698 research outputs found
Aceite de oliva virgen y regulación hormonal de la presión arterial: una revisión del papel de los enzimas proteolíticos
Numerosos estudios realizados en los últimos años, han puesto de manifiesto que los niveles elevados de grasa en la dieta están directamente relacionados con el desarrollo de diversas patologías, entre las que destacan enfermedades cardiovasculares, diabetes o incluso diversos tipos de cánceres. Estudios epidemiológicos también han demostrado que no sólo es importante la cantidad, sino también el tipo de grasa de la dieta. Son especialmente conocidos los efectos beneficiosos de la dieta mediterránea, caracterizada entre otros aspectos, por un consumo elevado de ácidos grasos monoinsaturados como el oleico. En cualquier caso, no se conoce con exactitud las relaciones existentes entre el tipo de grasa de la dieta y el desarrollo de las distintas patologías. Las aminopeptidasas son enzimas proteolíticos implicados en una amplia variedad de procesos biológicos, destacando su papel en el control de la presión arterial a través del sistema renina-angiotensina. En esta revisión se estudia la influencia de una dieta enriquecida en aceite de oliva sobre la actividad aminopeptidásica sérica y de tejidos periféricos, analizando su influencia en la regulación del sistema renina-angiotensina para el control de la presión arterial y el balance de líquidos y electrolitos.The intake of high fat dietary levels is related to the development of several pathologies such as cardiovascular diseases, diabetes and cancer. However, epidemiological studies have demonstrated that not only the amount but also the type of dietary fat participates in the origin of the diseases. In fact, several important beneficts have been attributed to the Mediterranean diet, characterized by the high intake of monoinsaturated fatty acids such as oleic acid preferently. In any case, the relationship between the type of dietary fat an the development of diseases are unknown. Aminopeptidases are proteolytic enzymes involved in several biological proccesses, regulating blood pressure through the renin-angiotensin system. In this review, the influence of an olive oil-enriched diet is presented, analyzing their role in the regulation of blood pressure, local blood flow and fluid and electrolytic balance among other functions
Boundary Treatment for High-Order IMEX Runge–Kutta Local Discontinuous Galerkin Schemes for Multidimensional Nonlinear Parabolic PDEs
It includes supplementary materials[Abstract]: In this article, we propose novel boundary treatment algorithms to avoid order reduction when implicit-explicit Runge–Kutta time discretization is used for solving convection-diffusion-reaction problems with time-dependent Dirichlet boundary conditions. We consider Cartesian meshes and PDEs with stiff terms coming from the diffusive parts of the PDE. The algorithms treat boundary values at the implicit-explicit internal stages in the same way as the interior points. The boundary treatment strategy is designed to work with multidimensional problems with possible nonlinear advection and source terms. The proposed methods recover the designed order of convergence by numerical verification. For the spatial discretization, in this work, we consider local discontinuous Galerkin methods, although the developed boundary treatment algorithms can operate with other discretization schemes in space, such as finite differences, finite elements, or finite volumes.The third author's research has been funded by FEDER and the Spanish Governmentthrough the coordinated research project RTI2018-096064-B-C1, and has been partially funded byMCIN/AEI and "European Union NextGenerationEU/PRTR" through grant PDC2022-133663-C21 and by MCIN/AEI and "ERDF: A Way of Making Europe"" by the European Union through grant PID2022-137637NB-C21. The other authors' research has been funded by grant ED431G 2023/01 of CITIC, funded by Consellería de Educación, Universidade e Formación Profesional of Xunta deGalicia and FEDER, and by Spanish MINECO under research project number PID2019-10858RB-I00Xunta de Galicia; ED431G 2023/0
Mitigation of phytotoxic effect of compost by application of optimized aqueous extraction protocols
The abuse of chemical fertilizers in recent decades has led the promotion of less harmful alternatives, such as compost
or aqueous extracts obtained from it. Therefore, it is essential to develop liquid biofertilizers, which in addition of
being stable and useful for fertigation and foliar application in intensive agriculture had a remarkable phytostimulant
extracts. For this purpose, a collection of aqueous extracts was obtained by applying four different Compost Extraction
Protocols (CEP1, CEP2, CEP3, CEP4) in terms of incubation time, temperature and agitation of compost samples from
agri-food waste, olive mill waste, sewage sludge and vegetable waste. Subsequently, a physicochemical characterization
of the obtained set was performed in which pH, electrical conductivity and Total Organic Carbon (TOC) were measured.
In addition, a biological characterization was also carried out by calculating the Germination Index (GI) and
determining the Biological Oxygen Demand (BOD5). Furthermore, functional diversity was studied using the Biolog
EcoPlates technique. The results obtained confirmed the great heterogeneity of the selected raw materials. However,
it was observed that the less aggressive treatments in terms of temperature and incubation time, such as CEP1 (48 h,
room temperature (RT)) or CEP4 (14 days, RT), provided aqueous compost extracts with better phytostimulant characteristics
than the starting composts. It was even possible to find a compost extraction protocol that maximize the beneficial
effects of compost. This was the case of CEP1, which improved the GI and reduced the phytotoxicity in most of
the raw materials analyzed. Therefore, the use of this type of liquid organic amendment could mitigate the phytotoxic
effect of several composts being a good alternative to the use of chemical fertilizers
Key plant species and detritivores drive diversity effects on instream leaf litter decomposition more than functional diversity: A microcosm study
Anthropogenic impacts on freshwater ecosystems cause critical losses of biodiversity that can in turn impair key processes such as decomposition and nutrient cycling. Forest streams are mainly subsidized by terrestrial organic detritus, so their functioning and conservation status can be altered by changes in forest biodiversity and composition, particularly if these changes involve the replacement of functional groups or the loss of key species. We examined this issue using a microcosm experiment where we manipulated plant functional diversity (FD) (monocultures and low-FD and high-FD mixtures, resulting from different combinations of deciduous and evergreen Quercus species) and the presence of a key species (Alnus glutinosa), all in presence and absence of detritivores, and assessed effects on litter decomposition, nutrient cycling, and fungal and detritivore biomass. We found (i) positive diversity effects on detritivore-mediated decomposition, litter nutrient losses and detritivore biomass exclusively when A. glutinosa was present; and (ii) negative effects on the same processes when microbially mediated and on fungal biomass. Most positive trends could be explained by the higher litter palatability and litter trait variability obtained with the inclusion of alder leaves in the mixture. Our results support the hypothesis of a consistent slowing down of the decomposition process as a result of plant biodiversity loss, and hence effects on stream ecosystem functioning, especially when a key (N-fixing) species is lost; and underscore the importance of detritivores as drivers of plant diversity effects in the studied ecosystem processes.This study was funded by the 2014–2020 FEDER Operative Program Andalusia (RIOVEGEST project, Ref. FEDER-UAL18 -RNM -B006 – B, to J.J.C). Additional support was provided by the Spanish Ministry for Science, Innovation and Universities and FEDER (BioLoss project, Ref. RTI2018-095023- B-I00, to L.B.). Rubio-Ríos was supported by an FPU grant of the Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports (reference FPU16/03734)
Changes in Biomarkers of Redox Status in Saliva of Pigs after an Experimental Sepsis Induction
Saliva from pigs is gaining attention as an easy sample to obtain, being a source of biomarkers that can provide information on animal health and welfare. This study aimed to evaluate the changes that can occur in salivary biomarkers of the redox status of pigs with an experimentally induced sepsis. For that, the cupric reducing antioxidant capacity (CUPRAC), ferric reducing ability of saliva (FRAS), Trolox equivalent antioxidant capacity (TEAC), advanced oxidation protein products (AOPP), ferrous oxidation-xylenol orange (FOX), peroxide activity (POX-Act), and reactive oxygen-derived compounds (d-ROMs) were measured in the saliva of pigs with experimentally induced sepsis by endotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS), non-septic inflammation induced by turpentine, and in healthy individuals before and after 3 h, 6 h, 24 h, and 48 h. AOPP, POX-Act, and d-ROMs in the sepsis group were higher than in the control from 3 h to 24 h after the inoculation. CUPRAC, FRAS, and TEAC were higher in sepsis than the control group at 24 h. These changes were of higher magnitude than those that occurred in the turpentine group. In conclusion, our findings reveal that sepsis produces changes in salivary biomarkers of redox status, which opens the possibility of using them as potential biomarkers in this species
Loss of heterozygosity at 9q32-33 (DBC1 locus) in primary non-invasive papillary urothelial neoplasm of low malignant potential and low-grade urothelial carcinoma of the bladder and their associated normal urothelium.
Tumour recurrence has a major impact on patients with non-invasive papillary urothelial
tumours of the bladder. To explore the role of DBC1 (deleted in bladder cancer 1 locus),
a candidate tumour suppressor gene located at 9q32–33, as prognostic marker we have
performed loss of heterozygosity (LOH) testing in 49 patients with primary papillary
urothelial tumours and associated normal urothelium. Data from the 38 tumours and
11 specimens of normal urothelium that were informative in the LOH study (D9S195
marker) showed that LOH in urothelium (45.4%) but not in non-invasive tumours (60.5%)
was associated with tumour recurrence (p = 0.026) but not to grade or progression. Also,
tumours whose normal urothelium had LOH were larger (p = 0.020) and showed cyclin
D1 over-expression (p = 0.032). Non-significant increased expression of p53, p21Waf1,
apoptotic index and tumour proliferation, and decreased expression of p27Kip1 or cyclin
D3 also characterized tumours whose normal urothelium had LOH. The expression of these
G1 –S modulators, apoptotic index and tumour proliferation was more heterogeneous in
papillary urothelial tumours, irrespective of having retained heterozygosity or LOH. Also,
Bax expression decreased in papillary urothelial tumours having LOH (p = 0.0473), but
Bcl-2 was unrelated to LOH status. In addition, FGFR3 protein expression decreased in
LOH tumours (p = 0.036) and in those having LOH in their normal urothelium (p = 0.022).
FGFR3 immunohistochemical expression was validated by western blot in selected cases. The
survival analysis selected LOH in normal urothelium as a marker of disease-free survival
(log-rank 5.32, p = 0.021), progression-free survival (log-rank 3.97, p = 0.046) and overall
survival (log-rank 4.26, p = 0.038); LOH in tumours was significant in progression-free
survival (log-rank 3.83, p = 0.042). It is concluded that LOH at the DBC1 locus in normal
urothelium seems to be relevant in the prognosis of non-invasive papillary tumours of the
bladder via selecting cases with increased proliferation, frequent alterations of the G1 –S
phase modulators, and decreased FGFR3 protein expression
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