419 research outputs found
Evaluation of nitrogen fertilizer and inoculation with diazotrophic bacteria on the biochemical behavior of the maize cultivar nitroflint
The evaluation of nitrogen fertilizer and inoculation with diazotrophic bacteria on the genetic and biochemical behavior of the maize (Zea mays L.) cultivar Nitroflint were performed in two experiments, one in the field and the other in greenhouse. The experimental set up consisted of a randomized blocks design with three replications and two evaluation factors, inoculation (or not) with diazotrophic bacteria and nitrogen fertilizer levels (100 kg/ha of N and 10 kg/ha of N). In the field experiment the following parameters were measured: grain production, total plant nitrogen (above ground), grain nitrogen and activities of the enzymes nitrate reductase and glutamine synthetase. In the second experiment (greenhouse), fresh weight of the plant, glutamine synthetase (transferase and synthetase) and nitrate reductase activities were determined for both leaf and root tissue. A bacterial count was made in three media, denominated LGI (semi-selective for Azospirillum amazonense), JNFb (Herbaspirillum spp.) and NFb (Azospirillum spp.) for the shoot and the root. Results of the field experiment showed an effect of N fertilizer on total N and grain production. The second experiment (greenhouse) showed an effect of N fertilizer on all parameters measured and inoculation was effective on glutamine synthetase activity of the root by transferase reaction. A correlation was obtained between root glutamine synthetase activity and bacterial growth in LGI.33696197
Triple product correlations in top squark decays
We propose several T-odd asymmetries in the decay chains of the top squarks
and and , for . We
calculate the asymmetries within the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model with
complex parameters , and . We give the analytic formulae for
the decay distributions. We present numerical results for the asymmetries and
estimate the event rates necessary to observe them. The largest T-odd asymmetry
can be as large as 40%.Comment: 26 pages, 5 figures; misprints corrected; reference adde
The skeletal phenotype of chondroadherin deficient mice
Chondroadherin, a leucine rich repeat extracellular matrix protein with functions in cell to matrix interactions, binds cells via their a2b1 integrin as well as via cell surface proteoglycans, providing for different sets of signals to the cell. Additionally, the protein acts as an anchor to the matrix by binding tightly to collagens type I and II as well as type VI. We generated mice with inactivated chondroadherin gene to provide integrated studies of the role of the protein. The null mice presented distinct phenotypes with affected cartilage as well as bone. At 3–6 weeks of age the epiphyseal growth plate was widened most pronounced in the proliferative zone. The proteome of the femoral head articular cartilage at 4 months of age showed some distinct differences, with increased deposition of cartilage intermediate layer protein 1 and fibronectin in the chondroadherin deficient mice, more pronounced in the female. Other proteins show decreased levels in the deficient mice, particularly pronounced for matrilin-1, thrombospondin-1 and notably the members of the a1-antitrypsin family of proteinase inhibitors as well as for a member of the bone morphogenetic protein growth factor family. Thus, cartilage homeostasis is distinctly altered. The bone phenotype was expressed in several ways. The number of bone sialoprotein mRNA expressing cells in the proximal tibial metaphysic was decreased and the osteoid surface was increased possibly indicating a change in mineral metabolism. Micro-CT revealed lower cortical thickness and increased structure model index, i.e. the amount of plates and rods composing the bone trabeculas. The structural changes were paralleled by loss of function, where the null mice showed lower femoral neck failure load and tibial strength during mechanical testing at 4 months of age. The skeletal phenotype points at a role for chondroadherin in both bone and cartilage homeostasis, however, without leading to altered longitudinal growth
Measuring Lepton Flavour Violation at LHC with Long-Lived Slepton in the Coannihilation Region
When the mass difference between the lightest slepton, the NLSP, and the
lightest neutralino, the LSP, is smaller than the tau mass, the lifetime of the
lightest slepton increases in many orders of magnitude with respect to typical
lifetimes of other supersymmetric particles. These small mass differences are
possible in the MSSM and, for instance, they correspond to the coannihilation
region of the CMSSM for M_{1/2} \gsim 700 GeV. In a general gravity-mediated
MSSM, where the lightest supersymmetric particle is the neutralino, the
lifetime of the lightest slepton is inversely proportional to the square of the
intergenerational mixing in the slepton mass matrices. Such a long-lived
slepton would produce a distinctive signature at LHC and a measurement of its
lifetime would be relatively simple. Therefore, the long-lived slepton scenario
offers an excellent opportunity to study lepton flavour violation at ATLAS and
CMS detectors in the LHC and an improvement of the leptonic mass insertion
bounds by more than five orders of magnitude would be possible.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures, 4 table
Biological response to pre-mineralized starch based scaffolds for bone tissue engineering
It is known that calcium-phosphate (Ca-P) coatings are able not only to improve the bone
bonding behaviour of polymeric materials, but at the same time play a positive role on
enhancing cell adhesion and inducing the differentiation of osteoprogenitor cells. Recently
an innovative biomimetic methodology, in which a sodium silicate gel was used as a
nucleative agent, was proposed as an alternative to the currently available biomimetic
coating methodologies. This methodology is especially adequate for coating biodegradable
porous scaffolds. In the present work we evaluated the influence of the referred to
treatment on the mechanical properties of 50/50 (wt%) blend of corn starch/ethylene-vinyl
alcohol (SEVA-C) based scaffolds. These Ca-P coated scaffolds presented a compressive
modulus of 224.6 ± 20.6 and a compressive strength of 24.2 ± 2.20. Cytotoxicity evaluation
was performed according ISO/EN 10993 part 5 guidelines and showed that the biomimetic
treatment did not have any deleterious effect on L929 cells and did not inhibit cell growth.
Direct contact assays were done by using a cell line of human osteoblast like cells (SaOS-2).
3 × 105 cells were seeded per scaffold and allowed to grow for two weeks at 37 ◦C in a
humidified atmosphere containing 5% CO2. Total protein quantification and scanning
electron microscopy (SEM) observation showed that cells were able to grow in the
pre-mineralized scaffolds. Furthermore cell viability assays (MTS test) also show that cells
remain viable after two weeks in culture. Finally, protein expression studies showed that
after two weeks osteopontin and collagen type I were being expressed by SaOS-2 cells
seeded on the pre-mineralized scaffolds. Moreover, alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity was
higher in the supernatants collected from the pre-mineralized samples, when compared to
the control samples (non Ca-P coated). This may indicate that a faster mineralization of the
ECM produced on the pre-mineralized samples was occurring. Consequently, biomimetic
pre-mineralization of starch based scaffolds can be a useful route for applying these
materials on bone tissue engineering
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