481 research outputs found
Alchemilla vulgaris effects on egg production and quality expressed by heatstressed quail during the late laying period
Potential for mitigating effects of heat stress through dietary Alchemilla vulgaris (AV) supplementation during the late laying period of Japanese quail (Coturnix coturnix japonica) were investigated. A 2 x 3 factorial arrangement of environmental temperature (ET) regimes and levels of dietary supplementation with AV (0%, 1%, and 3%) was used in a 75-day experiment. Twenty-five quail were randomly assigned to each treatment with five replicate cages of five birds. The birds were housed in temperature-controlled rooms at 22 ± 2 °C for 24 h/day (TN) or 34 ± 2 °C between 09h00 and 17h00 followed by 22 ± 2 °C for 16 h/day (HS). The interaction of ET and supplement regimes was rarely significant. In HS quail supplemented with 1% AV, egg production was reduced and FCR was increased compared with the other treatments. Dietary AV was found to reduce egg production in TN conditions, but 3% AV supplementation in the HS group prevented decreased egg production and improved FCR. Various indicators of egg quality were significantly affected by supplementation with AV at certain times during the experiment. Most effects of HS on egg quality were manifest in the first 15 days of ET regimes. Although HS significantly decreased eggshell weight until 31–45 days, AV supplementation improved it on the 45th day and then maintained it through the end of the experiment. Thus, AV may mitigate some effects of HS by partially preventing decreased egg production and increased FCR during the late laying period of Japanese quail.Keywords: Coturnix coturnix japonica, flavonoids, supplemen
Experimental Control and Characterization of Autophagy in Drosophila
Insects such as the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, which fundamentally reorganize their body plan during metamorphosis, make extensive use of autophagy for their normal development and physiology. In the fruit fly, the hepatic/adipose organ known as the fat body accumulates nutrient stores during the larval feeding stage. Upon entering metamorphosis, as well as in response to starvation, these nutrients are mobilized through a massive induction of autophagy, providing support to other tissues and organs during periods of nutrient deprivation. High levels of autophagy are also observed in larval tissues destined for elimination, such as the salivary glands and larval gut. Drosophila is emerging as an important system for studying the functions and regulation of autophagy in an in vivo setting. In this chapter we describe reagents and methods for monitoring autophagy in Drosophila, focusing on the larval fat body. We also describe methods for experimentally activating and inhibiting autophagy in this system and discuss the potential for genetic analysis in Drosophila to identify novel genes involved in autophagy
Ostracods as ecological and isotopic indicators of lake water salinity changes: the Lake Van example
Ostracods are common lacustrine calcitic microfossils. Their faunal
assemblage and morphological characteristics are important ecological
proxies, and their valves are archives of geochemical information related to
palaeoclimatic and palaeohydrological changes. In an attempt to assess
ostracod ecology (taxonomic diversity and valve morphology) combined with
valve geochemistry (δ18O and δ13C) as
palaeosalinity indicators, we analysed sedimentary material from the
International Continental Scientific Drilling Program (ICDP) Ahlat Ridge site
from a terminal and alkaline lake, Lake Van (Turkey), covering the last
150 kyr. Despite a low species diversity, the ostracod faunal assemblage
reacted sensitively to changes in the concentration of total dissolved salts
in their aquatic environment. Limnocythere inopinata is present
throughout the studied interval, while Limnocythere sp. A is
restricted to the Last Glacial period and related to increased lake water
salinity and alkalinity. The presence of species belonging to the genus
Candona is limited to periods of lower salinity. Valves of
Limnocytherinae species (incl. L. inopinata) display nodes (hollow
protrusions) during intervals of increased salinity. Both the number of noded
valves and the number of nodes per valve appear to increase with rising
salinity, suggesting that node formation is related to hydrological changes
(salinity and/or alkalinity). In contrast to Lake Van's bulk
δ18O record, the δ18O values of ostracod valves
do record relative changes of the lake volume, with lower values during high
lake level periods. The δ13C values of different species
reflect ostracod habitat preferences (i.e. infaunal vs. epifaunal) but are
less sensitive to hydrological changes. However, combined with other proxies,
decreasing Holocene δ13C values may indicate a freshening of
the lake water compared to the low lake level during the Last Glacial period.
The Lake Van example underscores the significance and value of coupling
ostracod ecology and valve geochemistry in palaeoenvironmental studies of
endorheic lake basins.</p
The Technical and Financial Effects of Parenteral Supplementation with Selenium and Vitamin E during Late Pregnancy and the Early Lactation Period on the Productivity of Dairy Cattle
This study aimed to determine the effects of parenteral selenium (Se) and vitamin E supplementation on economic impact, milk yield, and some reproductive parameters in high-yield dairy cows in the dry period and in those at the beginning of lactation. At the beginning of the dry period, cows (n = 323) were randomly divided into three groups as follows: Treatment 1 (T1), Treatment 2 (T2), and Control (C). Cows in group T1 received this preparation 21 days before calving and on calving day, and cows in group T2 received it only on calving day. The cows in the control group did not receive this preparation. Supplementation with Se increased Se serum levels of cows treated at calving day (p<0.05). Differences in milk yield at all weeks and the electrical conductivity values at the 8th and 12th weeks were significant (p<0.05). Supplementation with Se and Vitamin E decreased the incidence of metritis, the number of services per conception and the service period, but had no effects on the incidence of retained fetal membrane. A partial budgeting analysis indicated that Se supplementation was economically profitable; cows in group T1 averaged 240.6 per cow. Supplementation with Se and Vitamin E has been found to increase serum Se levels, milk yield, and has positive effects on udder health by decreasing milk conductivity values and incidence of sub-clinical mastitis
Biallelic variants in ADAMTS15 cause a novel form of distal arthrogryposis
Purpose We aimed to identify the underlying genetic cause for a novel form of distal arthrogryposis. Methods Rare variant family-based genomics, exome sequencing, and disease-specific panel sequencing were used to detect ADAMTS15 variants in affected individuals. Adamts15 expression was analyzed at the single-cell level during murine embryogenesis. Expression patterns were characterized using in situ hybridization and RNAscope. Results We identified homozygous rare variant alleles of ADAMTS15 in 5 affected individuals from 4 unrelated consanguineous families presenting with congenital flexion contractures of the interphalangeal joints and hypoplastic or absent palmar creases. Radiographic investigations showed physiological interphalangeal joint morphology. Additional features included knee, Achilles tendon, and toe contractures, spinal stiffness, scoliosis, and orthodontic abnormalities. Analysis of mouse whole-embryo single-cell sequencing data revealed a tightly regulated Adamts15 expression in the limb mesenchyme between embryonic stages E11.5 and E15.0. A perimuscular and peritendinous expression was evident in in situ hybridization in the developing mouse limb. In accordance, RNAscope analysis detected a significant coexpression with Osr1, but not with markers for skeletal muscle or joint formation. Conclusion In aggregate, our findings provide evidence that rare biallelic recessive trait variants in ADAMTS15 cause a novel autosomal recessive connective tissue disorder, resulting in a distal arthrogryposis syndrome
Editorial of Special Issue of National Identities: Alevism as an ethno-religious identity: Contested boundaries
No abstract for editorial but this is the opening paragraph:
This special issue on Alevism and trans/national Alevi identity critically engages with the relationship between religion, ethnicity and national identity. The core issues are as follows:
• how ethnicity and religion are conceptualised for a relatively invisible ethnic group in different national contexts;
• how religion and ethnicity intersect when Alevism is both a faith and an ethnic identity, especially when conceptions of that identity are contested;
• how identity is shaped through state policies within different national policy contexts and how etic definitions of minority communities are constructed by the state or other agencies with the power to impose them on the community in contrast to the emic or self-definitions of Aleviness from within the Alevi community;
• how despite the fragmented, heterogeneous nature of Alevi communities, there is also a sense of a single, transnational imaginary community, at least for the purposes of political assimilation/integration and activism;
• how education and other arenas of political, religious and cultural engagement at local, national and transnational levels create the possibilities, both positively and negatively, for future action/policy to situate minority ethnic communities
Left atrial giant thrombus infected by Escherichia Coli. Case report
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licens
- …