141 research outputs found

    Integrated study on production performance and quality traits of European sea bass ( Dicentrarchus labrax ) fed high plant protein diets

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    In the issue of fishmeal replacement, besides maintaining optimal growth, a key area of investigation for continuing to improve modern aquafeeds includes the evaluation of the effects of plant ingredients on fish quality. It is generally accepted that farmed fish quality can be influenced by the formulation of composition of their feed. Hence, the aim of the present research was to evaluate plant protein inclusion up to 84% of the overall protein content in an integrated study on growth and quality traits of European sea bass. Three diets were formulated to contain increasing plant protein levels (50, 67 and 84%; 50PP, 67PP and 84PP, respectively), with fishmeal dietary levels at 30, 20 and 10%, respectively. No significant differences due to reducing fishmeal content were observed after 118 days in terms of growth (final body weight and specific growth rate) and feed intake, even though a trend towards lower growth performance at higher fishmeal replacement levels was observed. Fish fed diet 50PP showed lower feed conversion rate in comparison to those fed diet 84PP, while no differences were recorded between diet 50PP and 67PP. No significant differences among treatments were found in protein efficiency rate. On the contrary, fish fed diet 84PP showed lower gross protein efficiency in comparison to those fed diet 50PP and 67PP. No significant differences in biometric indices and fillet composition were observed. No significant differences were found in pH, liquid holding capacity and skin colour measurements between treatments, while regarding fillet colour, significant differences were found only for H\ub0ab. In conclusion, our findings demonstrated that dietary plant proteins up to 84% of the overall protein content had no effects on quality traits of European sea bass in comparison with 50% and 67%. All experimental groups showed similar growth even though 84% plant protein inclusion negatively influenced feed and protein utilisation

    Feeding common sole (Solea solea) juveniles with increasing dietary lipid levels affects growth, feed utilization and gut health

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    Knowledge about the nutritional requirements of common sole (Solea solea) is limited and no information regarding the optimal dietary lipid level is available yet. Thus, this study was undertaken to assess the growth response and feed utilization of common sole juveniles fed diets with increasing lipid levels. Four isonitrogenous (59% protein) pelletized diets with different dietary lipid levels (8%, 12%, 16% and 20%; L8, L12, L16 and L20, respectively) were fed to triplicate fish groups of 80 individuals to apparent satiation over 150 days. A one-way ANOVA, Tukey's post hoc test and linear regression were used to analyse the data (P 64 0.05). At the end of the trial, final body weight was significantly higher in fish fed L8 (40.7 \ub1 1.7 g), followed by those fed L12 (35.1 \ub1 1.2 g), L16 (27.9 \ub1 2.5 g) and L20 (22.1 \ub1 0.3 g). The specific growth rate was higher in fish fed L8 and L12, compared to the other treatments, and it was lowest in L20. Voluntary feed intake decreased with an increase in the dietary lipid level. The feed conversion rate, the protein efficiency ratio and the gross protein efficiency were lower in fish fed L20, while no significant differences were observed among L8, L12 and L16. Gross lipid efficiency was significantly higher in fish fed low lipid diets. Histological observations showed that 19 of 36 observed subjects had lipid droplets in the cytoplasm of enterocytes at the apex of the mucosal folds and, in some cases, also along the entire fold (intestinal steatosis). The number of fish with intestinal steatosis in groups L20 and L16 was significantly higher than the number in group L8. Ultrastructure showed large electrondense lipid droplets within the cytoplasm of enterocytes and warping of the cytoplasmic membrane (steatosis); in some cases, lipid droplets were also present within the Golgi apparatus. In conclusion, the results of this trial suggest that the diet for S. solea juveniles should include no more than 12% lipids. Higher lipid inclusions not only led to a substantial decline in performance but also affected gut health. This should be taken into consideration in formulating specific practical diets for common sole

    3D extracellular matrix derived model of alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma

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    INTRODUCTION: Rhabdomyosarcoma is the most common soft tissue sarcoma in childhood, among the subtypes the Alveolar (ARMS) is the more aggressive with a higher tendency to metastasize [1]. Integrins are a class of transmembrane adhesion molecules that mediate survival, differentiation, migration and differentiation [2]. Here we investigate the role of integrins in ARMS metastatic migration in an engineered 3D scaffold. METHODS: ARMS xenografts are obtained from subcutaneous injection of RH30 cells in immunodeficient mice. Composition of the ECM is determined by proteomic analysis. The main components of the ECM are used to enrich a 3D collagen scaffold cultured in a perfusion bioreactor. Cells are analyzed by qPCR for the expression of a panel of integrins. Presence of the protein is confirmed by flow cytometry immunofluorescence. MMPs expression is evaluated by zymography. RESULTS: Verified the expression of human and ARMS marker and typical tumor morphology in xenografts, they are processed for proteomic analysis. Proteomic data analysis is currently under investigation. Preliminary data culturing RH30 cells in 3D bioreactor show upregulation of ITG5 and CXCR4 receptor compared to 2D condition. Localization and quantification at protein level will be assessed respectively by immunofluorescence and cytofluorimetry. Expression of MMP-9 and MMP-2 has been assessed by zymography comparing the expression of these MMPs in 2D vs 3D bioreactor and RH30 isolated from the xenograft. DISCUSSION & CONCLUSIONS: Preliminary data on ITG expression show that in 3D scaffold the expression of ITG5 and CXCR4 is upregulated. In parallel the active form of MMP-2 is more present in 3D models compared to 2D. Other groups reported a mechanical interaction between ITG5 and MMP-2 [3]. This interaction will be studied in a more representative engineered 3D scaffold to shed light on the complex interaction between ECM and metastatic progression

    The Peritoneum as a Natural Scaffold for Vascular Regeneration

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    Objective: The peritoneum has the same developmental origin as blood vessels, is highly reactive and poorly thrombogenic. We hypothesize that parietal peritoneum can sustain development and regeneration of new vessels. Methods and Results: The study comprised two experimental approaches. First, to test surgical feasibility and efficacy of the peritoneal vascular autograft, we set up an autologous transplantation procedure in pigs, where a tubularized parietal peritoneal graft was covered with a metal mesh and anastomosed end-to-end in the infrarenal aorta. Second, to dissect the contribution of graft vs host cells to the newly developed vessel wall, we performed human-to-rat peritoneal patch grafting in the abdominal aorta and examined the origin of endothelial and smooth muscle cells. In pig experiments, the graft remodeled to an apparently normal blood vessel, without thrombosis. Histology confirmed arterialization of the graft with complete endothelial coverage and neointimal hyperplasia in the absence of erosion, inflammation or thrombosis. In rats, immunostaining for human mitochondri revealed that endothelial cells and smooth muscle cells rarely were of human origin. Remodeling of the graft was mainly attributable to local cells with no clear evidence of c-kit+ endothelial progenitor cells or c-kit+ resident perivascular progenitor cells. Conclusions: The parietal peritoneum can be feasibly used as a scaffold to sustain the regeneration of blood vessels, whic

    Midterm results on a new self-expandable covered stent combined with branched stent grafts: Insights from a multicenter Italian registry

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    Objective: To investigate the technical periprocedural and midterm outcomes of endovascular repairs with multibranched endovascular repair or iliac branch devices combined with a new self-expanding covered stent. Methods: The COvera in BRAnch registry is a physician-initiated, multicenter, ambispective, observational registry (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04598802) enrolling patients receiving a multibranched endovascular repair or iliac branch devices procedure mated with Bard Covera Plus (Tempe, AZ) covered stent, designed to evaluate the outcomes of the covered stent mated with patient-specific and off-the-shelf branched stent graft. Primary end points were technical success, branch instability, and freedom from aortic and branch-related reintervention within 30 days and at follow-up. Preoperative characteristics, comorbidities, and outcomes definitions were graded according to the Society for Vascular Surgery reporting standards. Results: Two hundred eighty-four patients (76 years; range, 70-80 years; 79% males) in 24 centers were enrolled for a total of 708 target vessels treated. The covered stents were mated with an off-the-shelf graft in 556 vessels (79%) and a custom-made graft in 152 (21%). Three hundred seven adjunctive relining stents in 277 vessels (39%) were deployed, of which 116 (38%) were proximal, 66 (21%) intrastent, and 125 (41%) distal. Adjunctive relining stent placement was more frequent when landing in a vessel branch instead of the main trunk (59% vs 39%; P = .031), performing a percutaneous access (49% vs 35%; P < .001), using a stent with a diameter of 8 mm or greater (44% vs 36%; P = .032) and a length of 80 mm or greater (65% vs 55%; P = .005), when a post-dilatation was not performed (45% vs 29%; P < .001) and when an inner branch configuration was used (55% vs 35%; P < .001). Perioperative technical bridging success was 98%. Eight patients (3%) died in the perioperative period. Two deaths (1%) were associated with renal branch occlusion followed by acute kidney injury and paraplegia. Follow-up data were available for 638 vessels (90%) at a median of 32 months (Q1, Q3, 21, 46). Branch instability was reported in 1% of branches. Forty-six patients (17%) died during follow-up, nine (3%) of them owing to aortic-related causes. Primary patency rates at 1, 2, and 3 years were 99% (581/587), 99% (404/411), and 97% (272/279), respectively. Branch instability was associated with patient-specific devices (9% vs 4%; P = .014) and intrastent adjunctive stent placement (12% vs 2%; P = .003), especially when a bare metal balloon-expandable stent was used (25% vs 3%; P < .001). Conclusions: The use of this new self-expanding covered stent mated with branched endografts proved to be safe and feasible with high technical procedural success rates. Low rates of branch instability were observed at midterm follow-up. Comparative studies with other commercially available covered stents are warranted

    Top-pair production at hadron colliders with next-to-next-to-leading logarithmic soft-gluon resummation

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    Incorporating all recent theoretical advances, we resum soft-gluon corrections to the total ttˉt\bar t cross-section at hadron colliders at the next-to-next-to-leading logarithmic (NNLL) order. We perform the resummation in the well established framework of Mellin NN-space resummation. We exhaustively study the sources of systematic uncertainty like renormalization and factorization scale variation, power suppressed effects and missing two- and higher-loop corrections. The inclusion of soft-gluon resummation at NNLL brings only a minor decrease in the perturbative uncertainty with respect to the NLL approximation, and a small shift in the central value, consistent with the quoted uncertainties. These numerical predictions agree with the currently available measurements from the Tevatron and LHC and have uncertainty of similar size. We conclude that significant improvements in the ttˉt\bar t cross-sections can potentially be expected only upon inclusion of the complete NNLO corrections.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures. V2 updates tables and figures including results for sqrt(S)=8 TeV. Version to appear in Phys Lett

    Pediatric T- and NK-cell lymphomas: new biologic insights and treatment strategies

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    T- and natural killer (NK)-cell lymphomas are challenging childhood neoplasms. These cancers have varying presentations, vast molecular heterogeneity, and several are quite unusual in the West, creating diagnostic challenges. Over 20 distinct T- and NK-cell neoplasms are recognized by the 2008 World Health Organization classification, demonstrating the diversity and potential complexity of these cases. In pediatric populations, selection of optimal therapy poses an additional quandary, as most of these malignancies have not been studied in large randomized clinical trials. Despite their rarity, exciting molecular discoveries are yielding insights into these clinicopathologic entities, improving the accuracy of our diagnoses of these cancers, and expanding our ability to effectively treat them, including the use of new targeted therapies. Here, we summarize this fascinating group of lymphomas, with particular attention to the three most common subtypes: T-lymphoblastic lymphoma, anaplastic large cell lymphoma, and peripheral T-cell lymphoma-not otherwise specified. We highlight recent findings regarding their molecular etiologies, new biologic markers, and cutting-edge therapeutic strategies applied to this intriguing class of neoplasms

    Quang Tri War Memorial. An Architectural Investigation

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    Ricerca applicata sulla cittadella di Quang Tri in Vietnam. Dai memoriali europei della seconda guerra mondiale alle nuove forme memoriali in contesti extraeuropei, tra genius loci specifici e valorizzazione degli aspetti di resilienza del territorio. Una nuova forma del paesaggio
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