Abstract. Anemia affects one-quarter of the world's population, but its etiology remains poorly understood. We determined the prevalence of anemia and studied underlying risk factors in infants (6-23 months), young school-aged children (6-8 years), and young non-pregnant women (15-25 years) in south-central Cô te d'Ivoire. Blood, stool, and urine samples were subjected to standardized, quality-controlled methods. We found high prevalence of anemia, malaria, inflammation, and deficiencies of iron, riboflavin, and vitamin A but low prevalence and intensities of soil-transmitted helminth and schistosome infections. Multivariate regression analysis revealed significant associations between anemia and Plasmodium falciparum for infants, inflammation for school-aged children, and cellular iron deficiency for both school-aged children and non-pregnant women. Women with riboflavin deficiency had significantly lower odds of anemia. Our findings call for interventions to protect infants from malaria, improved intake of dietary iron, better access to health care, and health education.
The role of bacilli in cocoa fermentation is not well known. Their potential of production of pectinolytic enzymes during this process was evaluated. Bacillus growth was monitored and pectinolytic strains were screened for their use of pectin as sole carbon source. Effects of cocoa fermentation parameters susceptible to influence on enzyme production were analysed. Among 98 strains isolated, 90 were positive for pectin degradation and 80% of them presented detectable pectinolytic activities in submerged fermentation. Forty-eight strains produced polygalacturonase (PG), 47 yielded pectin lyase (PL) and 23 strains produced both enzymes. Bacilli growth was not significantly affected during fermentation. PL production was favoured by galactose, lactose, glucose as sugars, and arginine, glutamine, cysteine and ammonium sulphate as nitrogen compounds. Pectin at low concentration (0.05%) and iron stimulated PL production. It was strongly repressed by galacturonic acid (1%), and negatively affected by nitrogen starvation, zinc and temperatures above 45°C. PL yield was very weak below pH 4.0 and in anaerobic conditions. PG production was weakened by sucrose and cation depletion. It was increased slightly by cysteine, ammonium nitrate and nitrogen starvation and significantly above 40°C. PG synthesis was not affected by acidic pH (3.0-6.0) or oxygen availability. As fermentation products, lactate and acetate lowered the production of both enzymes while ethanol had no effect. The high proportion of pectinolytic producers among the strains studied and analysis of factors influencing pectinolytic enzymes production, suggest that Bacillus sp. is liable to produce at least one enzyme during cocoa fermentation.
BackgroundGiven the widespread distribution of Plasmodium and helminth infections, and similarities of ecological requirements for disease transmission, coinfection is a common phenomenon in sub-Saharan Africa and elsewhere in the tropics. Interactions of Plasmodium falciparum and soil-transmitted helminths, including immunological responses and clinical outcomes of the host, need further scientific inquiry. Understanding the complex interactions between these parasitic infections is of public health relevance considering that control measures targeting malaria and helminthiases are going to scale.MethodologyA cross-sectional survey was carried out in April 2010 in infants, young school-aged children, and young non-pregnant women in south-central Côte d'Ivoire. Stool, urine, and blood samples were collected and subjected to standardized, quality-controlled methods. Soil-transmitted helminth infections were identified and quantified in stool. Finger-prick blood samples were used to determine Plasmodium spp. infection, parasitemia, and hemoglobin concentrations. Iron, vitamin A, riboflavin, and inflammation status were measured in venous blood samples.Principal FindingsMultivariate regression analysis revealed specific association between infection and demographic, socioeconomic, host inflammatory and nutritional factors. Non-pregnant women infected with P. falciparum had significantly lower odds of hookworm infection, whilst a significant positive association was found between both parasitic infections in 6- to 8-year-old children. Coinfected children had lower odds of anemia and iron deficiency than their counterparts infected with P. falciparum alone.Conclusions/SignificanceOur findings suggest that interaction between P. falciparum and light-intensity hookworm infections vary with age and, in school-aged children, may benefit the host through preventing iron deficiency anemia. This observation warrants additional investigation to elucidate the mechanisms and consequences of coinfections, as this information could have important implications when implementing integrated control measures against malaria and helminthiases.
Microbial pectinolytic strains are targeted as potential starter to control cocoa fermentation. This study analyses the ability of yeasts pectinolytic strains to grow under stress conditions. After an initial growth, a decline trend was observed in yeast growth cycle during the cocoa fermentation. The 36 yeasts pectinolytic strains screened from 205 isolates showed tolerance to both alcoholic stress (10-12% alcohol) and thermic stress (up to 40°C) corresponding to surviving population round 75%. However, temperature-alcohol cross stress provokes full inhibition of strains that failed to grow at only 35°C under 8-10% alcohol. As acid stress, citric acid at 4% has the same effect as alcohol. In contrast, acetic acid and lactic acid respectively at 0.5% and 2% exerted individually, a higher pressure on yeast growth inhibiting up to 60% the fungal population. However, the viability of yeasts strains to a given concentration of lactic (1%) or acetic (0.25%) acid proved to be relatively stable with YS201 at increasing temperature up to 40°C. Cross stress involving temperature and alcohol or single acid stress may be the limiting factor for yeasts pectinolytic growth as starter in controlled cocoa fermentation.
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