Institution
Tunis University
Education•Tunis, Tunisia•
About: Tunis University is a education organization based out in Tunis, Tunisia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Thin film. The organization has 11745 authors who have published 15400 publications receiving 154900 citations. The organization is also known as: University of Tunis & UT.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The RRS and RPL intensity is dominated by competition between radiative recombination at rate ${W}_{R}$ and the energy transfer mechanism of excitons between states of the localization tail.
Abstract: Resonant Raman scattering (RRS) and resonant photoluminescence (RPL) studies on localized exciton states due to disorder in indirect-band-gap ${\mathrm{GaAs}}_{1\mathrm{\ensuremath{-}}\mathrm{x}}$${\mathrm{P}}_{\mathrm{x}}$ alloys show that the RRS and RPL intensity is dominated by competition between radiative recombination at rate ${W}_{R}$ and the energy transfer mechanism of excitons between states of the localization tail. The rate of change of the transfer probability d[ln(${W}_{\mathrm{tr})]/\mathrm{dE}}$ has been evaluated near the point where ${W}_{\mathrm{tr}={W}_{R}}$.
45 citations
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11 Mar 2020TL;DR: The aim of the present review is to summarize the actual data about the use of G. mellonella for testing the in vivo efficacy of licensed antifungal drugs, new drugs, and combination therapies.
Abstract: The treatment of invasive fungal infections remains challenging and the emergence of new fungal pathogens as well as the development of resistance to the main antifungal drugs highlight the need for novel therapeutic strategies. Although in vitro antifungal susceptibility testing has come of age, the proper evaluation of therapeutic efficacy of current or new antifungals is dependent on the use of animal models. Mammalian models, particularly using rodents, are the cornerstone for evaluation of antifungal efficacy, but are limited by increased costs and ethical considerations. To circumvent these limitations, alternative invertebrate models, such as Galleria mellonella, have been developed. Larvae of G. mellonella have been widely used for testing virulence of fungi and more recently have proven useful for evaluation of antifungal efficacy. This model is suitable for infection by different fungal pathogens including yeasts (Candida, Cryptococcus, Trichosporon) and filamentous fungi (Aspergillus, Mucorales). Antifungal efficacy may be easily estimated by fungal burden or mortality rate in infected and treated larvae. The aim of the present review is to summarize the actual data about the use of G. mellonella for testing the in vivo efficacy of licensed antifungal drugs, new drugs, and combination therapies.
45 citations
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TL;DR: Neither ATP13A2 genetic variability nor quantitative gene expression in brain appears to contribute to familial parkinsonism or nonfamilial PD.
Abstract: Recessively inherited mutations in ATP13A2 result in Kufor-Rakeb syndrome, whereas genetic variability and elevated ATP13A2 expression have been implicated in Parkinson disease (PD). Given this background, ATP13A2 was comprehensively assessed to support or refute its contribution to PD. Sequencing of ATP13A2 exons and intron-exon boundaries was performed in 89 probands with familial parkinsonism from Tunisia. The segregation of mutations with parkinsonism was subsequently assessed within pedigrees. The frequency of genetic variants and evidence for association was also examined in 240 patients with non-familial PD and 372 healthy controls. ATP13A2 mRNA expression was also quantified in brain tissues from 38 patients with non-familial PD and 38 healthy subjects from the US. Sequencing analysis revealed 37 new variants; seven missense, six silent and 24 that were noncoding. However, no single ATP13A2 mutation segregated with familial parkinsonism in either a dominant or recessive manner. Four markers showed marginal association with non-familial PD, prior to correction for multiple testing. ATP13A2 mRNA expression was marginally decreased in PD brains compared with tissue from control subjects. In conclusion, neither ATP13A2 genetic variability nor quantitative gene expression in brain appears to contribute to familial parkinsonism or non-familial PD.
45 citations
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TL;DR: Durancin 61A alone or in combination with other bacteriocins or antibiotics may provide a possible therapeutic option for the treatment of infections by these pathogens.
Abstract: Aim: The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of durancin 61A alone or in combination with nisin, pediocin PA-1, reuterin, microcin J25, vancomycin or tetracycline as an inhibitor of resistant clinical pathogens and to shed light on its mode of action. Results: Durancin and reuterin were effective inhibitors of Clostridium difficile, vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. The combination of durancin and reuterin was highly synergistic against C. difficile (fractional inhibitory concentration index = 0.2). Durancin/vancomycin combination was synergistic against S. aureus ATCC® 700699 (fractional inhibitory concentration index = 0.3). Conclusion & future perspective: Durancin 61A alone or combined with other bacteriocins or antibiotics may therefore provide a possible therapeutic option for the treatment of infections by these pathogens.
45 citations
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TL;DR: This study investigates the evolutionary history of North-African low latitude marginal populations of Alnus glutinosa Gaertn.
Abstract: Populations located at the rear-edge of a species’ distribution may have disproportionate ecological and evolutionary importance for biodiversity conservation in a changing global environment. Yet genetic studies of such populations remain rare. This study investigates the evolutionary history of North-African low latitude marginal populations of Alnus glutinosa Gaertn., a European tree species that plays a significant ecological role as a keystone of riparian ecosystems. We genotyped 551 adults from 19 populations located across North Africa at 12 microsatellite loci and applied a coalescent-based simulation approach to reconstruct the demographic and evolutionary history of these populations. Surprisingly, Moroccan trees were tetraploids demonstrating a strong distinctiveness of these populations within a species otherwise known as diploid. Best-fitting models of demographic reconstruction revealed the relict nature of Moroccan populations that were found to have withstood past climate change events and to be much older than Algerian and Tunisian populations. This study highlights the complex demographic history that can be encountered in rear-edge distribution margins that here consist of both old stable climate relict and more recent populations, distinctively diverse genetically both quantitatively and qualitatively. We emphasize the high evolutionary and conservation value of marginal rear-edge populations of a keystone riparian species in the context of on-going climate change in the Mediterranean region.
45 citations
Authors
Showing all 11809 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Walid Saad | 85 | 749 | 30499 |
Alexandre Mebazaa | 83 | 716 | 39967 |
Albert Y. Zomaya | 75 | 946 | 24637 |
Anis Larbi | 67 | 259 | 15984 |
Carmen Torres | 64 | 461 | 15416 |
Chedly Abdelly | 60 | 429 | 14181 |
Hans R. Kricheldorf | 57 | 825 | 18670 |
Mohamed Benbouzid | 51 | 492 | 12164 |
Enrique Monte | 48 | 118 | 7868 |
Fayçal Hentati | 47 | 153 | 10376 |
A. D. Roses | 45 | 120 | 24719 |
Laurent Nahon | 45 | 205 | 6252 |
Bessem Samet | 45 | 308 | 7151 |
Maxim Avdeev | 42 | 526 | 8673 |
Abdellatif Boudabous | 40 | 174 | 5605 |