25 research outputs found

    Early research on anatomy and mating of land slugs and snails: Francesco Redi's (1684) Osservazioni

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    In 1684 the Italian scientist Francesco Redi published one of the first detailed studies on land gastropods. It included the mating and functional anatomy of limacid slugs, functional anatomy of helicid snails and morpho-anatomical comparisons of land and marine slugs and snails. His research was based on a few marine species (an unidentified gastropod, the neogastropod Hexaplex trunculus and aplysiid opisthobranchs), several land snails (including the large helicid Helix lucorum) and some limacid slugs (probably different species of the Limax corsicus group and perhaps Limacus flavus). Redi's investigations are generally accurate and his description of slug mating is much more detailed than the earlier account by Martin Lister. However, his survey also contains minor oversights and mistakes: he did not identify major organs of mollusc anatomy (radula, salivary glands and certain genital structures), his illustration of mating slugs is unrealistic and he overlooked important anatomical differences between marine and land slugs. His most remarkable oversight is hermaphroditism: although he observed slug mating, knew that no differences existed between partners, and was probably aware of earlier literature on the androgynous nature of land snails, he failed to conclude that they are hermaphrodite

    Serum levels of soluble CD30 are increased in ulcerative colitis (UC) but not in Crohn's disease (CD)

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    Imbalance in Th1 and Th2 subsets and their derived cytokines seems to be involved in the immune abnormalities underlying UC and CD. CD30 is a member of the tumour necrosis factor/nerve growth receptor superfamily expressed on T cells producing Th2 cytokines and released as a soluble form. In this study high levels of soluble CD30 were found in sera of UC patients independently of disease activity. Furthermore, increased titres of soluble CD30 molecule were shown, in the same patients, by mitogen-stimulated cultures of peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Our data seem to indicate that an activation of Th2 immune response is involved in the pathogenesis of UC, but not of CD. Furthermore, this finding indicates that serum soluble CD30 measurement may be helpful for differentiating these two forms of inflammatory bowel disease
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