62 research outputs found

    Emerging applications of fluorescence spectroscopy in medical microbiology field

    Get PDF
    There are many diagnostic techniques and methods available for diagnosis of medically important microorganisms like bacteria, viruses, fungi and parasites. But, almost all these techniques and methods have some limitations or inconvenience. Most of these techniques are laborious, time consuming and with chances of false positive or false negative results. It warrants the need of a diagnostic technique which can overcome these limitations and problems. At present, there is emerging trend to use Fluorescence spectroscopy as a diagnostic as well as research tool in many fields of medical sciences. Here, we will critically discuss research studies which propose that Fluorescence spectroscopy may be an excellent diagnostic as well as excellent research tool in medical microbiology field with high sensitivity and specificity

    Can climate change increase fire severity independent of fire intensity?

    Get PDF
    We tested the idea that climate may affect forest fire severity independent of fire intensity. Pervasive warming can lead to chronic stress on forest trees (McDowell et al. 2008; Raffa et al. 2008), resulting in higher sensitivity to fire-induced damage (van Mantgem et al. 2003). Thus, there may be ongoing increases in fire severity (the number of trees killed), even when there is no change in fire intensity (the amount of heat released during a fire). We examined this question at a subcontinental scale by synthesizing existing information from plot-based prescribed fire monitoring databases across the western United States of America (USA). Prescribed fire data are particularly well suited to exploring the relationship between climate and fire severity because prescribed burns are conducted over a relatively narrow range of fire weather but over a potentially wide range of inter-annual climatic conditions. Specifically, we considered two topics, (i) quantifying the contribution of climate to fire severity (as measured by post-fire tree mortality), and (ii) detecting any secular trends in fire in the climate/fire severity relationship. Statistical models based on data from \u3e330 forest plots showed that across regions and major taxa, probabilities of fire-caused tree mortality were strongly sensitive to pre-fire changes in climatic water deficit, an index of drought. Our downscaled climate data indicated that changes in the climatic water deficit were due to increasing temperatures, without detectable trends in precipitation. These climatic trends were correlated with increasing probabilities of fire-caused mortality over time. Results from this study demonstrate that incorporating measures of pre-fire climatic stress and/or tree health into models of post-fire mortality used by prescribed fire managers may substantially improve their predictive capabilities. The relationships developed here will help managers predict changes in fire severity from large-scale climatic anomalies (e.g., ENSO, PDO) and from secular trends in climate

    Oocyte DNA damage quality control requires consecutive interplay of CHK2 and CK1 to activate p63

    No full text
    The survival rate of cancer patients is steadily increasing, owing to more efficient therapies. Understanding the molecular mechanisms of chemotherapy-induced premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) could identify targets for prevention of POI. Loss of the primordial follicle reserve is the most important cause of POI, with the p53 family member p63 being responsible for DNA-damage-induced apoptosis of resting oocytes. Here, we provide the first detailed mechanistic insight into the activation of p63, a process that requires phosphorylation by both the priming kinase CHK2 and the executioner kinase CK1 in mouse primordial follicles. We further describe the structural changes induced by phosphorylation that enable p63 to adopt its active tetrameric conformation and demonstrate that previously discussed phosphorylation by c-Abl is not involved in this process. Inhibition of CK1 rescues primary oocytes from doxorubicin and cisplatin-induced apoptosis, thus uncovering a new target for the development of fertoprotective therapies
    corecore