2,254 research outputs found

    Prebiotics may alter bile salt hydrolase activity: Possible implications for cholesterol metabolism

    Get PDF
    Probiotics secrete bile salt hydrolase (BSH) which catalyses the deconjugation and excretion of bile salts in the GI tract altering cholesterol metabolism in the liver. Many probiotic preparations include prebiotics to promote probiotic growth but little is understood about how prebiotics affect BSH activity. In this study the ability of probiotic Lactobacilli species to deconjugate bile salts in the presence of various prebiotics was determined by measuring cholic acid release. The kinetic properties of BSH was assessed to determine the impact the prebiotics on bile salt deconjugation. When L. acidophilus NCTC 1723 was incubated with inulin (1%) there was a significant (p < 0.01) increase in cholic acid release by 0.16 nmol/min. Lactulose and lactobionic acid at 1% decreased cholic acid release to 0.2 nmol/min and 0.06 nmol/min respectively. In the presence of the pure BSH, inulin and lactulose (0-6%) altered Kₘ and Vₘₐₓ of the enzyme with a Kᵢ of 12% and 10.5% respectively. By contrast, lactobionic acid (2%) increased BSH activity two-fold (p < 0.01). These results confirm that prebiotics are capable of altering BSH activity in vitro. Similar changes in vivo could potentially affect the claimed health benefits of synbiotics particularly where the desired outcome is lowering of serum cholesterol

    Some elementary concepts of finite plane projective geometry

    Get PDF
    Call number: LD2668 .R4 1966 C79

    Self-titration by experienced e-cigarette users: blood nicotine delivery and subjective effects (Study Data)

    Get PDF
    This is a UK laboratory study of twelve experienced e-cigarette users (11 males; 1 female; note the female participant’s data was removed from all analyses in the published paper) to understand the effects of e-liquid nicotine concentration on puffing patterns, plasma nicotine levels and subjective effects. All participants completed two vaping sessions under low (6 mg/mL) and high (24 mg/mL) nicotine e-liquid concentrations in two separate (counterbalanced) sessions at the University of East London (UEL). The data include puffing patterns (puff number, puff duration, volume of e-liquid consumed), plasma nicotine levels, craving and withdrawal symptoms after 10, 30 and 60 minutes of ad libitum vaping and self-reported positive and negative effects at 60 minutes

    Employability for inclusion: The urgent need for a biopsychosocial model perspective

    Get PDF
    Definitions of disability are changing, shifting from a narrow medical diagnosis to a biopsychosocial model of disability, where disability is conceptualised as a series of relational conditions that can potentially disadvantage individuals within environments. Implications of this new understanding of disability will have significant effects in the higher education sector, where there is increasing participation of disabled students. In this paper, we discuss one aspect of these implications through the topic of graduate employability. In doing so, we generate a new concept ‘Employability for Inclusion’ that can be utilised as an equity-focused lens for universities to consider how employability initiatives are inclusive to disabled and/or diverse students. To unpack this concept, we further illustrate how a biopsychosocial model of disability would impact key employability activities (e.g., work-integrated learning) and provide valuable insights into how the higher education sector can adopt emerging conceptualisations of disability and inclusion. © 2023 Association for Tertiary Education Management and the Melbourne Centre for the Study of Higher Education

    Sensor node localisation using a stereo camera rig

    Get PDF
    In this paper, we use stereo vision processing techniques to detect and localise sensors used for monitoring simulated environmental events within an experimental sensor network testbed. Our sensor nodes communicate to the camera through patterns emitted by light emitting diodes (LEDs). Ultimately, we envisage the use of very low-cost, low-power, compact microcontroller-based sensing nodes that employ LED communication rather than power hungry RF to transmit data that is gathered via existing CCTV infrastructure. To facilitate our research, we have constructed a controlled environment where nodes and cameras can be deployed and potentially hazardous chemical or physical plumes can be introduced to simulate environmental pollution events in a controlled manner. In this paper we show how 3D spatial localisation of sensors becomes a straightforward task when a stereo camera rig is used rather than a more usual 2D CCTV camera

    Emerging dynamics of human campylobacteriosis in Southern Ireland

    Get PDF
    Infections with Campylobacter spp. pose a significant health burden worldwide. The significance of Campylobacter jejuni/Campylobacter coli infection is well appreciated but the contribution of non-C. jejuni/C. coli spp. to human gastroenteritis is largely unknown. In this study, we employed a two-tiered molecular study on 7194 patient faecal samples received by the Microbiology Department in Cork University Hospital during 2009. The first step, using EntericBio® (Serosep), a multiplex PCR system, detected Campylobacter to the genus level. The second step, utilizing Campylobacter species-specific PCR identified to the species level. A total of 340 samples were confirmed as Campylobacter genus positive, 329 of which were identified to species level with 33 samples containing mixed Campylobacter infections. Campylobacter jejuni, present in 72.4% of samples, was the most common species detected, however, 27.4% of patient samples contained non-C. jejuni/C. coli spp.; Campylobacter fetus (2.4%), Campylobacter upsaliensis (1.2%), Campylobacter hyointestinalis (1.5%), Campylobacter lari (0.6%) and an emerging species, Campylobacter ureolyticus (24.4%). We report a prominent seasonal distribution for campylobacteriosis (Spring with C. ureolyticus (March) preceeding slightly C. jejuni/C. coli (April/May)

    Recent Decisions

    Get PDF
    Comments on recent decisions by J. Patrick O\u27Malley, Peter H. Lousberg, David J. Eardley, James M. Corcoran, Jr., Joseph B. Joyce, James E. Murray, Edmund L. White, Berry L. Reece, Jr., A. J. Deutsch, and George N. Tompkins, Jr

    Ethanol-induced G-protein subunit expression changes in D2 receptor deficient Drosophila

    Get PDF
    Alcohol abuse and addiction impact on users’ quality of life and have substantial implications for health services. Understanding the mechanisms by which alcohol modifies cellular and molecular mechanisms associated with chronic abuse, could lead to improved pharmaceutical interventions to overcome alcohol addiction. Alcohol acts through multiple receptor systems and, like other addictive drugs, causes prolonged or permanent changes in gene expression. Dopamine release and changes in gene expression of elements of the cAMP-CREB-DeltaFosB pathways have been associated to addictive behaviours. However, the mechanisms linking ethanol with long-term changes in the reward pathways are not fully understood. In this work, we have focused on measuring changes in G-protein gene expression in a Drosophila melanogaster ethanol tolerance model. Exposure of Drosophila to ethanol vapour causes sedation in the flies, but multiple exposure increases the sedation time, which is considered a manifestation of ethanol tolerance. Using quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR), we have measured G-protein mRNA in flies that have experienced zero, one or three ethanol exposures at 24 hours intervals. When measured in a wild type population, changes in G-protein levels were variable. However in a sub-population of Drosophila that we selected for high ethanol sensitivity we observed a non-statistically significant decrease of two Gα-protein subunits: Gi and Gq. These same changes were observed at a statistically significant level in two Drosophila mutant lines characterised by a deletion of Dopamine D2 receptor and a non-functional of Gq subunit respectively. These two Drosophila lines also displayed an altered sensitivity to ethanol while retaining the tolerance response to alcohol. These data indicate that when measured in genetically homogeneous populations ethanol induced G-proteins gene expression changes can be detected, but the persistence of this effect in flies lacking D2 receptors suggests that these G-proteins subunits changes do not utilise the previously described D2 receptor dependant mechanisms associated with addictive drugs
    corecore