50 research outputs found
Análisis de efectos fijos sobre el comportamiento productivo de la raza caprina murciano granadina en el núcleo de control de Almería
El objetivo del presente estudio es determinar la
influencia del efecto año, época de parto, número de lactación y ganadería sobre la producción de leche estandarizada a 240 días en cabras de raza Murciano-Granadina. La base información deriva del control lechero oficial desarrollado durante quince años en el núcleo de control de Almería de la Asociación Nacional de Criadores de
Caprino de Raza Murciano-Granadina.
Los resultados mostraron que la producción de leche
se encuentra fuertemente influenciada por todos los efectos
estudiados, hecho que resulta muy interesante en una
raza principalmente explotada en condiciones semiextensivas
y con una elevada dependencia ambiental
The influence of seasonality on the content of goyazensolide and on anti-inflammatory and anti-hyperuricemic effects of the ethanolic extract of Lychnophora passerina (Brazilian arnica).
Ethnopharmacological relevance: Lychnophora passerina (Mart ex DC) Gardn (Asteraceae), popularly known
as Brazilian arnica, is used in Brazilian folk medicine to treat pain, rheumatism, bruises, inflammatory diseases
and insect bites.
Aim of the study: Investigate the influence of the seasons on the anti-inflammatory and anti-hyperuricemic
activities of ethanolic extract of L. passerina and the ratio of the goyazensolide content, main chemical
constituent of the ethanolic extract, with these activities.
Materials and methods: Ethanolic extracts of aerial parts of L. passerina were obtained from seasons: summer
(ES), autumn (EA), winter (EW) and spring (EP). The sesquiterpene lactone goyazensolide, major metabolite,
was quantified in ES, EA, EW and EP by a developed and validated HPLC-DAD method. The in vivo antihyperuricemic
and anti-inflammatory effects of the ethanolic extracts from L. passerina and goyazensolide were
assayed on experimental model of oxonate-induced hyperuricemia in mice, liver xanthine oxidase (XOD)
inhibition and on carrageenan-induced paw edema in mice.
Results: HPLC method using aqueous solution of acetic acid 0.01% (v/v) and acetonitrile with acetic acid 0.01%
(v/v) as a mobile phase in a gradient system, with coumarin as an internal standard and DAD detection at 270 nm
was developed. The validation parameters showed linearity in a range within 10.0?150.0 ?g/ml, with intraday and
interday precisions a range of 0.61?3.82. The accuracy values of intraday and interday analysis within 87.58?
100.95%. EA showed the highest goyazensolide content. From the third to the sixth hour after injection of
carrageenan, treatments with all extracts at the dose of 125 mg/kg were able to reduce edema. Goyazensolide
(10 mg/kg) showed significant reduction of paw swelling from the second hour assay. This sesquiterpene lactone
was more active than extracts and presented similar effect to indomethacin. Treatments with ES, EA and EP
(125 mg/kg) and goyazensolide (10 mg/kg) reduced serum urate levels compared to hyperuricemic control group
and were able to inhibit liver XOD activity. One of the mechanisms by which ES, EA, EP and goyazensolide
exercise their anti-hyperuricemic effect is by the inhibition of liver XOD activity. Goyazensolide was identified as
the main compound present in ES, EA, EW and EP and it is shown to be one of the chemical constituents
responsible for the anti-inflammatory and anti-hyperuricemic effects of the ethanolic extracts.
Conclusion: The anti-inflammatory and anti-hyperuricemic activities of the ethanolic extracts from L.
passerina were not proportionally influenced by the variation of goyazensolide content throughout the seasons.
The involvement of goyazensolide on in vivo anti-inflammatory and anti-hyperuricemic activities of
L. passerina extracts was confirmed, as well as the possibility of participation of other constituents on these
effects. This study demonstrated that the aerial parts of L. passerina may be collected in any season for use as
anti-inflammatory agent. For use in hyperuricemia, the best seasons for the collection are summer, autumn and
spring. The ethanolic extract of L. passerina and goyazensolide can be considered promising agents in the
therapeutic of inflammation, hyperuricemia and gout
Bacillus sphaericus Binary Toxin Elicits Host Cell Autophagy as a Response to Intoxication
Bacillus sphaericus strains that produce the binary toxin (Bin) are highly toxic to Culex and Anopheles mosquitoes, and have been used since the late 1980s as a biopesticide for the control of these vectors of infectious disease agents. The Bin toxin produced by these strains targets mosquito larval midgut epithelial cells where it binds to Cpm1 (Culex pipiens maltase 1) a digestive enzyme, and causes severe intracellular damage, including a dramatic cytoplasmic vacuolation. The intoxication of mammalian epithelial MDCK cells engineered to express Cpm1 mimics the cytopathologies observed in mosquito enterocytes following Bin ingestion: pore formation and vacuolation. In this study we demonstrate that Bin-induced vacuolisation is a transient phenomenon that affects autolysosomes. In addition, we show that this vacuolisation is associated with induction of autophagy in intoxicated cells. Furthermore, we report that after internalization, Bin reaches the recycling endosomes but is not localized either within the vacuolating autolysosomes or within any other degradative compartment. Our observations reveal that Bin elicits autophagy as the cell's response to intoxication while protecting itself from degradation through trafficking towards the recycling pathways