced in a food-grade bacterium and opens new perspectives for alternative vaccine strategies against brucellosis.
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Culturable Bacterial Microbiota of the Stomach of Helicobacter pylori Positive and Negative Gastric Disease Patients
Yalda Khosravi,Yakhya Dieye,Bee Hoon Poh,Chow Goon Ng,Mun Fai Loke,Khean-Lee Goh,Jamuna Vadivelu +6 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that there may be geographical variations in the diversity of the human gastric microbiome and possible interactions between Hp and other bacterial species from stomach microbiota in pathogenesis are proposed for further investigations.
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The Salmonella Pathogenicity Island (SPI) 1 contributes more than SPI2 to the colonization of the chicken by Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium
TL;DR: A mixed infection approach to study the contribution of SPI1 and SPI2 to the colonization of the chicken by Typhimurium found that SPI1 contributes to colonization of both the cecum and spleen in the chicken.
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Ability of Lactococcus lactis to export viral capsid antigens: a crucial step for development of live vaccines.
Yakhya Dieye,Arjan J. W. Hoekman,Florence Clier,Vincent Juillard,Hein J. Boot,Jean-Christophe Piard +5 more
TL;DR: Lactococcal strains producing Nuc-VP2 andVP3 in various bacterial compartments were administered orally to chickens, which did not develop any detectable immune response against VP2 and VP3 but did exhibit an immuneresponse against Nuc when Nuc -VP2 was anchored to the cell wall of lactococci.