1,459 research outputs found
La recherche juridique sur les prélèvements biologiques réalisés dans le cadre des autopsies et objets de scellés judiciaires. Nécessité d'une adaptation législative
Currently, it is legally impossible to conduct scientific research on tissue and organ samples taken from forensic autopsies. In fact, the law schedules the destruction of such samples at the end of the judicial investigation, and the common law rules governing cadaver research cannot be applied to the forensic context. However, nothing seems in itself to stand in the way of such research since, despite their specific nature, these samples from forensic autopsies could be subject, following legislative amendments, to common law relating to medical research on samples taken from deceased persons. But an essential legislative amendment will have the goal firstly to allow the Biomedicine Agency to become authorized to issue a research permit and secondly, to change the research conditions in terms of the non-opposition of the deceased to the said research. Such an amendment would be a true breakthrough because it would allow teams to continue to move forward calmly in research, and allow this research to be placed within a legal framework, which would promote international exchanges
Full-genome sequence of the plant growth-promoting bacterium Pseudomonas protegens CHA0.
We report the complete genome sequence of the free-living bacterium Pseudomonas protegens (formerly Pseudomonas fluorescens) CHA0, a model organism used in plant-microbe interactions, biological control of phytopathogens, and bacterial genetics
Pseudomonas fluorescens CHA0 maintains carbon delivery to Fusarium graminearum-infected roots and prevents reduction in biomass of barley shoots through systemic interactions
Soil bacteria such as pseudomonads may reduce pathogen pressure for plants, both by activating plant defence mechanisms and by inhibiting pathogens directly due to the production of antibiotics. These effects are hard to distinguish under field conditions, impairing estimations of their relative contributions to plant health. A split-root system was set up with barley to quantify systemic and local effects of pre-inoculation with Pseudomonas fluorescens on the subsequent infection process by the fungal pathogen Fusarium graminearum. One root half was inoculated with F. graminearum in combination with P. fluorescens strain CHA0 or its isogenic antibiotic-deficient mutant CHA19. Bacteria were inoculated either together with the fungal pathogen or in separate halves of the root system to separate local and systemic effects. The short-term plant response to fungal infection was followed by using the short-lived isotopic tracer 11CO2 to track the delivery of recent photoassimilates to each root half. In the absence of bacteria, fungal infection diverted carbon from the shoot to healthy roots, rather than to infected roots, although the overall partitioning from the shoot to the entire root system was not modified. Both local and systemic pre-inoculation with P. fluorescens CHA0 prevented the diversion of carbon as well as preventing a reduction in plant biomass in response to F. graminearum infection, whereas the non-antibiotic-producing mutant CHA19 lacked this ability. The results suggest that the activation of plant defences is a central feature of biocontrol bacteria which may even surpass the effects of direct pathogen inhibition
On the Mixing of the Scalar Mesons , and
Based on a mass matrix describing the mixing of the scalar states
, and , the hadronic decays of the three
states are investigated. Taking into account the two possible assumptions
concerning the mass level order of the bare states
, and in the
scalar sector, and , we obtain the
glueball-quarkonia content of the three states by solving the unlinear
equations. Some predictions about the decays of the three states in two cases
are presented, which can provide a stringent consistency check of the two
assumptions.Comment: revtex 10 pages, 1 eps figur
Possible large phase in psi(2S) -> 1-0- Decays
The strong and the electromagnetic amplitudes are analyzed on the basis of
the measurements of J/psi, psi(2S) -> 1-0- in e+e- experiments. The currently
available experimental information is revised with inclusion of the
contribution from e+e- -> gamma * -> 1-0- . The study shows that a large phase
around minus 90 degree between the strong and the electromagnetic amplitudes
could not be ruled out by the experimental data for psi(2S).Comment: 4 page
Selection rules in three-body B decay from factorization
Extending the dynamics underlying the factorization calculation of two-body
decays, we propose simple selection rules for nonresonant three-body B decays.
We predict, for instance, that in the Dalitz plot of B^0-->D^0-bar\pi^+\pi^-,
practically no events should be found in the corner of E(\pi^+) < \Lambda_{QCD}
as compared with the corner of E(\pi^-) < \Lambda_{QCD}. We also predict that
there should be very few three-body decay events with a soft meson resonance
and two energetic mesons or meson resonances. The selection rules are quite
different from the soft pion theorem, since they apply to different kinematical
regions. For B^0 -->D^0-bar\pi^+\pi^-, the latter predicts that the decay
matrix element vanishes in the zero-four-momentum limit of \pi^+ instead of
\pi^-. Since this marked difference from the soft pion theorem is directly
related to the issue of short-distance QCD dominance in the FSI of two-body B
decays, experimental test of the selection rules will shed light on strong
interaction dynamics of B decay.Comment: 12 pages in REVTEX including 3 eps figure
Final-state interaction phase difference in and decays
It is shown that the study of the interference pattern in the
decay provides the evidence
for the large (nearly ) relative phase between the one-photon and the
three-gluon decay amplitudes.Comment: 5 pages, revtex, \tightenlines, a version published in Phys. Rev. D
61, 117504 (2000
Electromagnetic form factors in the J/\psi mass region: The case in favor of additional resonances
Using the results of our recent analysis of e^+e^- annihilation, we plot the
curves for the diagonal and transition form factors of light hadrons in the
time-like region up to the production threshold of an open charm quantum
number. The comparison with existing data on the decays of J/\psi into such
hadrons shows that some new resonance structures may be present in the mass
range between 2 GeVand the J/\psi mass. Searching them may help in a better
understanding of the mass spectrum in both the simple and a more sophisticated
quark models, and in revealing the details of the three-gluon mechanism of the
OZI rule breaking in K\bar K channel.Comment: Formulas are added, typo is corrected, the text is rearranged.
Replaced to match the version accepted in Phys Rev
The freshwater Sponge Ephydatia Fluviatilis harbours diverse pseudomonas species (Gammaproteobacteria, Pseudomonadales) with broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity
Bacteria are believed to play an important role in the fitness and biochemistry of sponges (Porifera). Pseudomonas species (Gammaproteobacteria, Pseudomonadales) are capable of colonizing a broad range of eukaryotic hosts, but knowledge of their diversity and function in freshwater invertebrates is rudimentary. We assessed the diversity, structure and antimicrobial activities of Pseudomonas spp. in the freshwater sponge Ephydatia fluviatilis. Polymerase Chain Reaction - Denaturing Gradient Gel Electrophoresis (PCR-DGGE) fingerprints of the global regulator gene gacA revealed distinct structures between sponge-associated and free-living Pseudomonas communities, unveiling previously unsuspected diversity of these assemblages in freshwater. Community structures varied across E. fluviatilis specimens, yet specific gacA phylotypes could be detected by PCR-DGGE in almost all sponge individuals sampled over two consecutive years. By means of whole-genome fingerprinting, 39 distinct genotypes were found within 90 fluorescent Pseudomonas isolates retrieved from E. fluviatilis. High frequency of in vitro antibacterial (49%), antiprotozoan (35%) and anti-oomycetal (32%) activities was found among these isolates, contrasting less-pronounced basidiomycetal (17%) and ascomycetal (8%) antagonism. Culture extracts of highly predation-resistant isolates rapidly caused complete immobility or lysis of cells of the protozoan Colpoda steinii. Isolates tentatively identified as P. jessenii, P. protegens and P. oryzihabitans showed conspicuous inhibitory traits and correspondence with dominant sponge-associated phylotypes registered by cultivation-independent analysis. Our findings suggest that E. fluviatilis hosts both transient and persistent Pseudomonas symbionts displaying antimicrobial activities of potential ecological and biotechnological value.European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) through the COMPETE (Operational Competitiveness Programme); national funds through FCT (Foundation for Science and Technology) [PEst-C/MAR/LA0015/2011]; FCT-funded project [PTDC/BIA-MIC/3865/2012]; Federation of European Microbiological Societies (FEMS)info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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