2,482 research outputs found

    Resource survey of Looe Key National Marine Sanctuary, 1983

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    Forward: Looe Key National Marine Sanctuary (LKNMS) was designated in 1981 to protect and promote the study, teaching, and wise use of the resources of Looe Key Sanctuary (Plate A). In order to wisely manage this valuable resource, a quantitative resource inventory was funded by the Sanctuary Programs Division (SPD), Office of Ocean and Coastal Resource Management, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in cooperation with the Southeast Fisheries Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, NOAA; the Cooperative Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Studies (CIMAS), University of Miami; the Fisher Island Laboratory, United States Geological Survey; and the St. Petersburg Laboratory, State of Florida Department of Natural Resources. This report is the result of this cooperative effort. The objective of this study was to quantitatively inventory selected resources of LKNMS in order to allow future monitoring of changes in the Sanctuary as a result of human or natural processes. This study, referred to as Phase I, gives a brief summary of past and present uses of the Sanctuary (Chapter 2); and describes general habitat types (Chapter 3), geology and sediment distribution (Chapter 4), coral abundance and distribution (Chapter 5), the growth history of the coral Montastraea annularis (Chapter 6), reef fish abundance and distribution (Chapter 7), and status of selected resources (Chapter 8). An interpretation of the results of the survey are provided for management consideration (Chapter 9). The results are expected to provide fundamental information for applied management, natural history interpretation, and scientific research. Numerous photographs and illustrations were used to supplement the report to make the material presented easier to comprehend (Plate B). We anticipate the information provided will be used by managers, naturalists, and the general public in addition to scientists. Unless otherwise indicated, all photographs were taken at Looe Key Reef by Dr. James A. Bohnsack. The top photograph in Plate 7.8 was taken by Michael C. Schmale. Illustrations were done by Jack Javech, NMFS. Field work was initiated in May 1983 and completed for the most part by October 1983 thanks to the cooperation of numerous people and organizations. In addition to the participating agencies and organizations we thank the Newfound Harbor Marine Institute and the Division of Parks and Recreation, State of Florida Department of Natural Resources for their logistical support. Special thanks goes to Billy Causey, the Sanctuary Manager, for his help, information, and comments. We thank in alphabetical order: Scott Bannerot, Margie Bastian, Bill Becker, Barbara Bohnsack, Grant Beardsley, John Halas, Raymond Hixon, Irene Hooper, Eric Lindblad, and Mike Schmale. We dedicate this effort to the memory of Ray Hixon who participated in the study and who loved Looe Key. (PDF contains 43 pages

    An environmental assessment of the John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park and the Key Largo Coral Reef Marine Sanctuary (Unpublished 1983 Report)

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    The Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park was established in 1960 and the Key Largo National Marine Sanctuary in 1975. Field studies, funded by NOAA, were conducted in 1980 - 1981 to determine the state of the coral reefs and surrounding areas in relation to changing environmental conditions and resource management that had occurred over the intervening years. Ten reef sites within the Sanctuary and seven shallow grass and hardbottom sites within the Park were chosen for qualitative and quantitative studies. At each site, three parallel transects not less than 400 m long were run perpendicular to the reef or shore, each 300 m apart. Observations, data collecting and sampling were done by two teams of divers. Approximately 75 percent of the bottom within the 18-m isobath was covered by marine grasses, predominantly turtle grass. The general health of the seagrasses appeared good but a few areas showed signs of stress. The inner hardbottom of the Park was studied at the two entrances to Largo Sound. Though at the time of the study the North Channel hardbottom was subjected to only moderate boat traffic, marked changes had taken place over the past years, the most obvious of which was the loss of the extensive beds of Sargassum weed, one of the most extensive beds of this alga in the Keys. Only at this site was the green alga Enteromorpha encountered. This alga, often considered a pollution indicator, may denote the effects of shore run off. The hardbottom at South Channel and the surrounding grass beds showed signs of stress. This area bears the heaviest boat traffic within the Park waters causing continuous turbidity from boat wakes with resulting siltation. The offshore hardbottom and rubble areas in the Sanctuary appeared to be in good health and showed no visible indications of deterioration. Damage by boat groundings and anchors was negligible in the areas surveyed. The outer reefs in general appear to be healthy. Corals have a surprising resiliency to detrimental factors and, when conditions again become favorable, recover quickly from even severe damage. It is, therefore, a cause for concern that Grecian Rocks, which sits somewhat inshore of the outer reef line, has yet to recover from die-off in 1978. The slow recovery, if occurring, may be due to the lower quality of the inshore waters. The patch reefs, more adapted to inshore waters, do not show obvious stress signs, at least those surveyed in this study. It is apparent that water quality was changing in the keys. Water clarity over much of the reef tract was observed to be much reduced from former years and undoubtedly plays an important part in the stresses seen today over the Sanctuary and Park. (PDF contains 119 pages

    Severe Hypokalemia Secondary to Distal Renal Tubular Acidosis in a Hispanic Man

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    Introduction: Renal tubular acidosis is a rare renal disorder that can cause severe electrolyte imbalances which can be life threatening. Case: A 21-year-old man presented to the ED on account of generalized weakness and body aches of one day duration. He reported no past medical history other than a previous episode of similar symptoms with improvement after IV hydration and electrolytes replacements about 2 months prior. He was not taking any medications and denied vomiting, diarrhea nor any significant family history. He admitted to alcohol and marijuana use. Physical examination was significant for reduced muscle power, tone, and reflexes in all extremities. He was unable to move his limbs against gravity. Admission laboratory findings revealed severe hypokalemia 1.1 mEq/L, metabolic acidosis with bicarbonate of 10.1 and EKG showed QT prolongation. Patient received a total of about 200 mEq of potassium through a central line in 24 hours with serum level of 3.7mmol/l in addition to intravenous bicarbonates with a resolution of the presenting symptoms. Discussion: The causes of hypokalemia are broad however a methodical approach can be helpful to rule out the many causes and narrow down the differential diagnosis. Distal RTA is caused by the inability of the distal renal tubule to secrete hydrogen ions due to the selective failure of activity or expression of the H+-ATPase. Conclusion: This case underscores the importance of systematic approach to the evaluation of patients with hypokalemia to uncover the cause of the underlying disease before life threatening complications occur. Our patient remains under close follow up

    Estructura del sistema frontal de cabalgamientos en el Pirineo Oriental: control estratigráfico en la geometría y secuencia de emplazamiento de los cabalgamientos

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    El manto del Cadí, la unidad estructural más extensa del Pirineo Oriental meridional, involucra cerca de 5 km de sucesión paleógena depositada en una cuenca de antepaís. Esta secuencia constituye un sistema petrolífero que ha sido explorado desde el año 1960 y suprayace discordantemente un basamento Paleozoico involucrado en el apilamiento antiforme que caracteriza el centro de la cordillera. En el antepaís, la sucesión paleógena presenta un espesor menor y está constituida por un conjunto de facies diferente, en general más somera. La interpretación de datos sísmicos reprocesados recientemente y su integración con datos de superficie y de sondeos son la base de un nuevo modelo estructural del área. La presencia de un espesor anómalo de una serie de rocas evaporíticas por debajo del sinclinal de Ripoll (2000m perforados en el sondeo El Serrat-1) ha sido interpretada como asociada a un cambio lateral de facies entre una formación turbidítica (Campdevànol) septentrional, la formación evaporítica de Beuda y una formación carbonática meridional (Perafita) y a su apilamiento en un dúplex

    Walls talk: Microbial biogeography of homes spanning urbanization.

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    Westernization has propelled changes in urbanization and architecture, altering our exposure to the outdoor environment from that experienced during most of human evolution. These changes might affect the developmental exposure of infants to bacteria, immune development, and human microbiome diversity. Contemporary urban humans spend most of their time indoors, and little is known about the microbes associated with different designs of the built environment and their interaction with the human immune system. This study addresses the associations between architectural design and the microbial biogeography of households across a gradient of urbanization in South America. Urbanization was associated with households' increased isolation from outdoor environments, with additional indoor space isolation by walls. Microbes from house walls and floors segregate by location, and urban indoor walls contain human bacterial markers of space use. Urbanized spaces uniquely increase the content of human-associated microbes-which could increase transmission of potential pathogens-and decrease exposure to the environmental microbes with which humans have coevolved

    Posttranslational modifications in psoriatic arthritis: A systematic literature review

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    Antecedentes y objetivos: La artritis psoriásica (APs) es una enfermedad inflamatoria compleja. Las modificaciones postraduccionales influyen en casi todos los aspectos de la biología celular normal y la patogénesis. El objetivo de esta revisión sistemática era recopilar todas las pruebas publicadas sobre las modificaciones postraduccionales en la APs, y el resultado principal era evaluar una asociación entre los resultados de la enfermedad y las modificaciones postraduccionales específicas en la APs. Métodos: Se realizó una búsqueda electrónica sistemática en las bases de datos Medline, PubMed, Cochrane, Virtual Health Library y Embase. Se identificaron 587 artículos; 59 fueron evaluados tras eliminar duplicados y escaneados, de los cuales 47 fueron incluidos. Se realizó un análisis descriptivo, agrupando los resultados según el tipo de modificación postraduccional evaluada. El protocolo se registró en la base de datos PROSPERO. Resultados: Se identificaron siete modificaciones postraduccionales: citrulinación, carbamilación, fosforilación, glucosilación, acetilación, metilación y estrés oxidativo. El péptido anticitrulinado y la proteína anticarbamilada se han evaluado en la artritis reumatoide. Actualmente existe información que sugiere que estos anticuerpos pueden ser útiles para mejorar el diagnóstico de la APs y que pueden demostrar una correlación con una peor progresión de la enfermedad (erosiones, afectación poliarticular y mala respuesta al tratamiento). La glicosilación se asoció con un aumento de la inflamación y los productos de fosforilación relacionados con la expresión de SIRT2 y pSTAT3 o la presencia de Th17 y la citoquina interleucina-22, lo que sugiere una posible diana terapéutica.Conclusiones:Las modificaciones postraduccionales a menudo desempeñan un papel clave en la modulación de la función de las proteínas en la APs y se correlacionan con los resultados de la enfermedad.La citrulinación, la carbamilación, la fosforilación, la glucosilación, la acetilación, la metilación y el estrés oxidativo se identificaron como factores asociados con el diagnóstico y el pronóstico.© 2023 Los autoresBackground and aims: Psoriatic arthritis (PsA) is an inflammatory complex condition. Posttranslational modifications influence almost all aspects of normal cell biology and pathogenesis. The aim of this systematic review was to collect all published evidence regarding posttranslational modifications in PsA, and the main outcome was to evaluate an association between disease outcomes and specific posttranslational modifications in PsA. Methods: A systematic electronic search was performed in Medline, PubMed, Cochrane, Virtual Health Library, and Embase databases. A total of 587 articles were identified; 59 were evaluated after removing duplicates and scanning, of which 47 were included. A descriptive analysis was conducted, with results grouped according to the type of posttranslational modification evaluated. The protocol was registered at the PROSPERO database. Results: Seven posttranslational modifications were identified: citrullination, carbamylation, phosphorylation, glycosylation, acetylation, methylation, and oxidative stress. Anti-citrullinated peptide and anti-carbamylated protein have been evaluated in rheumatoid arthritis. There is now information suggesting that these antibodies may be helpful in improving the diagnosis of PsA and that they may demonstrate a correlation with worse disease progression (erosions, polyarticular involvement, and poor treatment response). Glycosylation was associated with increased inflammation and phosphorylation products related to the expression of SIRT2 and pSTAT3 or the presence of Th17 and cytokine interleukin-22, suggesting a possible therapeutic target. Conclusions: Posttranslational modifications often play a key role in modulating protein function in PsA and correlate with disease outcomes. Citrullination, carbamylation, phosphorylation, glycosylation, acetylation, methylation, and oxidative stress were identified as associated with diagnosis and prognosis. © 2023 The Author(s

    Occurrence of antibiotics and bacterial resistance in wastewater and sea water from the Antarctic

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    The potential presence of introduced antibiotics in the aquatic environment is a hot topic of concern, particularly in the Antarctic, a highly vulnerable area protected under the Madrid protocol. The increasing presence of human population, especially during summer, might led to the appearance of pharmaceuticals in wastewater. The previous discovery of Escherichia coli strains resistant to antibiotics in sea water and wastewater collected in King George Island motivated our investigation on antibiotics occurrence in these samples. The application of a multi-residue LCMS/MS method for 20 antibiotics, revealed the presence of 8 compounds in treated wastewater, mainly the quinolones ciprofloxacin and norfloxacin (92% and 54% of the samples analyzed, average concentrations 0.89 μg/L and 0.75 μg/L, respectively) and the macrolides azithromycin and clarithromycin (15% positive samples, and average concentrations near 0.4 μg/L), and erythromycin (38% positive samples, average concentration 0.003 μg/L). Metronidazole and clindamycin were found in one sample, at 0.17 and 0.1 μg/L, respectively; and trimethoprim in two samples, at 0.001 μg/L. Analysis of sea water collected near the outfall of the wastewater discharges also showed the sporadic presence of 3 antibiotics (ciprofloxacin, clindamycin, trimethoprim) at low ng/L level, illustrating the impact of pharmaceuticals consumption and the poor removal of these compounds in conventional WWTPs. The most widespread antibiotic in sea water was ciprofloxacin, which was found in 15 out of 34 sea water samples analyzed, at concentrations ranging from 4 to 218 ng/L. Bacteria resistance was observed for some antibiotics identified in the samples (e.g. trimetropim and nalidixic acid –a first generation quinolone). However, resistance to some groups of antibiotics could not be correlated to their presence in the water samples due to analytical limitations (penicillins, tetraciclines). On the contrary, for some groups of antibiotics detected in samples (macrolides), the antibacterial activity against E. Coli was not investigated because these antibiotics do not include this bacterial species in their spectrum of activity. Our preliminary data demonstrate that antibiotics occurrence in the Antarctic aquatic environment is an issue that needs to be properly addressed. Periodical monitoring of water samples and the implementation of additional treatments in the WWTPs are recommended as a first step to prevent potential problems related to the presence of antibiotics and other emerging contaminants in the near future in Antarctica

    Axenic interspecies and intraclonal hybrid formation in Leishmania: Successful crossings between visceral and cutaneous strains

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    [EN] Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) represent a serious threat to humans, especially for those living in poor or developing countries. Leishmanianiosis is considered a zoonotic NTD transmitted by the bite of female phlebotomine sandflies, and is manifested mainly as a visceral form (caused by L. infantum and L. donovani) and a cutaneous form (caused by many species including L. major, L. tropica and L. braziliensis). Although it is now known that sexual reproduction occurs in these parasites, more studies are necessary to characterize the ability of Leishmania to generate hybrids, which may represent an important mechanism for virulence, drug resistance or adaptation to the host immune system. Therefore, several experiments were conducted to generate either intraclonal or interspecies hybrids in vitro. Results demonstrated that hybrids can be formed even with outcrosses between parasites causing visceral and cutaneous forms of the disease. Characterization of hybrids in terms of ploidy, kDNA content, growth rate and infection capacity provide important information about sexual reproduction in these parasites.SI: C.G.C (LE255-16) and B.D.A (LE208-17) are recipients of Junta de Castilla y Leo´n (JCyL) and European Social Found (ESF)’s Fellowships Scheme for Doctoral Training Programs. This research was funded by MINECO; SAF2017- 83575-R to RMR. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscrip
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