350 research outputs found
Effect of amount and time of potassium application on herbage yield, oil yield, oil content and quality of lemongrass (Cymbopogon flexuosus) under semi arid tropical conditions
A field experiment on lemongrass (Cymbopogon flexuosus) comprising 12 treatments of four levels of K2O (0, 40, 80 and 120 kg ha 1 year-1) and three time of applications (Full basal at the time of planting, ½ basal + ½ after six months and 1/3rd basal +1/3rd after six months and 1/3rd after first harvest) were tested during 2006–2008. Results showed that application of 40 kg K2O ha 1 year-1 in three splits i.e. 1/3rd basal +1/3rd after six months and 1/3rd after first harvest produced maximum herbage and oil yield which was at par with 80 kg K2O ha 1 year-1 applied as a basal.
 
Sutural cataract associated with a mutation in the ferritin light chain gene (FTL) in a family of Indian origin
PURPOSE:
The molecular characterization of 27 members of an Indian family, with 13 members in four generations, affected with Y-sutural congenital cataract.
METHODS:
Detailed family history and clinical data were collected. A genome-wide scan by two-point linkage analysis using more than 400 microsatellite markers in combination with multipoint lod score and haplotype analysis was performed. Mutation screening was carried out in the candidate gene by bi-directional sequencing of amplified products.
RESULTS:
A maximum two-point lod score of 6.37 at theta=0.00 was obtained with marker D19S879. Haplotype analysis placed the cataract locus to a 5.0 cM region between D19S902 and D19S867, in close proximity to the L-ferritin light chain gene (FTL) on chromosome 19q13.3. Hematological tests in two affected individuals showed very high levels of serum ferritin without iron overload leading to the diagnosis of hyperferritinemia-cataract syndrome. Mutation screening in FTL identified a G>A change at position 32 (c.-168G>A) in a highly conserved 3 nucleotide motif that forms a loop structure in the iron responsive element (IRE) in the 5'-untranslated region (5'-UTR). This nucleotide alteration was neither seen in any unaffected member of the family nor found in 50 unrelated control subjects.
CONCLUSIONS:
The present study is the first report of a Y-sutural congenital cataract mapping to 19q13.3. The mutation observed in FTL in this family highlights the phenotypic heterogeneity of the disorder in relation to the genotype as the identical mutation (32 G>A) has previously been reported in two Italian families with entirely different phenotypes. It is also the first report of hereditary hyperferritinemia-cataract syndrome in a family of Indian origin
High SMAD7 and p-SMAD2,3 expression is associated with environmental enteropathy in children
This work was supported by grants from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (SAA: OPP1066200, PK: OPP1066118, GM: OPP1131242)
Pathobiome driven gut inflammation in Pakistani children with environmental enteric dysfunction
Environmental Enteric Dysfunction (EED) is an acquired small intestinal inflammatory condition underlying high rates of stunting in children \u3c5 years of age in low- and middle-income countries. Children with EED are known to have repeated exposures to enteropathogens and environmental toxins that leads to malabsorptive syndrome. We aimed to characterize association of linear growth faltering with enteropathogen burden and subsequent changes in EED biomarkers. In a longitudinal birth cohort (n = 272), monthly anthropometric measurements (Length for Age Z score- LAZ) of asymptomatic children were obtained up to 18 months. Biological samples were collected at 6 and 9 months for the assessment of biomarkers. A customized TaqMan array card was used to target 40 enteropathogens in fecal samples. Linear regression was applied to study the effect of specific enteropathogen infection on change in linear growth (ΔLAZ). Presence of any pathogen in fecal sample correlated with serum flagellin IgA (6 mo, r = 0.19, p = 0.002), fecal Reg 1b (6 mo, r = 0.16, p = 0.01; 9mo, r = 0.16, p = 0.008) and serum Reg 1b (6 mo, r = 0.26, p\u3c0.0001; 9 mo, r = 0.15, p = 0.008). At 6 months, presence of Campylobacter [β (SE) 7751.2 (2608.5), p = 0.003] and ETEC LT [β (SE) 7089.2 (3015.04), p = 0.019] was associated with increase in MPO. Giardia was associated with increase in Reg1b [β (SE) 72.189 (26.394), p = 0.006] and antiflic IgA[β (SE) 0.054 (0.021), p = 0.0091]. Multiple enteropathogen infections in early life negatively correlated with ΔLAZ, and simultaneous changes in gut inflammatory and permeability markers. A combination vaccine targeting enteropathogens in early life could help in the prevention of future stuntin
Survival in small cell lung cancer in India: Prognostic utility of clinical features, laboratory parameters and response to treatment
BACKGROUND: Predictors of survival and response to treatment in
patients with small cell lung cancer (SCLC) are ill-defined and
unclear. In an attempt to assess the impact of common presenting
symptoms and laboratory values on survival, we undertook this
retrospective review of patients with SCLC. To our knowledge, there is
no study on survival in SCLC patients from the Indian subcontinent.
DESIGN: Retrospective Cohort study. MATERIALS AND METHODS: All newly
diagnosed small cell lung cancer cases from December 2001 through
December 2004, were identified and clinical data on presenting symptoms
and laboratory findings from their hospital records, noted. The
influence of various pretreatment factors on survival was investigated
using Kaplan-Meier plots and Cox multivariate regression model.
RESULTS: 76 subjects were included (84% males, 91% smokers). 57%
patients had five or more symptoms at presentation. Cumulative symptom
burden was strongly associated with survival ( P =0.02). Survival was
also significantly related with Karnofsky performance status (KPS) ( P
=0.04), disease extent (P =0.03) and symptomatic response to treatment
( P< 0.001). Patients with higher hemoglobin ( P =0.02), serum
sodium ( P =0.04) and serum globulin ( P =0.02), survived significantly
longer. By multivariate regression analysis, hemoglobin, KPS and brain
metastases, were significant predictors of survival ( P =0.01, P =0.02,
P< 0.01 respectively). CONCLUSION: Cumulative symptom burden, KPS,
disease extent and symptomatic assessment of improvement after
treatment, are useful predictors of survival. This has important
clinical implications, keeping in view, the infrastructure and cost
involved in more objective tests like CT scan, for evaluation of
disease extent and prognosis. These findings can provide a simple basis
for predicting prognosis in small cell lung cancer, especially in
developing countries like ours
Genetic variability and inter-relationship of kernel carotenoids among indigenous and exotic maize (Zea mays L.) inbreds
Carotenoids play vital role in growth and development of human beings. Yellow maize kernel contains carotenoids that possess provitamin A and antioxidant activity. Multilocation based analyses of 105 maize inbreds of indigenous and exotic origin revealed wide genetic variation for lutein (0.2–11.3 μg/g), zeaxanthin (0.2–20.0 μg/g) and β-carotene (0.0–15.0 μg/g). For β-cryptoxanthin, low variation (0.1–3.3 μg/g) was observed. Carotenoids were quite stable over environments that played minor role in causing variation. The heritability (>90%) and genetic advance (>75%) were high for all the carotenoid components. Zeaxanthin showed positive correlation with lutein and β-cryptoxanthin, while β-carotene, the major provitamin A carotenoid, did not show correlation with other carotenoids. Kernel colour was positively correlated with lutein (0.25), zeaxanthin (0.47) and β-cryptoxanthin (0.44), but not with β-carotene (0.04). This suggested that visual selection based on kernel colour will be misleading in selecting provitamin A-rich genotypes. Inbreds with provitamin A and non-provitamin A carotenoids identified in the present study will help in development of biofortified maize hybrids
Unique and conserved MicroRNAs in wheat chromosome 5D revealed by next-generation sequencing
MicroRNAs are a class of short, non-coding, single-stranded RNAs that act as post-transcriptional regulators in gene expression. miRNA analysis of Triticum aestivum chromosome 5D was performed on 454 GS FLX Titanium sequences of flow sorted chromosome 5D with a total of 3,208,630 good quality reads representing 1.34x and 1.61x coverage of the short (5DS) and long (5DL) arms of the chromosome respectively. In silico and structural analyses revealed a total of 55 miRNAs; 48 and 42 miRNAs were found to be present on 5DL and 5DS respectively, of which 35 were common to both chromosome arms, while 13 miRNAs were specific to 5DL and 7 miRNAs were specific to 5DS. In total, 14 of the predicted miRNAs were identified in wheat for the first time. Representation (the copy number of each miRNA) was also found to be higher in 5DL (1,949) compared to 5DS (1,191). Targets were predicted for each miRNA, while expression analysis gave evidence of expression for 6 out of 55 miRNAs. Occurrences of the same miRNAs were also found in Brachypodium distachyon and Oryza sativa genome sequences to identify syntenic miRNA coding sequences. Based on this analysis, two other miRNAs: miR1133 and miR167 were detected in B. distachyon syntenic region of wheat 5DS. Five of the predicted miRNA coding regions (miR6220, miR5070, miR169, miR5085, miR2118) were experimentally verified to be located to the 5D chromosome and three of them : miR2118, miR169 and miR5085, were shown to be 5D specific. Furthermore miR2118 was shown to be
expressed in Chinese Spring adult leaves. miRNA genes identified in this study will expand our understanding of gene regulation in bread wheat
COMBREX: a project to accelerate the functional annotation of prokaryotic genomes
COMBREX (http://combrex.bu.edu) is a project to increase the speed of the functional annotation of new bacterial and archaeal genomes. It consists of a database of functional predictions produced by computational biologists and a mechanism for experimental biochemists to bid for the validation of those predictions. Small grants are available to support successful bids.National Institute of General Medical Sciences (U.S.) (Go grant 1RC2GM092602-01
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