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Dive into the research topics where Germinal Jorge Cantó Alarcón is active.

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Featured researches published by Germinal Jorge Cantó Alarcón.


Preventive Veterinary Medicine | 2012

Population structure of Mycobacterium bovis isolates from cattle in Mexico

José A Gutiérrez Reyes; Leticia García Casanova; Cecilia Romero Torres; Susana Sosa Gallegos; Germinal Jorge Cantó Alarcón; Marcela Mercado Pezzat; Oscar Pizano Martínez; Ciro Estrada Chávez; Feliciano Milián Suazo

The molecular fingerprints of 878 isolates of Mycobacterium bovis collected from cattle between 2009 and 2010 in different regions of Mexico were used in this study. One hundred and ninety-four spoligotypes were observed in total with a high degree of heterogeneity. Sixty-four percent of the isolates grouped into just nine spoligotypes, and 27% fell into only two spoligotypes: SB0673 and SB0669; 149 were orphan spoligotypes. The two predominant spoligotypes were found in almost all states in Mexico, especially in central Mexico, where there is a high concentration of dairy cattle; however, some spoligotypes were closely associated with restricted geographical areas. The hypothetical evolutionary relationship among spoligotypes was estimated using the spoligoforest program in the spolTools webpage. Four trees with connected components and nine unconnected nodes were found. The biggest tree had SB0140 strain as a root, suggesting this as the oldest strain in the tree. However, the relationship of this spoligotype with SB0673 and SB0669 was weak. The discriminatory power of spoligotyping for this M. bovis sample of isolates was 0.94, and the recent transmission index (RTI) 0.83, suggesting a high rate of recent transmission of some strains of M. bovis in the population. This parameter indicates that new measures are required to stop the dissemination of tuberculosis in cattle.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Efficacy of a Vaccine Formula against Tuberculosis in Cattle

Germinal Jorge Cantó Alarcón; Yezenia Rubio Venegas; Luis Bojorquez Narvaez; Oscar Pizano Martínez; Leticia García Casanova; Susana Sosa Gallegos; Alejandro Nava Vargas; Andrea M. Olvera Ramírez; Feliciano Milián Suazo

“Test-and-slaughter” has been successful in industrialized countries to control and eradicate tuberculosis from cattle; however, this strategy is too expensive for developing nations, where the prevalence is especially high. Vaccination with the Calmette-Guérin (BCG) strain has been shown to protect against the development of lesions in vaccinated animals: mouse, cattle and wildlife species. In this study, the immune response and the pathology of vaccinated (BCG-prime and BCG prime-CFP-boosted) and unvaccinated (controls) calves were evaluated under experimental settings. A 106 CFU dose of the BCG strain was inoculated subcutaneously on the neck to two groups of ten animas each. Thirty days after vaccination, one of the vaccinated groups was boosted with an M. bovis culture filtrate protein (CFP). Three months after vaccination, the three groups of animals were challenged with 5×105 CFU via intranasal by aerosol with a field strain of M. bovis. The immune response was monitored throughout the study. Protection was assessed based on immune response (IFN-g release) prechallenge, presence of visible lesions in lymph nodes and lungs at slaughter, and presence of bacilli in lymph nodes and lung samples in histological analysis. Vaccinated cattle, either with the BCG alone or with BCG and boosted with CFP showed higher IFN-g response, fewer lesions, and fewer bacilli per lesion than unvaccinated controls after challenge. Animals with low levels of IFN-g postvaccine-prechallenge showed more lesions than animals with high levels. Results from this study support the argument that vaccination could be incorporated into control programs to reduce the incidence of TB in cattle in countries with high prevalence.


Preventive Veterinary Medicine | 2016

Genetic diversity based on MIRU-VNTR profile of isolates of Mycobacterium bovis from Mexican cattle.

Alejandro Nava Vargas; Feliciano Milián Suazo; Germinal Jorge Cantó Alarcón; Yezenia Rubio Venegas; Elba Rodríguez Hernández; Oscar Pizano Martínez

Bovine tuberculosis (bTB) is a disease caused by Mycobacterium bovis (M. bovis), which affects cattle, animal species and humans. To determinate the genetic structure of strains of M. bovis in mexican cattle, 467 isolates obtained from 2009 to 2010 from different regions of Mexico with known spoligotype were included in the study. The isolates were genotyped by interspersed repeated mycobacterial units-variable number tandem repeats (MIRU-VNTR) obtaining 13 MIRU-VNTR groups. When combining MIRU-VNTR patterns with its spolygotypes, the Hunter genetic discrimination index (HGDI), we obtained 421 genetic patterns distributed in 17 groups. The HGDI for the total loci was 0.99. The locus that presented the higher HGDI was 2461 (0.857), while the locus with the lowest HGDI was 2686 (0.239). When we analyzed our results, using just 6 or 8 MIRU-VNTR we obtained an discriminatory power of 0.8499 and 0.8875 respectively indicating lower HGDI than 12 MIRU-VNTR locus.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2008

Anaplasma marginale Yucatan (Mexico) Strain

Sergio D. Rodríguez Camarillo; Miguel Ángel García Ortiz; Edmundo Enrique Rojas Ramírez; Germinal Jorge Cantó Alarcón; Jesús Francisco Preciado de la Torre; Rodrigo Rosario Cruz; Juan Alberto Ramos Aragón; Ramón Aboytes Torres

Anaplasma marginale Yucatan strain was found to have low virulence in cattle. We studied the virulence of this isolate by experimental inoculation of 113 susceptible cattle at increasing doses, after which only one animal required treatment for clinical disease. Subsequently, 104 cattle received a live vaccine of this strain by inoculation, which induced immunoprotection after heterologous challenged exposure with a different A. marginale isolate. In this study 14% of the immunized cattle required treatment as compared with the control nonimmunized cattle, in which 56% required treatment. The A. marginale vaccine strains used for the immunization studies had MSP1a variable regions that were different from those used for the challenge exposure.


Veterinary Microbiology | 2006

Anaplasma marginale: lack of cross-protection between strains that share MSP1a variable region and MSP4.

Verónica Ocampo Espinoza; J. Eduardo Salazar Vázquez; Marina Durán Aguilar; Miguel Ángel García Ortiz; Germinal Jorge Cantó Alarcón; Sergio D. Rodríguez


Vaccine | 2007

Anaplasma marginale field challenge: Protection by an inactivated immunogen that shares partial sequence of msp1α variable region with the challenge strain

Laura Elena Orozco Vega; Sergio D. Rodríguez; Germinal Jorge Cantó Alarcón; Rafael López Flores; Rafael Jiménez Ocampo; Miguel Ángel García Ortiz; Jesús Francisco Preciado de la Torre; Edmundo Enrique Rojas Ramírez


Revista Mexicana de Ciencias Pecuarias | 2018

Diversidad genética y distribución regional de cepas de Mycobacterium bovis del ganado en México

Feliciano Milián Suazo; Leticia García Casanova; Cecilia Romero Torres; Germinal Jorge Cantó Alarcón; José A Gutiérrez Reyes; Susana Gallegos Sosa; Marcela Mercado Pezzat; Félix Mejía Estrada; Aída L Peña Cisneros; Ciro Estrada Chávez; Oscar Pizano Martínez


Revista Mexicana de Ciencias Pecuarias | 2012

Estrategias genómicas y moleculares para el control de la babesiosis bovina

Juan Joel Mosqueda Gualito; Alfonso Falcón Neri; Juan Alberto Ramos Aragón; Germinal Jorge Cantó Alarcón; Minerva Camacho-Nuez


THERYA | 2018

Intestinal parasites of the bobcat (Lynx rufus) in areas surrounding Queretaro, Mexico

Brenda Camacho-Macías; Norma Hernández-Camacho; Germinal Jorge Cantó Alarcón; Claudia I. Muñoz-García; Rubén Pineda-López; Raúl F. Pineda-López; Salvador Zamora-Ledesma; Marco Antonio Moreno-Pérez


Revista Mexicana de Ciencias Pecuarias | 2018

Resistencia natural contra la tuberculosis en ganado. Revisión

Sara González Ruíz; Germinal Jorge Cantó Alarcón; Elba Rodríguez-Hernández; Susana Flores Villalba; Sergio Iván Román Ponce; Feliciano Milián Suazo

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Feliciano Milián Suazo

Autonomous University of Queretaro

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Alejandro Nava Vargas

Autonomous University of Queretaro

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Ciro Estrada Chávez

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Juan Joel Mosqueda Gualito

Autonomous University of Queretaro

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Susana Sosa Gallegos

Autonomous University of Queretaro

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Yezenia Rubio Venegas

Autonomous University of Queretaro

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Andrea M. Olvera Ramírez

Autonomous University of Queretaro

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Brenda Camacho-Macías

Autonomous University of Queretaro

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Claudia I. Muñoz-García

Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana

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