2,313 research outputs found

    Study of the antibacterial activity of total extract and Petroleum ether, chloroform, ethyl acetate and aqueous fractions of aerial parts of heliotropium bacciferum against staphylococcus aureus, Bacillus cereus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, E.coli, Salmonella enteritidis

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    Heliotropium bacciferum is One of the plants belonging to the family Boraginaceae , which is Restricted distribution in the south of Iran. It is used for Hypotension, fever, stomach ulcers in traditional medicine. In this study, the antibacterial effects of extracts and fractions of chloroform, ethyl acetate and aqueous, aerial parts of Heliotropium bacciferum Forssk was evaluated against five bacterial strains. The methanol extract were prepared using the percolation method. Fractions of chloroform, Petroleum ether, ethyl acetate, methanol and aqueous respectively by Liquid - Liquid fractionation of the total extract were prepared. The antibacterial activity against two Gram positive bacteria, three Gram negative bacterial using Minimum inhibitory concentration in microplate and well plate method. Results showed that H. bacciferum extracts exhibited a significant activity against strains Staphylococcus aureus, Bacillus cereus,Pseudomonas aeruginosa, E.coli, Salmonella enteritidis. MIC and well plate is between 7.6-125 ÎĽg/ml. The results of this study indicate that extracts of the plant H.bacciferum has a antimicrobial effect against strains are listed And among the extracts, aqueous part is that most antibacterial effect of the other fraction and then methanolic extract has the greatest effect

    Seroprevalence of anti-Hp and anti-cagA antibodies among healthy persons in Golestan province, northeast of Iran (2010)

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    Background: The major cause of peptic ulcer disease is helicobacter pylori (Hp), and it is also implicated in the pathogenesis of adenocarcinoma of the distal stomach and gastric lymphoma. The incidence of peptic ulcer disease, atrophic gastritis, and gastric adenocarcinoma are more common in people infected of cagA positive strains of Hp. The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of the anti-Hp and anti-cagA antibodies among healthy persons in Golestan province-North of Iran. Methods: The blood samples of 1028 healthy people were collected all over Golestan province by cluster sampling. A demographic questionnaire was completed and body mass index (BMI) was calculated for each case. Hp-IgG (Pishtaz teb Co. Iran) and anti- cagA (DIA.PRO Italy) titer were evaluated by Elisa method. Data were collected and analyzed. Results: Six hundred-eighty three individuals (66.4%) were positive for Hp and 395 (57.8%) of them were cagA positive. Hp positive cases were (66.3%) and (66.6%) in male and female, respectively. Prevalence of cagA was 56.3% and 58.9%, respectively. The most seropositivity of Helicobacter Pylori (75.4%) was in 55-64 years old (p<0.001). Prevalence of cagA (63.4%) was more in age between 15-24 years. Conclusion: Prevalence of anti-Hp antibody and strains of cagA seropositive in healthy persons of this province of Iran were relatively high. Preventive protocol for reducing of the infection is recommended

    Genetic analysis of breeding-related traits in Brassica rapa

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    Brassica rapa is an important crop with a variety of forms, and a wide distribution in the world. It is used as oil seed and vegetable crop and a valuable source of diverse health-promoting metabolites. It also can serve as a model for genetic and molecular analysis in the Brassica genus, to which all rapes, kales and cabbages belong, as it has the smallest genome size and some genotypes with a rapid life cycle. Insertional mutagenesis using heterologous maize transposons has been a valuable tool for the identification and isolation of genes in Arabidopsis. Transposon-based activation tagging systems use a construct with constitutive enhancer elements that can cause transcriptional activation of flanking plant genes, which can result in dominant mutant phenotypes and subsequent isolation of the genes involved. Chapter 2 describes the action of an En/I activation tagging construct in B. rapa through Agrobacterium rhizogenes–mediated hairy root transformation. Successful transformation of this construct to B. rapa ssp. by A. tumefaciens was not achieved, probably due to the combination of an inefficient plant transformation and regeneration system, the length of the construct and most importantly the presence of the SU1 gene in the construct that appears to inhibit the regeneration of transformed shoots. As an alternative to the insertional mutagenesis approach to identify genetic loci that impact traits, there is a genetic approach based on quantitative trait locus (QTL) analysis. Segregating populations are needed to map QTLs for traits of interest. Chapter 3 describes the analysis of an F2 population derived from a cross between two distinct, but early flowering and self compatible, B. rapa genotypes, L58 and R-o-18. Amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) markers together with simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers were used to genotype this F2 population and anchor the linkage map to the reference genetic map of B. rapa. Highly significant QTLs associated with the production of adventitious roots and the transformation competence to A. rhizogenes were detected, which will allow the selection of lines that are more efficient in transformation experiments. The analysis detected a strong QTL associated with seed coat color as well as QTLs for various morphological traits. To fix the recombination events as much as possible and to obtain an “immortal” mapping population, a recombinant inbred line (RIL) population was developed from this F2 population. Chapter 4 describes development of this RIL population, for which a genetic linkage map was constructed using the Illumina® BeadXpressTM genotyping platform of Keygene NV and additional SSR markers. Analysis revealed an additional QTL for seed coat colour as well QTL for pod shattering, carpel number, cuticular wax and seed vivipary. Chapter 5 describes the detection of QTLs related to primary and secondary metabolites in this RIL population. The two parental lines show clear differences in metabolite profile, which allowed the finding of QTLs for glucosinolates, phenylpropanoids, glucose, glutamate and amino acids after analysis with H1- NMR. HPLC analysis of tocopherols revealed four QTLs controlling the levels of this important antioxidant. The information on the genetic control of health related compounds indicates the potential to improve nutritional quality in classical crop breeding programs. <br/
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