3,696 research outputs found
Lacticaseibacillus casei Strain Shirota Modulates Macrophage-Intestinal Epithelial Cell Co-Culture Barrier Integrity, Bacterial Sensing and Inflammatory Cytokines.
Probiotic bacteria modulate macrophage immune inflammatory responses, with functional cytokine responses determined by macrophage subset polarisation, stimulation and probiotic strain. Mucosal macrophages exhibit subset functional heterogeneity but are organised in a 3-dimensional tissue, over-laid by barrier epithelial cells. This study aimed to investigate the effects of the probiotic Lacticaseibacillus casei strain Shirota (LcS) on macrophage-epithelial cell cytokine responses, pattern recognition receptor (PRR) expression and LPS responses and the impacts on barrier integrity. THP-1-derived M1 and M2 subset macrophages were co-cultured in a transwell system with differentiated Caco-2 epithelial cells in the presence or absence of enteropathogenic LPS. Both Caco-2 cells in monoculture and macrophage co-culture were assayed for cytokines, PRR expression and barrier integrity (TEER and ZO-1) by RT-PCR, ELISA, IHC and electrical resistance. Caco-2 monocultures expressed distinct cytokine profiles (IL-6, IL-8, TNFα, endogenous IL-10), PRRs and barrier integrity, determined by inflammatory context (TNFα or IL-1β). In co-culture, LcS rescued ZO-1 and TEER in M2/Caco-2, but not M1/Caco-2. LcS suppressed TLR2, TLR4, MD2 expression in both co-cultures and differentially regulated NOD2, TLR9, Tollip and cytokine secretion. In conclusion, LcS selectively modulates epithelial barrier integrity, pathogen sensing and inflammatory cytokine profile; determined by macrophage subset and activation status
The effect of cereal type and micronisation on the concentration of lactic acid in the production of fermented liquid feed for pigs
The use of fermented liquid feeds (FLF) is gaming popularity in Europe as a means of improving the gut health of pigs and improvmg the stability and safety of liquid feed in ad libitum feeding systems with modern liquid feeding systems it is often advantageous to ferment the cereal component of the diet and use this as a base to which other components are added to formulate a range of diets for the whole unit. The exception to this may be diets for newly weaned pigs where it is normal (in the UK) for processed cereals to be used
A prototype system for observing the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation - scientific basis, measurement and risk mitigation strategies, and first results
The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (MOC) carries up to one quarter of the global northward heat transport in the Subtropical North Atlantic. A system monitoring the strength of the MOC volume transport has been operating since April 2004. The core of this system is an array of moored sensors measuring density, bottom pressure and ocean currents. A strategy to mitigate risks of possible partial failures of the array is presented, relying on backup and complementary measurements. The MOC is decomposed into five components, making use of the continuous moored observations, and of cable measurements across the Straits of Florida, and wind stress data. The components compensate for each other, indicating that the system is working reliably. The year-long average strength of the MOC is 18.7±5.6 Sv, with wind-driven and density-inferred transports contributing equally to the variability. Numerical simulations suggest that the surprisingly fast density changes at the western boundary are partially linked to westward propagating planetary wave
A Novel Lactic Acid Bacteria Mixture: Macrophage-Targeted Prophylactic Intervention in Colorectal Cancer Management
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the most common forms of cancer. Its onset from chronic inflammation is widely accepted. Moreover, dysbiosis plays an undeniable role, thus the use of probiotics in CRC has been suggested. They exhibit both anti- and pro-inflammatory properties and restore balance in the microbiota. The aim of this study was to investigate the immunomodulatory properties of six lactobacilli with probiotic features in an in vitro model of macrophage-like cells and to test these pooled probiotics for their anti-tumour properties in a chemically induced CRC model using Wistar male rats. Upon co-culture of M1- and M2-like macrophages with lactobacilli, cytokine release (TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-18, IL-23) and phagocytic activity using fluorescent-labelled bacteria were tested. The effects of orally administered probiotics on basic cancer and immune parameters and cytokine concentration (TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-18) in colon tumours were studied. Tested lactobacilli exhibited both pro- and anti-inflammatory properties in in vitro conditions. In vivo study showed that the administration of probiotics was able to decrease multiplicity, volume and total tumour numbers, restore colon length (p < 0.05) and increase IL-18 production (p < 0.05) in tumour tissue. These data indicate both an immunomodulatory effect of probiotics on distinct macrophage subsets and a protective effect against chemically-induced CRC.</jats:p
Deposition in the inner and outer corners of the JET divertor with carbon wall and metallic ITER-like wall
Rotating collectors and quartz microbalances (QMBs) are used in JET to provide time-dependent
measurements of erosion and deposition. Rotation of collector discs behind apertures allows
recording of the long term evolution of deposition. QMBs measure mass change via the
frequency deviations of vibrating quartz crystals. These diagnostics are used to investigate
erosion/deposition during JET-C carbon operation and JET-ILW (ITER-like wall) beryllium/
tungsten operation. A simple geometrical model utilising experimental data is used to model the
time-dependent collector deposition profiles, demonstrating good qualitative agreement with
experimental results. Overall, the JET-ILW collector deposition is reduced by an order of
magnitude relative to JET-C, with beryllium replacing carbon as the dominant deposit. However,
contrary to JET-C, in JET-ILW there is more deposition on the outer collector than the inner.
This reversal of deposition asymmetry is investigated using an analysis of QMB data and is
attributed to the different chemical properties of carbon and beryllium.EURATOM 63305
Nonanalytic behavior of the spin susceptibility in clean Fermi systems
The wavevector and temperature dependent static spin susceptibility,
\chi_s(Q,T), of clean interacting Fermi systems is considered in dimensions
1\leq d \leq 3. We show that at zero temperature \chi_s is a nonanalytic
function of |Q|, with the leading nonanalyticity being |Q|^{d-1} for 1<d<3, and
Q^2\ln|Q| for d=3. For the homogeneous spin susceptibility we find a
nonanalytic temperature dependence T^{d-1} for 1<d<3. We give qualitative
mode-mode coupling arguments to that effect, and corroborate these arguments by
a perturbative calculation to second order in the electron-electron interaction
amplitude. The implications of this, in particular for itinerant
ferromagnetism, are discussed. We also point out the relation between our
findings and established perturbative results for 1-d systems, as well as for
the temperature dependence of \chi_s(Q=0) in d=3.Comment: 12pp., REVTeX, 5 eps figures, final version as publishe
Universality in Heavy Fermions Revisited
A previous scaling analysis of pressure experiments in heavy fermion is
reviewed and enlarged. We show that the critical exponents obtained from this
analysis indicate that a one-parameter scaling describes these experiments. We
obtain explicitly the enhancemente factors showing that these systems are
indeed near criticality and that the scaling approach is appropriate. The
physics responsible for the one-parameter scaling and breakdown of hyperscaling
is clarified. We discuss a microsocopic theory that is in agreement with the
experiments. The scaling theory is generalized for the case the shift and
crossover exponents are different. The exponents governing the physical
behavior along the non-Fermi liquid trajectory are obtained for this case.Comment: 7 pages, Latex, 3 Postscript figures, to be published in Physical
Review
Coexistence of Singlet and Triplet Attractive Channels in the Pairing Interactions Mediated by Antiferromagnetic Fluctuations
We propose a phase diagram of quasi-low-dimensional type II superconductors
in parallel magnetic fields, when antiferromagnetic fluctuations contribute to
the pairing interactions. We point out that pairing interactions mediated by
antiferromagnetic fluctuations necessarily include both singlet channels and
triplet channels as attractive interactions. Usually, a singlet pairing is
favored at zero field, but a triplet pairing occurs at high fields where the
singlet pairing is suppressed by the Pauli paramagnetic pair-breaking effect.
As a result, the critical field increases divergently at low temperatures. A
possible relation to experimental phase diagrams of a quasi-one-dimensional
organic superconductor is briefly discussed. We also discuss a possibility that
a triplet superconductivity is observed even at zero field.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure (Latex, revtex.sty, epsf.sty
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