156 research outputs found

    Hybridization between wild and cultivated potato species in the Peruvian Andes and biosafety implications for deployment of GM potatoes

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    The nature and extent of past and current hybridization between cultivated potato and wild relatives in nature is of interest to crop evolutionists, taxonomists, breeders and recently to molecular biologists because of the possibilities of inverse gene flow in the deployment of genetically-modified (GM) crops. This research proves that natural hybridization occurs in areas of potato diversity in the Andes, the possibilities for survival of these new hybrids, and shows a possible way forward in case of GM potatoes should prove advantageous in such areas

    The antibody response of cattle to Clostridium botulinum types C and D toxoids

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    The resistance of cattle with varying serum-antitoxin titres was determined by per os challenge. The results proved that a solid immunity can be produced against C. botulinum toxins C₁ and D. The immune response of cattle to various quantities of C. botulinum C₁ and D toxoids, aluminum phosphate adsorbed and in water-in-oil emulsion was investigated. The response to antigen in watering oil emulsion was far superior to the other when they were used for primary and secondary stimuli. When cattle had been given a solid basic immunity with 2 injections of antigen in water-in-oil emulsion, essentially the same booster effect was obtained with antigen in water-in-oil emulsion and in aqueous solution. Only some of the animals injected intramuscularly with antigens in water-in-oil emulsion developed local lesions. These lesions were not large and their histological picture indicated a noticeable decline in severity within 20 weeks. A case is thus made out for the use of C. botulinum C₁ and D toxoids in water-in-oil emulsion for the primary and secondary stimuli and an aqueous solution of these antigens for any booster stimulus as an improved method of protecting cattle against botulism.The articles have been scanned in colour with a HP scanjet 5590; 300dpi. Adobe Acrobat XI Pro was used to OCR the text and also for the merging and conversion to final presentyation PDF-Format

    Cerebral Blood Flow in Relation to Contralateral Carotid Disease an MRA and TCD Study

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    AbstractObjective: to describe redistribution of cerebral blood flow in patients with severe internal carotid artery (ICA) stenoses in relation to contralateral ICA disease. Methods: sixty-six patients scheduled for carotid endarterectomy (CEA) were grouped according to severity of contralateral stenosis (<30% [group I]; 30–69% [group II]; 70–99% [group III]; occlusion [group IV]. Transcranial Doppler (TCD) and magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) investigations were performed preoperatively. Results: TCD demonstrated a reversed flow in the contralateral anterior cerebral artery (A1segment) and ophthalmic artery in three-quarters of group IV patients (p <0.0001). Group IV patients also exhibited decreased blood flow velocity in the contralateral middle cerebral artery (p =0.001). MRA showed increased ipsilateral ICA and basilar artery (BA) blood flow volumes (Q-flows) in group IV patients when compared to the other groups (p <0.001). No changes in total Q-flow (ICAs+BA) were found. Conclusions: in patients considered for CEA, the severity of the contralateral ICA disease is an important determinant of the pattern of blood flow redistribution through the anterior communicating pathway and ophthalmic artery. Significant flow redistribution through the posterior communicating pathway occurs especially in patients with contralateral ICA occlusion

    Replicated analysis of the genetic architecture of quantitative traits in two wild great tit populations

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    Currently, there is much debate on the genetic architecture of quantitative traits in wild populations. Is trait variation influenced by many genes of small effect or by a few genes of major effect? Where is additive genetic variation located in the genome? Do the same loci cause similar phenotypic variation in different populations? Great tits (Parus major) have been studied extensively in long-term studies across Europe and consequently are considered an ecological ‘model organism’. Recently, genomic resources have been developed for the great tit, including a custom SNP chip and genetic linkage map. In this study, we used a suite of approaches to investigate the genetic architecture of eight quantitative traits in two long-term study populations of great tits—one in the Netherlands and the other in the United Kingdom. Overall, we found little evidence for the presence of genes of large effects in either population. Instead, traits appeared to be influenced by many genes of small effect, with conservative estimates of the number of contributing loci ranging from 31 to 310. Despite concordance between population-specific heritabilities, we found no evidence for the presence of loci having similar effects in both populations. While population-specific genetic architectures are possible, an undetected shared architecture cannot be rejected because of limited power to map loci of small and moderate effects. This study is one of few examples of genetic architecture analysis in replicated wild populations and highlights some of the challenges and limitations researchers will face when attempting similar molecular quantitative genetic studies in free-living populations

    A Structured Assessment to Decrease the Amount of Inconclusive Endometrial Biopsies in Women with Postmenopausal Bleeding

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    Objective. To determine whether structured assessment of outpatient endometrial biopsies decreases the number of inconclusive samples. Design. Retrospective cohort study. Setting. Single hospital pathology laboratory. Population. Endometrial biopsy samples of 66 women with postmenopausal bleeding, collected during the usual diagnostic work-up an

    Conformally dressed black hole in 2+1 dimensions

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    A three dimensional black hole solution of Einstein equations with negative cosmological constant coupled to a conformal scalar field is given. The solution is static, circularly symmetric, asymptotically anti-de Sitter and nonperturbative in the conformal field. The curvature tensor is singular at the origin while the scalar field is regular everywhere. The condition that the Euclidean geometry be regular at the horizon fixes the temperature to be T=9 r+16πl2T=\frac{9\, r_+}{16\pi l^2}. Using the Hamiltonian formulation including boundary terms of the Euclidean action, the entropy is found to be 23\frac{2}{3} of the standard value (14A\frac{1}{4} A), and in agreement with the first law of thermodynamics.Comment: LaTeX ,RevTeX, 13pages, no figure

    Influence of genetic variation in COMT on cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity in cancer patients

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    Cisplatin is a chemotherapeutic agent widely used for multiple indications. Unfortunately, in a substantial set of patients treated with cisplatin, dose-limiting acute kidney injury (AKI) occurs. Here, we assessed the association of 3 catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with increased cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity. In total, 551 patients were genotyped for the 1947 G>A (Val158Met, rs4680), c.615 + 310 C>T (rs4646316), and c.616 – 367 C>T (rs9332377) polymorphisms. Associations between these variants and AKI grade ≄3 were studied. The presence of a homozygous variant of c.616-367C>T was associated with a decreased occurrence of AKI grade 3 toxicity (p = 0.014, odds ratio (OR) 0.201, 95% confidence interval (CI) (0.047–0.861)). However, we could not exclude the role of dehydration as a potential cause of AKI in 25 of the 27 patients with AKI grade 3, which potentially affected the results substantially. As a result of the low incidence of AKI grade 3 in this dataset, the lack of patients with a COMT variant, and the high number of patients with dehydration, the association between COMT variants and AKI does not seem clinically relevant

    Towards a definition of sarcopenia--results from epidemiologic studies

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    The age-related loss of muscle mass, also called sarcopenia, is receiving increasing attention in aging research. While the concept is frequently being used in research settings and introduced to clinical settings, thus far no consensus on its definition has been established. This article provides an overview of the history of sarcopenia definitions proposed in the literature thus far. It will describe the methodology used to develop the cutpoints for low muscle mass (or strength) in large epidemiological studies, how sarcopenia based on these cutpoints relates to functional outcomes, and the advantages and disadvantages of the different definitions. This overview will contribute to the current need to develop a consensus definition of sarcopenia which can be used in all relevant settings. The Journal of Nutrition, Health & Aging©
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