30 research outputs found
Introdução de Cratylia argentea (Desv.) Kuntze em pastagem de Urochloa brizantha cv. BRS Piatã na região Central de Minas Gerais.
Esta publicação objetiva apresentar os procedimentos utilizados para o estabelecimento de consórcio de C. argentea com pastagem de Urochloa brizantha BRS Piatã em sistema de sequeiro, na região Central de Minas Gerais. O presente trabalho tem aderência com o Objetivo 2 dos ODS (Objetivos do Desenvolvimento Sustentável): ?Acabar com a fome, alcançar a segurança alimentar e melhoria da nutrição e promover a agricultura sustentável? e sua Meta 4: ?Até 2030, garantir sistemas sustentáveis de produção de alimentos e implementar práticas agrÃcolas resilientes, que aumentem a produtividade e a produção, que ajudem a manter os ecossistemas, que fortaleçam a capacidade de adaptação à s mudanças climáticas, à s condições meteorológicas extremas, secas, inundações e outros desastres, e que melhorem progressivamente a qualidade da terra e do solo.?ODS 2
Near-infrared spectroscopy and chemometrics methods to predict the chemical composition of Cratylia argentea.
Cratylia argentea is a leguminous shrub that has the potential for use as livestock feed in tropical areas. However, time-consuming and labor-intensive methods of chemical analysis limit the understanding of its nutritive value. Near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) is a low-cost technology widely used in forage crops to expedite chemical composition assessment. The objective of this study was to develop prediction models to assess the crude protein (CP), neutral detergent fiber (NDF), acid detergent fiber (ADF), and dry matter (DM) of Cratylia based on NIRS and partial least squares analysis. A total of 155 samples were harvested at different maturity levels and used for model development, of which 107 were used for calibration and 48 for external validation. The cross-validation presented a root mean square error of prediction of 0.77, 2.56, 3.43, and 0.42; a ratio of performance to deviation of 4.8, 4.0, 3.8, and 3.4; and an R2 of 0.92, 0.92, 0.87, and 0.84 for CP, NDF, ADF, and DM, respectively. Based on the obtained results, we concluded that NIRS accurately predicted the chemical parameters of Cratylia. Therefore, NIRS can serve as a useful tool for livestock producers and researchers to estimate Cratylia?s nutritive value
The effects of a reduced balanced protein diet on litter moisture, pododermatitis and feather condition of female broiler breeders over three generations
Protein content reduction in broiler breeder diets has been increasingly investigated. However, broiler breeders reared on low protein diets are characterized by a deterioration of the feather condition. Furthermore, polydipsia induced by controlled feed intake increases litter moisture and as a consequence pododermatitis. This project aimed to study the litter moisture, pododermatitis and feather condition of breeders fed with a 25% reduced balanced protein (RP) diet during the rearing and laying period over three successive generations. The experiment started with two treatments for the F0 generation: control (C) group fed with standard C diets and RP group fed with RP diets. The female F0-progeny of each treatment was divided into the two dietary treatments as well, resulting in four treatments for the F1 generation: C/C, C/RP, RP/C and RP/RP (breeder feed in F0/F1 generation). The RP diet fed breeders received on average 10% more feed than C diet fed breeders to achieve the same target BW. The female F1-progeny of each treatment were all fed with C diets which resulted in four treatments for the F2 generation: C/C/C, C/RP/C, RP/C/C and RP/RP/C (breeder feed in F0/F1/F2 generation). Litter moisture, footpad and hock dermatitis were recorded at regular intervals throughout the experimental period in all three generations. For the F0 and F1 generation, the pens of breeders receiving C diets had significantly higher litter moisture than the RP diets fed groups (P<0.05), resulting in an elevated footpad dermatitis occurrence (FDO) (P<0.05). No difference was found in the F2 generation. The feather condition was scored during the laying period for each generation. F0 and F1 breeders reared on the RP diets had poorer feather condition than those receiving the C diets (P<0.05). The C/RP breeders had a significantly poorer feather condition than RP/RP breeders (P<0.05). For the F2 generation, RP/RP/C breeders had a significantly better feather condition compared with the other three groups (P<0.05). The RP/C/C breeders were significantly better feathered than C/C/C breeders (P<0.05). In conclusion, providing RP diets to broiler breeders improved litter condition and hence reduced FDO whereas impaired feather condition. Furthermore, positive transgenerational effects of the maternal RP diets on the feather condition may be inferred, hence potentially altering the welfare status.status: publishe
Generic framework for high-dimensional fixed-effects ANOVA
In functional genomics it is more rule than exception that experimental designs are used to generate the data. The samples of the resulting data sets are thus organized according to this design and for each sample many biochemical compounds are measured, e.g. typically thousands of gene-expressions or hundreds of metabolites. This results in high-dimensional data sets with an underlying experimental design. Several methods have recently become available for analyzing such data while utilizing the underlying design. We review these methods by putting them in a unifying and general framework to facilitate understanding the (dis-)similarities between the methods. The biological question dictates which method to use and the framework allows for building new methods to accommodate a range of such biological questions. The framework is built on well known fixed-effect ANOVA models and subsequent dimension reduction. We present the framework both in matrix algebra as well as in more insightful geometrical terms. We show the workings of the different special cases of our framework with a real-life metabolomics example from nutritional research and a gene-expression example from the field of virology
Avaliação do comportamento de bezerras leiteiras em pastoreio no consórcio de cratÃlia (Cratylia argentea) com capim BRS Piatã (Urochloa brizantha).
O objetivo deste trabalho foi avaliar a aceitação da leguminosa arbustiva cratÃlia (Cratylia argentea) em consórcio com capim BRS Piatã (Urochloa brizantha) por bezerras leiteiras em pastoreio direto. O experimento foi realizado no municÃpio de Prudente de Morais localizado no bioma Cerrado na região central de Minas Gerais. Avaliou o hábito diurno de pastoreio de 9 bezerras leiteiras mestiças 3/4 (1/4 Gir X 3/4 Holandês) durante um perÃodo de 6 dias, composto de 2 dias de adaptação ao manejo e 4 dias de avaliação neste consórcio. A área experimental era composta por 6 parcelas de 2200 m² possuindo dois estratos: estrato arbustivo, composto por cratÃlia com espaçamento de 2 metros entre plantas e 25 entre linhas; estrato herbáceo que ocupa as entrelinhas de cratÃlia, composto por capim BRS Piatã. A permanência dos animais era de um dia, das 7 à s 17 horas, em cada parcela, onde verificou-se a evolução da aceitação da cratÃlia e o hábito de ramoneio ao longo dos dias de avaliação. Do primeiro ao quarto dia, o tempo de pastoreio na cratÃlia evoluiu de 11,48 a 22,59%, mostrando uma tendência de aumento da ingestão voluntária da cratÃlia. É interessante ressaltar que as bezerras leiteiras pastejaram o estrato arbustivo em condições de disponibilidade do estrato herbáceo em abundância. O consórcio das forrageiras se mostrou viável para utilização para pastoreio direto com bezerras leiteiras
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Evidence for involvement of the alcohol consumption WDPCP gene in lipid metabolism, and liver cirrhosis.
Acknowledgements: R.P. was supported by Rutherford Fund fellowship from the Medical Research Council (MR/R026505/1 and MR/R026505/2). B.A., X.J., and F.O. were supported by Rutherford Fund from Medical Research Council MR/R026505/2. R.M. was funded by the President’s PhD Scholarship from Imperial College London. PE is Director of the MRC Centre for Environment and Health and acknowledges support from the Medical Research Council (MR/S019669/1). PE also acknowledges support from the UK Dementia Research Institute, Imperial College London (UKDRI-5001), Health Data Research UK London (HDRUK-1004231) and the British Heart Foundation Imperial College London Centre for Research Excellence (BHF-RE/18/4/34215). The Airwave Health Monitoring Study was funded by the UK Home Office (780- TETRA, 2003-2018) and is currently funded by the MRC and ESRC (MR/R023484/1) with additional support from the NIHR Imperial College Biomedical Research Centre in collaboration with Imperial College NHS Healthcare Trust. R.C.P is supported by the UK Dementia Research Institute (UKDRI-5001), which receives its funding from UK DRI Ltd, funded by the UK Medical Research Council, Alzheimer’s Society and Alzheimer’s Research UK. Work in LMM’s laboratory is supported by the UK Medical Research Council, intramural project MC_UU_00025/3 (RG94521). The views expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the sponsors. We thank Prof. Ulrike Heberlein, (Janelia Research Campus, Virginia, USA) for generously providing us the hppy17-51 fly lines. This research was funded, in whole or in part, by the Medical Research Council (MR/R026505/1 and MR/R026505/2). A CC BY or equivalent licence is applied to the Author Accepted Manuscript (AAM) arising from this submission, in accordance with the grant’s open access conditions.Biological pathways between alcohol consumption and alcohol liver disease (ALD) are not fully understood. We selected genes with known effect on (1) alcohol consumption, (2) liver function, and (3) gene expression. Expression of the orthologs of these genes in Caenorhabditis elegans and Drosophila melanogaster was suppressed using mutations and/or RNA interference (RNAi). In humans, association analysis, pathway analysis, and Mendelian randomization analysis were performed to identify metabolic changes due to alcohol consumption. In C. elegans, we found a reduction in locomotion rate after exposure to ethanol for RNAi knockdown of ACTR1B and MAPT. In Drosophila, we observed (1) a change in sedative effect of ethanol for RNAi knockdown of WDPCP, TENM2, GPN1, ARPC1B, and SCN8A, (2) a reduction in ethanol consumption for RNAi knockdown of TENM2, (3) a reduction in triradylglycerols (TAG) levels for RNAi knockdown of WDPCP, TENM2, and GPN1. In human, we observed (1) a link between alcohol consumption and several metabolites including TAG, (2) an enrichment of the candidate (alcohol-associated) metabolites within the linoleic acid (LNA) and alpha-linolenic acid (ALA) metabolism pathways, (3) a causal link between gene expression of WDPCP to liver fibrosis and liver cirrhosis. Our results imply that WDPCP might be involved in ALD