270 research outputs found

    Sensibilizar para a entrega de medicamentos usados na farmácia: Qual a importância para o ambiente e fauna selvagem?

    Get PDF
    Actualmente, é cada vez mais importante tratar devidamente os resíduos perigosos para diminuir o seu impacto nos ecossistemas. Neste grupo destacam-se os produtos farmacêuticos que não são considerados resíduos perigosos pelos cidadãos comuns, sendo por isso geralmente depositados no lixo comum. Este facto constui um problema ambiental grave já que vários trabalhos de investigação indicam que a contaminação por fármacos têm efeitos nocivos na fauna e nos ecossistemas

    Water buffalo production in the Brazilian Amazon Basin: a review

    Get PDF
    The Brazilian Amazon has witnessed, in the last decades, an increase in the water buffalo (Bubalus bubalis) inventory, with interesting productivity results. As the Brazilian Amazon contains the main water buffalo population in the Americas, the aim of this work is to review its most relevant production systems and some peculiarities about meat and milk production in this territory. The opening section describes the Amazon Basin, the most common water buffalo breeds, a brief history of the local livestock farming beginning in 1644. Also, it presents how water buffaloes gradually replaced bovine herds, especially where the latter had a lower productive performance. The use of extensive or more intensified models is pointed out and the ecosystems in which buffaloes are raised are detailed since native or cultivated pastures can be used in floodplains or drylands. Buffalo raising is favored in the Amazon due to the climate, soil, genetic variability of forages, animal adaptability, and physical space. Thus, it is clear that buffaloes have a high potential for meat and milk production and are an alternative in the use of altered areas of the Amazon; and, in the recent past, the low profitability of buffalo farming in traditional production systems in the Amazon was the reason which made this activity economically unattractive. Most recent technologies as outdoor confinements and silvopastoral systems are pointed out as more suitable regarding land-use policies, and buffalo farming for meat and milk production fits perfectly in this context, with productivity and beneficial socioeconomicinfo:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersio

    Holonomy Transformation in the FRW Metric

    Get PDF
    In this work we investigate loop variables in Friedman-Robertson-Walker spacetime. We analyze the parallel transport of vectors and spinors in several paths in this spacetime in order to classify its global properties. The band holonomy invariance is analysed in this background.Comment: 8 page

    Geometric Phases in Graphitic Cones

    Full text link
    In this article we use a geometric approach to study geometric phases in graphitic cones. The spinor that describes the low energy states near the Fermi energy acquires a phase when transported around the apex of the cone, as found by a holonomy transformation. This topological result can be viewed as an analogue of the Aharonov-Bohm effect. The topological analysis is extended to a system with nn cones, whose resulting configuration is described by an effective defect.Comment: 4 pages, revtex

    Fermentation characteristics and chemical composition of elephant grass silage with ground maize and fermented juice of epiphytic lactic acid bacteria

    Get PDF
    This study aimed to evaluate the microbial populations, fermentation profile, dry matter recovery and chemical composition of elephant grass silage with ground maize (GM) and the fermented juice of epiphytic lactic acid bacteria (FJLB). A factorial design was used with four levels of GM (0 g/kg, 50 g/kg, 100 g/kg and 200 g/kg), untreated or treated with FJLB, in a completely randomized design with five replicates. A pre-experiment was undertaken to determine the optimum level of sucrose to be added to fermented juice for the development of epiphytic microflora. In this pre-experiment, a completely randomized design with three replications was used. The treatments were represented by the levels of sucrose (0 g/kg, 5 g/kg, 10 g/kg, 20 g/kg, 40 g/kg, 60 g/kg and 80 g/kg, fresh matter basis). The microbial populations, dry matter recovery, and effluent losses were affected by the interaction between GM and FJLB. Dry matter (DM) and crude protein (CP) contents increased linearly with the inclusion of GM. The addition of GM enhanced the fermentation process via a reduction in losses, and improvements were identified in the nutritional value of elephant grass silages. The use of fermented juice increased dry matter recovery, and its effect was more pronounced when ground maize was added.Keywords: dry matter recovery, lactic acid, microbiology, Pennisetum purpureu

    Interaction of global and local monopoles

    Get PDF
    We study the direct interaction between global and local monopoles. While in two previous papers, the coupling between the two sectors was only indirect through the coupling to gravity, we here introduce a new term in the potential that couples the Goldstone field and the Higgs field directly. We investigate the influence of this term in curved space and compare it to the results obtained previously.Comment: 9 Revtex pages, 4 ps-figure

    The anisotropic Ashkin-Teller model: a renormalization group study

    Full text link
    The two-dimensional ferromagnetic anisotropic Ashkin-Teller model is investigated through a real-space renormalization-group approach. The critical frontier, separating five distinct phases, recover all the known exacts results for the square lattice. The correlation length (νT)(\nu_T) and crossover (ϕ)(\phi) critical exponents are also calculated. With the only exception of the four-state Potts critical point, the entire phase diagram belongs to the Ising universality class.Comment: 3 ps figures, accepted for publication in Physica

    An Overall Evaluation Of The Resistance (r) And Pathogenesis-related (pr) Super Families In Soybean, As Compared With Medicago And Arabidopsis

    Get PDF
    Plants have the ability to recognize and respond to a multitude of pathogens, resulting in a massive reprogramming of the plant to activate defense responses including Resistance (R) and Pathogenesis-Related (PR) genes. Abiotic stresses can also activate PR genes and enhance pathogen resistance, representing valuable genes for breeding purposes. The present work offers an overview of soybean Rand PR genes present in the GENOSOJA (Brazilian Soybean Genome Consortium) platform, regarding their structure, abundance, evolution and role in the plant-pathogen metabolic pathway, as compared with Medicago and Arabidopsis. Searches revealed 3,065 R candidates (756 in Soybean, 1,142 in Medicago and 1,167 in Arabidopsis), and PR candidates matching to 1,261 sequences (310, 585 and 366 for the three species, respectively). The identified transcripts were also evaluated regarding their expression pattern in 65 libraries, showing prevalence in seeds and developing tissues. Upon consulting the Super SAGE libraries, 1,072 Rand 481 PR tags were identified in association with the different libraries. Multiple alignments were generated forXa21andPR-2genes, allowing inferences about their evolution. The results revealed interesting insights regarding the variability and complexity of defense genes in soybean, as compared with Medicago and Arabidopsis. © 2012, Sociedade Brasileira de Genética.35SUPPL.1260271Alberts, B., Johnson, A., Lewis, J., Raff, M., Roberts, K., Walter, P., (2002) Molecular Biology of the Cell, p. 1616. , 4th edition. Garland Publishing Company, New York & LondonAltschul, S.F., Gish, W., Miller, W., Myers, E., Basic local alignment search tool (1990) J Mol Biol, 215, pp. 403-410Ashfield, T., Bocian, A., Held, D., Henk, A.D., Marek, L.F., Danesh, D., Penuela, S., Young, N.D., Genetic and physical localization of the soybean Rpg1-b disease resistance gene reveals a complex locus containing several tightly linked families of NBS-LRR genes (2003) Mol Plant Microbe Interact, 16, pp. 817-826Atici, O., Nalbantoglu, B., Antifreeze proteins in higher plants (2003) Phytochemistry, 64, pp. 1187-1196Barbosa-da-Silva, A., Wanderley-Nogueira, A.C., Silva, R.R.M., Belarmino, L.C., Soares-Cavalcanti, N.M., Benko-Iseppon, A.M., In silico survey of resistance (R) genes in Eucalyptus transcriptome (2005) Genet Mol Biol, 28, pp. 562-574Benko-Iseppon, A.M., Galdino, S.L., Calsa, T., Kido, E.A., Tossi, A., Belarmino, L.C., Crovella, S., Overview of plant antimicrobial peptides (2010) Curr Prot Pept Sci, 11, pp. 181-188Bent, A.F., Plant disease resistance genes: Function meets structure (1996) Plant Cell, 8, pp. 1751-1771Bolton, M., Primary metabolism and plant defense-Fuel for the fire (2009) Mol Plant Microbe Interact, 22, pp. 487-497Bonas, U., Anckerveken, G.V., Gene-for-gene interactions: Bacterial avirulence proteins specify plant disease resistance (1999) Curr Opin Plant Biol, 2, pp. 94-98Bonasera, J.M., Kim, J.F., Beer, S.V., PR genes of apple: Identification and expression in response to elicitors and inoculation with Erwinia amylovora (2006) BMC Plant Biol, 6, pp. 23-34Cannon, S.B., May, G.D., Jackson, S.A., Three sequenced legume genomes and many crop species: Rich opportunities for translational genomics (2009) Plant Physiol, 151, pp. 970-977Chester, K.S., The problem of acquired physiological immunity in plants (1933) Quart Rev Phytopathol, 42, pp. 185-209Dafny-Yelin, M., Tzfira, T., Delivery of multiple trans-genes to plant cells (2007) Plant Physiol, 145, pp. 1118-1128Dinesh-Kumar, S.P., Whitham, S., Choi, D., Hehl, R., Corr, C., Baker, B., Transposon tagging of tobacco mosaic virus resistance gene N:I its possible role in the TMV-N-mediated signal transduction pathway (1995) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA, 92, pp. 4175-4180Dixon, M.S., Jones, D.A., Keddie, J.S., Thomas, C.T., Harrison, K., Jones, J.D.G., The tomato Cf2 disease resistance locus comprises two functional genes encoding leucine rich repeats proteins (1996) Cell, 84, pp. 451-459Durrant, W.E., Dong, X., Systemic acquired resistance (2004) Annu Rev Plant Pathol, 42, pp. 185-209Eisen, M.B., Spellman, P.T., Brown, P.O., Botstein, B., Cluster analysis and display of genome-wide expression patterns (1998) Genetics, 25, pp. 14863-14868Ellis, J., Jones, D., Structure and function of proteins controlling strain-specific pathogen resistance in plants (2000) Curr Opin Plant Biol, 1, pp. 288-293Ellis, J., Lawrence, G.J., Finnegan, E.J., Anderson, P.A., Contrasting complexity of two rust resistance loci in flax (1995) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA, 92, pp. 4185-4188Ellis, J., Dodds, P., Pryor, T., Structure, function and evolution of plant disease resistance genes (2000) Curr Opin Plant Biol, 3, pp. 278-284Gaffney, T., Friedrich, L., Vernooij, B., Negrotto, D., Nye, G., Ukness, S., Ward, E., Kessman Hand Ryals, J., Requirementofsalicylic acid for the induction of systemic acquired resistance (1993) Science, 261, pp. 754-756Glombitza, S., Dubuis, P.-H., Thulke, O., Welzl, G., Bovet, L., Götz, M., Affenzeller, M., Asnaghi, C., Crosstalk and differential response to abiotic and biotic stressors reflected at the transcriptional level of effector genes from secondary metabolism (2004) Plant Mol Biol, 54, pp. 817-835Griffith, M., Yaish, M.W.F., Antifreeze proteins in overwintering plants: A tale of two activities (2004) Trends Plant Sci, 9, pp. 399-405Hammond-Kosack, K.E., Jones, J.D.G., Plant disease resistance genes (1997) Annu Rev Plant Physiol, 48, pp. 575-607Hon, W.C., Griffith, M., Mlynarz, A., Kwok, Y.C., Yang, D.S.C., Antifreeze proteins in winter rye are similar to pathogenesis-related proteins (1995) Plant Physiol, 109, pp. 879-889Hulbert, S.H., Webb, C.A., Smith, S.M., Sun, Q., Resistance gene complexes: Evolution and utilization (2001) Annu Rev Phytopathol, 39, pp. 285-312Joahal, G.S., Briggs, S.P., Reductase activity encodes by the Hm1 resistance gene in maize (1992) Science, 198, pp. 985-987Kanazin, V., Marek, L.F., Shoemaker, R.C., Resistance gene analogs are conserved and clustered in soybean (1996) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA, 93, pp. 11746-11750Kido, E.A., Barbosa, P.K., Ferreira Neto, J.C.R., Pandolfi, V., Houllou-Kido, L.M., Crovella, S., Benko-Iseppon, A.M., Identification of plant protein kinases in response to abiotic and biotic stresses using Super SAGE (2011) Curr Prot Pept Sci, 12, pp. 643-656Kitajima, S., Sato, F., Plant pathogenesis-related proteins: Molecular mechanisms of gene expression and protein function (1999) J Biochem, 125, pp. 1-8Lavin, M., Herendeen, P.S., Wojciechowski, M.F., Evolutionary rates analysis of Leguminosae implicates a rapid diversification of lineages during the tertiary (2005) Syst Biol, 54, pp. 575-594Lawrence, G.J., Finnegan, E.J., Ayliffe, M.A., Ellis, J.G., The L6 gene for flax rust resistance is related to the Arabidopsis bacterial resistance gene RPS2 and the tobacco viral resistance gene (1995) N. Plant Cell, 7, pp. 1195-1206Leubner-Metzger, G., β-1,3-glucanase gene expression in low-hydrated seeds as a mechanism for dormancy release during tobacco after-ripening (2005) Plant J, 41, pp. 133-145Li, L., He, H., Zhang, J., Wang, X., Bai, S., Stolc, V., Tongprasit, W., Deng, X.W., Transcriptional analysis of highly syntenic regions between Medicago truncatula and Glycine max using tiling microarrays (2008) Genome Biol, 9, pp. R57Libault, M., Farmer, A., Joshi, T., Takahashi, K., Langley, R.J., Franklin, L.D., He, J., Stacey, G., An integrated transcriptome atlas of the crop model Glycine max and its use in comparative analyses in plants (2010) Plant J, 63, pp. 86-99Liu, B., Zhang, S., Zhu, X., Yang, Q., Wu, S., Mei, M., Mauleon, R., Leung, H., Candidate defense genes as predictors of quantitative blast resistance in rice (2004) Mol Plant Microbe Int, 17, pp. 1146-1152Maisonneuve, B., Bellec, Y., Anderson, P., Michelmore, R.W., Rapid mapping of two genes for resistance to downy mildew from Lactuca serriola to existing clusters of resistance genes (1994) Theor Appl Genet, 89, pp. 96-104Matsumura, H., Kruger, D.H., Kahl, G., Terauchi, R., SuperSAGE: A modern platform for genome-wide quantitative transcript profiling (2008) Curr Pharm Biotechnol, 9, pp. 368-374Melotto, M., Coelho, M.F., Pedrosa-Harand, A., Kelly, J.D., Camargo, L.E., The anthracnose resistance locus Co-4 of common bean is located on chromosome 3 and contains putative disease resistance-related genes (2004) Theor Appl Genet, 109, pp. 690-699Metzler, M.C., Cutt, J.R., Klessig, D.F., Isolation and characterization of a gene encoding a PR-1 like protein from Arabidopsis thaliana (1991) Plant Physiol, 96, pp. 346-348Michelmore, R.W., Meyers, B.C., Clusters of resistance genes in plants evolve by divergent selection and a birth-and-death process (1998) Genome Res, 8, pp. 1113-1130Mindrinos, M., Katagiri, F., Yu, G.L., Ausubel, F.M., The Arabidopsis thaliana disease resistance gene encodes a protein containing a nucleotide-binding site and leucine rich repeats (1994) Cell, 78, pp. 1089-1099Mudge, J., Cannon, S.B., Kalo, P., Oldroyd, G.E., Roe, B.A., Town, C.D., Young, N.D., Highly syntenic regions in the genomes of soybean, Medicago truncatula and Arabidopsis thaliana (2005) BMC Plant Biol, 5, pp. e15Nanda, A.K., Andrio, E., Marino, D., Pauly, N., Dunand, C., Reactive Oxygen Species during plant-microorganism early interactions (2010) J Integr Plant Biol, 52, pp. 195-204Nurnberg, T., Brunner, F., Innate immunity in plants and animals: Emerging parallels between the recognition of general elicitors and pathogen-associated molecular patterns (2002) Curr Opin Plant Biol, 5, pp. 318-324Page, R.D., (1996) Comp Appl Biosci, 12, pp. 357-358Rayapati, P.J., Lee, M., Gregory, J.W., Wise, R.P., A linkage map of diploid Avena based on RFLP loci and a locus conferring resistance to nine isolates of Puccinia coronata var. 'avenae' (1994) Theor Appl Genet, 89, pp. 831-837Salmeron, J.M., Oldroyd, G.E.D., Romens, C.M.T., Scofield, S.R., Kim, H.S., Lavelle, D.T., Dahlbeck, D., Staskawicz, B.J., Tomato Prf is a member of the leucine rich repeats class of plant disease resistance genes and lies embedded within the Pto kinase gene cluster (1996) Cell, 86, pp. 123-133Shoemaker, R.C., Schlueter, J., Doyle, J.J., Paleopolyploidy and gene duplication in soybean and other legumes (2006) Curr Opin Plant Biol, 9, pp. 104-109Song, W.Y., Pi, L.Y., Wang, G.L., Gardner, J., Holsten, T., Ronald, P.C., Evolution of the rice Xa21 disease resistance genes family (1997) Plant Cell, 9, pp. 1279-1287Song, W.Y., Wang, G.L., Kim, H.S., Pi, L.Y., Gardner, J., Wang, B., Holsten, T., Fauquet, C., A receptor kinase-like protein encoded by the rice disease resistance gene Xa21 (1995) Science, 270, pp. 1804-1806Sparla, F., Rotino, L., Valgimigli, M.C., Pupillo, P., Trost, P., Systemic resistance induced by benzothisdizole in pear inoculated with the agent of fire blight (2004) Sci Hortic, 101, pp. 269-279Tamura, K., Dudley, J., Nei, M., Kumar, S., MEGA4: Molecular Evolutionary Genetics Analysis (MEGA) software ver. 4.0 (2007) Mol Biol Evol, 24, pp. 1596-1599Tang, X., Xie, M., Kim, Y.J., Zhou, J., Klessing, D.F., Martin, G.B., Overexpression of Pto activates defense responses and confers broad resistance (1999) Plant Cell, 11, pp. 15-29Thiel, T., Graner, A., Waugh, R., Grosse, I., Close, T.J., Stein, N., Evidence and evolutionary of ancient whole-genome duplication in barley predating the divergence from rice (2009) BMC Evol Biol, 9, pp. 209-227Tornero, P., Gadea, J., Conejero, V., Vera, P., Two PR-1 genes from tomato are differentially regulated and reveal a novel mode of expression for a pathogenesis-related gene during the hypersensitive response and development (1997) Plant Microbe Interact, 10, pp. 624-634Van-Loon, L.C., Geraats, B.P.J., Linthorst, H.J.M., Ethylene as a modulator of disease resistance in plants (2006) Trends Plant Sci, 11, pp. 184-191Van-Loon, L.C., Pierpoint, W.S., Boller, T., Conejero, V., Recommendations for naming plant pathogenesis-related proteins (1999) Plant Mol Biol Rep, 12, pp. 245-264Velazhahan, R., Muthukrishnan, S., Transgenic tobacco plants constitutively overexpressing a rice thaumatin-like protein (PR-5) show enhanced resistance to Alternaria alternata (2003) Plant Biol, 47, pp. 347-354Vergne, E., Grand, X., Ballini, R., Chalvon, V., Saindrenan, P., Tharreau, D., Nottéghem, J.-L., Morel, J.-B., Preformed expression of defense is a hallmark of partial resistance to rice blast fungal pathogen Magnaporthe oryzae (2010) BMC Plant Biol, 10, pp. e206Wanderley-Nogueira, A.C., Mota, N., Lima-Morais, D., Silva, L.C.B., Silva, A.B., Benko-Iseppon, A.M., Abundance and diversity of resistance (R) genes in the sugarcane trans-criptome (2007) Genet Mol Res, 6, pp. 866-889Wang, G.L., Holsten, T.E., Song, W.Y., Wang, H.P., Ronald, P.C., Construction of a rice bacterial artificial chromosome library and identification of clones linked to the Xa21 disease resistance locus (1995) Plant J, 7, pp. 525-533Wendell, J., Genome evolution in polyploids (2000) Plant Mol Biol, 42, pp. 225-249Weng, J.K., Banks, J.A., Chapple, C., Parallels in lignin biosynthesis: A study in Selaginella moellendorffii reveals convergence across 400 million years of evolution (2008) Comm Int Biol, 1, pp. 20-22Wilkstrom, N., Savolainen, V., Chase, M.W., Evolution of the angiosperms: Calibrating the family tree (2001) Proc Soc Biol Sci, 268, pp. 2211-2220Zeier, J., Pink, B., Mueller, M.J., Berger, S., Light conditions influence specific defense responses in incompatible plant-pathogen interactions: Uncoupling systemic resistance from salicylic acid and PR-1 accumulation (2004) Planta, 219, pp. 673-68

    Variabilidade de Xanthomonas campestris pv. vesicatoria em tomate no Brasil.

    Get PDF
    Os resultados indicam que as duas populações são geneticamente distintas.Suplemento. Edição dos Resumos do 30 Congresso Brasileiro de Fitopatologia, Poços de Caldas, 1997. Resumo, 30

    Total lipids, fatty acid composition, total cholesterol and lipid-soluble antioxidant vitamins in the longissimus lumborum muscle of water buffalo (Bubalus bubalis) from different production systems of the Brazilian Eastern Amazon

    Get PDF
    Research Areas: Agriculture ; Veterinary Sciences ; ZoologyThe aim of this study was to analyze the influence of distinct production systems and seasonal variation in the Brazilian Eastern Amazon on the meat lipid composition of water buffaloes. Water buffaloes were reared in commercial farms in the Eastern Amazon either in extensive systems (Marajó Island, Nova Timboteua and Santarém locations), during rainy or dry seasons, or intensive (feedlot) systems. Animals reared in extensive systems were fed natural pastures, and those reared in feedlots were fed sorghum silage and commercial pellets. Buffaloes were slaughtered and ribeye muscle (longissimus lumborum) samples collected. Lipid-soluble antioxidant vitamins and fatty acids were analyzed. The nutritional value of meat from buffaloes reared in Marajó Island extensive system during the rainy season was higher than that of other systems, as it had lower levels of cholesterol and higher amounts of α-tocopherol associated with higher hypocholesterolaemic/hypercholesterolaemic ratio and lower index of atherogenic. Also, this meat had lower percentages of saturated fatty acids and higher proportions of mono- and polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA), particularly n-3 PUFA, with increased PUFA/saturated fatty acids ratio and decreased n-6/n-3 PUFA ratio. However, all extensive systems produced meat with a relatively low index of thrombogenicity values, which is advantageous for human healthinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
    corecore