62 research outputs found

    Alimentation

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    Pour donner une image fidèle de l’alimentation des Berbères depuis les origines et suivre son évolution il aurait fallu disposer de documents et de textes qui font malheureusement défaut, aussi plutôt que de se livrer à une étude diachronique impossible à rédiger dans l’état actuel de la recherche nous avons choisi de présenter ce que l’on sait de l’alimentation des Paléoberbères des temps préhistoriques antérieurs à l’élevage et à l’agriculture puis de regrouper nos connaissances sur l’alime..

    Targeted Disruption of the PME-1 Gene Causes Loss of Demethylated PP2A and Perinatal Lethality in Mice

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    Phosphoprotein phosphatase 2A (PP2A), a major serine-threonine protein phosphatase in eukaryotes, is an oligomeric protein comprised of structural (A) and catalytic (C) subunits to which a variable regulatory subunit (B) can associate. The C subunit contains a methyl ester post-translational modification on its C-terminal leucine residue, which is removed by a specific methylesterase (PME-1). Methylesterification is thought to control the binding of different B subunits to AC dimers, but little is known about its physiological significance in vivo.Here, we show that targeted disruption of the PME-1 gene causes perinatal lethality in mice, a phenotype that correlates with a virtually complete loss of the demethylated form of PP2A in the nervous system and peripheral tissues. Interestingly, PP2A catalytic activity over a peptide substrate was dramatically reduced in PME-1(-/-) tissues, which also displayed alterations in phosphoproteome content.These findings suggest a role for the demethylated form of PP2A in maintenance of enzyme function and phosphorylation networks in vivo

    Data for: "Additional data confirms the impact of the COVID19 lockdown on the behavior and fattening of migratory snow geese"

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    Please find all metadata and dataset information in the README.md file.Article abstract: The COVID19 lockdown provided a unique opportunity to study the impact of human activities and conservation measures on wildlife. However, most lockdown studies were opportunistic and based on limited data, because this ‘natural experiment’ was unexpected and short-lasting. Replication of scientific results is the cornerstone of the scientific method and ensures that conclusions from such short-term studies are robust. Here, we test predictions arising from a previous study where we showed the impact of the lockdown-induced reduction in hunting disturbance on the body condition and behavior of greater snow geese (Anser caerulescens a.), a species whose management is crucial for the conservation of northern ecosystems. The analysis of two additional years of data confirmed our predictions. The return to a high hunting pressure in springs 2021‐–2022 (post-lockdown) reduced overall goose body condition compared to the lockdown year. Goose fattening in post-lockdown springs was very similar to pre-lockdown years, differing from 2020 when a high body condition was reached earlier in spring than in any other year. Radio-tracked birds spent more time in profitable but risky agricultural lands in 2021 compared to 2020, as was the case in the pre-lockdown year. Our study provides robust evidence confirming the impacts of spring hunting on greater snow goose physiology. It demonstrates the long-lasting efficiency of the spring conservation hunt established two decades ago to limit the size of the population with the aim of preserving Arctic ecosystems from overgrazing and associated negative impacts on other arctic-nesting birds.THIS DATASET IS ARCHIVED AT DANS/EASY, BUT NOT ACCESSIBLE HERE. TO VIEW A LIST OF FILES AND ACCESS THE FILES IN THIS DATASET CLICK ON THE DOI-LINK ABOV

    Synthesis and in vitro study of a diglyceride prodrug of a peptide

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    A diglyceride derivative of a pentapeptide renin inhibitor, the 1,3-dipalmitoyl-[Iva-Phe-Nle-Sta-Ala-Sta-acetyl]-glycerol was synthesized and tested in vitro as a potential prodrug for oral administration. The ability of the diglyceride analog to inhibit the renin activity was equivalent to that of the parent peptide after predigestion with pancreatic lipase. Furthermore, the presence of the palmitoyl groups was found to induce, in vitro, an efficient protection of the peptide from gastric and intestinal hydrolysis. During incubation with intestinal and gastric fluids, and with alpha-chymotrypsin and pancreatic lipase, the glycerolipidic derivative was more stable than the peptide alone. These results support the use of glycerolipidic prodrug for oral administration of peptides

    Atlas iconographique tomodensitométrique des pathologies bénignes de l'amiante [Computed tomographic atlas of benign asbestos related pathology].

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    The demonstration by computed tomography of abnormalities related to asbestos is essential for the recognition of industrial disease, the compensation of which has considerable economic consequences. The use of compute tomography, the most reliable technique for the detection of pleuro-parenchymatous abnormalities related to asbestos exposure, has increased considerably in France since the publication of the results of a consensus conference in Paris in 1999. Since that time, developments in technology have noticeably modified the protocols of investigation and increased the sensitivity of the detection of pleural and interstitial parenchymatous abnormalities and of nodules. The technical recommendations and those for the interpretation of pleural and parenchymatous abnormalities need to be well known. They are presented in the form of an atlas that gives detailed criteria for asbestosis, pleural plaques and pleural fibrosis. The diagnosis of pleural plaques depends on the combination of clear limits at the pleural and pulmonary interface, typical topography and multiple, bilateral localization. In the context of asbestos exposure the plaques are characteristic of this exposure, unlike diffuse pleural thickening, crow's feet images, parenchymatous bands and entrapped atalectasis. The writing of the radiological report would be most appropriate on this basis

    Performance of chest radiograph and CT scan for lung cancer screening in asbestos-exposed workers.

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    International audienceOBJECTIVES: The aim was to compare, in a cohort of asbestos-exposed workers, the sensitivity and the specificity of low-radiation helical chest CT scan with chest radiograph for the biennial screening of bronchopulmonary cancer, according to the size of detected nodules. Material and METHODS: The screening procedure consisted of biennial chest radiograph and monodetector chest CT scan, given to 972 individuals who had been highly exposed to asbestos. A total of 2555 screening procedures were performed. The study focuses on the 1230 screening procedures for which a 2-year follow-up period was available. RESULTS: Twenty-four cases of bronchopulmonary cancer were diagnosed. CT scan detected 20 cancers, 12 of which had not been detected by chest radiograph. Sensitivity of chest radiograph and CT scan were, respectively, 33% and 83%, lesions measuring over 2 mm in diameter being considered as suspect. The specificity of chest radiograph and CT scan were, respectively, 95% and 78%. Calculation of the differential false positive/true positive (FP/TP) ratio and the receiver operating characteristic curve, performed for both chest radiograph and CT scan, facilitated the determination of the best possible compromise between specificity and sensitivity, according to the diameter threshold applied for considering a nodule as suspect. CONCLUSIONS: Although this study confirms the superior sensitivity of chest CT scan compared with conventional chest radiograph, the associated loss in specificity leads to a recommended diameter of 5 mm as the threshold for considering non-calcified lesions as "suspect", for the surveillance of asbestos-exposed individuals
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