66 research outputs found
Flavedo and albedo of five citrus fruits from Southern Italy: physicochemical characteristics and enzyme-assisted extraction of phenolic compounds
Peels are major byproducts of the juice processing industry. Citrus peels are composed of two tissues, namely the flavedo (outer layer) and the albedo (inner layer). Here, flavedo and albedo were obtained from the peel of grapefruit cv. âStar rubyâ, lemon cv. âAkragasâ, and sweet orange cvs. âTaroccoâ, âSanguinelloâ and âMoroâ. Freeze dried flavedo and albedo were investigated for their functional properties, and subjected to enzyme-assisted extraction with pectinase and cellulase (concentration of 6 U gâ1 DW) to extract the phenolic compounds. Albedo showed superior physicochemical characteristics than flavedo. Albedo from âTaroccoâ exhibited the maximum water holding capacity (10.9â±â0.48 g/g). Grapefruit albedo revealed the highest water swelling (13.4â±â2.62 mL/g) and oil binding (6.31â±â2.62 g/g) capacities. As regards the enzyme-assisted extraction of phytochemicals, both enzymes enhanced the extraction of phenolics (pâ<â0.05) compared to the controls. In flavedo, pectinase and cellulase increased the recovery of phenolics by approx. 30%, whereas in albedo the yields were increased above 60%. Results from this investigation suggest that albedo might be used by the food industry as a novel raw material, due to its superior physicochemical properties. Moreover, results provide evidence that the enzyme-assisted extraction is advantageous to recover phenolics from the citrus peels
Expression pattern of estroprogestinic receptors in sinonasal inverted papilloma
open13openSerra A; Caltabiano R; Spinato G; Gallina S; Caruso S; Rapisarda V; Di Mauro P; Castro V; Conti A; Licciardello L; Maiolino L; Lanzafame S; Cocuzza SSerra, A; Caltabiano, R; Spinato, G; Gallina, S; Caruso, S; Rapisarda, V; Di Mauro, P; Castro, V; Conti, A; Licciardello, L; Maiolino, L; Lanzafame, S; Cocuzza,
Transcriptional analysis of pha genes in Pseudomonas mediterranea CFBP 5447 grown on glycerol
We analysed the draft genome sequence of Pseudomonas mediterranea CFBP 5447 in order to identify firstly the central metabolic pathways that convert fatty acids or carbohydrate intermediates into mcl-PHA and secondly the genes involved in glycerol metabolism (glpF, glpK, glpD, glpR). Absence of the glpF gene, which codifies for the âglycerol uptake facilitator proteinâ, was highlighted. In order to understand the expression of the pha gene cluster, we investigated the promoter activity of phaC1, phaC2, phaZ, phaD and phaI genes. When glycerol was present as the carbon source, PI was found to be the most active promoter. Expression analysis of the knock-out mutant of the phaD gene, which is a transcriptional regulator belonging to the TetR family, showed that PhaD acts as an activator of the phaI promoter which, in turn, triggers the transcription of the phaIF operon. The activation of PC1, which controls the phaC1ZC2D, by PhaD, was less efficient than PI
'Omics' and chemical approaches used to monitor iron-deficiency in citrus rootstocks
Two different 'omics' approaches were performed to a better comprehension of biological mechanisms involved in citrus iron (Fe) deficiency. Tips roots from Swingle citrumelo and Carrizo citrange (sensitive and tolerant rootstocks, respectively), growing in pots with control and chlorotic soil, were used for transcriptomic and proteomic analysis. CombiMatrix array was performed to isolate differential genes, among which glutathione peroxidase (GPX), SAUR gene and glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) showed to be the most involved ones. They were switched on Swingle grown on calcareous conditions compared to Carrizo (in the same soil) and to the same stock in the control soil. The over-expression of GPX could be the effort of plants to neutralize the oxidative environment produced by stress. The involvement of auxin (and as consequence of SAUR gene) in the regulation of Fe deficiency responses is also well known. Both genes were considered in association to peroxidase, ferric chelate reductase activities, iron and chlorophyll content, to monitor the degree of suffering of rootstocks. Among differentially expressed proteins, identified by means of 2D-PAGE and RP-HPLC/nESI-MSMS, a strong down-regulation of cytosolic pyrophosphate-dependent phosphofructokinase ÎČ-subunit and NADPH-isocitrate dehydrogenase could produce plant inability to sustain the energetic request of cell roots
Lâimmigrazione nella trasformazione dei contesti urbani: il caso siciliano, lâesigenza del recupero culturale ed il rifiuto della marginalizzazione
The issue of the immigration leads to reorganize the whole social architecture of the societies in which it occurs. Considering the urban environment as a microcosm which has a great deal of influence on global dynamics, it is right to think about the living conditions of urban citizens who live in the multicultural present societies, often suffering marginalization. As the last researches claim, the local government system is the one that could help to deal with the immigration matter in the best way and this also needs to be urgently addressed, as the âImmigration in Sicilyâ case study could show
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Thermopower across the phase diagram of the cuprate La1.6âxNd0.4SrxCuO4 : signatures of the pseudogap and charge-density-wave phases
The Seebeck coeïŹcient (thermopower) S of the cuprate superconductor La1.6âxNd0.4SrxCuO4
was measured across its doping phase diagram (from p = 0.12 to p = 0.25), at various temperatures
down to T â 2 K, in the normal state accessed by suppressing superconductivity with a magnetic
ïŹeld up to H = 37.5 T. The magnitude of S/T in the T = 0 limit is found to suddenly increase,
by a factor â 5, when the doping is reduced below p
â = 0.23, the critical doping for the onset
of the pseudogap phase. This conïŹrms that the pseudogap phase causes a large reduction of the
carrier density n, consistent with a drop from n = 1 + p above p
â to n = p below pâ, as previously
inferred from measurements of the Hall coeïŹcient, resistivity and thermal conductivity. When the
doping is reduced below p = 0.19, a qualitative change is observed whereby S/T decreases as T â 0,
eventually to reach negative values at T = 0. In prior work on other cuprates, negative values of
S/T at T â 0 were shown to result from a reconstruction of the Fermi surface caused by charge-
density-wave (CDW) order. We therefore identify pCDW â 0.19 as the critical doping beyond which
there is no CDW-induced Fermi surface reconstruction. The fact that pCDW is well separated from
p
â reveals that there is a doping range below pâ where the transport signatures of the pseudogap
phase are unaïŹected by CDW correlations, as previously found in YBa2Cu3Oy and La2âxSrxCuO4.Center for Dynamics and Control of Material
Hydrological and erosional response of a small catchment in Sicily
Increasing our understanding of the main processes acting in small Mediterranean catchments is essential to planning effective soil and water conservation practices in semi-arid areas. A monitoring program of a Sicilian catchment started in 1996 and ended in 2006. The factors driving the hydrological response for 170 events with runoff generation and 46 with sediment production were specified. The catchment response varied greatly over the year. Rainfall intensity was a poor driver of runoff generation, whereas both the simulations made with the Thornthwaite-Mather water balance model and hydrograph recession analyses, pointed to the chief importance of wet antecedent conditions and soil saturation processes in runoff generation. The influence of rainfall spatial variability was also examined. SSC-Q relationships, classified by following their shapes for all sediment production events, suggested that the principal role of small poorly vegetated hillslope patches was as sediment sources and confirmed the complexity of the hydrological response in this small Mediterranean catchment. © 2019 Feliciana Licciardello et al., published by Sciendo 2019.Acknowledgements. The research was performed with the Project MASCC (Mediterranean Agricultural Soils Conservation under global Change) funded by Ministero delle politiche agricole, alimentari e forestali, as well as TransHyMed (CGL2016-75957-R AEI/FEDER, UE) and MASCC-DYNAMITE (PCIN-2017-061/AEI) funded by the Spanish Government and the European Union. The authors thank Michael Eaude for English style improvements and two anonymous reviewers for their constructive questions and comments.Peer reviewe
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