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Virus-helminth coinfection reveals a microbiota-independent mechanism of immunomodulation

TLDR
Data indicate that helminth-induced immunomodulation occurs independently of changes in the microbiota but is dependent on Ym1, a chitinase-like molecule that is associated with alternatively activated macrophages, which could partially restore antiviral immunity.
Abstract
The mammalian intestine is colonized by beneficial commensal bacteria and is a site of infection by pathogens, including helminth parasites. Helminths induce potent immunomodulatory effects, but whether these effects are mediated by direct regulation of host immunity or indirectly through eliciting changes in the microbiota is unknown. We tested this in the context of virus-helminth coinfection. Helminth coinfection resulted in impaired antiviral immunity and was associated with changes in the microbiota and STAT6-dependent helminth-induced alternative activation of macrophages. Notably, helminth-induced impairment of antiviral immunity was evident in germ-free mice, but neutralization of Ym1, a chitinase-like molecule that is associated with alternatively activated macrophages, could partially restore antiviral immunity. These data indicate that helminth-induced immunomodulation occurs independently of changes in the microbiota but is dependent on Ym1.

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Helminth-associated changes in host immune phenotype connect top-down and bottom-up interactions during co-infection.

TL;DR: In this article , the authors tracked changes in host immunological and morphological phenotypes during helminth-coccidia co-infection to investigate their role in driving independent and combinatorial bottom-up and top-down parasite interactions.
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Hookworm infection associates with a vaginal Type 1/Type 2 immune signature and increased HPV load

TL;DR: A pronounced mixed Type 1/Type 2 immune response was detected in the vaginal fluids of women with hookworm infection and this immune signature was a notable feature in hookworm-HPV co-infected women.
Posted ContentDOI

The Development, Function, and Plasticity of the Immune Macroenvironment in Cancer

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that tumor development dynamically reshapes the composition and function of the immune macroenvironment and reveals remarkable plasticity in the systemic immune state, which contrasts with terminal immune dysfunction in the tumor microenvironment.

Host-pathogen and host-microbe interactions in migratory animals and their implications for pathogen dispersal

Alice Risely
TL;DR: It is found that migratory animals do not appear to have strong capacity to pick up and disperse pathogens.

HIV and schistosomiasis : studies in Tanzania

TL;DR: This thesis will first describe population-based epidemiological work in Tanzania associating HIV with S. haematobium andwith S. mansoni, and on the effects of schistosome infection on immunological response to treatment in people living with HIV infection.
References
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Search and clustering orders of magnitude faster than BLAST

Robert C. Edgar
- 01 Oct 2010 - 
TL;DR: UCLUST is a new clustering method that exploits USEARCH to assign sequences to clusters and offers several advantages over the widely used program CD-HIT, including higher speed, lower memory use, improved sensitivity, clustering at lower identities and classification of much larger datasets.
Journal ArticleDOI

APE: Analyses of Phylogenetics and Evolution in R language

TL;DR: UNLABELLED Analysis of Phylogenetics and Evolution (APE) is a package written in the R language for use in molecular evolution and phylogenetics that provides both utility functions for reading and writing data and manipulating phylogenetic trees.
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FastTree 2--approximately maximum-likelihood trees for large alignments.

TL;DR: Improvements to FastTree are described that improve its accuracy without sacrificing scalability, and FastTree 2 allows the inference of maximum-likelihood phylogenies for huge alignments.
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