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Dive into the research topics where Cristina Villena is active.

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Featured researches published by Cristina Villena.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2002

Molecular Epidemiology of Astrovirus Infection in Barcelona, Spain

Susana Guix; Santiago Caballero; Cristina Villena; Rosa Bartolomé; Cristina Latorre; Nuria Rabella; Maria Simó; Albert Bosch; Rosa M. Pintó

ABSTRACT A 3-year study involving 2,347 gastroenteritis samples was conducted to determine the prevalence, time distribution, and medical significance of human astrovirus infection in Barcelona, Spain. The overall incidence of astrovirus was found to be 4.9%. Mixed infections with other enteric agents were detected in 17.2% of all astrovirus-positive samples. During the 3-year period, the highest astrovirus incidence was reported in the winter months, although infections also occurred in summer. The peak detection rate was observed in children between 2 and 4 years of age. Overall, HAstV-1 was the most prevalent type, followed by HAstV-4, HAstV-3, HAstV-8, and HAstV-2. HAstV-5, HAstV-6, and HAstV-7 were not detected during these 3 years. From our serotype data for each age group, we observed that HAstV-1, HAstV-2, and HAstV-3 affected mostly children younger than 3 years of age, while HAstV-4 and HAstV-8 had a greater impact in older children. Genetic variability was analyzed between astroviruses isolated in Barcelona and strains isolated in other parts of the world. A fourth lineage was described for HAstV-1, most likely due to the large number of assayed samples, which may also explain the high level of genetic variability observed in the astrovirus isolates.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2003

Group A Rotavirus in Sewage Samples from Barcelona and Cairo: Emergence of Unusual Genotypes

Cristina Villena; Waled Morsy El-Senousy; F. Xavier Abad; Rosa M. Pintó; Albert Bosch

ABSTRACT The presence of rotavirus strains in sewage samples from Cairo, Egypt (November 1998 to October 1999), and Barcelona, Spain (November 1998 to December 2002), was investigated by using a generic molecular detection method based on amplification of a VP6 gene fragment. Overall, 85.7 and 66.9% of the sewage samples from Cairo and Barcelona, respectively, were positive. Positive samples were characterized further, and VP7 and VP4 genotypes were determined. Although 30% of the positive samples from Cairo were G untypeable, the distribution of G types in the positive samples was 69.6% G1, 13% G3, 8.7% G4, and 8.7% G9. The percentage of untypeable samples was much higher for the Barcelona samples (56.5%), and the distribution in the positive samples was 56.4% G1, 31.5% G3, 6% G9, 4% G2, and 2% G5. When the P types were examined, 26.7% of the positive samples from Cairo were untypeable, and the distribution of types in the positive samples was 53.3% P[8], 30% P[6], and 16.6% P[4]. In Barcelona, 27.2% of the samples were P untypeable, and the frequencies of the types detected were 49.7% P[8], 37.2% P[4], 8.8% P[6], and 4.2% P[9]. The distribution for strains from Cairo was 38.5% P[8]G1, 27% P[6]G1, 11.5% P[4]G1, 11.5% P[8]G3, 7.7% P[6]G4, and 3.8% P[8]G9. Strikingly, equivalent frequencies of common and uncommon strains were observed for Barcelona samples, and the distribution was 38.8% P[8]G1, 30.6% P[4]G1, 11.6% P[8]G3, 6.6% P[4]G3, 5.8% P[6]G1, 1.6% P[6]G3, 1.6% P[9]G1, 0.8% P[4]G2, 0.8% P[6]G9, 0.8% P[8]G9, and 0.8% P[8]G5. Additionally, two P[−]G5 strains were isolated in Barcelona, and the porcine or human origin of these strains was unclear. Rotavirus variability exhibited not only a geographic pattern but also a temporal pattern.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2001

Potential role of fomites in the vehicular transmission of human astroviruses.

F. Xavier Abad; Cristina Villena; Susana Guix; Santiago Caballero; Rosa M. Pintó; Albert Bosch

ABSTRACT The persistence of human astroviruses dried on representative porous (paper) and nonporous (china) surfaces was investigated. Long-term astrovirus survival on fomites was monitored by an integrated cell culture-reverse transcription-PCR procedure. Viruses were applied to inanimate surfaces in the presence and absence of fecal material, and their survival was assayed at 4 and 20°C with high relative humidity. Astroviruses exhibited a notable persistence when dried on porous and nonporous materials, particularly at low temperature. Short-term survival of astroviruses on fomites was compared to that of other enteric viruses significant for health, such as rotavirus, adenovirus, poliovirus, and hepatitis A virus. Overall, astroviruses persisted better than poliovirus and adenovirus, although they exhibited a shorter survival than rotavirus and hepatitis A virus. Astroviruses show a high level of persistence at the desiccation step, which is of major significance in determining the chance of subsequent virus survival dried on fomites. Astroviruses are able to survive on inert surfaces long enough to suggest that fomites may play a relevant role in the secondary transmission of astrovirus diarrhea.


Epidemiology and Infection | 2007

Hepatitis A virus in urban sewage from two Mediterranean countries

Rosa M. Pintó; D. Alegre; A. Domínguez; Waled Morsy El-Senousy; Glòria Sánchez; Cristina Villena; M. I. Costafreda; Lluís Aragonès; Albert Bosch

Molecular methods for the detection and typing of hepatitis A virus (HAV) strains in sewage were applied to determine its distribution in Cairo and Barcelona. The study revealed the occurrence of different patterns of hepatitis A endemicity in each city. The circulating strains characterized, whether in Cairo or Barcelona, were genotype IB. The effects of a child vaccination programme and the increase in the immigrant population on the overall hepatitis A occurrence in Barcelona were evaluated. While vaccination contributed to a significant decrease in the number of clinical cases, the huge recent immigration flow has probably been responsible for the re-emergence of the disease in the last year of study, in the form of small outbreaks among the non-vaccinated population.


Journal of Virology | 2007

Relative Fitness and Replication Capacity of a Multinucleoside Analogue-Resistant Clinical Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Isolate with a Deletion of Codon 69 in the Reverse Transcriptase Coding Region

Cristina Villena; Julia G. Prado; Maria C. Puertas; Miguel Angel Martínez; Bonaventura Clotet; Lidia Ruiz; Neil T. Parkin; Luis Menéndez-Arias; Javier Martinez-Picado

ABSTRACT Deletions, insertions, and amino acid substitutions in the β3-β4 hairpin loop-coding region of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) reverse transcriptase (RT) have been associated with resistance to nucleoside RT inhibitors when appearing in combination with other mutations in the RT-coding region. In this work, we have measured the in vivo fitness of HIV-1 variants containing a deletion of 3 nucleotides affecting codon 69 (Δ69) of the viral RT as well as the replication capacity (RC) ex vivo of a series of recombinant HIV-1 variants carrying an RT bearing the Δ69 deletion or the T69A mutation in a multidrug-resistant (MDR) sequence background, including the Q151M complex and substitutions M184V, K103N, Y181C, and G190A. Patient-derived viral clones having RTs with Δ69 together with S163I showed increased RCs under drug pressure. These data were consistent with the viral population dynamics observed in a long-term-treated HIV-1-infected patient. In the absence of drugs, viral clones containing T69A replicated more efficiently than those having Δ69, but only when patient-derived sequences corresponding to RT residues 248 to 527 were present. These effects could be attributed to a functional interaction between the C-terminal domain of the p66 subunit (RNase H domain) and the DNA polymerase domain of the RT. Finally, recombinant HIV-1 clones bearing RTs with MDR-associated mutations, including deletions at codon 69, showed increased susceptibilities to protease inhibitors in phenotypic assays. These effects correlated with impaired Gag cleavage and could be attributed to delayed maturation and decreased production of active protease in those variants.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2005

Evidence for Preferential Genotyping of a Minority Human Immunodeficiency Virus Population Due to Primer-Template Mismatching during PCR-Based Amplification

Javier Martinez-Picado; Kristina Morales-Lopetegi; Cristina Villena; Carolina Gutierrez; Nuria Izquierdo; Silvia Marfil; Bonaventura Clotet; Lidia Ruiz

ABSTRACT Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) genotyping assays have come to be widely used for monitoring antiretroviral drug resistance. We report a case in which primer-template mismatches during nested PCR-based amplification biased the composition of the original viral population in the sample, magnifying a distinct minority HIV-1 population. This observation might help to explain some unexpected HIV-1 genotypes.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 1997

Astrovirus survival in drinking water.

F. X. Abad; Rosa M. Pintó; Cristina Villena; Rodrigo Gajardo; A. Bosch


Epidemiology and Infection | 2003

A large infantile gastroenteritis outbreak in Albania caused by multiple emerging rotavirus genotypes

Cristina Villena; R Gabrieli; Rosa M. Pintó; Susana Guix; D. Donia; Ersilia Buonomo; Leonardo Palombi; Fabian Cenko; S. Bino; Albert Bosch; Maurizio Divizia


Water Science and Technology | 2004

Waterborne gastroenteritis outbreak in Albania

Maurizio Divizia; R Gabrieli; D. Donia; Alessia Macaluso; Albert Bosch; Susana Guix; Glòria Sánchez; Cristina Villena; Rosa M. Pintó; Leonardo Palombi; E. Buonuomo; Fabian Cenko; L. Leno; D. Bebeci; S. Bino


Water Science and Technology | 2001

Astrovirus detection in wastewater samples

Rosa M. Pintó; Cristina Villena; F. Le Guyader; Susana Guix; S. Calallero; M. Pommepuy; A. Bosch

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Albert Bosch

University of Barcelona

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Susana Guix

University of Barcelona

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A. Bosch

University of Barcelona

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Bonaventura Clotet

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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F. X. Abad

University of Barcelona

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Lidia Ruiz

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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