Anthony William Maresso
Baylor College of Medicine
37 Papers
185 Citations
Anthony William Maresso is an academic researcher from Baylor College of Medicine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Bacillus anthracis. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 37 publications.
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Papers
Iron and zinc exploitation during bacterial pathogenesis
TL;DR: This review describes the many elegant ways pathogenic bacteria mine, regulate, and craft the use of two key metals to build a virulence arsenal that challenges even the most sophisticated immune response.
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Novel Segment- and Host-Specific Patterns of Enteroaggregative Escherichia coli Adherence to Human Intestinal Enteroids.
Anubama Rajan,Lucy Vela,Xi Lei Zeng,Xiaomin Yu,Noah F. Shroyer,Sarah E. Blutt,Nina M. Poole,Lily G. Carlin,James P. Nataro,Mary K. Estes,Pablo C. Okhuysen,Anthony William Maresso +11 more
TL;DR: Using human intestinal enteroids derived from all four segments of the human intestine, EAEC demonstrates aggregative adherence to duodenal and ileal enteroids, with donor-driven differences driving a sheet-like and layered pattern, implying that the morphology of adherent clusters and the overall intestinal cell association of EAEC occur by different mechanisms.
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The theft of host heme by Gram-positive pathogenic bacteria
TL;DR: This review summarizes old and new research covering the acquisition, transport, and utilization of heme in Gram-positive bacterial pathogens.
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Mechanisms of iron import in anthrax
TL;DR: This review provides an in depth description of the current knowledge of B. anthracis iron acquisition and applies these findings to a general understanding of how pathogenic Gram-positive bacteria transport this critical nutrient during infection.
Wastewater Analysis of SARS-CoV-2 as a Predictive Metric of Positivity Rate for a Major Metropolis
Lauren B. Stadler,Katherine B. Ensor,Justin R. Clark,Prashant Kalvapalle,Zachary W. LaTurner,Mojica L,Austen Terwilliger,Zhuo Y,Priyanka Ali,Avadhanula,Roberto Bertolusso,Tessa Crosby,Hernandez H,Hollstein M,Kyle Weesner,David M. Zong,David Persse,Pedro A. Piedra,Anthony William Maresso,Loren Hopkins +19 more
TL;DR: Wastewater monitoring for SARS-CoV-2 has been suggested as an epidemiological indicator of community infection dynamics and disease prevalence and demonstrated robust tracking of positivity rate for populations served by individual treatment plants, findings which were used in real-time to make public health interventions.