Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: https://hdl.handle.net/10495/44691
Título : Capacity of Histoplasma capsulatum to Survive the Composting Process
Autor : Gómez Londoño, Luisa Fernanda
Pérez León, Laura Carolina
McEwen Ochoa, Juan Guillermo
Peláez Jaramillo, Carlos Alberto
Acevedo Ruiz, José Miguel
Taylor, María Lucía
Arango Arteaga, Myrtha
Zuluaga Rodríguez, Alejandra
Jiménez Alzate, María del Pilar
metadata.dc.subject.*: Histoplasma
Compostaje
Composting
Histoplasmosis
https://id.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/D006658
https://id.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/D000076282
https://id.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/D006660
Fecha de publicación : 2019
Editorial : Hindawi
Wiley
Citación : Gómez Londoño, Luisa Fernanda, Pérez León, Laura Carolina, McEwen Ochoa, Juan Guillermo, Zuluaga Rodriguez, Alejandra, Peláez Jaramillo, Carlos Alberto, Acevedo Ruiz, Jose Miguel, Taylor, María Lucia, Arango Arteaga, Myrtha, Jiménez Alzate, María del Pilar, Capacity of Histoplasma capsulatum to Survive the Composting Process, Applied and Environmental Soil Science, 2019, 5038153, 9 pages, 2019. https://doi.org/10.1155/2019/5038153
Resumen : ABSTRACT: Histoplasma capsulatum (H. capsulatum) is a thermal-dimorphic fungus, the causal agent of histoplasmosis. Its presence in the environment is related with chicken manure due to their high nitrogen and phosphorus content. In Colombia, chicken manure is the most used raw material in the composting process; however, there is no information about the capacity of H. capsulatum to survive and remain viable in a composted organic fertilizer. To address this question, this study shows three assays based on microbiological culture and the Hc100 nested PCR. First, a composting reactor system was designed to transform organic material under laboratory conditions, and the raw material was inoculated with the fungus. From these reactors, the fungus was not isolated, but its DNA was detected. In the second assay, samples from factories where the DNA of the fungus was previously detected by PCR were analyzed. In the raw material samples, 3 colonies of H. capsulatum were isolated and its DNA was detected. However, after the composting process, neither the fungus was recovered by culture nor DNA was detected. In the third assay, sterilized and nonsterilized organic composted samples were inoculated with H. capsulatum and then evaluated monthly during a year. In both types of samples, the fungus DNA was detected by Hc100 nested PCR during the whole year, but the fungus only grew from sterile samples during the first two months evaluated. In general, the results of the assays showed that H. capsulatum is not able to survive a well-done composting process.
metadata.dc.identifier.eissn: 1687-7675
ISSN : 1687-7667
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1155/2019/5038153
Aparece en las colecciones: Artículos de Revista en Ciencias Médicas

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