841 research outputs found
Impiego di batteri lattici autoctoni per il miglioramento igienico-sanitario del Pecorino Siciliano DOP
Il Pecorino Siciliano DOP \ue8 considerato
il pi\uf9 antico formaggio prodotto in
Sicilia e, probabilmente, d\u2019Europa. Le
citazioni storiche sulla sua antica origine
risalgono al IX secolo a.C. in uno
dei passi pi\uf9 famosi dell\u2019odissea di Omero,
quando Ulisse incontra Polifemo. In seguito,
anche Aristotele e Plinio esaltano il gusto
unico di questo formaggio. In particolare,
proprio Plinio, nella sua opera \u201cNaturalis
Historia\u201d, redige una carta dei formaggi nella
quale vengono citati, tra i migliori pecorini,quelli provenienti da Agrigento.
Fra le caratteristiche peculiari del Pecorino
Siciliano DOP vanno annoverati il sapore
leggermente piccante e l\u2019incantevole profumo
di pascolo. Il Pecorino Siciliano DOP \ue8
un formaggio a pasta dura, semicotto, prodotto
con latte intero crudo di pecora. L\u2019areale
di produzione si estende su tutta la regione
Sicilia.
La forma \ue8 cilindrica a facce piane o lievemente
concave, pesa dai 4 ai 12 kg, lo scalzo
\ue8 di 10-18 cm. La crosta \ue8 bianca-giallognola,con la superficie rugosa per la modellatura
lasciata dal canestro in giunco dove avviene
la formatura, spesso viene cappata con
olio. La pasta \ue8 compatta, di colore bianco
o giallo paglierino, con occhiatura scarsa. Il
sapore \ue8 piccante e caratteristico, l\u2019aroma \ue8
intenso. La stagionatura minima prevista dal
disciplinare \ue8 di 4 mesi.
Il Pecorino Siciliano ha acquisito la certificazione
DO nel 1955 e la DOP nel 1996 con
regolamento CE n. 1107/96 della Commissione
del 12 giugno 1996 (Gazzetta Ufficiale
Comunit\ue0 Europea L 148 del 21/6/1996). Attualmente,
le attivit\ue0 di promozione, valorizzazione
e vigilanza sono affidate al Consorzio
di tutela del Pecorino Siciliano DOP,
che \ue8 stato riconosciuto dal ministero delle
Politiche agricole, alimentari e forestali (Mi-
Paaf) dal 2005 a oggi.
L\u2019elevata eterogeneit\ue0 del prodotto osservata
nelle forme presenti sul mercato \ue8 dovuta
sia ai metodi di produzione artigianali sia al
vecchissimo disciplinare di produzione, risalente
al 1956. Ci\uf2 ha indotto il consorzio
di tutela a intraprendere una proficua collaborazione
tecnico-scientifica con l\u2019Universit\ue0
degli Studi di Palermo prima e l\u2019Istituto
Zooprofilattico Sperimentale della Sicilia, il
Corfilac e l\u2019Universit\ue0 di Catania successivamente,
con l\u2019obiettivo di migliorare la qualit\ue0
igienico-sanitaria del formaggio Pecorino Siciliano
DOP e ridurre l\u2019eccessiva variabilit\ue0
qualitativa fra le forme ottenute da differenti
caseificazioni
Microcorrosion Casting in Normal and Pathological Biliary Tree Morphology
The organization of the intrahepatic biliary tree was studied in three dimensions by scanning electron microscopic (SEM) corrosion casts, in normal and cholestatic rat liver.
In the normal liver the observation revealed the features of the biliary passages from the bile canaliculi to the canaliculo-ductular junction, to the ductules and the bile ducts, confirming previous SEM observations.
In cholestatic liver, the modifications and the proliferation of bile ductules appear clearly.
Resin flow from canalicular to sinusoidal network was never observed.
The method was found to be very useful in the evaluation of the architecture of the intrahepatic biliary tree, under normal as well as under pathological conditions
Immunolocalization of estrogen receptor beta in the epididymis of mature and immature pigs.
A growing body of evidence suggests a role of estrogens in the male reproduction via their specific estrogen receptors (ERalpha/ERbeta). Estrogen receptor distribution along the genital tract tissues has been described in different species, but it is unknown in the pig. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to localize ERbeta in the epididymis of mature and immature pigs (aged 2 and 18 months, respectively). Immunohistochemistry was carried out on paraffin-embedded tissues using a mouse anti-human monoclonal IgG against ERbeta as the primary antibody, and a goat anti-mouse biotinylated IgG as the secondary antibody. Avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex was then applied followed by diaminobenzidine. In immature pigs, the epithelial cells from the caput, corpus and cauda epididymis showed no or very weak immunoreactivity for ERbeta, whereas they were all strongly immmunoreactive in mature pigs. A various intensity of immunostaining from weak to strong in the smooth muscle cells as well as in the connective tissue cells were detected in the epididymis of both, young and adult pigs. This is the first report on the cellular localization of ERbeta protein in porcine epidydimis. The present study demonstrated that (1) irrespectively of the epididymal region, the epithelial cells of caput, corpus and cauda epididymis of mature pigs revealed a strong immunoreactivity for ERbeta, and (2) ERbeta expression in the epididymal epithelium is regulated by puberty. Finally, although the biological activity of ERbeta has not yet been established, the results of the present study suggest its involvement in estrogen modulation of pig epididymal function
The FXR agonist obeticholic acid inhibits the cancerogenic potential of human cholangiocarcinoma
Cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) is an aggressive cancer with high resistance to chemotherapeutics. CCA is enriched in cancer stem cells, which correlate with aggressiveness and prognosis. FXR, a member of the metabolic nuclear receptor family, is markedly down-regulated in human CCA. Our aim was to evaluate, in primary cultures of human intrahepatic CCA (iCCA), the effects of the FXR agonist obeticholic acid (OCA), a semisynthetic bile acid derivative, on their cancerogenic potential. Primary human iCCA cell cultures were prepared from surgical specimens of mucinous or mixed iCCA subtypes. Increasing concentrations (0–2.5 μM) of OCA were added to culture media and, after 3–10 days, effects on proliferation (MTS assay, cell population doubling time), apoptosis (annexin V-FITC/propidium iodide), cell migration and invasion (wound healing response and Matrigel invasion assay), and cancerogenic potential (spheroid formation, clonogenic assay, colony formation capacity) were evaluated. Results: FXR gene expression was downregulated (RT-qPCR) in iCCA cells vs normal human biliary tree stem cells (p < 0.05) and in mucinous iCCA vs mixed iCCA cells (p < 0.05) but was upregulated by addition of OCA. OCA significantly (p < 0.05) inhibited proliferation of both mucinous and mixed iCCA cells, starting at a concentration as low as 0.05 μM. Also, CDCA (but not UDCA) inhibited cell proliferation, although to a much lower extent than OCA, consistent with its different affinity for FXR. OCA significantly induced apoptosis of both iCCA subtypes and decreased their in vitro cancerogenic potential, as evaluated by impairment of colony and spheroid formation capacity and delayed wound healing and Matrigel invasion. In general, these effects were more evident in mixed than mucinous iCCA cells. When tested together with Gemcitabine and Cisplatin, OCA potentiated the anti-proliferative and pro-apoptotic effects of these chemotherapeutics, but mainly in mixed iCCA cells. OCA abolished the capacity of both mucinous and mixed iCCA cells to form colonies when administered together with Gemcitabine and Cisplatin. In subcutaneous xenografts of mixed iCCA cells, OCA alone or combined with Gemcitabine or Cisplatin markedly reduced the tumor size after 5 weeks of treatment by inducing necrosis of tumor mass and inhibiting cell proliferation. In conclusion, FXR is down-regulated in iCCA cells, and its activation by OCA results in anti-cancerogenic effects against mucinous and mixed iCCA cells, both in vitro and in vivo. The effects of OCA predominated in mixed iCCA cells, consistent with the lower aggressiveness and the higher FXR expression in this CCA subtype. These results, showing the FXR-mediated capacity of OCA to inhibit cholangiocarcinogenesis, represent the basis for testing OCA in clinical trials of CCA patients
Histamine stimulates the proliferation of small and large cholangiocytes by activation of both IP3/Ca2+ and cAMP-dependent signaling mechanisms
Although large cholangiocytes exert their functions by activation of cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP), Ca(2+)-dependent signaling regulates the function of small cholangiocytes. Histamine interacts with four receptors, H1-H4HRs. H1HR acts by Gαq activating IP(3)/Ca(2+), whereas H2HR activates Gα(s) stimulating cAMP. We hypothesize that histamine increases biliary growth by activating H1HR on small and H2HR on large cholangiocytes. The expression of H1-H4HRs was evaluated in liver sections, isolated and cultured (normal rat intrahepatic cholangiocyte culture (NRIC)) cholangiocytes. In vivo, normal rats were treated with histamine or H1-H4HR agonists for 1 week. We evaluated: (1) intrahepatic bile duct mass (IBDM); (2) the effects of histamine, H1HR or H2HR agonists on NRIC proliferation, IP(3) and cAMP levels and PKCα and protein kinase A (PKA) phosphorylation; and (3) PKCα silencing on H1HR-stimulated NRIC proliferation. Small and large cholangiocytes express H1-H4HRs. Histamine and the H1HR agonist increased small IBDM, whereas histamine and the H2HR agonist increased large IBDM. H1HR agonists stimulated IP(3) levels, as well as PKCα phosphorylation and NRIC proliferation, whereas H2HR agonists increased cAMP levels, as well as PKA phosphorylation and NRIC proliferation. The H1HR agonist did not increase proliferation in PKCα siRNA-transfected NRICs. The activation of differential signaling mechanisms targeting small and large cholangiocytes is important for repopulation of the biliary epithelium during pathologies affecting different-sized bile ducts
CoRoT light curves of RR Lyrae stars. CoRoT 101128793: long-term changes in the Blazhko effect and excitation of additional modes
The CoRoT (Convection, Rotation and planetary Transits) space mission
provides a valuable opportunity to monitor stars with uninterrupted time
sampling for up to 150 days at a time. The study of RR Lyrae stars, performed
in the framework of the Additional Programmes belonging to the exoplanetary
field, will particularly benefit from such dense, long-duration monitoring. The
Blazhko effect in RR Lyrae stars is a long-standing, unsolved problem of
stellar astrophysics. We used the CoRoT data of the new RR Lyrae variable CoRoT
101128793 (f0=2.119 c/d, P=0.4719296 d) to provide us with more detailed
observational facts to understand the physical process behind the phenomenon.
The CoRoT data were corrected for one jump and the long-term drift. We applied
different period-finding techniques to the corrected timeseries to investigate
amplitude and phase modulation. We detected 79 frequencies in the light curve
of CoRoT 101128793. They have been identified as the main frequency f0, and its
harmonics, two independent terms, the terms related to the Blazhko frequency,
and several combination terms. A Blazhko frequency fB=0.056 c/d and a triplet
structure around the fundamental radial mode and harmonics were detected, as
well as a long-term variability of the Blazhko modulation. Indeed, the
amplitude of the main oscillation is decreasing along the CoRoT survey. The
Blazhko modulation is one of the smallest observed in RR Lyrae stars. Moreover,
the additional modes f1=3.630 and f2=3.159 c/d are detected. Taking its ratio
with the fundamental radial mode into account, the term f1 could be the
identified as the second radial overtone. Detecting of these modes in
horizontal branch stars is a new result obtained by CoRoT.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, 2 long tables. Accepted for publication in A&
Application of the MEGNO technique to the dynamics of Jovian irregular satellites
We apply the MEGNO (Mean Exponential Growth of Nearby Orbits) technique to
the dynamics of Jovian irregular satellites. We demonstrate the efficiency of
applying the MEGNO indicator to generate a mapping of relevant phase-space
regions occupied by observed jovian irregular satellites. The construction of
MEGNO maps of the Jovian phase-space region within its Hill-sphere is addressed
and the obtained results are compared with previous studies regarding the
dynamical stability of irregular satellites. Since this is the first time the
MEGNO technique is applied to study the dynamics of irregular satellites we
provide a review of the MEGNO theory. We consider the elliptic restricted
three-body problem in which Jupiter is orbited by a massless test satellite
subject to solar gravitational perturbations. The equations of motion of the
system are integrated numerically and the MEGNO indicator computed from the
systems variational equations. An unprecedented large set of initial conditions
are studied to generate the MEGNO maps. The chaotic nature of initial
conditions are demonstrated by studying a quasi-periodic orbit and a chaotic
orbit. As a result we establish the existence of several high-order mean-motion
resonances detected for retrograde orbits along with other interesting
dynamical features. The computed MEGNO maps allows to qualitatively
differentiate between chaotic and quasi-periodic regions of the irregular
satellite phase-space given only a relatively short integration time. By
comparing with previous published results we can establish a correlation
between chaotic regions and corresponding regions of orbital instability.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures, 2 tables, submitted to MNRA
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