35 research outputs found

    Studio di espressione dei geni ROS coinvolti nello stress da Zinco nel pioppo

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    Lo Zinco (Zn) è tra i più abbondanti metalli pesanti presenti negli ecosistemi, derivato principalmente dalla produzione industriale; in piccole concentrazioni è fondamentale per gli esseri viventi, agendo come cofattore di enzimi e proteine strutturali coinvolte in molte funzioni cellulari; a concentrazioni elevate può diventare molto tossico, a causa della sua capacità di inattivare le proteine, e accumularsi negli organismi viventi. Gli effetti morfologici, biochimici e molecolari, derivanti da somministrazioni massicce di Zn, e i meccanismi alla base della tolleranza, in piante arboree, vengono studiati in specie del genere Populus, scelto come sistema modello per ricerche sulle piante in quanto presenta: un’ elevata capacità di crescita, elevata produttività e traspirazione, un apparato radicale profondo, genoma relativamente piccolo e facilità di propagazione vegetativa.Uno dei principali effetti dei metalli pesanti sulla pianta è quello di aumentare la produzione di ROS (Reactive Oxygen species), inducendo stress ossidativo. I ROS, sono prodotti dalle cellule aerobe in condizioni normali da alterazioni nella catena di trasporto mitocondriale e cloroplastica; i metalli pesanti stimolano lo stress ossidativo determinando la formazione di radicale idrossile (OH. ) oltre la capacità difensiva della pianta.Per comprendere come le piante sono in grado di reagire allo stress ossidativo, sono stati condotti studi su diversi cloni di pioppo. Questo studio è stato condotto su un clone ibrido di pioppo Populus deltoides x Populus Nigra (Populus x euramericana) clone I-214, comunemente utilizzato nelle piantagioni italiane per la produzione di carta ed energia rinnovabile. Scopo del progetto è stato testare la risposta del clone I-214, dopo 4 settimane di trattamento in idroponica con 1 µM di Zn (0,065 ppm – controllo) e 1 mM (65 ppm – trattato) di Zn; al fine di determinare, tramite PCR real-time normalizzata su opportuni housekeeping, se si ha una variazione nell’espressione relativa dei geni: Superossido Dismutasi (SOD), Catalasi (CAT), Glutatione perossidasi (GPX) e Glutatione S-Trasferasi (GST), in foglie giovani, vecchie e radici

    Circulating SIRT1 inversely correlates with epicardial fat thickness in patients with obesity

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    Background and aim: Obesity is increasing worldwide and is related to undesirable cardiovascular outcomes. Epicardial fat (EF), the heart visceral fat depot, increases with obesity and correlates with cardiovascular risk. SIRT1, an enzyme regulating metabolic circuits linked with obesity, has a cardioprotective effect and is a predictor of cardiovascular events. We aimed to assess the relationship of EF thickness (EFT) with circulating SIRT1 in patients with obesity. Methods and results: Sixty-two patients affected by obesity and 23 lean controls were studied. Plasma SIRT1 concentration was determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). EFT was measured by echocardiography. Body mass index (BMI), waist circumference, heart rate (HR), blood pressure, and laboratory findings (fasting glucose, insulin, HbA1c, cholesterol, and triglycerides) were assessed. SIRT1 was significantly lower (P = 0.002) and EFT was higher (P < 0.0001) in patients with obesity compared with lean controls. SIRT1 showed a negative correlation with EFT and HR in the obesity group (rho = -0.350, P = 0.005; rho = -0.303, P = 0.008, respectively). After adjustment for obesity-correlated variables, multiple linear regression analysis showed that EFT remained the best correlate of SIRT1 (beta = -0.352, P = 0.016). Conclusions: Circulating SIRT1 correlates with the visceral fat content of the heart. Serum SIRT1 levels might provide additional information for risk assessment of coronary artery disease in patients with obesity. (C) 2016 The Italian Society of Diabetology, the Italian Society for the Study of Atherosclerosis, the Italian Society of Human Nutrition, and the Department of Clinical Medicine and Surgery, Federico II University. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved

    Smartphone and social network addiction in early adolescents: The role of self-regulatory self-efficacy in a pilot school-based intervention

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    Background: Youths' online problematic behaviors, such as smartphone or social network sites (SNS) addiction, gained increasing attention nowadays, due to their impact on concurrent and later adjustment, such as emotional and/or behavioral problems, academic impairments, or relational issues. Aims: This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of a pilot school-based intervention to contrast online addictive behaviors while fostering adolescents' self-regulative abilities. Materials &amp; Methods: The intervention started in January 2022 in an Italian junior high school located in Rome, and consisted of four meetings with students. A total sample of 462 15-year-old adolescents (Mage = 15.2; SD = 0.50; 41% females; Ncontrol = 214; Nintervention = 248) was considered. Within the latent difference score framework, we examined short-term changes from the pre-to-the-postintervention levels of SNS and smartphone addiction, and self-regulatory self-efficacy (SRSE) beliefs as a possible booster of the intervention's effectiveness. Results: Results showed a significant decrease in both online addictions (SNS and smartphone addiction), controlling for age, gender, sexual orientation, and socioeconomic status, because of the short-term efficacy of the project. The buffering effect of SRSE beliefs was further supported. Conclusion: These findings emphasized the usefulness of promoting youths' self-regulative beliefs to contrast problematic tendencies, according to a Positive Youth Development perspective which focused on resources rather than only on the prevention of negative outcomes for youths' adjustment

    Modulation of Antioxidant Defense in Farmed Rainbow Trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) Fed with a Diet Supplemented by the Waste Derived from the Supercritical Fluid Extraction of Basil (Ocimum basilicum)

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    Phytotherapy is based on the use of plants to prevent or treat human and animal diseases. Recently, the use of essential oils and polyphenol-enriched extracts is also rapidly increasing in the aquaculture sector as a means of greater industrial and environmental sustainability. Previous studies assessed the antibacterial and antiparasitic effects of these bioactive compounds on fish. However, studies on the modulation of oxidative stress biomarkers are still scant to date. Thus, in this study, the modulation of antioxidant defense against oxidative stress exerted by fish diets supplemented with a basil supercritical extract (F1-BEO) was assessed in rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss. The F1-BEO extracted with supercritical fluid extraction was added to the commercial feed flour (0.5, 1, 2, 3% w/w) and mixed with fish oil to obtain a suitable compound for pellet preparation. Fish were fed for 30 days. The levels of stress biomarkers such as superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione peroxidase, glutathione S-transferase, glutathione reductase, glyoxalase I, glyoxalase II, lactate dehydrogenase, glutathione and malondialdehyde showed a boost in the antioxidant pathway in fish fed with a 0.5% F1-BEO-supplemented diet. Higher F1BEO supplementation led to a failure of activity of several enzymes and the depletion of glutathione levels. Malondialdehyde concentration suggests a sufficient oxidative stress defense against lipid peroxidation in all experimental groups, except for a 3% F1-BEO-supplemented diet (liver 168.87 ± 38.79 nmol/mg prot; kidney 146.86 ± 23.28 nmol/mg prot), compared to control (liver 127.76 ± 18.15 nmol/mg prot; kidney 98.68 ± 15.65 nmol/mg prot). Our results suggest supplementing F1-BEO in fish diets up to 0.5% to avoid potential oxidative pressure in farmed trout

    Cardiac troponin T is necessary for normal development in the embryonic chick heart

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    The heart is the first functioning organ to develop during embryogenesis. The formation of the heart is a tightly regulated and complex process, and alterations to its development can result in congenital heart defects. Mutations in sarcomeric proteins, such as alpha myosin heavy chain and cardiac alpha actin, have now been associated with congenital heart defects in humans, often with atrial septal defects. However, cardiac troponin T (cTNT encoded by gene TNNT2) has not. Using gene-specific antisense oligonucleotides, we have investigated the role of cTNT in chick cardiogenesis. TNNT2 is expressed throughout heart development and in the postnatal heart. TNNT2-morpholino treatment resulted in abnormal atrial septal growth and a reduction in the number of trabeculae in the developing primitive ventricular chamber. External analysis revealed the development of diverticula from the ventricular myocardial wall which showed no evidence of fibrosis and still retained a myocardial phenotype. Sarcomeric assembly appeared normal in these treated hearts. In humans, congenital ventricular diverticulum is a rare condition, which has not yet been genetically associated. However, abnormal haemodynamics is known to cause structural defects in the heart. Further, structural defects, including atrial septal defects and congenital diverticula, have previously been associated with conduction anomalies. Therefore, to provide mechanistic insights into the effect that cTNT knockdown has on the developing heart, quantitative PCR was performed to determine the expression of the shear stress responsive gene NOS3 and the conduction gene TBX3. Both genes were differentially expressed compared to controls. Therefore, a reduction in cTNT in the developing heart results in abnormal atrial septal formation and aberrant ventricular morphogenesis. We hypothesize that alterations to the haemodynamics, indicated by differential NOS3 expression, causes these abnormalities in growth in cTNT knockdown hearts. In addition, the muscular diverticula reported here suggest a novel role for mutations of structural sarcomeric proteins in the pathogenesis of congenital cardiac diverticula. From these studies, we suggest TNNT2 is a gene worthy of screening for those with a congenital heart defect, particularly atrial septal defects and ventricular diverticula

    Modulation of Antioxidant Defense in Farmed Rainbow Trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) Fed with a Diet Supplemented by the Waste Derived from the Supercritical Fluid Extraction of Basil (Ocimum basilicum)

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    Phytotherapy is based on the use of plants to prevent or treat human and animal diseases. Recently, the use of essential oils and polyphenol-enriched extracts is also rapidly increasing in the aquaculture sector as a means of greater industrial and environmental sustainability. Previous studies assessed the antibacterial and antiparasitic effects of these bioactive compounds on fish. However, studies on the modulation of oxidative stress biomarkers are still scant to date. Thus, in this study, the modulation of antioxidant defense against oxidative stress exerted by fish diets supplemented with a basil supercritical extract (F1-BEO) was assessed in rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss. The F1-BEO extracted with supercritical fluid extraction was added to the commercial feed flour (0.5, 1, 2, 3% w/w) and mixed with fish oil to obtain a suitable compound for pellet preparation. Fish were fed for 30 days. The levels of stress biomarkers such as superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione peroxidase, glutathione S-transferase, glutathione reductase, glyoxalase I, glyoxalase II, lactate dehydrogenase, glutathione and malondialdehyde showed a boost in the antioxidant pathway in fish fed with a 0.5% F1-BEO-supplemented diet. Higher F1-BEO supplementation led to a failure of activity of several enzymes and the depletion of glutathione levels. Malondialdehyde concentration suggests a sufficient oxidative stress defense against lipid peroxidation in all experimental groups, except for a 3% F1-BEO-supplemented diet (liver 168.87 ± 38.79 nmol/mg prot; kidney 146.86 ± 23.28 nmol/mg prot), compared to control (liver 127.76 ± 18.15 nmol/mg prot; kidney 98.68 ± 15.65 nmol/mg prot). Our results suggest supplementing F1-BEO in fish diets up to 0.5% to avoid potential oxidative pressure in farmed trout.This research was funded by Italian Ministry of Health, Ricerca Finalizzata, grant number GR-2013-02355796.Peer reviewe

    Anomalous aortic origin of coronary arteries : Early results on clinical management from an international multicenter study

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    Background: Anomalous aortic origin of coronary arteries (AAOCA) is a rare abnormality, whose optimal management is still undefined. We describe early outcomes in patients treated with different management strategies. Methods: This is a retrospective clinicalmulticenter study including patients with AAOCA, undergoing or not surgical treatment. Patients with isolated high coronary take off and associated major congenital heart disease were excluded. Preoperative, intraoperative, anatomical and postoperative data were retrieved from a common database. Results: Among 217 patients, 156 underwent Surgical repair (median age 39 years, IQR: 15-53), while 61 were Medical (median age 15 years, IQR: 8-52), inwhomAAOCA was incidentally diagnosed during screening or clinical evaluations. Surgical patients were more often symptomatic when compared to medical ones (87.2% vs 44.3%, p b 0.001). Coronary unroofing was the most frequent procedure (56.4%). Operative mortality was 1.3% (2 patients with preoperative severe heart failure). At a median follow up of 18 months (range 0.1-23 years), 89.9% of survivors are in NYHA Conclusions: Surgery for AAOCA is safe andwith low morbidity. When compared to Medical patients, who remain on exercise restriction and medical therapy, surgical patients have a benefit in terms of symptoms and return to normal life. Since the long term-risk of sudden cardiac death is still unknown, we currently recommend accurate long term surveillance in all patients with AAOCA. (C) 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.Peer reviewe

    Ectopia ureterale nel cane. Definizione di un protocollo per la gestione diagnostica e terapeutica. Studio retrospettivo.

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    Obiettivo: lo studio retrospettivo si propone di identificare un protocollo di diagnosi, comprensivo di ecografia, radiografia, TC e un’eventuale terapia di tipo chirurgico, per la risoluzione dell’uretere ectopico. Sono state valutate e messe a confronto le migliori tecniche diagnostiche e terapeutiche nel cane, sia maschio che femmina, in base alla tipologia di patologia ureterale riscontrata. In particolar modo si è posta l’attenzione sulla tecnica chirurgica dell’uretere ectopico sia intramurale che extramurale. Essendo l’uretere ectopico una patologia derivante dall’embriogenesi, ci siamo focalizzati sullo sviluppo embrionale non idoneo, il quale porta inevitabilmente all’incontinenza urinaria. Abbiamo potuto formulare delle diagnosi differenziali causanti l’incontinenza urinaria. Una conferma importante è la predisposizione di alcune razze, selezionate geneticamente, nelle quali c’è una frequenza maggiore di uretere ectopico. Materiali e metodi: sono stati messi a confronto degli studi effettuati esternamente, con quelli riscontrati e fruibili nella casistica dell’Ospedale Didattico Veterinario “Mario Modenato”, di San Piero a Grado. Objective: the retrospective study aims to identify a diagnostic protocol, including ultrasound, radiography, CT and any surgical therapy, for the resolution of the ectopic ureter. The best diagnostic and therapeutic techniques in dogs, both male and female, were evaluated and compared on the basis of the type of ureteral pathology found. In particular, attention has been paid to the surgical technique of both intramural and extramural ectopic ureter. Since the ectopic ureter is a pathology deriving from embryogenesis, we have focused on unsuitable embryonic development, which inevitably leads to urinary incontinence. We were able to make differential diagnoses causing urinary incontinence. An important confirmation is the predisposition of some breeds, genetically selected, in which there is a higher frequency of ectopic ureter. Materials and methods: the studies carried out externally were compared with those found and usable in the case studies of the "Mario Modenato" Veterinary Teaching Hospital, San Piero a Grado
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