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Featured researches published by Noémi Nógrády.


Journal of Medical Microbiology | 2013

Antimicrobial resistance and genetic characteristics of integron-carrier shigellae isolated in Hungary (1998-2008)

Noémi Nógrády; Margit Király; Klára Borbás; Ákos Tóth; Judit Pászti; Istvan Toth

Antimicrobial susceptibility, integron carriage, genetic relationship and presence of some important virulence genes of the integron-carrier strains of Shigella sonnei (n = 230) and Shigella flexneri (n = 22) isolated from stool samples of patients in Hungary between 1998 and 2008 were investigated. Sixty-seven per cent (168/252) of the strains were resistant to sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprim (SxT) followed by streptomycin (S, 47%), ampicillin (A, 32%) and tetracycline (Tc, 28%). Thirty-six per cent (90/252) exhibited multidrug resistance, mostly showing SSxTTc or ASSxTc, ASSxTTc resistance patterns. An S. sonnei strain of imported origin was resistant to cefotaxime and harboured a blaCTX-M-55-type extended-spectrum β-lactamase gene. Altogether 33% of the S. sonnei (n = 75) and 14% of the S. flexneri (n = 3) strains had either class 1 or class 2 integrons or both. The variable regions encoded aadA1 or dfrA1-aadA1 genes for the class 1 and dfrA1-sat2-aadA1 or dfrA1-sat2 genes for the class 2 integrons. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis analysis revealed that those strains that have different integron types represented different genetic clusters. The Shiga toxin (stx1) gene was identified in one S. sonnei strain and the cdtB gene was detected in an S. flexneri strain. The results reveal the high incidence of antibiotic resistance among Shigella isolates and the presence of the stx1 gene in S. sonnei and the cdtB gene in S. flexneri. The genetic diversity of Shigella spp. isolated recently in Hungary was also demonstrated.


Foodborne Pathogens and Disease | 2010

Molecular and Pathogenic Characterization of Salmonella enterica Serovar Bovismorbificans Strains of Animal, Environmental, Food, and Human Origin in Hungary

Noémi Nógrády; Ariel Imre; Ágnes Kostyák; Ákos Tóth; Béla Nagy

In this study, we characterized 110 strains of Salmonella enterica serovar Bovismorbificans contaminating environment, animals, food of animal origin, and human, to assess their significance along the food chain in Hungary. Additionally, five strains from Germany were tested for comparative purposes. Characterization involved antibiotic susceptibility testing, class 1 integron detection by polymerase chain reaction, plasmid profiling, virulotyping (using virulence gene-specific polymerase chain reactions), and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. Pathogenic potential of selected strains was tested in orally infected 1-day-old specific pathogen-free chicks. Eighty-two percent of the strains were susceptible to the 16 antibiotics tested, and none of them had class 1 integron. A multidrug-resistant human isolate harbored a bla(SHV5)-type extended-spectrum beta-lactamase gene, first reported in this serotype. All the strains possessed avrA, ssaQ, mgtC, spi4, and sopB genes indicating the presence of Salmonella pathogenicity islands 1-5, respectively, missed the phage-related genes sopE and gipA, but retained the phage-related gene sodC1. An approximately 90 kb large plasmid was characteristic to 80% of the strains, all of which carried the spvC gene. In vivo colonization testing of four selected strains in 1-day-old chicks resulted in significantly reduced liver and spleen colonization ability as compared with the Salmonella Enteritidis control strain, whereas their caecal colonization ability differed less from that of Salmonella Enteritidis. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis data revealed the dominance of two pulsotypes (C2 and C5) without any specific temporal, geographical, and/or source-related linkages. The results show that Salmonella Bovismorbificans studied here are less invasive than Salmonella Enteritidis, but they may colonize and persist in several animal species and successfully contaminate meat products of different animal origin in Hungary.


Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2007

Emergence of multidrug-resistant clones of Salmonella Infantis in broiler chickens and humans in Hungary

Noémi Nógrády; Ákos Tóth; Ágnes Kostyák; Judit Pászti; Béla Nagy


Avian Pathology | 2006

Class 1 integrons and their conjugal transfer with and without virulence-associated genes in extra-intestinal and intestinal Escherichia coli of poultry

Noémi Nógrády; Judit Pászti; Henriett Pikó; Béla Nagy


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2003

Growth and colonization suppression of Salmonella enterica serovar Hadar in vitro and in vivo

Noémi Nógrády; Ariel Imre; Ivan Rychlik; Paul A. Barrow; Béla Nagy


Veterinarni Medicina | 2018

Chloramphenicol resistance genes in Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica serovar typhimurium isolated from human and animal sources in Hungary

Noémi Nógrády; I. Gado; P. Zsolt Fekete; Judit Pászti


Veterinary Microbiology | 2003

Genes responsible for anaerobic fumarate and arginine metabolism are involved in growth suppression in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium in vitro, without influencing colonisation inhibition in the chicken in vivo

Noémi Nógrády; Ariel Imre; Ivan Rychlik; Paul A. Barrow; Béla Nagy


Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2007

Extended-spectrum-β-lactamase-producing Salmonella enterica strains isolated from humans in Hungary, 2000 to 2004

Ákos Tóth; Noémi Nógrády; Péter Zsolt Fekete; Judit Pászti; Miklós Füzi


Archive | 2015

Insight into the molecular characteristics of new multiresistant clones and plasmids in Salmonella Infantis in poultry and man

Ama Szmolka; Mónika Szabó; Tibor Nagy; Judit Pászti; Noémi Nógrády; Erzsébet Adrián; Ferenc Olasz; Béla Nagy


Bulletin of University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine Cluj-Napoca: Horticulture | 2008

MOLECULAR AND PHAGE TYPING OF SALMONELLA ISOLATES FROM MAN AND POULTRY IN NORTHWESTERN ROMANIA

A. Ungvári; Gábor Á. Czirják; L. B. Köbölkuti; Daniel Cadar; Gábor Kardos; Noémi Nógrády; Ibolya Turcsányi; Judit Pászti; Daniela Moga

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Béla Nagy

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Ákos Tóth

European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control

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Ariel Imre

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Péter Zsolt Fekete

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Ivan Rychlik

Charles University in Prague

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Paul A. Barrow

University of Nottingham

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Ferenc Olasz

Biotechnology Institute

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Ama Szmolka

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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