Displaying publications 41 - 60 of 561 in total

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  1. Yong HS, Cheong WH, Mak JW, Chiang GL, Chan KL, Dhaliwal SS
    Biochem Genet, 1980 Oct;18(9-10):939-45.
    PMID: 7225086
    The genetics of glucosephosphate isomerase (E.C. 5.3.1.9) in two strains (Malaysian and Taiwan) of Aedes togoi is reported. Three electrophoretic phenotypes were presented in both sexes. The zymogram patterns were identical in both strains of A. togoi. The phenotypes were governed by a pair of codominant alleles. The allele frequency of the slow-moving band was 0.63 in the Malaysian strain adn was 0,86 and 0.82 in F161 and F169 generations, respectively, of the Taiwan strain. The sample studied was in good accord with Hardy-Weinberg expectation.
    Matched MeSH terms: Species Specificity
  2. Lim PK, Mak JW, Cheong WH, Mahadevan S
    PMID: 7221700
    Comparative studies of vector efficiency were done with the Liverpool and Malaysian strains of Aedes (Finlaya) togoi for subperiodic Brugia malayi and Brugia pahangi. The Malaysian strain of A. togoi was found to take in fewer microfilariae under the same experimental conditions than the Liverpool strain. Also, for various microfilarial densities in the host's peripheral blood, the Malaysian strain had less mean infective larvae per fed mosquito than the Liverpool strain. The microfilarial intake of A. togoi was not affected by the site of feeding on the host affected by the site of feeding on the host. Most of the mosquitoes took in fewer microfilariae than expected. It is concluded from these studies that the Malaysian strain of A. togoi is a susceptible and reasonably good vector for subperiodic B. malayi and B. pahangi. Further field studies should be carried out to determine its importance as a natural vector of Brugian filariasis.
    Matched MeSH terms: Species Specificity
  3. Caldecott JO
    Folia Primatol., 1980;33(4):291-309.
    PMID: 7419138
    Sympatric gibbon species Hylobates lar and H. syndactylus were censused on a mountain in Malaya (West Malaysia). Habitat quality was assessed between 380- and 1,525-m altitudes. H. syndactylus was found to occur up to altitudes higher than does H. lar, and this is discussed with reference to the two species' divergent foraging strategies indicated by previous research. It is suggested that gibbons are restricted in their altitudinal range by an increasingly unfavourable ratio of food consumed to energy expended in its location, caused by a reduced food-source density and more difficult terrain at higher elevations.
    Matched MeSH terms: Species Specificity
  4. Bongso TA, Jainudeen MR
    Trop Anim Health Prod, 1982 Feb;14(1):58.
    PMID: 7080208
    Matched MeSH terms: Species Specificity
  5. Foo AE, Yap HH
    PMID: 6128794
    Comparative laboratory bioassays of three formulations of Bacillus thuringiensis H-14 (IPS-78, San 402-I and Bactimos) were conducted against late 3rd/early 4th instar larvae of four species of mosquito, viz., Aedes aegypti, Culex quinquefasciatus, Anopheles balabacensis and Mansonia (Mansonioides) indiana, in Malaysia. From the average response of the mosquito larvae to the three formulations of B. thuringiensis H-14, Ae. aegypti was found to be most susceptible, followed by Cx. quinquefasciatus, An. balabacensis and M. (M.) indiana in decreasing order. The LC50 values for Ae. aegypti, Cx. quinquefasciatus, An. balabacensis and M. (M.) indiana after a 48-hour exposure to IPS-78 formulation were 50.9, 129.3, 117.8 and 169.6 International Toxic Unit (ITU) Ae. ae./l; to San 402-I formulation were 54.6, 223.1, 405.1 and 177.6 ITU Ae. ae/l and to Bactimos formulation were 57.2, 175.7, 35.6 and 514.5 ITU Ae. ae./l respectively. The efficacy of the bacterial product was also found to be determined by its formulation in relation to the feeding and resting habits of the mosquito larvae. No delayed pupation or emergence was observed on the larvae exposed to B. thuringiensis H-14 at sub-lethal concentrations.
    Matched MeSH terms: Species Specificity
  6. Yong HS, Dhaliwal SS, Lim BL
    Cytologia (Tokyo), 1982 Dec;47(3-4):535-8.
    PMID: 7166052
    Matched MeSH terms: Species Specificity
  7. Bayssade-Dufour C, Albaret JL, Ow-Yang CK
    Ann Parasitol Hum Comp, 1982;57(6):565-72.
    PMID: 7168529
    A description is given of cercarial chaetotaxy of two Centrocestinae (Heterophyidae, Opisthorchioidea) from Malaysia: Centrocestus formosanus and Centrocestus sp.--Comparison with cercarial chaetotaxy of taxonomically related groups indicates that 1. The chaetotaxy of the Centrocestinae agrees with that of other Opisthorchioidea, 2. There is an important difference between chaetotaxy of Centrocestinae and other Heterophyidae which suggest that the family is heterogeneous.
    Matched MeSH terms: Species Specificity
  8. Yong HS, Cheong WH, Chiang GL, Dhaliwal SS, Loong KP, Sarjan R
    Comp. Biochem. Physiol., B, 1983;76(3):611-3.
    PMID: 6641178
    Three taxa of the malaria mosquito Anopheles balabacensis complex representing three geographical regions (Thailand, Peninsular Malaysia and Sabah) in Southeast Asia, were analysed for genetic variation at 15 gene-enzyme systems. The Sabah taxon was monomorphic for all the 15 gene-enzyme systems. Only two gene-enzyme systems (esterase and glucose phosphate isomerase) were variable in the Thailand and Peninsular Malaysia taxa. The average heterozygosity or gene diversity was 0.007 for the Thailand taxon and 0.028 for the Peninsular Malaysia (Perlis) taxon. There were no unique gene-enzyme markers in the three taxa studied. The average values of genetic identities (0.933-0.997) and genetic distances (0.003-0.069) indicate that these three taxa are of subspecific status.
    Matched MeSH terms: Species Specificity
  9. Chiang GL, Cheong WH, Samarawickrema WA, Mak JW, Kan SK
    PMID: 6150551
    Using seven methods of surveillance, 58 species of mosquitoes from nine genera were in Pantai and the two neighbouring villages during two visits in 1982. Ma. bonneae was the most prevalent species attracted to man. In the forest shade Ma. bonneae and Ma. dives showed activity throughout the 24 hours with peak biting during 1900-2100 hours. An. balabacensis exhibited peak activity shortly after midnight. Inside and outside house, Ma. bonneae showed similar activity except that it ceased during the day. Mansonia was only mildly zoophilic. CDC light traps gave poor yields of mosquitoes. Pyrethrum spray catch inside houses early morning did not include any Mansonia. Outdoor day resting catch included Ma. bonneae fed on man. Transmission of Brugia, probably human filariasis, by Ma. bonneae occurred in Pantai and in the two neighbouring villages. One infection in Ma. dives was found in Pantai. The monthly infective biting rate and monthly transmission potential for Ma. bonneae were estimated at the forest shade and outside the house in Pantai.
    Matched MeSH terms: Species Specificity
  10. Aley SB, Sherwood JA, Howard RJ
    J. Exp. Med., 1984 Nov 01;160(5):1585-90.
    PMID: 6208311
    We have investigated the expression of a strain-specific malarial antigen on the surface of erythrocytes infected with knobless (K-) variants of knob-positive (K+) strains of Plasmodium falciparum. Aotus blood infected with K+ or K- parasites derived from two independent geographical isolates (Malayan camp and Santa Lucia) was surface iodinated by the lactoperoxidase method. Infected and uninfected erythrocytes were then separated by a new procedure involving equilibrium density sedimentation on a Percoll gradient containing sorbitol. Strain-specific antigens were readily identified on the surface of erythrocytes infected with either of the K+ strains by their characteristic size and detergent solubility. These proteins were not detected on the surface of erythrocytes infected with either of the K- variants nor on uninfected erythrocytes isolated from K+- or K- -infected blood. These results are consistent with a role for the strain-specific surface antigen in cytoadherence of P. falciparum-infected erythrocytes. Our findings represent the second biochemical difference (with the knob-associated histidine-rich protein) between K+ and K- P. falciparum.
    Matched MeSH terms: Species Specificity
  11. Morita K, Igarashi A
    J Gen Virol, 1984 Nov;65 ( Pt 11):1899-908.
    PMID: 6094708
    Eighteen strains of Getah virus isolated from mosquitoes, swine and horses in Japan (1956 to 1981), and one strain isolated in Malaysia (1955), were analysed by RNase T1-resistant oligonucleotide fingerprinting. All fingerprints showed a poly(A) tract. The fingerprint pattern of the Malaysian strain was quite different from those of the Japanese strains. Although most of the recent Japanese isolates shared many large oligonucleotide spots in common, the patterns were not identical even among the strains obtained in one locality in the same year. These results suggest that the Getah virus genome undergoes mutation rather frequently. However, there is a tendency for the isolates of the same year to show greater similarity. The fingerprint patterns of certain host-dependent temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants differed from that of the parental strain. Also, there were some differences in large oligonucleotide spots between strain JaNAr12380M isolated in suckling mouse brain (SMB) and strain JaNAr12380A isolated in C6/36 cells, despite the fact that both strains were derived from the same wild mosquito homogenate. In addition, many host-dependent ts mutants were present in strain JaNAr12380A, whereas no such mutants were observed in strain JaNAr12380M. It is concluded that there is considerable variation in the strains of Getah virus infecting mosquitoes in the wild, and also that the variants or mutants present in mosquitoes might be subject to selection during viral multiplication in the mammalian host.
    Matched MeSH terms: Species Specificity
  12. Rajamanickam C, Wiesenhutter E, Zin FM, Hamid J
    Vet Parasitol, 1985 Jan;17(2):151-7.
    PMID: 3922103
    In 3 urban areas in Selangor, Peninsular Malaysia between 1973 and 1981, blood from 4084 dogs was examined for haematozoa. The following frequencies were found: Babesia gibsoni 17.7%; microfilariae of Dirofilaria immitis 9.6%; Hepatozoon canis 1.2%; B. canis 1.1%; Ehrlichia canis 0.2%; Trypanosoma evansi 0.1%. A detailed examination of B. gibsoni infections and microfilariasis due to D. immitis with regards to monthly distribution, breed frequency, sex and age, revealed that pedigree and non-pedigree dogs were equally susceptible to Babesia and microfilariae infections.
    Matched MeSH terms: Species Specificity
  13. Chooi KF, Sani RA
    Vet Rec, 1985 Jan 05;116(1):27.
    PMID: 3984169
    Matched MeSH terms: Species Specificity
  14. Narama I, Miura K, Tsuruta M, Tsuchitani M
    Vet Pathol, 1985 Jul;22(4):355-62.
    PMID: 4035940
    Splenic nodules from 38 cynomolgus monkeys (Macaca fascicularis) which were captured in Malaysia and Indonesia were studied histologically. The lesions were characterized by well-circumscribed focal fibrosis, accumulation of eosinophils and histiocytes, hemorrhage or hemosiderosis, and loss of normal splenic architecture. Small arteries in the lesion frequently had intimal thickening and narrowing of the lumen in addition to the presence of microfilariae. Microfilariae were also seen in the extravascular area of the lesion, and were occasionally engulfed by multinucleated giant cells. The splenic lesion was thought to have been initiated by incomplete infarction caused by intimal thickening and microfilarial occupation of the small arteries.
    Matched MeSH terms: Species Specificity
  15. Gomez-Eichelmann MC, Holz G, Beach D, Simpson AM, Simpson L
    Mol Biochem Parasitol, 1988 Jan 15;27(2-3):143-58.
    PMID: 3344003
    Eight strains of a lizard Leishmania species, L. tarentolae, were compared with four other saurian species [L. hoogstrali, L. adleri, L. agamae and Leishmania sp. LizS], with L. major from man and with Trypanosoma platydactyli, a putative lizard trypanosome, in terms of kinetoplast DNA minicircle and maxicircle sequences and in terms of nuclear chromosome patterns on orthogonal gel electrophoresis. The L. tarentolae strains fell into two major groups, one (group A) consisting of the L. tarentolae strains, UC, Krassner and Trager, derived from an Algerian gecko isolate and the other (group B) consisting of five L. tarentolae LEM strains isolated from geckos in southern France. T. platydactyli TPCL2, which was postulated by Wallbanks et al. to represent the lizard form of a French L. tarentolae strain, was closely related to the UC strain and not to the LEM strains, in all respects analyzed. Leishmania sp. LizS from a Mongolian gecko and L. hoogstrali from a Sudanese gecko showed some sequence similarities to the L. tarentolae strains, but the leishmanias said to be L. adleri from a Kenyan lacertid and L. agamae from an Israeli agamid showed no minicircle sequence similarities with lizard Leishmania and in fact were probably the same species. The maxicircle divergent region was larger in the group B strains than in the group A strains, but there were sequences in common with both groups, and not with L. hoogstrali and L. major. Four strains of L. tarentolae, the four other supposed saurian Leishmania species, three mammalian leishmanias, T. platydactyli and four other trypanosomes, T. cyclops (Malaysian macaque), T. conorrhini (Hawaiian reduviid bug), T. cruzi (man) and T. lewisi (feral rat) were analyzed for their contents of sterols and phosphoglyceride fatty acyl groups. T. platydactyli TPCL2 contained a sterol (5-dehydroepisterol), a phosphatidylcholine fatty acyl group (alpha-linolenic acid) and a phosphatidylethanolamine fatty acyl group (dihydrosterculic acid) characteristic of members of the genus Leishmania and not the genus Trypanosoma. The proportions of those lipids in the free sterol and phosphoglyceride fractions of T. platydactyli TPCL2 most closely resembled those seen in the Leishmania strains from Algerian, French, Mongolian and Sudanese geckos.
    Matched MeSH terms: Species Specificity
  16. Yong HS, Mak JW
    PMID: 3043697
    The current information on isoenzyme studies of nematode parasites was reviewed. The genetic heterogeneity as reviewed by these studies was highlighted. Application of isoenzyme studies and the role of biotechnological techniques in isoenzyme studies was discussed, and the status of cytogenetic studies on nematode parasites was presented.
    Matched MeSH terms: Species Specificity
  17. Chang SP, Kramer KJ, Yamaga KM, Kato A, Case SE, Siddiqui WA
    Exp Parasitol, 1988 Oct;67(1):1-11.
    PMID: 3049134
    The gene encoding the 195,000-Da major merozoite surface antigen (gp195) of the FUP (Uganda-Palo Alto) isolate of Plasmodium falciparum, a strain widely used for monkey vaccination experiments, has been cloned and sequenced. The translated amino acid sequence of the FUP gp195 protein is closely related to the sequences of corresponding proteins of the CAMP (Malaysia) and MAD-20 (Papua New Guinea) isolates and more distantly related to those of the Wellcome (West Africa) and K1 (Thailand) isolates, supporting the proposed allelic dimorphism of gp195 within the parasite population. The prevalence of dimorphic sequences within the gp195 protein suggests that many gp195 epitopes would be group-specific. Despite the extensive differences in amino acid sequence between gp195 proteins of these two groups, the hydropathy profiles of proteins representative of both groups are very similar. The conservation of overall secondary structure shown by the hydropathy profile comparison indicates that gp195 proteins of the various P. falciparum isolates are functionally equivalent. This information on the primary structure of the FUP gp195 protein will enable us to evaluate the possible roles of conserved, group-specific and variable epitopes in immunity to the blood stage of the malaria parasite.
    Matched MeSH terms: Species Specificity
  18. Baimai V
    PMID: 3238480
    Until recently, very little was known of Anopheles species complexes and their relationships to epidemiology and malaria transmission in Southeast Asia. During the past eight years, extensive studies on the genetics of natural populations of anopheline mosquitoes in this region, involving the interdisciplinary efforts of taxonomists, operational entomologists and biologists, have revealed groups of cryptic species of Anopheles vectors, particularly the An. leucos phyrus group. This species group comprise seventeen species and two subspecies widely distributed in the forested areas of Southeast Asia. Among these species. An. dirus Peyton and Harrison, has been shown by cytogenetic and morphological studies to be a complex of at least seven isomorphic species, provisionally designated species A, B, C, D, E, F and takasagoensis, on the Southeast Asian mainland. Cytological identification of these species is based on distinct banding patterns of salivary gland polytene chromosomes as well as heterochromatin differences in mitotic karyotypes. The five species found in Thailand (A-D, F) exhibit distinct geographic distributions. Species A is widespread throughout Thailand except in the south. Species B had been found in sympatry with species C in southern Thailand and both seem to show north-south clinal geographic variation. Species D is common on the west side of southern Thailand and along the Thai-Burmese border in sympatry with species A. Species F, An. nemophilous Peyton and Ramalingam, has been found in a population at the Thai-Malaysian border in this study although it was known to be common in southern and western Thailand and Peninsular Malaysia. Species E is known only from western India. The five species found in Thailand also exhibit seasonal variation in relative abundance and different nocturnal biting cycles. Chromosomal polymorphisms have been observed in mitotic and polytene chromosomes of An. dirus A and D. Species B and C also show heterochromatin variation in the sex chromosomes, but are monomorphic for the standard sequence in polytene chromosomes. These biological characteristics of the An. dirus complex may have implications for understanding the epidemiology of malaria in Southeast Asia. Recent cytogenetic studies of wild-caught samples of An. leucosphyrus from Sumatra, Kalimantan and southern Thailand have revealed the presence of two distinct species within this taxon. Species A is widely distributed in southern Thailand, East Malaysia and Kalimantan, while species B is confined to Sumatra. The two isomorphic species are vectors of human malaria within their range of distribution.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
    Matched MeSH terms: Species Specificity
  19. Tan NH, Tan CS
    Comp. Biochem. Physiol., B, 1988;90(4):745-50.
    PMID: 2854766
    1. The L-amino acid oxidase, hyaluronidase, alkaline phosphomonoesterase, protease, phosphodiesterase, acetylcholinesterase, phospholipase A and 5'-nucleotidase activities of 47 samples of venoms from all the six species of cobra (Naja), including five subspecies of Naja naja, were examined. 2. The results demonstrated interspecific differences in the venom contents of phospholipase A, acetylcholinesterase, hyaluronidase and phosphodiesterase. These differences in venom enzyme contents can be used for the differentiation of species of the genus Naja. 3. Thus, our results revealed a correlation between the enzyme composition of venom and the taxonomic status of the snake at the species level for the genus Naja.
    Matched MeSH terms: Species Specificity
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