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Dive into the research topics where Magnus Andersson is active.

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Featured researches published by Magnus Andersson.


Toxicology in Vitro | 2003

In vitro assay for human toxicity of cereulide, the emetic mitochondrial toxin produced by food poisoning Bacillus cereus

Elina Jääskeläinen; Vera V. Teplova; Maria A. Andersson; Leif C. Andersson; P Tammela; Magnus Andersson; Tuula Pirhonen; Nils-Erik L. Saris; P Vuorela; Mirja Salkinoja-Salonen

The in vitro boar spermatozoon test was compared with the LC ion trap MS analysis for measuring the cereulide content of a pasta dish, implemented in serious emetic food poisoning caused by Bacillus cereus. Both assays showed that the poisonous food contained approximately 1.6 microg of cereulide g(-1) implying the toxic dose in human as < or =8 microg kg(-1) body weight. The threshold concentration of cereulide provoking visible mitochondrial damage in boar sperm exposed in vitro was 2 ng of cereulide ml(-1) of extended boar sperm. The same threshold value was found for cereulide extracted from the food and from the cultured bacteria. This shows that other constituents of the food did not enhance or mask the effects of cereulide. Exposure of four human cell lines (HeLa, Caco-2, Calu-3 and Paju) to cereulide showed that the threshold concentration for the loss of mitochondrial membrane potential in human cells was similar to that observed in boar sperm. Human cells and boar sperm were equally sensitive to cereulide. The results show that boar spermatozoan assay is useful for detecting cereulide concentrations toxic to humans. Spermatozoa in commercially available extended fresh boar and cryopreserved bull semen were compared, boar sperms were 100 times more sensitive to cereulide than bull sperms.


Clinical and Experimental Immunology | 2002

Inhibition of human natural killer cell activity by cereulide, an emetic toxin from Bacillus cereus

Auli Paananen; Raimo Mikkola; T. Sareneva; Sampsa Matikainen; M. Hess; Magnus Andersson; Ilkka Julkunen; Mirja Salkinoja-Salonen; Tuomo Timonen

The lipophilic toxin, cereulide, emitted by emetic food poisoning causing strains of Bacillus cereus, is a powerful mitochondria toxin. It is highly lipophilic and rapidly absorbed from the gut into the bloodstream. We tested how this toxin influences natural killer (NK) cells, which are important effectors in defence against infections and malignancy. Cereulide inhibited cytotoxicity and cytokine production of natural killer cells, caused swelling of natural killer cell mitochondria, and eventually induced natural killer cell apoptosis. The suppressive effect on cytotoxicity was fast and toxic concentration low, 20–30u2003μg/l. As the emesis causing concentration of cereulide is around 10u2003μg/kg of total body mass, our results suggest that emesis causing or even lower doses of cereulide may also have a systemic natural killer cell suppressive effect.


Cytogenetic and Genome Research | 2008

Cytogenetic screening of livestock populations in Europe: an overview

A. Ducos; T. Révay; András Kovács; A. Hidas; A. Pinton; A. Bonnet-Garnier; L Molteni; E. Slota; M. Switonski; M.V. Arruga; W.A. van Haeringen; I. Nicolae; Raquel Chaves; Henrique Guedes-Pinto; Magnus Andersson; L. Iannuzzi

Clinical animal cytogenetics development began in the 1960’s, almost at the same time as human cytogenetics. However, the development of the two disciplines has been very different during the last four decades. Clinical animal cytogenetics reached its ‘Golden Age’ at the end of the 1980’s. The majority of the laboratories, as well as the main screening programs in farm animal species, presented in this review, were implemented during that period, under the guidance of some historical leaders, the first of whom was Ingemar Gustavsson. Over the past 40 years, hundreds of scientific publications reporting original chromosomal abnormalities generally associated with clinical disorders (mainly fertility impairment) have been published. Since the 1980’s, the number of scientists involved in clinical animal cytogenetics has drastically decreased for different reasons and the activities in that field are now concentrated in only a few laboratories (10 to 15, mainly in Europe), some of which have become highly specialized. Currently between 8,000 and 10,000 chromosomal analyses are carried out each year worldwide, mainly in cattle, pigs, and horses. About half of these analyses are performed in one French laboratory. Accurate estimates of the prevalence of chromosomal abnormalities in some populations are now available. For instance, one phenotypically normal pig in 200 controlled in France carries a structural chromosomal rearrangement. The frequency of the widespread 1;29 Robertsonian translocation in cattle has greatly decreased in most countries, but remains rather high in certain breeds (up to 20–25% in large beef cattle populations, even higher in some local breeds). The continuation, and in some instances the development of the chromosomal screening programs in farm animal populations allowed the implementation of new and original scientific projects, aimed at exploring some basic questions in the fields of chromosome and/or cell biology, thanks to easier access to interesting biological materials (germ cells, gametes, embryos ...).


PLOS ONE | 2010

A Novel Mutation in the Maternally Imprinted PEG3 Domain Results in a Loss of MIMT1 Expression and Causes Abortions and Stillbirths in Cattle (Bos taurus)

Krzysztof Flisikowski; Heli Venhoranta; Joanna Nowacka-Woszuk; Stephanie D. McKay; Antti Flyckt; Juhani Taponen; Robert D. Schnabel; Hermann Schwarzenbacher; Izabela Szczerbal; Hannes Lohi; Ruedi Fries; Jeremy F. Taylor; M. Switonski; Magnus Andersson

Congenital malformations resulting in late abortions and stillbirths affect the economic wellbeing of producers and the welfare of cattle in breeding programs. An extremely high incidence of stillbirths of “half-sized” calves of normal karyotype and uninflated lungs was diagnosed in the progeny of the Finnish Ayrshire (Bos taurus) bull - YN51. No other visible anatomical abnormalities were apparent in the stillborn calves. We herein describe the positional identification of a 110 kb microdeletion in the maternally imprinted PEG3 domain that results in a loss of paternal MIMT1 expression and causes late term abortion and stillbirth in cattle. Using the BovineSNP50 BeadChip we performed a genome-wide half-sib linkage analysis that identified a 13.3 Mb associated region on BTA18 containing the maternally imprinted PEG3 domain. Within this cluster we found a 110 kb microdeletion that removes a part of the non-protein coding MER1 repeat containing imprinted transcript 1 gene (MIMT1). To confirm the elimination of gene expression in calves inheriting this deletion, we examined the mRNA levels of the three maternally imprinted genes within the PEG3 domain, in brain and cotyledon tissue collected from eight fetuses sired by the proband. None of the fetuses that inherited the microdeletion expressed MIMT1 in either tissue. The mutation, when inherited from the sire, is semi-lethal for his progeny with an observed mortality rate of 85%. The survival of 15% is presumably due to the incomplete silencing of maternally inherited MIMT1 alleles. We designed a PCR-based assay to confirm the existence of the microdeletion in the MIMT1 region that can be used to assist cattle breeders in preventing the stillbirths.


Systematic and Applied Microbiology | 1995

Bacillus thermosphaericus sp. nov. a New Thermophilic Ureolytic: Bacillus Isolated from Air

Magnus Andersson; M. Laukkanen; Eeva-Liisa Nurmiaho-Lassila; Frederick A. Rainey; S. I. Niemela; Mirja Salkinoja-Salonen

Summary Bacillus -strains representing the dominant thermophilic aerobes in municipal landfill and urban air are described. 16s rDNA sequencing studies showed that these strains represented a distinct lineage with the radiation of the genus Bacillus . The strains were strictly aerobic, growing between 32°C and 64°C, unable to use sugars as source of carbon and energy and formed sphaerical spores in terminally swollen sporangia. The cell morphology varied between cocci, short rods sometimes S-layered, extremely long rods and sphaerical cell wall deficient forms. Liberated spores exhibited hairy appendages. The guanine + cytosine content in DNA was 36 to 37%. and the peptidoglycan type was A4α-lysine-asparagine. The strains shared the peptidoglycan type and GC% with B. sphaericus but were distinguished from this species by 16S rDNA sequencing, the amino acid in the interpeptide bridge of the peptidoglycan, true thermophily and whole cell fatty acid composition. Since the strains exhibited no high similarity to any previously described Bacillus species, the traits are proposed as a new species B. thermosphaericus sp. nov., with P-11 as the type strain.


Systematic and Applied Microbiology | 2001

Toxic Bacillus pumilus from indoor air, Recycled Paper Pulp,Norway Spruce, Food Poisoning Outbreaks and Clinical Samples

Irmgard Suominen; Maria A. Andersson; Magnus Andersson; Anna-Maija Hallaksela; Peter Kämpfer; Frederick A. Rainey; Mirja Salkinoja-Salonen

Forty-four B. pumilus isolates of food poisoning, clinical, environmental and industrial origins were investigated for toxin production using the boar spermatozoan motility assay, previously shown to be a sensitive method for detecting non-protein toxins from B. cereus and B. licheniformis. The three toxic isolates originated from live tree, indoor air and recycled paper pulp and were more toxic than the previously described food poisoning isolates of B. licheniformis, whereas the B. pumilus food poisoning and clinical isolates were lower in toxicity. The type strain also produced inhibitory substances. The toxic substances were insensitive to heat (100 degrees C, 20 min), to pH 2 or pH 10 and to digestion with pronase. The substances were readily soluble in methanol and chloroform, but less soluble in toluene. Exposure of boar spermatozoa to 1-10 microg ml(-1) (EC50) of methanol soluble substance from the four strains disrupted the plasma membrane permeability barrier, induced abnormalities in the postacrosomal sheath, collapsed the mitochondrial and suppressed cytoplasmic NAD reduction. No change was observed in human peripheral blood lymphocytes exposed to concentrations of B. pumilus extract that affected spermatozoa. The toxin producing isolates were 99.4 to 99.6% similar in 16SrDNA (500 bp) to the type strain and could not be distinguished from the 41 non-toxic isolates by biochemical properties or whole cell fatty acid composition.


Acta Veterinaria Scandinavica | 2006

Fertility of frozen-thawed stallion semen cannot be predicted by the currently used laboratory methods.

P Kuisma; Magnus Andersson; Erkki V. S. Koskinen; T. Katila

The aim of the project was to use current simple and practical laboratory tests and compare results with the foaling rates of mares inseminated with commercially produced frozen semen. In Exp. 1, semen was tested from 27 and in Exp. 2 from 23 stallions; 19 stallions participated in both experiments. The mean number of mares per stallion in both experiments was 37 (min. 7, max. 121). Sperm morphology was assessed and bacterial culture performed once per stallion. In Exp. 1, progressive motility after 0, 1, 2, 3, and 4 h of incubation using light microscopy, motility characteristics measured with an automatic sperm analyzer, plasma membrane integrity using carboxyfluorescein diacetate/propidium iodide (CFDA/PI) staining and light microscopy, plasma membrane integrity using PI staining and a fluorometer, plasma membrane integrity using a resazurin reduction test, and sperm concentration were evaluated. In Exp. 2, the same tests as in Exp. 1 and a hypo-osmotic swelling test (HOST) using both light microscopy and a fluorometer were performed immediately after thawing and after a 3-h incubation. Statistical analysis was done separately to all stallions and to those having ≥ 20 mares; in addition, stallions with foaling rates < 60 or ≥ 60% were compared. In Exp. 1, progressive motility for all stallions after a 2 – 4-h incubation correlated with the foaling rate (correlation coefficients 0.39 – 0.51), (p < 0.05). In stallions with > 20 mares, the artificial insemination dose showed a correlation coefficient of -0.58 (p < 0.05). In Exp. 2, the HOST immediately after thawing showed a negative correlation with foaling rate (p < 0.05). No single test was consistently reliable for predicting the fertilizing capacity of semen, since the 2 experiments yielded conflicting results, although the same stallions sometimes participated in both. This shows the difficulty of frozen semen quality control in commercially produced stallion semen, and on the other hand, the difficulty of conducting fertility trials in horses.


Biology of Reproduction | 2010

Expression of SPEF2 During Mouse Spermatogenesis and Identification of IFT20 as an Interacting Protein

Anu Sironen; Jeanette Hansen; Bo Thomsen; Magnus Andersson; Johanna Vilkki; Jorma Toppari; Noora Kotaja

Abstract SPEF2 is expressed in all ciliated cells and is essential for correct sperm tail development and male fertility. We have previously identified a mutation within the SPEF2 gene as the cause for infertility because of immotile and malformed sperm tails in pigs. This mutation in pigs alters the testis-specific long SPEF2 isoform and exclusively affects the sperm tail development. In infertile boars, axonemal and all accessory structures of the sperm tail are affected; thus, SPEF2 seems to participate in the organization of these structures. In the present study, we have investigated the expression of SPEF2 during mouse spermatogenesis. SPEF2 mRNA and protein products appear to be localized both in germ cells and in Sertoli cells. In differentiating germ cells, SPEF2 protein is localized in the Golgi complex, manchette, basal body, and midpiece of the sperm tail. In mature murine sperm, SPEF2 is present in the distal part of the sperm tail midpiece. Using yeast two-hybrid assay and coimmunoprecipitation experiments, we identified an interaction between SPEF2 and the intraflagellar transport protein IFT20 in the testis. Furthermore, these two proteins colocalize in differentiating male germ cells. These results support the crucial importance of SPEF2 in sperm differentiation and involvement of SPEF2 in structuring of the sperm tail.


Reproduction in Domestic Animals | 2011

Protein Composition of Seminal Plasma in Fractionated Stallion Ejaculates

A.M. Kareskoski; M.M. Rivera del Alamo; K. Guvenc; Tiina Reilas; Juan J. Calvete; Heriberto Rodriguez-Martinez; Magnus Andersson; T. Katila

Seminal plasma (SP) contains several types of compounds derived from the epididymides and accessory glands. The aim of this study was to examine the protein composition of different ejaculate fractions. Trial I: fractionated ejaculates were collected from two normal and two subfertile stallions. Samples containing pre-sperm fluid and the first sperm-rich jets (HIGH-1), the main sperm-rich portion (HIGH-2), the jets with low sperm concentrations (LOW), and a combined whole-ejaculate (WE) sample was centrifuged, and the SP was filtered and frozen. A part of each SP sample was stored (5°C, 24 h) with spermatozoa from HIGH-2 and skim milk extender. Sperm motility was evaluated after storage in extender mixed with the stallions own SP or SP from one of the other stallions (sperm from a normal stallion stored in SP from a subfertile stallion and vice versa). Protein composition was analysed using reverse-phase liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC), N-terminal sequencing and mass spectrometry. The area-under-the-curve (AUC) was used for quantitative comparison of proteins within fractions. Trial II: semen samples were collected from seven stallions. Fractions with the highest (HIGH) and lowest (LOW) sperm concentrations and WE samples were examined using SDS-PAGE and densitometry. No significant differences emerged between fractions in the AUC-values of the Horse Seminal Protein-1 (HSP-1) and HSP-2 peaks, or the peak containing HSP-3 and HSP-4 (HSP-3/4). Levels of HSP-1, HSP-2 and HSP-3/4 were not significantly correlated with total sperm motility, progressive sperm motility or average path velocity after storage. Significant differences between ejaculate fractions in the amount of different protein groups present in SP were not found in Trial I; but in Trial II, the proteins in the 60-70 kDa range were more abundant in LOW than in HIGH and WE, indicating that this band contained proteins derived mainly from the seminal vesicles, which produce most of the SP in LOW.


Theriogenology | 2001

A novel automated fluorometric assay to evaluate sperm viability and fertility in dairy bulls

K. Alm; Juhani Taponen; M. Dahlbom; E. Tuunainen; Erkki V. S. Koskinen; Magnus Andersson

The artificial insemination (AI) industry is in need of an objective and rapid, but inexpensive method to evaluate frozen thawed bull semen ejaculates. This study presents a new fluorescence method that uses an automatized fluorometer and fluorophore stain propidium iodide that stains only those cells with damaged membranes. The fluorescence of the semen sample and the totally killed subsample were measured simultaneously, and viability was calculated. Every semen batch was analyzed before use in AI. For fertility evaluation, the nonreturn rates (NR%) obtained from 92,120 inseminations with the analyzed batches were recorded from 166 bulls (436 batches). This study confirms a 3.9% better NR% for the Finnish Holstein-Friesian breed than for Finnish Ayrshire. There was a clear seasonality in NR%: it differed (5.3%) significantly, being best in summer to autumn (June to October) and lowest in winter (January to March). The fluorometer method was fast and easy. The correlation between the total number of viable spermatozoa in an insemination dose and field fertility was low but significant (r = 0.051, P = 0.016), suggesting that the plasma membrane integrity evaluation can serve as a cost-beneficial quality control method of frozen-thawed semen at bull stations.

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T. Katila

University of Helsinki

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Hannes Lohi

University of Helsinki

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