Mehmet Özkan Timurkan
Atatürk University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Mehmet Özkan Timurkan.
Veterinary Microbiology | 2010
Feray Alkan; Aykut Özkul; Tuba Çiğdem Oğuzoğlu; Mehmet Özkan Timurkan; Elvin Caliskan; Vito Martella; İbrahim Burgu
Group A rotaviruses are major enteric pathogens of calves. In order to investigate the genetic diversity of bovine rotaviruses (BRVs), a collection of 53 BRVs, detected from diarrheic calves from several Turkish geographical areas, between 1997 and 2008 was analyzed by RT-PCR for specificities of the outer capsid proteins VP7 (G type) and VP4 (P type), for the first time. Overall, G6 was the predominant G type, detected in 40/53 samples (75.4%), while P[11] was the predominant P type, detected in 52/53 samples (98.1%). The most common VP7/VP4 combinations were G6P[11] (60.3%) and G10P[11] (24.5%). Mixed infections were identified in 7/53 samples (13.2%). In the VP7 region the G6P[11] viruses were similar to other ones detected worldwide, forming an independent G6 lineage, distantly related to the G6 gene of the vaccine G6P[1] strain NCDV (90.1% amino acid identity), and suggesting that G6P[11] viruses represent a genetically stable BRV strain. The study of G and P type diversity is pivotal to understand the efficacy of the existing rotavirus vaccines and to provide the basis of future prophylaxis tools against rotaviral diarrhea of calves.
Veterinaria Italiana | 2015
Mehmet Özkan Timurkan; Tuba Çiğdem Oğuzoğlu
This study provides data about canine parvovirus (CPV) types circulating among dogs in Turkey. Sixty-five samples from dogs with and without clinical signs of parvovirus infection were collected between April 2009 and February 2010. The samples were subsequently tested for CPV using polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Twenty-five samples (38.4%) were positive; when positive samples were characterized by sequence analysis, results showed that both CPV-2a (17/25, 68%) and CPV-2b (8/25, 32%) strains are circulating among domestic dogs in Turkey. This is the first molecular characterization study of CPVs from dogs based on partial VP2 gene sequences in Turkey.
Archives of Virology | 2011
Feray Alkan; Tuba Çiğdem Oğuzoğlu; Mehmet Özkan Timurkan; Zeynep Karapinar
The aim of this work was to investigate the molecular characteristics of bovine leukemia viruses (BLVs) in Turkey. The variability of env and gag fragments of BLVs was examined using DNA from blood samples obtained for sequence analysis of BLVs in four cattle herds from three different geographical areas in Turkey. The env gene sequences were highly similar to those of Brasilian, Argentine, and Japanese BLV strains, while gag genes from Turkish BLV isolates showed greatest similarity to those of Iranian isolates. This paper is the first report on the partial characterisation of env and gag genetic fragments of BLVs from Turkey.
BMC Veterinary Research | 2016
Yesari Eroksuz; Nafia Canan Gursoy; Tolga Karapinar; Burak Karabulut; Canan Akdeniz Incili; Zeynep Yerlikaya; Zulal Asci Toraman; Mehmet Özkan Timurkan; Hatice Eröksüz
BackgroundSystemic nocardiosis due to Nocardia cyriacigeorgica has not been reported in dogs.Case presentationLight and electron microscopy, microbiological culture and molecular identification (PCR) were used to diagnose systemic nocardiosis caused by Nocardia cyriacigeorgica in a 3-month-old husky dog. The postmortem changes included multifocal to coalescing, sharply circumscribed pyogranulomatous inflammation and abscess formation in lungs, liver, myocardium, spleen, kidneys, brain, and hilar lymph nodes. The organism was isolated and sequencing of its 16S rRNA allowed its identification and speciation. Examination of the bacterial culture by scanning electron-microscope showed filamentous branching with fragmentation into widely bacillary and cocoid forms of the bacteria. There was no history of immunosupressive drug administration and infection by the immunosuppresive viral pathogens, canine distemper and parvovirus were excluded via PCR.ConclusionN. cyriacigeorgica should be considered potential cause of systemic pyogranulomatous lesions in dogs. It is the first reported case of systemic nocardiosis due to N. cyriacigeorgica in a dog.
Turkish Journal of Medical Sciences | 2017
Mehmet Özkan Timurkan; Hakan Aydin; Osman Aktaş
BACKGROUND/AIM There are limited studies on genotyping and phylogenetic analysis of norovirus in Turkey, and this has not previously been studied in the Eastern Anatolia region. The aim of the present study was to determine the norovirus profile in this region with genotyping and phylogenetic analysis. MATERIALS AND METHODS Included in the study were stool samples obtained from 427 people from different age groups in Eastern Anatolia. The nucleic acid samples isolated by the automatic system and nucleic acid sequence reactions and phylogenetic analyses were performed on RNA samples. RESULTS The presence of norovirus was detected in 86 (20.1%) of the 427 stool samples by RT-PCR analysis. Twenty-six samples selected randomly from norovirus-RNA positive samples were subjected to the sequence reaction. In 24 of the 26 samples, genogroup GII was determined, as well as one each from GI and GIV in sequence reactions. Four different genotypes were detected in genogroup GII, which were determined to be the dominant types. These were GII.1, GII.4, GII.16, and GII.21. The GI.6 and GIV.1 genotypes were determined in genogroups GI and GIV, respectively. CONCLUSION The high frequency and genetic diversity of these infections are risk factors for disease and so vaccine studies should be undertaken in consideration of this situation.
Infection, Genetics and Evolution | 2017
Tuba Çiğdem Oğuzoğlu; Mehmet Özkan Timurkan; Bahattin Taylan Koç; Feray Alkan
Papillomavirus (PV) infections often cause benign and malignant skin neoplasia in dogs. To date, twenty types of canine papillomaviruses (CPVs) have been described worldwide. A detailed molecular characterization of CPVs in Turkey is lacking. In the present study, oral and mucosal lesions from 13 dogs with suspected CPV infection from the Mediterranean and central Anatolian regions of Turkey were analyzed. The partial gene sequences of the L1, E6, and E7 regions were compared with those of CPV types in the GenBank database. The results showed that CPV-1 infection was the dominant type of canine papillomatosis in Turkey. In addition, there was no statistically significant association between the frequency of the disease and the age or gender of the dog (p>0.05). However, all the dogs were pedigree breeds, suggesting that the disease may be more prevalent among pure-bred dogs than mixed breeds.
Transboundary and Emerging Diseases | 2012
Tuba Çiğdem Oğuzoğlu; Dilek Muz; Volkan Yilmaz; Mehmet Özkan Timurkan; Feray Alkan; Yılmaz Akça; İbrahim Burgu
Archives of Virology | 2010
Tuba Çiğdem Oğuzoğlu; Mehmet Özkan Timurkan; Dilek Muz; Ayşegül Kudu; Başak Numanbayraktaroğlu; Seda Sadak; İbrahim Burgu
Kafkas Universitesi Veteriner Fakultesi Dergisi | 2013
Feray Alkan; Mehmet Özkan Timurkan; İlke Karayel
Future Virology | 2016
Hakan Aydin; Muhammet Hamidullah Uyanik; Murat Karamese; Mehmet Özkan Timurkan