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Research Publications (Food Safety)

This page tracks research articles published in national and international peer-reviewed journals. Recent articles are available ahead of print and searchable by Journal, Article Title, and Category. Research publications are tracked across six categories: Bacterial Pathogens, Chemical Contaminants, Natural Toxins, Parasites, Produce Safety, and Viruses. Articles produced by USDA Grant Funding Agencies (requires login) and FDA Grant Funding Agencies (requires login) are also tracked in Scopus.

Displaying 26 - 50 of 230

  1. Profile of Michael E. Mann

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • “I've sometimes referred to one’s scientific career as a sort of random walk,” says Michael E. Mann, referring to a mathematical model. “There have been a number of significant junctures where I shifted direction, but it feels like it’s been leading somewhere.” In 1999, Mann was the lead author on...

      • Heavy Metals
      • Chemical contaminants
  2. Evidence for biosurfactant-induced flow in corners and bacterial spreading in unsaturated porous media

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • The spread of pathogenic bacteria in unsaturated porous media, where air and liquid coexist in pore spaces, is the major cause of soil contamination by pathogens, soft rot in plants, food spoilage, and many pulmonary diseases. However, visualization and fundamental understanding of bacterial transport in unsaturated porous media are currently...

  3. Click-to-lead design of a picomolar ABA receptor antagonist with potent activity in vivo

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • Abscisic acid (ABA) is a key plant hormone that mediates both plant biotic and abiotic stress responses and many other developmental processes. ABA receptor antagonists are useful for dissecting and manipulating ABA’s physiological roles in vivo. We set out to design antagonists that block receptor–PP2C interactions by modifying the agonist...

      • Heavy Metals
      • Chemical contaminants
  4. Bluefin tuna reveal global patterns of mercury pollution and bioavailability in the world's oceans

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • Bluefin tuna (BFT), highly prized among consumers, accumulate high levels of mercury (Hg) as neurotoxic methylmercury (MeHg). However, how Hg bioaccumulation varies among globally distributed BFT populations is not understood. Here, we show mercury accumulation rates (MARs) in BFT are highest in the Mediterranean Sea and decrease as North Pacific...

      • Chemical contaminants
  5. A poplar short-chain dehydrogenase reductase plays a potential key role in biphenyl detoxification

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are persistent organic pollutants with severe effects on human health and the biosphere. Plant-based remediation offers many benefits over conventional PCB remediation, but its development has been hampered by our poor understanding of biphenyl metabolism in eukaryotes, among other factors. We report here a major PCB-responsive protein...

      • Chemical contaminants
  6. Correction for Santucci Jr and Scully, The pervasive threat of lead (Pb) in drinking water: Unmasking and pursuing scientific factors that govern lead release

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • CHEMISTRY Correction for “The pervasive threat of lead (Pb) in drinking water: Unmasking and pursuing scientific factors that govern lead release,” by Raymond J. Santucci Jr and John R. Scully, which was first published September 8, 2020; 10.1073/pnas.1913749117 (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 117, 23211–23218). The authors note that Fig....

      • Heavy Metals
      • Chemical contaminants
  7. The Brucella effector BspL targets the ER-associated degradation (ERAD) pathway and delays bacterial egress from infected cells

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • Perturbation of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), a central organelle of the cell, can have critical consequences for cellular homeostasis. An elaborate surveillance system known as ER quality control ensures that cells can respond and adapt to stress via the unfolded protein response (UPR) and that only correctly assembled proteins reach...

      • Bacterial pathogens
  8. Neu3 neuraminidase induction triggers intestinal inflammation and colitis in a model of recurrent human food-poisoning

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • Intestinal inflammation is the underlying basis of colitis and the inflammatory bowel diseases. These syndromes originate from genetic and environmental factors that remain to be fully identified. Infections are possible disease triggers, including recurrent human food-poisoning by the common foodborne pathogen Salmonella enterica Typhimurium (ST), which in laboratory mice causes progressive intestinal inflammation leading to an enduring colitis.

      • Salmonella
      • Bacterial pathogens
  9. The impact of childhood lead exposure on adult personality: Evidence from the United States, Europe, and a large-scale natural experiment

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • Childhood lead exposure has devastating lifelong consequences, as even low-level exposure stunts intelligence and leads to delinquent behavior. However, these consequences may be more extensive than previously thought because childhood lead exposure may adversely affect normal-range personality traits. Personality influences nearly every aspect of human functioning, from well-being to career...

      • Heavy Metals
      • Chemical contaminants
  10. Minute-scale detection of SARS-CoV-2 using a low-cost biosensor composed of pencil graphite electrodes

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • COVID-19 has led to over 3.47 million deaths worldwide and continues to devastate primarily middle- and low-income countries. High-frequency testing has been proposed as a potential solution to prevent outbreaks. However, current tests are not sufficiently low-cost, rapid, or scalable to enable broad COVID-19 testing. Here, we describe LEAD (Low-cost...

      • Heavy Metals
      • Chemical contaminants
  11. Anthracene-induced formation of highly twisted metallacycle and its crystal structure and tunable assembly behaviors

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) continue to attract increasing interest with respect to their applications as luminescent materials. The ordered structure of the metal−organic complex facilitates the selective integration of PAHs that can be tuned to function cooperatively. Here, a unique highly twisted anthracene-based organoplatinum metallacycle was prepared via coordination-driven self-assembly....

      • Chemical contaminants
  12. Strong evidence for the continued contribution of lead deposited during the 20th century to the atmospheric environment in London of today

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • Although leaded gasoline was banned at the end of the last century, lead (Pb) remains significantly enriched in airborne particles in large cities. The remobilization of historical Pb deposited in soils from atmospheric removal has been suggested as an important source providing evidence for the hypothetical long-term persistency of lead, and possibly other pollutants, in the urban environment.

      • Heavy Metals
      • Chemical contaminants
  13. Vibrational relaxation dynamics in layered perovskite quantum wells

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • Organic–inorganic layered perovskites, or Ruddlesden–Popper perovskites, are two-dimensional quantum wells with layers of lead-halide octahedra stacked between organic ligand barriers. The combination of their dielectric confinement and ionic sublattice results in excitonic excitations with substantial binding energies that are strongly coupled to the surrounding soft, polar lattice. However, the ligand...

      • Heavy Metals
      • Chemical contaminants
  14. Anthropogenic lead pervasive in Canadian Arctic seawater

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • Anthropogenic Pb is widespread in the environment including remote places. However, its presence in Canadian Arctic seawater is thought to be negligible based on low dissolved Pb (dPb) concentrations and proxy data. Here, we measured dPb isotopes in Arctic seawater with very low dPb concentrations (average ∼5 pmol ⋅ kg−1)...

      • Heavy Metals
      • Chemical contaminants
  15. Sensing of intracellular Hcp levels controls T6SS expression in Vibrio cholerae

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • The type 6 secretion system (T6SS) is a bacterial weapon broadly distributed in gram-negative bacteria and used to kill competitors and predators. Featuring a long and double-tubular structure, this molecular machine is energetically costly to produce and thus is likely subject to diverse regulation strategies that are largely ill defined....

      • Vibrio
      • Bacterial pathogens
  16. Molecular dynamics reveals formation path of benzonitrile and other molecules in conditions relevant to the interstellar medium

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and polycyclic aromatic nitrogen heterocycles are believed to be widespread in different areas of the interstellar medium. However, the astronomical detection of specific aromatic molecules is extremely challenging. As a result, only a few aromatic molecules have been identified, and very little is known about how they...

      • Chemical contaminants
  17. Structural basis for Clostridium perfringens enterotoxin targeting of claudins at tight junctions in mammalian gut

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • The bacterium Clostridium perfringens causes severe, sometimes lethal gastrointestinal disorders in humans, including enteritis and enterotoxemia. Type F strains produce an enterotoxin (CpE) that causes the third most common foodborne illness in the United States. CpE induces gut breakdown by disrupting barriers at cell–cell contacts called tight junctions (TJs), which...

      • Bacterial pathogens
      • Clostridium perfringens
  18. Quantification of Brucella abortus population structure in a natural host

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • Cattle are natural hosts of the intracellular pathogen Brucella abortus, which inflicts a significant burden on the health and reproduction of these important livestock. The primary routes of infection in field settings have been described, but it is not known how the bovine host shapes the structure of B. abortus...

      • Bacterial pathogens
  19. Antigenic cartography reveals complexities of genetic determinants that lead to antigenic differences among pandemic GII.4 noroviruses

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • Noroviruses are the predominant cause of acute gastroenteritis, with a single genotype (GII.4) responsible for the majority of infections. This prevalence is characterized by the periodic emergence of new variants that present substitutions at antigenic sites of the major structural protein (VP1), facilitating escape from herd immunity. Notably, the contribution...

      • Viruses
      • Norovirus
  20. Acetogenic bacteria utilize light-driven electrons as an energy source for autotrophic growth

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • Acetogenic bacteria use cellular redox energy to convert CO2 to acetate using the Wood–Ljungdahl (WL) pathway. Such redox energy can be derived from electrons generated from H2 as well as from inorganic materials, such as photoresponsive semiconductors. We have developed a nanoparticle-microbe hybrid system in which chemically synthesized cadmium sulfide...

      • Heavy Metals
      • Chemical contaminants
  21. Mambalgin-3 potentiates human acid-sensing ion channel 1b under mild to moderate acidosis: Implications as an analgesic lead

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • Acid-sensing ion channels (ASICs) are expressed in the nervous system, activated by acidosis, and implicated in pain pathways. Mambalgins are peptide inhibitors of ASIC1 and analgesic in rodents via inhibition of centrally expressed ASIC1a and peripheral ASIC1b. This activity has generated interest in mambalgins as potential therapeutics. However, most mechanism...

      • Heavy Metals
      • Chemical contaminants
  22. Decoding ultrafast polarization responses in lead halide perovskites by the two-dimensional optical Kerr effect

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • The ultrafast polarization response to incident light and ensuing exciton/carrier generation are essential to outstanding optoelectronic properties of lead halide perovskites (LHPs). A large number of mechanistic studies in the LHP field to date have focused on contributions to polarizability from organic cations and the highly polarizable inorganic lattice. For...

      • Heavy Metals
      • Chemical contaminants
  23. Dissecting serotype-specific contributions to live oral cholera vaccine efficacy

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • The O1 serogroup of Vibrio cholerae causes pandemic cholera and is divided into the Ogawa and Inaba serotypes. The O-antigen is V. cholerae’s immunodominant antigen, and the two serotypes, which differ by the presence or absence of a terminally methylated O-antigen, likely influence development of immunity to cholera and oral...

      • Vibrio
      • Bacterial pathogens
  24. In This Issue

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Plumbojarosite, an insoluble lead–iron hydroxysulfate mineral. Image credit: Wikimedia Commons/John Sobolewski (JSS), licensed under CC BY 3.0. Reducing lead bioavailability in soil Childhood exposure to lead can lead to long-term adverse health effects. A significant source of lead exposure in children is contaminated soil and dust. Because of...

      • Heavy Metals
      • Heavy Metals
      • Chemical contaminants
      • Heavy Metals
      • Chemical contaminants
      • Chemical contaminants
  25. Cryoelectron-microscopy structure of the enteropathogenic Escherichia coli type III secretion system EspA filament

    • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) and enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) utilize a macromolecular type III secretion system (T3SS) to inject effector proteins into eukaryotic cells. This apparatus spans the inner and outer bacterial membranes and includes a helical needle protruding into the extracellular space. Thus far observed only in EPEC and...

      • Bacterial pathogens