30 research outputs found

    Paleopatología dental de la población prehispánica de "El Tambo Alto del Rey" departamento del Cauca, Colombia

    Get PDF
    La paleopatología dental es un área de investigación propia de la antropología dental que busca reconocer algunos marcadores en la forma de los dientes que nos permitan recrear y reconstruir las dinámicas bioculturales de las poblaciones antiguas relacionadas directamente con su estado de salud-enfermedad y dieta. Este estudio es uno de los primeros realizados en esta región. En este articulo presentamos los resultados del análisis bioantropológico realizado en 45 individuos (8 masculinos, 3 femeninos y 34 indeterminados) de la población prehispánica de "El tambo Alto del Rey" que existió entre los años 1200 Y 1600 d.C. en la región que comprende el actual municipio del Tambo, Departamento del Cauca, Colombia.Asociación de Antropología Biológica de la República Argentina (AABRA

    Análisis del funcionamiento de la configuración del reactor anaerobio de flujo ascendente – filtro percolador para el tratamiento a escala real de aguas residuales domésticas

    Get PDF
    Además de la existencia de plantas de tratamiento de aguas residuales (PTAR), es necesario asegurar su efectividad y sostenibilidad en el tiempo a través de una adecuada selección de tecnologías, buen diseño y construcción y buenas prácticas de operación y mantenimiento. La configuración Reactor UASB seguida de Filtro Percolador, ha demostrado la obtención de un efluente acorde con los requerimientos de la legislación ambiental; el Departamento del Valle del Cauca-Colombia tiene 19PTAR y cinco de ellas presentan esta configuración. Aunque elanálisis realizado a estas PTAR, muestra debilidades asociadas a selección inadecuada de criterios de diseño y deficiencias de operación y mantenimiento, se encontró un desempeño adecuado en términos de eficiencias de remoción de DQO, DBO5 y SST (alrededor de 80%). Dadas las bondades de esta configuración para el tratamiento de aguas residuales domésticas, es recomendable establecer criterios de diseño, operación y mantenimiento apropiados, lo que resultará en una mayor capacidad y eficiencia del tratamiento

    Economic impact of infections and antibiotics

    Get PDF
    In this chapter, we review several aspects with respect to the burden of infectious diseases, its impact in morbidity and mortality, and its economic burden. Furthermore, we referenced the actual situation with relation to the use of antimicrobial, the resistance problem and misuse of antibiotic, and the economic impact in the health systems

    Tomato geranylgeranyl diphosphate synthase isoform 1 is involved in the stress-triggered production of diterpenes in leaves and strigolactones in roots

    Get PDF
    Carotenoids are photoprotectant pigments and precursors of hormones such as strigolactones (SL). Carotenoids are produced in plastids from geranylgeranyl diphosphate (GGPP), which is diverted to the carotenoid pathway by phytoene synthase (PSY). In tomato (Solanum lycopersicum), three genes encode plastid-targeted GGPP synthases (SlG1 to SlG3) and three genes encode PSY isoforms (PSY1 to PSY3). Here, we investigated the function of SlG1 by generating loss-of-function lines and combining their metabolic and physiological phenotyping with gene co-expression and co-immunoprecipitation analyses. Leaves and fruits of slg1 lines showed a wild-type phenotype in terms of carotenoid accumulation, photosynthesis, and development under normal growth conditions. In response to bacterial infection, however, slg1 leaves produced lower levels of defensive GGPP-derived diterpenoids. In roots, SlG1 was co-expressed with PSY3 and other genes involved in SL production, and slg1 lines grown under phosphate starvation exuded less SLs. However, slg1 plants did not display the branched shoot phenotype observed in other SL-defective mutants. At the protein level, SlG1 physically interacted with the root-specific PSY3 isoform but not with PSY1 and PSY2. Our results confirm specific roles for SlG1 in producing GGPP for defensive diterpenoids in leaves and carotenoid-derived SLs (in combination with PSY3) in roots

    Anales de Edafología y Agrobiología Tomo 33 Número 9-10

    Get PDF
    Estudio del equilibrio nutritivo en cultivos de chirimoyo (Annona cherimolia), por César González O., Miguel Fuentes y Soledad Díaz.-- Resistencia a la desecación del tejido foliar y cierre de estomas en alfalfa (M edicago sativa L.) y trébol blanco (Trijolium repens L.) con relación al déficit agua, por M. Sánchez-Díaz y M. Sánchez-Marín.-- Determinación del calor isostérico y consideraciones sobre el mecanismo de la adsorción de fosfato por óxidos de hierro, por L. Madrid, F. Cabrera, P. de Arambarri y E. Díaz.-- Studies on sodium-calcium exchange equilibria. II. In Egyptian soils, by M. H. Nafady.-- Indices nutritivos en manzano (var. R. Delicious), por C. González, O. M. Rodríguez M., J. Solé D. y A. Wylie W.-- Caracteres de los suelos de las zonas citrícolas del valle de Murcia (España), por J. A. Sánchez F., F. Artes y J. López-Tarruella.-- Estudio micromorfológico de suelos desarrollados sobre andesitas en Andalucía oriental, por J. Aguilar y M. Delgado.-- Estudio edafológico de los relieves próximos a la vega de Motril, por J. Aguilar, Ruiz, A. Monge Ureña y C. Sierra Ruiz de la F.-- Consideraciones experimentales sobre el análisis de boro en plantas, por A. León, F.J. López-Andréu, F. Romojaro y C. Alcaraz.-- Efectos de la aplicación conjunta de fertilizantes químicos y microbianos (Azotobaeter Fosjobaeterias) en cultivos enarenados de tomate, por R. Azcón, M. Gómez y J. M. Barea.-- Formas de calcio en suelos del piso tropical de Barbacoas, Colombia, por G. Hugo Eraso, L. Federman Ortiz y O. Hernán Burbano.-- Compuestos íenólicos en Eriea vagans L., por J. Arinés, J. L. G. Mantilla y E. Vieitiz.-- Determinación de glúcidos en plantas por fotocolorimetría. Estudio comparativo de métodos clásicos y automáticos, por C. Cadahía y M. T. Piñeiro.-- Notas. Nombramiento de Consejeros Adjuntos del Patronato Alonso de Herrera.-- Nombramiento y cese de Vocales de la Junta de Gobierno del Patronato Alonso de Herrera.--Fallo de los Premios Alonso de Herrera y Antonio José de Cavanilles.-- Propuesta del Instituto de Alimentación y Productividad Animal sobre nombramiento de Vicedirector del mismo.-- Congresos y Reuniones internacionales.-- Creación de la Comisión Conjunta de Investigación Agraria de los Ministerios de Educación y Ciencia y de Agricultura.-- Restauración y adecuación del Jardín Botánico de Madrid.-- III Reunión Nacional de Centros de Investigación Ganadera Tribunales.-- Clausura del XI Curso Internacional de Edafología y Biología Vegetal.-- 7th International Colloquium on Plant Analysis and Fertilizer Problems.-- X Congreso Internacional de Ciencia del Suelo.-- Clausura del IV Congreso de Ciencia y Tecnología de Alimentos.-- 50th Anniversary Meeting of the British Society for Experimental Biología.-- XXIX Symposium on Symbiosis, Society for Experimental Biología.-- IV Reunión de la Sociedad Español de Microscopía Electrónica.-- Subvención de la Fundación Barrie de la Maza a la Misión Biológica de Galicia.-- Conferencia.-- Los universitarios y la defensa de la naturaleza.-- Seminario, sobre Tipos diferentes de costras calizas y su distribución regional.-- BibliografíaPeer reviewed2019-08.- CopyBook.- Libnova.- Biblioteca ICA

    Pisosterol induces G2/M cell cycle arrest and apoptosis via the ATM/ATR signaling pathway in human glioma cells

    No full text
    Ministério da Saúde. Secretaria de Vigilância em Saúde. Instituto Evandro Chagas. Laboratório de Cultura de Tecidos e Citogenética Ananindeua, PA, Brasil.Universidade Federal do Pará. Instituto de Ciências Biológicas. Laboratório de Citogenética Humana. Belém, PA, Brazil.Universidade Federal do Ceará. Departamento de Fisiologia e Farmacologia. Fortaleza, CE, Brazil.Universidade Federal do Pará. Instituto de Ciências Biológicas. Laboratório de Biologia Molecular Francisco Mauro Salzano. Belém, PA, Brazil.Universidade Federal do Pará. Instituto de Ciências Biológicas. Laboratório de Biologia Molecular Francisco Mauro Salzano. Belém, PA, Brazil.Universidade Federal do Pará. Faculdade de Ciências Naturais. Instituto de Ciências Exatas e Naturais. Belém, PA, Brazil.Background: Pisosterol, a triterpene derived from Pisolithus tinctorius, exhibits potential antitumor activity in various malignancies. However, the molecular mechanisms that mediate the pisosterol-specific effects on glioma cells remain unknown. Objective: This study aimed to evaluate the antitumoral effects of pisosterol on glioma cell lines. Methods: The 3-[4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl]-2,5-diphenyl tetrazolium bromide (MTT) and trypan blue exclusion assays were used to evaluate the effect of pisosterol on cell proliferation and viability in glioma cells. The effect of pisosterol on the distribution of the cells in cell cycle was performed by flow cytometry. The expression and methylation pattern of the promoter region of MYC, ATM, BCL2, BMI1, CASP3, CDK1, CDKN1A, CDKN2A, CDKN2B, CHEK1, MDM2, p14ARF and TP53 was analyzed by RT-qPCR, western blotting and bisulfite sequencing PCR (BSP-PCR). Results: Here, we reported that pisosterol markedly induced G2/M arrest and apoptosis and decreased the cell viability and proliferation potential of glioma cells in a dose-dependent manner by increasing the expression of ATM, CASP3, CDK1, CDKN1A, CDKN2A, CDKN2B, CHEK1, p14ARF and TP53 and decreasing the expression of MYC, BCL2, BMI1 and MDM2. Pisosterol also triggered both caspase-independent and caspase-dependent apoptotic pathways by regulating the expression of Bcl-2 and activating caspase-3 and p53. Conclusions: We, for the first time, confirmed that the ATM/ATR signaling pathway is a critical mechanism for G2/M arrest in pisosterol-induced glioma cell cycle arrest and suggest that this compound might be a promising anticancer candidate for further investigation

    Computational prediction and experimental assessment of secreted/surface proteins from Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv

    No full text
    The mycobacterial cell envelope has been implicated in the pathogenicity of tuberculosis and therefore has been a prime target for the identification and characterization of surface proteins with potential application in drug and vaccine development. In this study, the genome of Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv was screened using Machine Learning tools that included feature-based predictors, general localizers and transmembrane topology predictors to identify proteins that are potentially secreted to the surface of M. tuberculosis, or to the extracellular milieu through different secretory pathways. The subcellular localization of a set of 8 hypothetically secreted/surface candidate proteins was experimentally assessed by cellular fractionation and immunoelectron microscopy (IEM) to determine the reliability of the computational methodology proposed here, using 4 secreted/surface proteins with experimental confirmation as positive controls and 2 cytoplasmic proteins as negative controls. Subcellular fractionation and IEM studies provided evidence that the candidate proteins Rv0403c, Rv3630, Rv1022, Rv0835, Rv0361 and Rv0178 are secreted either to the mycobacterial surface or to the extracellular milieu. Surface localization was also confirmed for the positive controls, whereas negative controls were located on the cytoplasm. Based on statistical learning methods, we obtained computational subcellular localization predictions that were experimentally assessed and allowed us to construct a computational protocol with experimental support that allowed us to identify a new set of secreted/surface proteins as potential vaccine candidates. © 2010 Vizcaíno et al

    Computational prediction and experimental assessment of secreted/surface proteins from Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv

    No full text
    The mycobacterial cell envelope has been implicated in the pathogenicity of tuberculosis and therefore has been a prime target for the identification and characterization of surface proteins with potential application in drug and vaccine development. In this study, the genome of Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv was screened using Machine Learning tools that included feature-based predictors, general localizers and transmembrane topology predictors to identify proteins that are potentially secreted to the surface of M. tuberculosis, or to the extracellular milieu through different secretory pathways. The subcellular localization of a set of 8 hypothetically secreted/surface candidate proteins was experimentally assessed by cellular fractionation and immunoelectron microscopy (IEM) to determine the reliability of the computational methodology proposed here, using 4 secreted/surface proteins with experimental confirmation as positive controls and 2 cytoplasmic proteins as negative controls. Subcellular fractionation and IEM studies provided evidence that the candidate proteins Rv0403c, Rv3630, Rv1022, Rv0835, Rv0361 and Rv0178 are secreted either to the mycobacterial surface or to the extracellular milieu. Surface localization was also confirmed for the positive controls, whereas negative controls were located on the cytoplasm. Based on statistical learning methods, we obtained computational subcellular localization predictions that were experimentally assessed and allowed us to construct a computational protocol with experimental support that allowed us to identify a new set of secreted/surface proteins as potential vaccine candidates. © 2010 Vizcaíno et al
    corecore