3,449 research outputs found
Accelerometers can measure total and activity-specific energy expenditures in free-ranging marine mammals only if linked to time-activity budgets
Peer reviewedPostprin
Assessing the effect of pharmaceutical excipients on the DNA extraction from plant food supplements
in the EU market as ingredients in formulations, which are sold as plant food supplements
(PFS). Among the several issues that may affect the safety of PFS, the most relevant
concerns aduÍterations by the illegal addition of pharmaceutical drugs and/or the swap/
misidentification ofplant material, with cases of acate toxicity already reported [l]. Owing
to the high similarity and distinct therapeutic uses ofseveral medicinal plants, accurate and
fast methodologies allowing their distincüon are required. For that purpose, DNA-based
methods are considered fast, sensitive and highly specific tools, allowing the unequivocal
identification of plant species. Up to date, most of DNA methodologies reporting the
identification of plant species essentially concern medicinal plants [2], with few works
being developed for the authentication of PFS.This work was supported by the projects EXPL/DTP-SAP/1438/2013 (4SaferPFS)
and Pest-C/EQB/LA0006/2013 financed by FCT (Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia) (FEDER funds
through COMPETE). Teimo J.R. Fernandes is grateful to FCT PhD grant (SFRH/BD/93711/2013) financed
by POPH-QREN (subsidised by FSE and MCTES).info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Soybean DNA extraction from blended refined vegetable oils
The major genetically modified (GM) crop species is soybean (Glycine max), accounting for 53% of the total world’s GM planted area and 70% of the soybean annual production in 2008 [1]. Since the approval of Roundup Ready® (RR) soybean in EU, the production of soybean oil using GM seeds has been increasing. In EU, the doubts raised by the use of genetically modified organisms (GMO) lead to the mandatory labelling for food products containing more than 0.9% of authorised GMO. In blended edible oils prepared with mixtures of two or more different oils, it is important to verify the labelling statements concerning their constituents and the presence of GM material, since soybean oil is frequently used. The analysis of DNA coupled with polymerase chain reaction (PCR) has been the technique of choice to monitor the presence of GMO in food. However, it is very difficult to obtain amplifiable DNA from oil since most vegetable oils, like crude soybean oil, must be refined prior to its consumption
Fuzzy Rings in D6-Branes and Magnetic Field Background
We use the Myers T-dual nonabelin Born-Infeld action to find some new
nontrivial solutions for the branes in the background of D6-branes and Melvin
magnetic tube field. In the D6-Branes background we can find both of the fuzzy
sphere and fuzzy ring solutions, which are formed by the gravitational
dielectric effect. We see that the fuzzy ring solution has less energy then
that of the fuzzy sphere. Therefore the fuzzy sphere will decay to the fuzzy
ring configuration. In the Melvin magnetic tube field background there does not
exist fuzzy sphere while the fuzzy ring configuration may be formed by the
magnetic dielectric effect. The new solution shows that propagating in
the D6-branes and magnetic tube field background may expand into a rotating
fuzzy ring. We also use the Dirac-Born-Infeld action to construct the ring
configuration from the D-branes.Comment: Latex, 15 pages, detailed comments in section 2, typos correcte
DNA extraction from plant food supplements: Influence of different pharmaceutical excipients
The consumption of plant food supplements (PFS) has been growing globally, with an increase of misleading labeling and fraudulent practices also being reported. Recently, the use of molecular biology techniques has been proposed to detect botanical adulterations, one of the possible frauds in PFS. However, difficulties in recovering DNA from some PFS samples have been described. Aiming at using DNA-based methods for the unequivocal identification of plant species in PFS, adequate DNA isolation is required. However, PFS often contain pharmaceutical excipients known to have adsorbent properties that might interfere with DNA extraction. Thus, the aim of this work was to assess the effect of different excipients (talc, silica, iron oxide and titanium dioxide) on the recovery/amplification of DNA. For that purpose, known amounts of template maize DNA were spiked either to PFS or to model mixtures of excipients and quantified by real-time PCR. The tested excipients evidenced clear adsorption phenomena that justify the hampering effect on DNA extraction from PFS. The use of either 10% talc or 0.5% dyes completely adsorbed DNA, resulting in negative PCR amplifications. For the first time, pharmaceutical excipients were shown to affect DNA extraction explaining the inability of recovering DNA from some PFS samples in previous studies.This work received financial support from the European Union
(FEDER funds through COMPETE) and National Funds (FCT,
Fundaç~ao para a Ci^encia e Tecnologia) through project EXPL/DTPSAP/
1438/2013 (Safety of plant food supplements: searching for
adulterant pharmaceutical drugs and plants) and UID/QUI/50006/
2013. Joana Costa and Telmo J.R. Fernandes are grateful to FCT
grants SFRH/BPD/102404/2014 and SFRH/BD/93711/2013, respectively,
financed by POPH-QREN (subsidized by FSE and MCTES).This work received financial support from the European Union
(FEDER funds through COMPETE) and National Funds (FCT,
Fundaç~ao para a Ci^encia e Tecnologia) through project EXPL/DTPSAP/
1438/2013 (Safety of plant food supplements: searching for
adulterant pharmaceutical drugs and plants) and UID/QUI/50006/
2013. Joana Costa and Telmo J.R. Fernandes are grateful to FCT
grants SFRH/BPD/102404/2014 and SFRH/BD/93711/2013, respectively,
financed by POPH-QREN (subsidized by FSE and MCTES).info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
A small universe after all?
The cosmic microwave background radiation allows us to measure both the
geometry and topology of the universe. It has been argued that the COBE-DMR
data already rule out models that are multiply connected on scales smaller than
the particle horizon. Here we show the opposite is true: compact (small)
hyperbolic universes are favoured over their infinite counterparts. For a
density parameter of Omega_o=0.3, the compact models are a better fit to
COBE-DMR (relative likelihood ~20) and the large-scale structure data (sigma_8
increases by ~25%).Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX, 7 Figure
Hypercharge and baryon minus lepton number in E6
We study assignments of the hypercharge and baryon minus lepton number for
particles in the grand unification model. It is shown that there are
three assignments of hypercharge and three assignments of baryon minus lepton
number which are consistent with the Standard Model. Their explicit expressions
and detailed properties are given. In particular, we show that the
symmetry in cannot be orthogonal to the symmetry. Based on
these investigations, we propose an alternative SU(5) grand unification model.Comment: 16 pages, JHEP3.cls, To appear in JHE
First report of a norovirus outbreak associated with the variant Sydney 2012 in Portugal
Introduction: This study describes the investigation of a gastroenteritis outbreak in a group of students, associated with a dinner reunion in February 2013 in Porto, Portugal.
Methodology: An anonymous structured questionnaire was developed and sent to 34 students who attended the dinner reunion. Eighteen students completed the questionnaire and thirteen met the case definition (attack rate of 72%). Stools from two students were screened for norovirus by RT-PCR using primer pairs that target the highly conserved polymerase gene and the capsid gene.
Results: Norovirus genotyping confirmed the variant Sydney 2012 as the probable cause of the outbreak.
Conclusion: This is the first report of an outbreak associated with the new variant Sydney 2012 in Portugal.The study was supported by FEDER funds through Programa Operacional Factores de Competividade (COMPETE), by national funding through Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT) (project PTDC/CVT/113218/2009), and by grant SFRH/BD/45407/2008, and by project Ovislab ICT-2013-05-004-5314 ID-64757
Background Thermal Contributions in Testing the Unruh Effect
We consider inertial and accelerated Unruh-DeWitt detectors moving in a
background thermal bath and calculate their excitation rates. It is shown that
for fast moving detectors such a thermal bath does not affect substantially the
excitation probability. Our results are discussed in connection with a possible
proposal of testing the Unruh effect in high energy particle accelerators.Comment: 13 pages, (REVTEX 3.0), 3 figures available upon reques
- …
