Institution
CEVA Logistics
About: CEVA Logistics is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Vaccination & Virus. The organization has 672 authors who have published 756 publications receiving 10476 citations. The organization is also known as: CEVA.
Topics: Vaccination, Virus, Gene, Viral shedding, Newcastle disease
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The original physicochemical, rheological, and biological properties recently unraveled for this complex sulfated aldobiouronan open the way for novel potential applications.
748 citations
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TL;DR: A short review of biochemical and nutritional aspects associated with the use of seaweeds in food products.
Abstract: Seaweeds, which have traditionally been used by the Western food industry for their polysaccharide extractives — alginate, carrageenan and agar — also contain compounds with potential nutritional benefits. Seaweeds have recently been approved in France for human consumption (as vegetables and condiments), thus opening new opportunities for the food industry. These seaweed ingredients must meet industrial and technical specifications and consumer safety regulations. This paper is a short review of biochemical and nutritional aspects associated with the use of seaweeds in food products.
553 citations
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TL;DR: It is shown that the application of two strategies, cloning of the cDNAs into a bacterial artificial chromosome and nuclear expression of RNAs that are typically produced within the cytoplasm, is useful for the engineering of large RNA molecules.
Abstract: The construction of cDNA clones encoding large-size RNA molecules of biological interest, like coronavirus genomes, which are among the largest mature RNA molecules known to biology, has been hampered by the instability of those cDNAs in bacteria. Herein, we show that the application of two strategies, cloning of the cDNAs into a bacterial artificial chromosome and nuclear expression of RNAs that are typically produced within the cytoplasm, is useful for the engineering of large RNA molecules. A cDNA encoding an infectious coronavirus RNA genome has been cloned as a bacterial artificial chromosome. The rescued coronavirus conserved all of the genetic markers introduced throughout the sequence and showed a standard mRNA pattern and the antigenic characteristics expected for the synthetic virus. The cDNA was transcribed within the nucleus, and the RNA translocated to the cytoplasm. Interestingly, the recovered virus had essentially the same sequence as the original one, and no splicing was observed. The cDNA was derived from an attenuated isolate that replicates exclusively in the respiratory tract of swine. During the engineering of the infectious cDNA, the spike gene of the virus was replaced by the spike gene of an enteric isolate. The synthetic virus replicated abundantly in the enteric tract and was fully virulent, demonstrating that the tropism and virulence of the recovered coronavirus can be modified. This demonstration opens up the possibility of employing this infectious cDNA as a vector for vaccine development in human, porcine, canine, and feline species susceptible to group 1 coronaviruses.
359 citations
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TL;DR: Intramammary infections represent a major feature in bovine pathology and treatments are not very successful and cure rates are poor, especially towards Staphylococcus aureus which is responsible for chronic infections and huge economic losses.
245 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, population estimates have been calculated using Capture-Mark-Recapture methods, based on DNA-based scat surveys in five of the six Swedish counties with established bear populations.
Abstract: Estimating population size and trends are key issues in the conservation and management of large carnivores. The rebounding brown bear Ursus arctos population in Sweden is monitored by two different systems, both relying on voluntary resources. Population estimates have been calculated using Capture-Mark-Recapture methods, based on DNA-based scat surveys in five of the six Swedish counties with established bear populations. A total of 1,358 genotypes were identified using DNA extracted from collected scats. An independent ongoing programme, the Large Carnivore Observation Index (LCOI), was initiated in 1998. The LCOI uses effort-corrected observations of bears by moose Alces alces hunters during the moose hunt (> 2 million observation hours/year) and has shown a good correlation with relative population density of bears using the DNA-based method. From this, we have calculated population trends during the period 1998-2007. Using an exponential model, we estimated the yearly increase in the bear p...
168 citations
Authors
Showing all 672 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Pierre Taberlet | 108 | 300 | 51601 |
Robert Gurny | 81 | 396 | 28391 |
Marc Lahaye | 51 | 144 | 7972 |
Daniel Sperling | 46 | 367 | 10550 |
Joël Fleurence | 38 | 93 | 4960 |
Christian Miquel | 30 | 54 | 5024 |
Eva Bellemain | 29 | 33 | 7452 |
D.J. Kesler | 29 | 125 | 3330 |
Thomas Lewiner | 23 | 85 | 1985 |
Vilmos Palya | 23 | 75 | 1443 |
Judith Aronhime | 22 | 155 | 1270 |
Jean-François Sassi | 22 | 76 | 1894 |
Gwenaelle Dauphin | 22 | 49 | 1609 |
Jennifer T. Brisbin | 19 | 28 | 1329 |
A.H. Souza | 18 | 21 | 1247 |