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1 osquito midgut interactions as it becomes an oocyst.
2  essential for sporogonic development in the oocyst.
3 oked infected meat, or by uptake of cat-shed oocysts.
4 in decreased infection relative to untreated oocysts.
5 ome amplification (WGA) of DNA from purified oocysts.
6 ment, oocysts attached onto already attached oocysts.
7 that observed in mice infected with unfrozen oocysts.
8 ection of the mosquito midgut in the form of oocysts.
9 nd were infected with Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts.
10 trafficking mechanism to deliver PbSR to the oocysts.
11 les artificially spiked with Cryptosporidium oocysts.
12 to induce the excystation of Cryptosporidium oocysts.
13 d limiting the access of cattle to infective oocysts.
14 otective wall develops, forming unsporulated oocysts.
15 guts containing invading ookinetes and early oocysts.
16 ility to invade the mosquito midgut and form oocysts.
17 in, is expressed only in ookinetes and early oocysts.
18 possibility of distinguishing dead from live oocysts.
19 gives rise to haploid sporozoites within the oocysts.
20 raverse the mosquito midgut and transform to oocysts.
21 hilst also detecting damaged and/or excysted oocysts.
22 e and after a challenge with Cryptosporidium oocysts.
23 zoites, bradyzoites, and sporozoites but not oocysts.
24 irds were challenged with live E. acervulina oocysts 14 days posthatch, and fecal-oocyst shedding and
25  Escherichia coli and Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts account for most of the cases of diarrhea in the
26                                         Upon oocyst acquisition, these walls lose their integrity to
27 neity on transport of Cryptosporidium parvum oocyst and carboxylate microsphere in 2-dimensional micr
28                                   The robust oocyst and sporocyst walls protect the infective sporozo
29 ver they are severely deficient in ookinete, oocyst and sporozoite formation inside the mosquito vect
30                      However, when analyzing oocyst and sporozoite infection rates separately, the re
31 ased by 30% and 24% after infection with the oocyst and sporozoite stages of Plasmodium falciparum, r
32 or differential attraction and biting at the oocyst and sporozoite stages.
33  development, fertilization, and ookinete-to-oocyst and sporozoite-to-liver stage transitions.
34 as secreted into the sporocyst cavity of the oocysts and after excystation, secretion was detected in
35 yptosporidium is transmitted by ingestion of oocysts and completes its life cycle in a single host.
36 asites lacking TRP1 failed to migrate within oocysts and did not egress, suggesting that TRP1 is a vi
37  RAW macrophages could interact rapidly with oocysts and engulfed them by remodelling of their actin
38 nt involves transformation of ookinetes into oocysts and formation of infective sporozoites.
39 or not DOC inhibits or promotes transport of oocysts and microspheres in agricultural soils and by ho
40          Transport of Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts and microspheres in two disparate (a clay- and F
41 enes, protein expression is only reported in oocysts and sporozoites indicating that repressed transc
42 , which restored fertility and production of oocysts and sporozoites, which demonstrates that mitocho
43 e var gene is selected for expression in the oocyst, and transcription of this gene increases dramati
44 iglets were orally challenged with C hominis oocysts, and oral treatment with MMV665917 was commenced
45 tidious nature, the passing of non-infective oocysts, and the short duration of oocyst shedding, dire
46 s in its feces and, after sporulation, these oocysts are infectious to cattle.
47                                              Oocysts are meiotic spores and the product of parasite s
48 undantly expressed at a time when developing oocysts are observed, roughly 48 to 72 h after inoculati
49                                 Unsporulated oocysts are shed in the faeces of cats and meiosis gives
50 ) patches for microspheres at pH 4.4 and for oocysts at pH 5.8 and 8.1, where the DLVO energy barrier
51                Sporozoites are formed within oocysts at the mosquito midgut wall and are released int
52                    After initial attachment, oocysts attached onto already attached oocysts.
53                           In the micromodel, oocysts attached to the forward portion of clean collect
54 hat surface charge heterogeneity allowed for oocyst attachment.
55  The Brazilian datasets were consistent with oocysts being the predominant transmission route in thes
56 lood from DP-treated children (P = .06); the oocyst burden among mosquitoes was lower among those tha
57                                   The annual oocyst burden measured in community surveys is 3 to 434
58 le oocyst can possibly cause infection, this oocyst burden represents a major potential public health
59 eas of children might potentially reduce the oocyst burden.
60 e host and thus the only source of infective oocysts, but other mammals and birds can develop tissue
61 nth eggs, Giardia cysts, and Cryptosporidium oocysts, but the UASB reactor system discharges higher c
62 e and chemistry of the wall of the T. gondii oocyst by combining wall surface treatments, fluorescenc
63  Effective removal of Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts by granular filtration requires the knowledge of
64  targets derived from Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts by the use of oligonucleotide-gold nanoparticles
65  described for cryopreservation of C. parvum oocysts by vitrification using custom high aspect ratio
66    While cryopreservation of Cryptosporidium oocysts by vitrification was recently achieved, the meth
67                             Because a single oocyst can possibly cause infection, this oocyst burden
68 of transmission processes that amplified the oocyst concentration in the drinking-water effluent.
69 coprotein-coated microspheres best resembled oocyst concentration, despite having zeta similar to NH(
70 btain a 3-log inactivation of C. parvum Iowa oocysts, contact times of 105 and 128 min for a solution
71            These, now infectious, sporulated oocysts contaminate the environment as a source of infec
72 usually become infected through ingestion of oocyst-contaminated soil and water, tissue cysts in unde
73                           The first was that oocyst contamination of the drinking-water influent, cou
74 on were assessed by calculating the mosquito oocyst count as a marker for infectivity, using standard
75                                              Oocysts cryopreserved using the described protocol exhib
76 pment and precipitation independently raised oocyst delivery to the ocean (average increases of 44% a
77                 In contrast, NF166 and NF165 oocyst densities were strongly reduced in refractory mos
78 s and TEP1 silencing significantly increased oocyst densities.
79 genotyping, two loci significantly affecting oocyst density were identified: one on chromosome 2 betw
80 tes but did increase quality, as measured by oocyst density, by 2.4-fold.
81  doubling prevalence of infected midguts and oocyst density.
82 tor for attachment efficiencies of C. parvum oocyst deposition in porous media for a variety of envir
83 of suspended illite clay drastically enhance oocyst deposition.
84 s a method for confirming putative T. gondii oocysts detected in snail faeces and tissues by microsco
85 asexual blood forms, gametocytes, and in the oocysts developing inside mosquito mid-gut.
86 ctors of the complement-like system restores oocyst development and disease transmission to rodent ho
87 itoes that confer refractoriness (failure of oocyst development in mosquito midguts) to natural Plasm
88 mia that subsequently translated into higher oocyst development in mosquitoes.
89 ciparum, ookinete development in P. berghei, oocyst development in P. berghei and P. falciparum, and
90 D: +/- 1.80 nM) and dose-dependently blocked oocyst development in the mosquito with a 50% inhibitory
91             An antienolase antibody inhibits oocyst development of both Plasmodium berghei and Plasmo
92 tibodies against PfCelTOS strongly inhibited oocyst development of P. falciparum and Plasmodium bergh
93               Mosquito infection ensues upon oocyst development that follows ookinete invasion and tr
94 s RBC binding and plays an important role in oocyst development, a critical step in malaria transmiss
95 nts of the mosquito immune system that limit oocyst development, and provide insight into their possi
96 he mosquito midgut epithelium or ookinete-to-oocyst differentiation but mediates a late-phase immune
97 ntify SOAP as a key molecule for ookinete-to-oocyst differentiation in mosquitoes.
98 d Anopheles stephensi genes expressed during oocyst differentiation on the midgut.
99  asexual stage genes was up-regulated during oocyst differentiation.
100 model was recorded to determine the attached oocyst distributions in transversal and longitudinal dir
101 reexisting indole levels in the gut join the oocyst dose and immune status as important factors that
102                               Because of its oocyst durability Cryptosporidium parvum is a significan
103 rozoites, pointing to a role for PbSR in the oocyst during sporogony.
104 n-releated protein 1 (TRP1) is important for oocyst egress and salivary gland invasion, and hence for
105 ays chlorine inactivation of Cryptosporidium oocysts, emphasizing the need for additional pool remedi
106 nt across temperatures, counterbalancing the oocyst enhancement at 24 degrees C.
107                          The genotype of the oocysts excreted in feces and the relative distribution
108                                              Oocyst excretion and diarrhea severity were observed dai
109 engineered parasite strain totally prevented oocyst excretion following infection with wild-type T. g
110        GloWPa-Crypto L1 is most sensitive to oocyst excretion rates, due to large variation reported
111        MMV665917 significantly reduced fecal oocyst excretion, parasite colonization and damage to th
112 ent per villus and significantly exacerbated oocyst excretion.
113 lts in intensified epithelial parasitism and oocyst excretion.
114 d be a cost-effective new tool for assessing oocyst filtration in porous media, for example, to evalu
115 ce were infected with Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts for 6-13 days and compared with uninfected contr
116 o WT parasites as reflected by impairment of oocyst formation and sporogonic development in the mosqu
117                                              Oocyst formation and sporozoite production, necessary fo
118 st gametocytes in vitro), completely blocked oocyst formation in a mouse model of transmission.
119 le gamete formation and completely prevented oocyst formation in female Anopheles stephensi mosquitoe
120 h kinetics compared to WT parasites; however oocyst formation in mosquitoes was reduced by 50 to 80%.
121 n of PfPATPL1 also reduces the efficiency of oocyst formation in mosquitoes.
122                               For successful oocyst formation newly formed ookinetes in the midgut lu
123 nd define the genes that orchestrate sex and oocyst formation through mRNA sequencing of sorted cells
124 ant WT plasminogen to depleted serum rescues oocyst formation, recombinant inactive plasminogen does
125 en depletion leads to a strong inhibition of oocyst formation.
126 o gametocytes but have drastic impairment of oocyst formation.
127             Plasmodium sporozoites mature in oocysts formed in the mosquito gut wall and then invade
128 d to be at least about 10 oocysts/g (about 1 oocyst/g for a pica child) for Cryptosporidium, about 5
129 ), levels would need to be at least about 10 oocysts/g (about 1 oocyst/g for a pica child) for Crypto
130 s of only 4 mg L(-1) SRHA and SDBS decreased oocyst hydrophobicity from 66% to 20% and from 66% to 5%
131 nsport of surface-treated, sterile C. parvum oocyst in porous media.
132 humans and animals, which is transmitted via oocysts in cat faeces or tissue cysts in contaminated me
133 n T. gondii forms cysts in vitro that induce oocysts in cats, the gold standard criterion for cysts.
134 rospheres may not be suitable surrogates for oocysts in certain types of soils.
135  exposure (as assessed by the mean number of oocysts in control mosquitoes) and antibody titers.
136                             By concentrating oocysts in faecal pellets, snails may facilitate entry o
137 udies in which genotyping of Cryptospiridium oocysts in feces of dogs and cats have been successful a
138  unexcysted (in vivo) Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts in human colonic adenocarcinoma (HCT-8) cells an
139                    The domestic dog excretes oocysts in its feces and, after sporulation, these oocys
140                   Vitrification of C. parvum oocysts in larger volumes will expedite progress of rese
141 ocytes, PNP-deficient parasites did not form oocysts in mosquito midguts and were not transmitted fro
142    We imaged the release of sporozoites from oocysts in situ, which was preceded by active motility.
143 results in significantly elevated numbers of oocysts in susceptible and resistant mosquitoes.
144 ence of infected mosquitos at different mean oocysts in the control.
145 n maintaining the integrity of the T. gondii oocysts in the environment or after exposure to disinfec
146                       Real time transport of oocysts in the micromodel was recorded to determine the
147 ilencing reduces the number of P. falciparum oocysts in the mosquito midgut by over 70% compared with
148        Plasmodium sporozoites develop within oocysts in the mosquito midgut wall and then migrate to
149 as measured by the number of Cryptosporidium oocysts in the stools) and also with the IL-1alpha conce
150 yotes (Canis latrans) can excrete N. caninum oocysts in their feces and that white-tailed deer (Odoco
151 vailable, and control focuses on eliminating oocysts in water supplies.
152 icrospheres achieved a superior match to the oocysts in zeta, concentration, mass recovery, and colli
153  of phagocytic cells in processing T. gondii oocysts, in line with non-classical routes of infection,
154 tro male gamete formation assays and reduced oocyst infection and prevalence in Anopheles mosquitoes.
155                                              Oocyst infection can be distinguished from bradyzoite in
156 train) gametocyte cultures slightly enhanced oocyst infection.
157 y addressed the effects of ClO2 on C. parvum oocyst infectivity in chlorinated recreational water ven
158 ly expressed as percent inhibition in either oocyst intensity (% transmission reducing activity, %TRA
159 ted the relationship between % inhibition in oocyst intensity and % inhibition of prevalence of infec
160 pooled mosquitoes accurately quantifies mean oocyst intensity and generates comparable TRA estimates.
161 AlbB reduced malaria parasite prevalence and oocyst intensity at 28 degrees C.
162 er-assay variability of % inhibition of mean oocyst intensity at each concentration of 4B7 (lower con
163 l three IgGs showed 97 to 100% inhibition in oocyst intensity compared to control IgG.
164  anti-Pfs230, and anti-PfHAP2 IgGs inhibited oocyst intensity in a dose-dependent manner.
165              Luminescence-based estimates of oocyst intensity in individual mosquitoes should be inte
166 ffect on prevalence but a marked increase in oocyst intensity.
167  supporting sporozoite excystation following oocyst internalisation.
168  and measures that decrease spread of viable oocysts into the environment.
169 f the U.S. ranging from ca. 0.005 to ca. 0.5 oocysts/L.
170 itted by contamination of food or water with oocyst-laden feces from an infected animal.
171 er account for nearly a quarter of the total oocyst load, meaning that the developing world accounts
172 he effect of manure storage and treatment on oocyst loads using scenario analysis.
173  We find that although manure storage halves oocyst loads, manure treatment, especially of cattle man
174 development (day 1 after the blood meal) and oocyst maturation (day 7 after the blood meal) but not d
175               To date, only one apicomplexan oocyst membrane protein has been identified, Cryptospori
176 identification of parasite species using egg/oocyst morphology, which could overestimate parasite sha
177 l component of the events that precede intra-oocyst motility and subsequently sporozoite egress and s
178      In a C. parvum infection with 1 x 10(6) oocysts/mouse in SCID beige (SCIDbg) mice (SCID mice lac
179 ria protein expressed in ookinetes and young oocysts, named secreted ookinete adhesive protein (SOAP)
180 nexons resulted in an increase in Plasmodium oocyst number and infection prevalence.
181 , but not AGAP006241, caused an induction in oocyst number.
182 pact Plasmodium infection outcomes, reducing oocyst numbers and the potential for malaria transmissio
183 s mosquitoes (approximately 90% reduction in oocyst numbers in the midgut).
184 ediated positive correlation between egg and oocyst numbers; impairing oogenesis by multiple 20E mani
185 ged gnotobiotic piglets with equal number of oocysts of type 1 and type 2, given either simultaneousl
186 in-binding proteins and then develop into an oocyst on the midgut basal lamina.
187  develops and differentiates within parasite oocysts on the Anopheles mosquito midgut.
188  the ookinetes into the sporozoite-producing oocysts on the mosquito midgut wall.
189 urs primarily via ingestion of environmental oocysts or consumption of undercooked/raw meat containin
190 viable in the mosquito midgut and never made oocysts or sporozoites, thereby abrogating transmission
191 ough targeted propagation in mice of progeny oocysts originating from populations lacking one parenta
192 io cholerae, and <9 x 10(-6) Cryptosporidium oocysts per 100 mL.
193                                 As few as 10 oocysts per 300 microl of stools could be detected with
194 nsitivity was determined to be as low as 200 oocysts per gram of feces processed, equivalent to 2 ooc
195 per gram of feces processed, equivalent to 2 oocysts per PCR.
196 en measured in community surveys is 3 to 434 oocysts per square foot and is greater in areas where ca
197 . load from livestock manure of 3.2 x 10(23) oocysts per year.
198 fect, they are unable to progress beyond the oocyst phase of the parasite mosquito stage.
199 tein is a major type of surface protein that oocysts possess.
200                                              Oocyst prevalence on mosquito midguts and sporozoite pre
201                                              Oocyst production and mosquito infectivity is also signi
202 tly, triacsin C effectively reduced parasite oocyst production up to 88.1% with no apparent toxicity
203 in 1 minus parasites were fed to a mosquito, oocyst production was reduced by 70-90%, suggesting an i
204  DNA were achieved by a combination of three oocyst purification steps and whole-genome amplification
205                                              Oocyst rates were 6.8% and 4.2% among resistant and susc
206 gly restricted the development of Plasmodium oocysts, reducing their number by 90%.
207 y restores ookinete-to-oocyst transition but oocysts remain small in size and produce a very small nu
208 ites were observed in macrophages containing oocyst remnants or in new macrophages, giving rise to di
209 nate-capped silver-nanoparticle treatment of oocysts resulted in morphological modifications and decr
210 abelling of viable sporozoites excysted from oocysts reveals a complex admixture of surface proteins
211 w that watersheds with the highest levels of oocyst runoff align closely with regions of increased se
212 n of food or water that is contaminated with oocysts shed by cats or by eating undercooked or raw mea
213  have focused attention on the importance of oocysts shed in the feces of infected cats.
214 rvulina oocysts 14 days posthatch, and fecal-oocyst shedding and body weight gain were determined as
215  chickens evidenced by significantly reduced oocyst shedding and disruption of the intestinal blood b
216                                        Fecal oocyst shedding and intestinal parasite burden were sign
217 with 3-1E protein showed significantly lower oocyst shedding and normal body weight gain than nonvacc
218 17, or -18 or IFN-gamma gene further reduced oocyst shedding compared with that achieved with 3-1E al
219  of 3-1E resulted in significantly decreased oocyst shedding compared with that in nonvaccinated chic
220 icant reduction in merozoite replication and oocyst shedding in E. tenella in vitro and in vivo.
221 ice (SCID mice lacking functional NK cells), oocyst shedding was first demonstrated 18 days after inf
222 ing parameters, including diarrhea severity, oocyst shedding, and overall health.
223                                        Fecal oocyst shedding, as well as intestinal parasite burden,
224 unocompromised mice and dramatically reduces oocyst shedding, diarrhea, and dehydration in neonatal c
225 infective oocysts, and the short duration of oocyst shedding, direct contact with cats is not thought
226 Eimeria spp. genes related to gamete fusion, oocyst shedding, mitosis and spermiogenesis.
227 infection was monitored by quantifying fecal oocyst shedding.
228         Genes significantly overexpressed in oocysts show evidence of specialized functions not found
229      Analysis of RNA-Seq data from replicate oocyst, sporozoite and intracellular samples revealed si
230 nses only in malaria-infected mosquitoes (at oocyst, sporozoite or both stages).
231 asites suggesting a role for this protein in oocyst/sporozoite transmission to susceptible hosts.
232 e mRNAs and proteins that are upregulated in oocyst sporozoites (UOS) or upregulated in infectious sp
233 ulation of at least 47 genes (upregulated in oocyst sporozoites [UOS genes]) before they infect the s
234 dynamic transcriptomes and proteomes of both oocyst sporozoites and salivary gland sporozoites in bot
235 n, resulting in parasites capable of forming oocyst sporozoites but blocked in the salivary gland tra
236                                  Conversely, oocyst sporozoites show upregulation of at least 47 gene
237 he sporozoite secretory organelles, rendered oocyst sporozoites unable to infect the mosquito salivar
238 ed that SSP3 is expressed in mosquito midgut oocyst sporozoites, exhibiting an intracellular localiza
239 r microarray analysis shows that compared to oocyst sporozoites, salivary gland sporozoites upregulat
240 rts into gametocytes that produce infectious oocysts (sporozoites) that are expelled into the environ
241 e analyzed the transcriptome of C. parvum in oocysts, sporozoites and infected cell monolayers 2-48 h
242                                        While oocyst sporulation rates of PbSR knockout parasites are
243 owever, progression from the ookinete to the oocyst stage and sporozoite formation were completely ab
244 reas TgROM2 and TgROM3 were expressed in the oocyst stage involved in transmission.
245 us protozoan parasite Toxoplasma gondii, the oocyst stage possesses a bilayered wall that protects th
246 ved organelle of the Plasmodium ookinete and oocyst stage required for sporogony-is dependent on the
247 also reveal an increased sugar uptake at the oocyst stage that decreased at the sporozoite stage of i
248 cidian parasites are transmitted via a fecal oocyst stage that is exceptionally resistant to environm
249 idase production that limit the ookinete and oocyst stages of malaria parasite development, respectiv
250  to the mosquito-specific ookinete and young oocyst stages of the parasite.
251 eric repulsion and possibly other changes in oocyst surface properties.
252 e mosquito late-phase immune response limits oocyst survival are less understood.
253  a late-phase immune response that decreases oocyst survival.
254 nt immune mechanisms regulating ookinete and oocyst survival.
255 ite expansion > 100-fold and generate viable oocysts that are transmissible in vitro and to mice, cau
256 knockout parasites produce normal numbers of oocysts that fail to form sporozoites, pointing to a rol
257 ilisation, decreased fecundity and generates oocysts that fail to produce sporozoites.
258 richia coli cells and Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts that have been embedded in ground meat.
259 ur column data confirm for freshly harvested oocysts that the presence of iron coatings on the sand m
260                                              Oocysts, the extremely hardy free-living environmental s
261 ite transmission occurs through ingestion of oocysts, through either direct contact or consumption of
262 wall to digestive enzymes and the ability of oocysts to cause parenteral infections, the present stud
263 ith freshly harvested Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts to evaluate the effects of solution chemistry, s
264 es and discusses the inability of UV-exposed oocysts to regain infectivity.
265                                Attachment of oocysts to silica surface in a radial stagnation point f
266 d as the sporozoites transit from the midgut oocysts to the salivary glands.
267 he transcriptome found in the host cell, the oocyst transcriptome is less diverse.
268 em through RNAi largely restores ookinete-to-oocyst transition but oocysts remain small in size and p
269                   After invasion ookinete-to-oocyst transition must occur, a process believed to requ
270 ia ookinetes and disappear after ookinete-to-oocyst transition.
271 ranular filtration requires the knowledge of oocyst transport and deposition mechanisms, which can be
272 ased on real time microscopic observation of oocyst transport in porous media.
273 hrough the temperate soil 5-fold, whereas no oocyst transport was detected in tropical soil.
274 SRHA had only a nominal effect in increasing oocysts transport in tropical soil, but caused a 6-fold
275                          SDBS also increased oocysts transport through the temperate soil 5-fold, whe
276  the dissolved organic carbon (DOC), whereas oocysts transport was more affected by soil mineralogy.
277 sion of HSP70 mRNA in Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts via a simple heat shock process provides nonenzy
278 ffective in killing the parasite because the oocyst wall acts as a primary barrier to physical and ch
279 es to identify chemical factors that lead to oocyst wall disruption under physiological conditions.
280 ndings suggest a key biological role for the oocyst wall mechanics in maintaining the integrity of th
281 protein has been identified, Cryptosporidium oocyst wall protein 1 (COWP1).
282 polymorphism analysis of the Cryptosporidium oocyst wall protein gene for 134 of 136 (98.5%) samples
283 analysis of the 18S rRNA and Cryptosporidium oocyst wall protein genes.
284  indentation measurements indicated that the oocyst wall resembles common plastic materials, based on
285 hesis that multiple COWPs play a role in the oocyst wall structure.
286                  Given the resistance of the oocyst wall to digestive enzymes and the ability of oocy
287 OWP8 specifically localized to the C. parvum oocyst wall, supporting the hypothesis that multiple COW
288 fication of mRNA from as few as 30 C. parvum oocysts was demonstrated directly on-chip and compared t
289  infected with P. gallinaceum, the number of oocysts was dramatically reduced in midguts, and no spor
290  from as few as 5 x 10(3) purified C. parvum oocysts was successfully detected.
291                                 Internalised oocysts were associated to macrophage acidic compartment
292 g exposure to T. gondii-containing seawater, oocysts were detected by microscopy in snail faeces and
293 l and sexual stages and the formation of new oocysts were observed during the course of infection.
294                    Moreover, the majority of oocysts were retarded in their growth and were smaller i
295 d the same log reduction in concentration as oocysts, whereas results from unmodified microspheres de
296 al infection or abortion and by ingestion of oocysts, which, if it occurs during gestation, can also
297 used to identify live and inactive C. parvum oocysts with over 90% certainty, whilst also detecting d
298 (mouse) model, we observed that treatment of oocysts with silver nitrate and proteinate-capped silver
299 t experiments determine the number of mature oocysts, without considering that different immune mecha
300 ch includes clays, and SRHA, both caused the oocysts zeta potential (zeta) to become more negative, b

 
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