276 research outputs found
Influence of Quaternary Benzophenantridine and Protopine Alkaloids on Growth Performance, Dietary Energy, Carcass Traits, Visceral Mass, and Rumen Health in Finishing Ewes under Conditions of Severe Temperature-humidity Index.
Twenty Pelibuey×Katahdin ewes (35±2.3 kg) were used to determine the effects of the consumption of standardized plant extract containing a mixture of quaternary benzophenanthridine alkaloids and protopine alkaloids (QBA+PA) on growth performance, dietary energetics, visceral mass, and ruminal epithelial health in heat-stressed ewes fed with a high-energy corn-based diet. The basal diet (13.9% crude protein and 2.09 Mcal of net energy [NE] of maintenance/kg of dry matter) contained 49.7% starch and 15.3% neutral detergent fiber. Source of QBA+PA was Sangrovit RS (SANG) which contains 3 g of quaternary benzophenathridine and protopine alkaloids per kg of product. Treatments consisted of a daily consumption of 0 or 0.5 g SANG/ewe. Ewes were grouped by weight and assigned to 10 pens (5 pens/treatment), with two ewes per pen. The experimental period lasted 70 days. The mean temperature humidity index during the course of this experiment was 81.7±1.0 (severe heat stress). There were no treatment effects on water intake. Dry matter intake was not affected (p = 0.70) by treatments, but the group fed SANG had a numerically (11.2%) higher gain in comparison to the control group, SANG improved gain efficiency (8.3%, p = 0.04), dietary NE (5.2%, p<0.01) and the observed-to-expected NE (5.9%, p<0.01). Supplemental SANG did not affect (p≥0.12) carcass characteristics, chemical composition of shoulder, and organ weights (g/kg empty body weight) of stomach complex, intestines, and heart/lung. Supplemental SANG decreased liver weight (10.3%, p = 0.02) and increased visceral fat (16.9%, p = 0.02). Rumen epithelium of ewes fed SANG had lower scores for cellular dropsical degeneration (2.08 vs 2.34, p = 0.02), parakeratosis (1.30 vs 1.82, p = 0.03) and neutrophil infiltration (2.08 vs 2.86, p = 0.05) than controls. It is concluded that SANG supplementation helped ameliorate the negative effects of severe heat on growth performance of feedlot ewes fed high-energy corn-based diets. Improvement in energetic efficiency may have been mediated, in part, by anti-inflammatory effects of supplemental SANG and corresponding enhancement of nutrient uptake
Effect of plant growth-promoting bacteria and inoculation media in the yield on cooksfoot yield
Objetives: To determine the effect of three PGPB bacteria (Ewingella americana, Bacillus simplex y Microbacterium ginsengiterrae) and three inoculant methods (digestate, compost and cornstarch) on yield, plant height, leaf temperature, tiller density and morphological composition of cooksfoot.
Desing/methodology/approach: A completely randomized design was used, with a factorial arrangement 4*3, the experimental units being a pot with five stems.
Results: The dry matter did not register difference between treatments with bacteria (P>0.05), but with respect to the control the values increased up to 50%. Compost and digestate media outperformed cornstarch by 22%. The inoculation media had an effect (P<0.05) on the yield and leaf, while the bacteria promoted the formation of new tillers, the yield and reduced the leaf temperature.
Findings/conclusions: Compost and digestate as inoculation media can notably favor the beneficial effect of M. ginsengiterrae, which was the one that registered the best yieldsObjective: To determine the effect of three PGPB bacteria (Ewingella americana, Bacillus simplex and Microbacterium ginsengiterrae) and three inoculation media (digestate, compost and cornstarch) on plant height, leaf temperature, stalkdensity, morphological composition, and dry matter yield of orchard grass.Design/Methodology/Approach: A completely randomized design was used, with a factorial arrangement 4X3, the experimental units being a pot with five initial stalks.Results: The dry matter did not show difference between treatments with bacteria (P>0.05), but the control the values increased up to 50%. Compost and digestate media outperformed cornstarch by 22%. The inoculation media had an effect(P?0.05) on the yield and leaf variables, while the bacteria promoted the formation of new stalks and the production of biomass, and reduced the leaf temperature.Findings/Conclusions: Compost and digestate as inoculation media can notably favor the beneficial effect of M. ginsengiterrae, which was the one that registered the best yield
Acción génica y genes que otorgan resistencia a roya de la hoja en trigo cristalino
La roya de la hoja, causada por el hongo Puccnia triticina E., es una enfermedad que cuando se presenta, genera pérdidas hasta del 100 % en el rendimiento de grano del trigo cristalino (Triticum turgidum ssp. durum L.). Como medida de protección genética en la construcción piramidal de nuevos genotipos resistentes es necesario identificar en el germoplasma con resistencia a esta enfermedad, el número de genes involucrados y su acción génica. Con este propósito, durante el ciclo de cultivo otoño-invierno 2017- 2018, se cruzaron los progenitores susceptibles Atred#1 y Atred#2 con las líneas resistentes de trigo cristalino procedentes de Etiopía WC-2 no. 100, DW-K2 no. 47, Oda, 2000/01 population FR. no. 43, 2000/01 population 37-30 BDI no. 63 y 2000/01 population 37-30 BDI no. 12. Las generaciones filiales de las cruzas se obtuvieron alternadamente en CIMMYT-Batán, Estado de México y CIMMYT-CENEB, Ciudad Obregón, Sonora, hasta obtener las Familias F3 y F4. Con base en los análisis de segregantes de tales familias, se encontró que, en las seis líneas etíopes, la resistencia a la roya de la hoja es conferida por dos genes dominantes
Mycorrhiza induced resistance against pests: from the lab to the field
1 página - Conferencia invitada presentada en Iberian Plant Biology 2023. XVIII Portuguese-Spanish Congress on Plant Biology and the XXV Meeting of the Spanish Society of Plant Biology. 9-12 Julio 2023, Braga, PortugalArbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) can prime plant defences increasing their resistance against
pathogens and insect herbivores. Using tomato as a model, we have shown that inoculation with
different AMF reduces the performance of the chewing herbivore Spodoptera exigua and the leaf miner
Tuta absoluta. Transcriptomic and metabolomics analyses revealed that this Mycorrhiza Induced
Resistance (MIR) is associated to boosted activation of plant direct and indirect defences in response to
the attackers. We found primed accumulation in attacked leaves of antiherbivore metabolites, including
alkaloids and polyamine conjugates, and functional analyses demonstrated that some of the identified
compounds significantly inhibit herbivore development. In addition, the symbiosis altered the volatile
blends released by the plant, and enhanced the attraction of natural enemies of the pests (Nesidiocoris
tenuis, commonly used in biocontrol programs). Finally, networks analyses allowed the identification of
key regulators of the primed response within the jasmonic acid and ethylene signalling pathways.
Despite the many studies showing induced resistance by microorganisms in different plant‐pest systems,
the variability in the protection achieved under agronomic settings is hindering the application of this
strategy in agriculture. Plant‐microbe‐herbivore interactions are highly context dependent, with multiple
biotic and abiotic factors influencing the final output. Identifying such factors is essential to optimize the
application of microbial inoculants for crop protection in agriculture. We found that the plant genotype
and nutrient availability are important drivers of the context dependency of MIR in tomato. Despite of
the variability, comparisons across different experimental scales, from controlled lab set‐ups to
commercial production conditions, confirmed that MIR can be achieved under crop production
conditions and is compatible with other biocontrol methods. Accordingly, MIR can be a relevant addition
to current Integrated Pest Management Programs
Left-handed neutrino disappearance probe of neutrino mass and character
We explore the sensitivity to a non vanishing neutrino mass offered by
dynamical observables, i.e., branching ratios and polarizations. The
longitudinal polarization in the C.M. frame decreases by a 4% for and MeV. Taking advantage of the
fact that the polarization is a Lorentz variant quantity, we study the
polarization effects in a boosted frame. By means of a neutrino beam, produced
by a high velocity boosted parent able to flip the neutrino helicity, we find
that an enhanced left-handed neutrino deficit, induced by a Wigner rotation,
appears.Comment: 8 pages and 2 figures. Last version accepted in PRL, new references
and better analysis of experimental possibilitie
Development of a prediction model for short-term remission of patients with Crohn’s disease treated with anti-TNF drugs
Therapy with anti-tumor necrosis factor (TNF) has dramatically changed the natural history of Crohn’s disease (CD). However, these drugs are not without adverse events, and up to 40% of patients could lose efficacy in the long term. We aimed to identify reliable markers of response to anti-TNF drugs in patients with CD. A consecutive cohort of 113 anti-TNF naive patients with CD was stratified according to clinical response as short-term remission (STR) or non-STR (NSTR) at 12 weeks of treatment. We compared the protein expression profiles of plasma samples in a subset of patients from both groups prior to anti-TNF therapy by SWATH proteomics. We identified 18 differentially expressed proteins (p ≤ 0.01, fold change ≥ 2.4) involved in the organization of the cytoskeleton and cell junction, hemostasis/platelet function, carbohydrate metabolism, and immune response as candidate biomarkers of STR. Among them, vinculin was one of the most deregulated proteins (p < 0.001), whose differential expression was confirmed by ELISA (p = 0.054). In the multivariate analysis, plasma vinculin levels along with basal CD Activity Index, corticosteroids induction, and bowel resection were factors predicting NSTR
Study of Spin and Decay-Plane Correlations of W Bosons in the e+e- -> W+W- Process at LEP
Data collected at LEP at centre-of-mass energies \sqrt(s) = 189 - 209 GeV are
used to study correlations of the spin of W bosons using e+e- -> W+W- -> lnqq~
events. Spin correlations are favoured by data, and found to agree with the
Standard Model predictions. In addition, correlations between the W-boson decay
planes are studied in e+e- -> W+W- -> lnqq~ and e+e- -> W+W- -> qq~qq~ events.
Decay-plane correlations, consistent with zero and with the Standard Model
predictions, are measured
Ultrarelativistic sources in nonlinear electrodynamics
The fields of rapidly moving sources are studied within nonlinear
electrodynamics by boosting the fields of sources at rest. As a consequence of
the ultrarelativistic limit the delta-like electromagnetic shock waves are
found. The character of the field within the shock depends on the theory of
nonlinear electrodynamics considered. In particular, we obtain the field of an
ultrarelativistic charge in the Born-Infeld theory.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Measurement of the Cross Section for Open-Beauty Production in Photon-Photon Collisions at LEP
The cross section for open-beauty production in photon-photon collisions is
measured using the whole high-energy and high-luminosity data sample collected
by the L3 detector at LEP. This corresponds to 627/pb of integrated luminosity
for electron-positron centre-of-mass energies from 189GeV to 209GeV. Events
containing b quarks are identified through their semi-leptonic decay into
electrons or muons. The e+e- -> e+e-b b~X cross section is measured within our
fiducial volume and then extrapolated to the full phase space. These results
are found to be in significant excess with respect to Monte Carlo predictions
and next-to-leading order QCD calculations
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