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1 lishment of a biofilm within its vector, the flea.
2  proventriculus or produced a biofilm in the flea.
3 ic plague, blocks feeding by its vector, the flea.
4 dents and humans via the bite of an infected flea.
5 ited in the skin via the bite of an infected flea.
6 etween maternal host and principal host of a flea.
7 -PhoQ two-component regulatory system in the flea.
8 ole and function of this Y. pestis system in fleas.
9 ds produced by its primary prey, small water fleas.
10 cteria; yet only Y. pestis forms biofilms in fleas.
11 ease that is spread from mammal to mammal by fleas.
12 e and to be transmitted from host to host by fleas.
13 e agent of plague, is usually transmitted by fleas.
14  but not bubonic plague, when transmitted by fleas.
15 stis recently evolved, is not transmitted by fleas.
16 elegans and the ability to colonize or block fleas.
17 en 1939 and 1998 from patients, animals, and fleas.
18 mples were prepared from 381 field-collected fleas.
19 ive alternative for identifying Y. pestis in fleas.
20 erium associated with wild rodents and their fleas.
21 ae is transmitted experimentally to cats via fleas.
22 gue, is transmitted by the bites of infected fleas.
23 tentially other human pathogens, vectored by fleas.
24 d-feeding arthropod ectoparasites, including fleas.
25 he Bartonella variants carried by individual fleas.
26 thropod hosts across the globe, primarily in fleas.
27 sufficient to make Y. pestis orally toxic to fleas.
28 is colonization and biofilm formation in cat fleas.
29  in host-opportunistic than in host-specific fleas.
30 of Bartonella infection in either rodents or fleas.
31  to three challenges with Y. pestis-infected fleas, 14 of 15 unvaccinated control mice developed plag
32 flea; however, little is known about the cat flea, a species that may bridge zoonotic and anthroponot
33   However, because rodent and, consequently, flea abundance doubled following experimental defaunatio
34               Direct examination of infected fleas, aided by in vitro studies and experiments with th
35 kedly reduces the severity and prevalence of flea allergic dermatitis.
36 ss cohesive biofilm both in vitro and in the flea and had a greatly reduced ability to localize to an
37                     Y. pestis biofilm in the flea and in vitro is dependent on an extracellular matri
38 sylla cheopis and to produce biofilms in the flea and in vitro.
39 families of peptides are also shared by both fleas and are unique to these organisms.
40 atasi, and possibly other arthropods such as fleas and bed bugs, the strong saliva-induced DTH respon
41            Yersinia pestis is transmitted by fleas and causes bubonic plague, characterized by severe
42 apanese in World War II with plague-infected fleas and cholera-coated flies and of the Americans duri
43  heaviest in coastal and temperate climates, fleas and flea-borne disease agents can occur almost any
44 n experimentally infected Xenopsylla cheopis fleas and in experimentally infected monkey blood and or
45 e in humans follows transmission by infected fleas and is characterized by an acute, necrotizing lymp
46 orm, whipworm, pinworm, Chinese liver fluke, fleas and lice.
47 n the expected rate of spread by blocked rat fleas and that observed during the Black Death has even
48 s once monthly oral agent for the control of fleas and ticks on dogs and cats which was directly comp
49 t repellents, or products to control lice or fleas and ticks on pets.
50       Organisms such as Daphnia magna (water fleas) and Hyalella azteca (freshwater shrimps) are comm
51    The recently discovered glycine-rich snow flea antifreeze protein (sfAFP) has no sequence homology
52             Here, we show that, for the snow flea antifreeze protein (sfAFP), stability and cooperati
53 to determine the X-ray structure of the snow flea antifreeze protein (sfAFP).
54 trix enveloping the Y. pestis biofilm in the flea appeared to incorporate components from the flea's
55               The immature stages of the cat flea are extremely susceptible to environmental factors
56                                          Cat fleas are the most important ectoparasite of cats and do
57 acquisition of new genes, allowing it to use fleas as transmission vectors.
58       Our study exposes the potential of cat fleas as vectors of human pathogens in crowded northeast
59     This mutant was able to infect and block fleas as well as the parental wild-type strain, indicati
60 ilar to holotricin was found only in the cat flea, as were the abundantly expressed Cys-less peptide
61 symptomatic individuals, were tested for cat flea-associated and booklice-associated strains of R. fe
62 human granulocytic ehrlichiosis; a novel cat flea-associated typhus group rickettsiosis; bartonellose
63 ase, flea-borne typhus, and plague are three flea-associated zoonoses of cats of concern in the USA.
64 s biological control agent the alligatorweed flea beetle (Agasicles hygrophila) do not completely ove
65 nsect herbivores, including the cabbage stem flea beetle (Psylliodes chrysocephala), prevent glucosin
66 (6R,7S)-himachala-9,11-diene in the crucifer flea beetle Phyllotreta striolata, a compound previously
67 nt, 8-year cycles persisted for cabbage stem flea beetle throughout the 50 years of data collection.
68 m near the range margin of the alligatorweed flea beetle to test whether spatial variation in alligat
69 ighly susceptible to attack by an indigenous flea beetle, Epitrix cucumeris, and the Colorado potato
70                                  Phyllotreta flea beetles are adapted to crucifer plants (Brassicales
71 volution of GSS activity in ermine moths and flea beetles.
72 ing field data on prairie community ecology, flea behavior, and plague-transmission biology, we find
73  biofilm formation and essentially abolishes flea biofilms.
74 nd humans, C. felis felis is responsible for flea bite allergy dermatitis and the transmission of dog
75                              Transmission by flea bite is a relatively recent adaptation that disting
76 ional lymph nodes that drain the intradermal flea bite site.
77 e by increasing bacterial dissemination from flea bite sites and incidentally enhanced replication in
78 ive for C. elegans biofilm formation and for flea blockage but only moderately defective in an in vit
79 ify genes and pathways involved in Y. pestis flea blockage.
80 f ilp had no effect on bacterial blockage of flea blood feeding or colonization.
81 cuses on the ecology and epidemiology of the flea-borne bacterial zoonoses mentioned above with an em
82                            We identified the flea-borne Bartonella parasites infecting sympatric popu
83 ionary model in which Y. pestis emerged as a flea-borne clone, with each genetic change incrementally
84 in coastal and temperate climates, fleas and flea-borne disease agents can occur almost anywhere in t
85                                        Other flea-borne human pathogens have emerged recently (e.g.,
86 he evolution and emergence of Y. pestis as a flea-borne pathogen.
87                                Understanding flea-borne pathogens, and the associated risks for owner
88 ly documented environment where the agent of flea-borne plague, Yersinia pestis, must replicate to pr
89  vaccines for the ability to protect against flea-borne plague.
90 g examples from tick-borne Lyme borreliosis; flea-borne plague; and mosquito-borne dengue, malaria, a
91 ace antigens are more closely related to the flea-borne R. typhi than to the mite-borne R. akari.
92                                          For flea-borne Rickettsia typhi, the etiological agent of mu
93                                            A flea-borne rickettsia, previously referred to as ELB, ha
94  scenario in which plague first emerged as a flea-borne septicemic disease of limited transmissibilit
95 blocked, as a model for studying alternative flea-borne transmission mechanisms.
96 bstructs the flea's gut and thus hastens the flea-borne transmission of plague.
97                  Here, we show that although flea-borne transmission usually leads to bubonic plague
98  have contributed to the recent evolution of flea-borne transmission.
99 abling proventricular blockage and efficient flea-borne transmission.
100 ked fleas has been the accepted paradigm for flea-borne transmission.
101  the evolutionary adaptation of Y. pestis to flea-borne transmission.
102                         Cat-scratch disease, flea-borne typhus, and plague are three flea-associated
103                                              Flea-borne zoonoses such as plague (Yersinia pestis) and
104 pod vector, plague epizootics require a high flea burden per host, even when the susceptible host pop
105 he flea life cycle, targeting not only adult fleas but also the immature stages in the environment, c
106 rrelated with the number of bites by blocked fleas but not with the total number of fleabites.
107 ue depends on blockage of the foregut of the flea by a mass of plague bacilli.
108                      The bacteria can starve fleas by blocking their digestive tracts, which stimulat
109               Of these taxa, the spiny water flea (Bythotrephes longimanus) most prospered.
110   The predatory zooplankton, the spiny water flea (Bythotrephes longimanus), invaded the Laurentian G
111                                   Control of fleas can be achieved, over a timescale of several month
112 ctious window often followed by death of the flea, cannot sufficiently explain the rapid rate of spre
113       However, due to the lack of any stable flea cell line or a published flea genome sequence, litt
114 given rodent from the principal host of this flea; changes in FGMCs were lower in the host species mo
115 es of crustaceans in orders Anostraca (water flea), Cladocera (brine shrimp), Isopoda (pill bugs), Am
116 habit temporary freshwater bodies, and water fleas (Cladoceromorpha), which live in all kinds of fres
117 was greater in veterans who reported wearing flea collars during the war (5 of 20, 25%) than in those
118 nce defect for the DeltapgmA mutant, nor was flea colonization or blockage affected.
119                                To address if fleas combat rickettsial infection, we characterized the
120                                     Although flea concentrations may be heaviest in coastal and tempe
121 ection, and after 4 weeks 95% of co-infected fleas contained an average of 103 antibiotic-resistant Y
122 recently, selamectin have revolutionized cat-flea control.
123 e present the analysis of the sialome of cat flea Ctenocephaides felis.
124 kettsial infection, we characterized the cat flea (Ctenocephalides felis) innate immune response to R
125 logy to a Wolbachia strain isolated from cat fleas (Ctenocephalides).
126                                      The cat flea, Ctenocephalides felis felis, is the most important
127 vestigated the chronic toxicity to the water flea Daphnia magna of two HFFRs, aluminum diethylphosphi
128                                 In the water flea Daphnia magna, SSRIs increase offspring production
129                                    The water flea Daphnia moves to deeper waters to avoid predators w
130 ed by planktonic organisms such as the water flea Daphnia.
131 n in metapopulations of two species of water fleas (Daphnia) in the skerry archipelago of southern Fi
132                                    The water flea, Daphnia magna is a key model to study phenotypic,
133 tate and fate of eDNA derived from the water flea, Daphnia magna, using a full factorial mesocosm exp
134 s and ponds disable the ability of the water flea, Daphnia pulex to respond effectively to its predat
135 thesis that a transmissible infection in the flea depends on the development of a biofilm on the hydr
136                    Transmission of plague by fleas depends on infection of the proventricular valve i
137 icient early-phase transmission by unblocked fleas described in our study calls for a paradigm shift
138  highly bacteremic kittens in the absence of fleas did not become infected.
139 obial peptides had a normal phenotype in the flea digestive tract.
140 emain infectious for a long time because the fleas do not suffer block-induced mortality.
141  We evaluated the effects of four species of flea ectoparasites (Parapulex chephrenis, Synosternus cl
142 netic analysis correlated plasma levels with flea efficacy.
143 and were epidemiologically linked to cat and flea exposure (P< or =0.004), whereas those with B. quin
144 dulisporamides was examined in an artificial flea feeding system for intrinsic systemic potency as we
145 lization and adherence of the biofilm to the flea foregut is essential for transmission.
146 -mediated bacterial biofilm formation in the flea foregut, which greatly increased transmissibility.
147 reduced ability to localize to and block the flea foregut.
148 ility of Y. pestis to produce biofilm in the flea foregut.
149 .henselae isolates was evaluated by removing fleas from the naturally bacteremic, flea-infested catte
150  of any stable flea cell line or a published flea genome sequence, little is known regarding R. typhi
151                                    The rarer flea genotype had an 83% incidence of Rickettsia asembon
152 -EnvZ-regulated genes, we concluded that the flea gut environment triggers OmpR-EnvZ.
153  only is the PhoP-PhoQ system induced in the flea gut environment, but also this induction is require
154 sting ex vivo biofilm-forming ability to the flea gut environment, thus enabling proventricular block
155  acquisition and fitness of Y. pestis during flea gut infection, consistent with posttranscriptional
156  Taken as a whole, our data suggest that the flea gut is a complex, fluctuating environment in which
157 ynthesis is not required for survival in the flea gut.
158 genetic exchange with microbial flora of the flea gut.
159 xic digestion product of blood plasma in the flea gut.
160 rd" for identifying Yersinia pestis-infected fleas has been inoculation of mice with pooled flea mate
161  the etiological agent of plague, by blocked fleas has been the accepted paradigm for flea-borne tran
162          In recent years, the control of cat fleas has increasingly relied on the use of IGRs applied
163                      Sialomes of cat and rat fleas have in common the enzyme families of phosphatases
164 ding Yersinia biofilm-forming ability to the flea host environment.
165 val of Y. pestis within the mammalian and/or flea host.
166 iofilm formation has been studied in the rat flea; however, little is known about the cat flea, a spe
167  host reservoir (great gerbil), main vector (flea), human cases, and external (climate) conditions, w
168   Accordingly, we assessed R. typhi-mediated flea IMD pathway activation in vivo using small interfer
169 eplicates as a biofilm in the foregut of cat fleas in a manner requiring hmsFR, two determinants for
170                        An infestation of cat fleas in a research center led to the detection of two g
171                    CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Fleas, in contrast to bloodsucking Nematocera (mosquitoe
172 ith increasing environmental temperature for fleas infected with either wild type or pPla- Y. pestis.
173 ry's deadliest infections, is transmitted by fleas infected with Yersinia pestis.
174 s required for growth on acetate but not for flea infection or virulence in mice.
175                                              Flea infestation was a significant risk factor for B. he
176                           Following an acute flea infestation, a dog developed an unusual clinical pr
177                                              Flea infestation, adoption from a shelter or as a stray
178 emoving fleas from the naturally bacteremic, flea-infested cattery cats and transferring these fleas
179 eremia, the prevalence of B. henselae in the fleas infesting these cats, and whether B. henselae is t
180 ive genomics, and investigations of Yersinia-flea interactions have disclosed the important steps in
181                                 The Yersinia-flea interactions that enable plague transmission cycles
182 ch has been proposed as a model of Y. pestis-flea interactions.
183               During summer, the spiny water flea invasion sparked a cascade of shifting diversity wh
184                        After the spiny water flea invasion, Cyanobacteria dominance crept earlier int
185  results suggest that feeding obstruction in fleas is a biofilm-mediated process and that biofilms ma
186 ce of infection and transmission via blocked fleas is a dominant paradigm in the literature, our mode
187               Ctenocephalides felis, the cat flea, is among the most prevalent and widely dispersed v
188 rders are secondarily wingless (for example, fleas, lice, grylloblattids and mantophasmatids), with a
189 ost invasive vectors, such as anthropophilic fleas, lice, kissing bugs, and mosquitoes.
190 t based upon a detailed understanding of the flea life cycle, targeting not only adult fleas but also
191                          Possibly the oldest flea-like animals known, they provide a challenge to the
192                                          New flea-like fossils from China provide a rare, tantalizing
193                The poor vector competence of fleas likely imposed selective pressure that favored the
194 ng of how these organisms are transmitted by fleas, maintained in zoonotic cycles, and transmitted to
195 eas has been inoculation of mice with pooled flea material.
196              Horizontal gene transfer in the flea may be the source of antibiotic-resistant Y. pestis
197 smissible infection, Y. pestis colonizes the flea midgut and forms a biofilm in the proventricular va
198  that unrelated co-infecting bacteria in the flea midgut are readily incorporated into these aggregat
199 chia coli donor to Y. pestis occurred in the flea midgut at a frequency of 10-3 after only 3 days of
200 Y. pestis recently evolved, can colonize the flea midgut but does not form a biofilm in the foregut.
201 l infection rates and bacterial loads in the flea midgut but produced a less cohesive biofilm both in
202           The other strains persisted in the flea midgut for 4 weeks but did not increase in numbers,
203 d of 110 kb, however, failed to colonize the flea midgut normally, indicating that one or more genes
204              By enabling colonization of the flea midgut, acquisition of this PLD may have precipitat
205 d resistance to antibacterial factors in the flea midgut, and extending Yersinia biofilm-forming abil
206 s tested, were unable to stably colonize the flea midgut.
207 egulated at 21 degrees C in vitro and in the flea midgut.
208                          Although infectious fleas might be an important source of infection and tran
209 d that, in contrast to the classical blocked flea model, O. montana is immediately infectious, transm
210 amides were selected for evaluation in a dog/flea model; pharmacokinetic analysis correlated plasma l
211  the complex habits of mosquitoes, ticks and fleas; most vector-borne viruses or bacteria infect anim
212 ids, proved able to block Xenopsylla cheopis fleas normally.
213 ne is a new insecticide for the treatment of fleas on domesticated pets and has recently been reporte
214 at provide tools for better control of adult fleas on the host.
215                     Plague is transmitted by fleas or contaminated aerosols.
216 ly observed associations between climate and flea population dynamics in India.
217 tic species (including tadpoles, fish, water fleas, protozoan, and bacteria) with known nonspecific t
218                                              Fleas radiated with their vertebrate hosts, including wi
219          These data demonstrate that the cat flea readily transmits B. henselae to cats.
220 on of research on their biology and control, fleas remain such a burden for companion animals and the
221                                          Cat fleas removed from bacteremic cattery cats transmitted B
222                       Infected Vero cell and flea RNAs were reverse transcribed by using random hexam
223 portant human pathogen that is maintained in flea-rodent enzootic cycles in many parts of the world.
224  appeared to incorporate components from the flea's blood meal, and bacteria released from the biofil
225 ce the biofilm that ultimately obstructs the flea's gut and thus hastens the flea-borne transmission
226  shrimp's ultrafast predatory strike and the flea's jump.
227                                          The flea's lumen gut is a poorly documented environment wher
228 tants established long-term infection of the flea's midgut but failed to colonize the proventriculus,
229 the host species more closely related to the flea's principal host.
230 ies and season, but interestingly not by the flea's vertebrate hosts.
231                             Sixty of the 381 flea samples were positive for Y. pestis by PCR; 48 of t
232 an indicator of the presence of Y. pestis in flea samples.
233 g production and quality of offspring in two flea species (host-specialist Parapulex chephrenis and h
234      Bacterial composition appears driven by flea species and season, but interestingly not by the fl
235 nd compatibility barriers by identifying the flea species associated with each rodent host, and the B
236     FGMCs among rodents infested by the same flea species were correlated positively with the phyloge
237                          Currently, only one flea species-the rat flea Xenopsylla cheopis-has been in
238 fspring in a generalist than in a specialist flea, supporting the association between life-history pl
239 but the assemblage of Bartonella variants in fleas tended to reflect the assemblage of Bartonella var
240 gue, replicates as biofilm in the foregut of fleas that feed on plague-infected animals or humans.
241 ed with higher host FGMCs than parasitism by fleas that spent most of their life 'off-host'.
242 l mammals, infectious prairie dog carcasses, fleas that transmit plague without blockage of the diges
243               However, we also found several fleas that were carrying variants never found in the hos
244                                     In these fleas, the plague-causing bacteria are surrounded by an
245  new pesticide currently sold for control of fleas, ticks, and mites on companion animals and poultry
246  blockage-dependent plague transmission from fleas to mammals.
247 infested cattery cats and transferring these fleas to specific-pathogen-free (SPF) kittens housed in
248 de an experimentally tractable surrogate for fleas to study plague transmission.
249 he disease plague, forms biofilms to enhance flea-to-mammal transmission.
250                                            A flea-to-mouse transmission model was developed for use i
251 barriers mediated by limited between-species flea transfer.
252  subcutaneous route of infection that mimics flea transmission of bubonic plague.
253  of transmission cycles; mechanisms by which fleas transmit Y. pestis; resistance and susceptibility
254  this evolutionary leap from an enteric to a flea-transmitted systemic pathogen.
255                    At the temperature of its flea vector (approximately 20-30 degrees C), the causati
256 ms a bacterial biofilm in the foregut of the flea vector that interferes with normal blood feeding.
257 Thus, the interactions of Y. pestis with its flea vector that lead to colonization and successful tra
258 ole in producing the foregut blockage in the flea vector that precedes transmission.
259 lague, forms a biofilm in the foregut of its flea vector to produce a transmissible infection.
260 es in the non-sterile digestive tract of its flea vector to produce a transmissible infection.
261  generally considered to occur via a blocked flea vector), inhalation of infectious respiratory dropl
262 in vitro, infectivity and maintenance in the flea vector, and lethality in murine models of systemic
263 que life stage in the digestive tract of its flea vector, characterized by rapid formation of a bacte
264 lockage of the foregut proventriculus of its flea vector.
265 o environments of the mammalian host and the flea vector.
266 usative agent of bubonic plague, which has a flea vector.
267 at might interact with the mammalian host or flea vector.
268 o, exhibits significant oral toxicity to the flea vectors of plague, whereas Y. pestis does not.
269 ittle is known regarding R. typhi biology in flea vectors that, importantly, do not suffer lethality
270 ted mortality eliminates 30-40% of infective flea vectors, ureD mutation early in the evolution of Y.
271 olving transmission between rodent hosts and flea vectors.
272 d three gene losses, enabled transmission by flea vectors.
273 rtonella spp. infection in rodents and their flea vectors.
274 lite that exhibits systemic efficacy against fleas via modulation of an invertebrate specific glutama
275 end of this kinetic carnival we find jumping fleas, violent spider jaws, shrimp claw hammers, and squ
276 e highest number of eggs produced per female flea was accompanied by the longest duration of developm
277                                         Each flea was analyzed individually by both PCR and mouse ino
278 e maternal host from the principal host of a flea was found in X. ramesis (but not P. chephrenis) wit
279         The altered biofilm phenotype in the flea was not due to lack of PhoPQ-dependent or PmrAB-dep
280 fection of mice, Caenorhabditis elegans, and fleas was investigated.
281 GS: A salivary gland cDNA library from adult fleas was randomly sequenced, assembled, and annotated.
282 , the density of infected hosts and infected fleas was roughly twofold higher in sites where large wi
283  two European moles in Poland (n = 994), and fleas were collected from rodents (n = 833).
284                We found that the majority of fleas were host-generalists but the assemblage of Barton
285                            Oropsylla montana fleas were implicated as the vector for disease transmis
286                               A total of 132 fleas were removed from cats whose blood was simultaneou
287 ncipally vectored by insects (i.e., lice and fleas), whereas spotted fever group rickettsiae are excl
288 ive naive cats were injected with feces from fleas which had been feeding on cats infected with a pur
289 can be acquired from the bites of infectious fleas (which is generally considered to occur via a bloc
290 o mammals, including humans, by the bites of fleas whose digestive tracts are blocked by a mass of th
291             Bubonic plague is transmitted by fleas whose feeding is blocked by a mass of Yersinia pes
292             Bubonic plague is transmitted by fleas whose feeding is blocked by a Yersinia pestis biof
293                                Parasitism by fleas with a 'stay on the host body' exploitation strate
294   B. henselae DNA was detected in 34% of 132 fleas, with seasonal variation, but without an associati
295  and Y. pseudotuberculosis to infect the rat flea Xenopsylla cheopis and to produce biofilms in the f
296 ofilm-dependent blockage in the oriental rat flea Xenopsylla cheopis respectively.
297 estis to its most proficient vector, the rat flea Xenopsylla cheopis, and subsequent transmission eff
298     Currently, only one flea species-the rat flea Xenopsylla cheopis-has been investigated by means o
299  the midgut of its principal vector, the rat flea Xenopsylla cheopis.
300 terization FS50, a salivary protein from the flea, Xenopsylla cheopis, that exhibits an inhibitory ac

 
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