45 research outputs found

    Efficient Nitrogen Recovery from Agro-Energy Effluents for Cyanobacteria Cultivation (Spirulina)

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    The present study aimed to obtain an efficient liquid nitrogen fertilizer from the by-product of anaerobic digestion for its subsequent use in the production of cyanobacteria (Spirulina). A simple recovery technology was tested based on the stripping and acid absorption, modifying temperature (50 and 70 degrees C) and pH (10 and 12), of the ammonia nitrogen contained in the digestate produced in a large-scale plant treating livestock manure and grass silage. The results demonstrated how, at a relatively low temperature (50 degrees C), using sulfuric and citric acid solution, it is possible to recover nitrogen from a digestate in the form of ammonium sulfate and ammonium citrate with yields of 70% and 72.1% respectively. By carrying out Spirulina growth tests, promising results were obtained under semicontinuous production, with a maximum dry biomass daily productivity of 0.344 g L-1 day(-1) with ammonium sulfate and 0.246 gDW L-1 day(-1) with ammonium citrate. The results showed that nitrogen can be efficiently recovered on site by using the organic acid, digestate and waste heat from anaerobic digestion for Spirulina biomass production

    Clinicopathologic predictors of renal outcomes in light chain cast nephropathy: a multicenter retrospective study

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    Light chain cast nephropathy (LCCN) in multiple myeloma often leads to severe and poorly reversible acute kidney injury. Severe renal impairment influences the allocation of chemotherapy and its tolerability; it also affects patient survival. Whether renal biopsy findings add to the clinical assessment in predicting renal and patient outcomes in LCCN is uncertain. We retrospectively reviewed clinical presentation, chemotherapy regimens, hematologic response, and renal and patient outcomes in 178 patients with biopsy-proven LCCN from 10 centers in Europe and North America. A detailed pathology review, including assessment of the extent of cast formation, was performed to study correlations with initial presentation and outcomes. Patients presented with a mean estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) of 13 ± 11 mL/min/1.73 m2, and 82% had stage 3 acute kidney injury. The mean number of casts was 3.2/mm2 in the cortex. Tubulointerstitial lesions were frequent: acute tubular injury (94%), tubulitis (82%), tubular rupture (62%), giant cell reaction (60%), and cortical and medullary inflammation (95% and 75%, respectively). Medullary inflammation, giant cell reaction, and the extent of cast formation correlated with eGFR value at LCCN diagnosis. During a median follow-up of 22 months, mean eGFR increased to 43 ± 30 mL/min/1.73 m2. Age, β2-microglobulin, best hematologic response, number of cortical casts per square millimeter, and degree of interstitial fibrosis/tubular atrophy (IFTA) were independently associated with a higher eGFR during follow-up. This eGFR value correlated with overall survival, independently of the hematologic response. This study shows that extent of cast formation and IFTA in LCCN predicts the quality of renal response, which, in turn, is associated with overall survival.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Organic waste biorefineries: looking towards implementation

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    The concept of biorefinery expands the possibilities to extract value from organic matter in form of either bespoke crops or organic waste. The viability of biorefinery schemes depends on the recovery of higher-value chemicals with potential for a wide distribution and an untapped marketability. The feasibility of biorefining organic waste is enhanced by the fact that the biorefinery will typically receive a waste management fee for accepting organic waste. The development and implementation of waste biorefinery concepts can open up a wide array of possibilities to shift waste management towards higher sustainability. However, barriers encompassing environmental, technical, economic, logistic, social and legislative aspects need to be overcome. For instance, waste biorefineries are likely to be complex systems due to the variability, heterogeneity and low purity of waste materials as opposed to dedicated biomasses. This article discusses the drivers that can make the biorefinery concept applicable to waste management and the possibilities for its development to full scale. Technological, strategic and market constraints affect the successful implementations of these systems. Fluctuations in waste characteristics, the level of contamination in the organic waste fraction, the proximity of the organic waste resource, the markets for the biorefinery products, the potential for integration with other industrial processes and disposal of final residues are all critical aspects requiring detailed analysis. Furthermore, interventions from policy makers are necessary to foster sustainable bio-based solutions for waste management

    Overexpression of the Cytokine BAFF and Autoimmunity Risk

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    BACKGROUND\textbf{BACKGROUND}: Genomewide association studies of autoimmune diseases have mapped hundreds of susceptibility regions in the genome. However, only for a few association signals has the causal gene been identified, and for even fewer have the causal variant and underlying mechanism been defined. Coincident associations of DNA variants affecting both the risk of autoimmune disease and quantitative immune variables provide an informative route to explore disease mechanisms and drug-targetable pathways. METHODS\textbf{METHODS}: Using case-control samples from Sardinia, Italy, we performed a genomewide association study in multiple sclerosis followed by TNFSF13B locus-specific association testing in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Extensive phenotyping of quantitative immune variables, sequence-based fine mapping, cross-population and cross-phenotype analyses, and gene-expression studies were used to identify the causal variant and elucidate its mechanism of action. Signatures of positive selection were also investigated. RESULTS\textbf{RESULTS}: A variant in TNFSF13B, encoding the cytokine and drug target B-cell activating factor (BAFF), was associated with multiple sclerosis as well as SLE. The disease-risk allele was also associated with up-regulated humoral immunity through increased levels of soluble BAFF, B lymphocytes, and immunoglobulins. The causal variant was identified: an insertion-deletion variant, GCTGT→A (in which A is the risk allele), yielded a shorter transcript that escaped microRNA inhibition and increased production of soluble BAFF, which in turn up-regulated humoral immunity. Population genetic signatures indicated that this autoimmunity variant has been evolutionarily advantageous, most likely by augmenting resistance to malaria. CONCLUSIONS\textbf{CONCLUSIONS}: A TNFSF13B variant was associated with multiple sclerosis and SLE, and its effects were clarified at the population, cellular, and molecular levels. (Funded by the Italian Foundation for Multiple Sclerosis and others.).Supported by grants (2011/R/13 and 2015/R/09, to Dr. Cucca) from the Italian Foundation for Multiple Sclerosis; contracts (N01-AG-1-2109 and HHSN271201100005C, to Dr. Cucca) from the Intramural Research Program of the National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health (NIH); a grant (FaReBio2011 “Farmaci e Reti Biotecnologiche di Qualità,” to Dr. Cucca) from the Italian Ministry of Economy and Finance; a grant (633964, to Dr. Cucca) from the Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program of the European Union; a grant (U1301.2015/AI.1157.BE Prat. 2015-1651, to Dr. Cucca) from Fondazione di Sardegna; grants (“Centro per la ricerca di nuovi farmaci per malattie rare, trascurate e della povertà” and “Progetto collezione di composti chimici ed attività di screening,” to Dr. Cucca) from Ministero dell’Istruzione, dell’Università e della Ricerca; grants (HG005581, HG005552, HG006513, and HG007022, to Dr. Abecasis) from the National Human Genome Research Institute; a grant (9-2011-253, to Dr. Todd) from JDRF; a grant (091157, to Dr. Todd) from the Wellcome Trust; a grant (to Dr. Todd) from the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR); and the NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre. Dr. Idda was a recipient of a Master and Back fellowship from the Autonomous Region of Sardinia

    Geochemistry of lead at the old mine area of Baccu Locci (South-East Sardinia, Italy)

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    About a century of exploitation of the galena-arsenopyrite deposit of Baccu Locci in Sardinia (Italy) has caused a severe, persistent arsenic contamination that extends downstream of the mine for several kilometres. Differently from As, the aqueous contamination of lead is only localised in the upper part of the mine despite very high Pb concentrations in geologic materials (waste rocks, tailings, stream sediments, soils) over the whole Baccu Locci stream catchment. The determination of aqueous and solid Pb speciation in various environmental media of the Baccu Locci system has pointed out that the peculiar geochemical behaviour of Pb is mainly due to (i) the short residence time of dissolved Pb in surface and ground water under near-neutral pH conditions and (ii) the low solubility of plumbojarosite that represents the main secondary Pb-bearing mineral in the Baccu Locci environment

    Fermentative hydrogen production from cheese whey with in-line, concentration gradient-driven butyric acid extraction

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    Hydrogen (H2) generation from cheese whey with simultaneous production and extraction of volatile fatty acids (VFAs) was studied in UASB reactors at two temperatures (20 and 35 °C) and pH values (5.0 and 4.5). The extraction module, installed through a recirculation loop, was a silicone tube coil submerged in water, which allows concentration-driven extraction of undissociated VFAs. Operating conditions were selected as a compromise for the recovery of both H2 and VFAs. Batch experiments showed a higher yield (0.9 mol H2 mol−1 glucoseeq.) at 35 °C and pH 5.0, regardless of the presence of the extraction module, whereas lower yields were obtained at pH 4.5 and 20 °C (0.5 and 0.3 mol H2 mol−1 glucoseeq., respectively). VFAs crossed the silicone membrane, with a strong preference for butyric over propionic and acetic acid due to its higher hydrophobicity. Sugars, lactic acid and nutrients were retained, resulting in an extracted solution of up to 2.5 g L−1 butyric acid with more than 90% purity. Continuous experiment confirmed those results, with production rates up to 2.0 L H2 L−1 d−1 and butyric acid extraction both in-line (from the UASB recirculation) and off-line (from the UASB effluent). In-line VFA extraction can reduce the operating costs of fermentation, facilitating downstream processing for the recovery of marketable VFAs without affecting the H2 production.This work was funded by the Science Foundation of Ireland (SFI) Research Professorship Programme on Innovative Energy Technologies for Bioenergy, Biofuels and a Sustainable Irish Bioeconomy (IETSBIO3 , award 15/RP/2763). Fabiano Asunis gratefully acknowledges Sardinian Regional Government for the financial support of his PhD scholarship (P.O.R. Sardegna F.S.E. - Operational Programme of the Autonomous Region of Sardinia, European Social Fund 2014-2020 - Axis III Education and training, Thematic goal 10, Investment Priority 10ii), Specific goal 10.5.2022-08-0

    Control of fermentation duration and pH to orient biochemicals and biofuels production from cheese whey

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    Batch dark fermentation tests were performed on sheep cheese whey, without inoculum addition at different operating pHs, relating the type and production yields of the observed gaseous and liquid by-products to the evolution of fermentation. Cheese whey fermentation evolved over time in two steps, involving an initial conversion of carbohydrates to lactic acid, followed by the degradation of this to soluble and gaseous products including short-chain fatty acids (mainly acetic, butyric and propionic acids) and hydrogen. The operating pH affected the production kinetics and yields, as well as the fermentation pathways. By varying the duration of the fermentation process, different cheese whey exploitation strategies may be applied and oriented to the main production of lactic acid or hydrogen or other organic acids

    Evaluation of the environmental sustainability of biorefinery applied to cheese whey

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    Although the implementation of the waste biorefinery concept can open a wide array of possibilities to shift waste management towards recovery of high added value products, several barriers including technical, environmental, economic, logistic aspects need to be overcome (Alibardi et al., 2020). In particular, when considering environmental sustainability, the question is: do relatively complex processes producing high added-value materials provide better environmental performances with respect to well-established ones? With reference to a specific agro-industrial waste - cheese whey (CW), which is the main by-product of the dairy industry – innovative solutions for its management by biorefinery approach and conventional treatment are compared in this study. In particular, a three-stage polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHA) production process from CW, based on: i) preliminary dark fermentation (DF) producing H2-rich gas, ii) selection and enrichment of PHA-accumulating biomass in an aerobic sequencing batch reactor (SBR) operated under a feast-and-famine regime, iii) PHA accumulation in a batch reactor, is considered and compared with conventional anaerobic digestion (AD) of CW, assumed as a sort of benchmark in terms of environmental performance
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