92 research outputs found

    Inhibition of Progenitor Dendritic Cell Maturation by Plasma from Patients with Peripartum Cardiomyopathy: Role in Pregnancy-associated Heart Disease

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    Dendritic cells (DCs) play dual roles in innate and adaptive immunity based on their functional maturity, and both innate and adaptive immune responses have been implicated in myocardial tissue remodeling associated with cardiomyopathies. Peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM) is a rare disorder which affects women within one month antepartum to five months postpartum. A high occurrence of PPCM in central Haiti (1 in 300 live births) provided the unique opportunity to study the relationship of immune activation and DC maturation to the etiology of this disorder. Plasma samples from two groups (n = 12) of age- and parity-matched Haitian women with or without evidence of PPCM were tested for levels of biomarkers of cardiac tissue remodeling and immune activation. Significantly elevated levels of GM-CSF, endothelin-1, proBNP and CRP and decreased levels of TGF- were measured in PPCM subjects relative to controls. Yet despite these findings, in vitro maturation of normal human cord blood derived progenitor dendritic cells (CBDCs) was significantly reduced (p < 0.001) in the presence of plasma from PPCM patients relative to plasma from post-partum control subjects as determined by expression of CD80, CD86, CD83, CCR7, MHC class II and the ability of these matured CBDCs to induce allo-responses in PBMCs. These results represent the first findings linking inhibition of DC maturation to the dysregulation of normal physiologic cardiac tissue remodeling during pregnancy and the pathogenesis of PPCM

    EFSA Panel on Biological Hazards (BIOHAZ); Scientific Opinion on the risk posed by Shiga toxinproducing Escherichia coli (STEC) and other pathogenic bacteria in seeds and sprouted seeds

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    Margarita de Sossa, Sixteenth-Century Puebla de los Ángeles, New Spain (Mexico)

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    Margarita de Sossa’s freedom journey was defiant and entrepreneurial. In her early twenties, still enslaved in Portugal, she took possession of her body; after refusing to endure her owner’s sexual demands, he sold her, and she was transported to Mexico. There, she purchased her freedom with money earned as a healer and then conducted an enviable business as an innkeeper. Sossa’s biography provides striking insights into how she conceptualized freedom in terms that included – but was not limited to – legal manumission. Her transatlantic biography offers a rare insight into the life of a free black woman (and former slave) in late sixteenth-century Puebla, who sought to establish various degrees of freedom for herself. Whether she was refusing to acquiesce to an abusive owner, embracing entrepreneurship, marrying, purchasing her own slave property, or later using the courts to petition for divorce. Sossa continued to advocate on her own behalf. Her biography shows that obtaining legal manumission was not always equivalent to independence and autonomy, particularly if married to an abusive husband, or if financial successes inspired the envy of neighbors

    Comparison of Biotic Indices to Evaluate Stream Health of the Le Sueur River Basin

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    My research was done to assess the stream health of the Le Sueur River Basin, compare the efficiency of using ichthyofauna vs. macroinvertebrate sampling protocols as biotic indicators of stream health, and to determine if these protocols are correlated. There were 36 sites sampled within the Le Sueur River Basin (area that drains into the Le Sueur River including the Le Sueur River itself, along with its tributaries). These sites were sampled using macroinvertebrate and ichthyofauna sampling techniques. Macroinvertebrates were sampled using kick nets at each site. Hester-Dendy artificial substrate samplers were also placed at each site for a 6-week colonization period. Ichthyofauna was sampled by the means of electroshocking. All organisms collected were preserved and kept for further identification. I, along with other WRC student workers, have identified the macroinvertebrates in each sample to the family level, and the ichthyofauna to the genus and species level. I will present the similarities and differences of the Family Biotic Index of macroinvertebrates and the Index of Biotic Integrity of ichthyofauna for each site along with the time and cost of determining each index. I will also recommend the use of one or both of the indices to measure stream health effectively and to save time and money

    A Comparison Among Three Sampling Methods to Calculate Biotic Integrity in the Greater Blue Earth River Basin

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    The Blue Earth River watershed in south central Minnesota has been dramatically impacted by the surrounding land use. Consequently, high sediment loads and degraded water quality are the outcomes. To gauge stream health, benthic macroinvertebrates and ichthyofauna (fish) may be utilized as biotic indicators because they respond to changes, both positive and negative, in the aquatic environment. We compared fish and macroinvertebrate Index of Biotic Integrity (IBI) methods at several different sites within the Blue Earth River watershed to determine if one method could serve as an efficient and reliable technique. Macroinvertebrates were collected using Hester-Dendy artificial substrate samplers and d-frame dipnets. Fish were collected by fall electrofishing. Data were analyzed and IBIs were calculated using the EPA Rapid Bioassessment Protocol. Early results suggest that IBI values are significantly different among the three methods and that macroinvertebrate IBIs are more practical to use when comparing a wide variety of stream orders
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