643 research outputs found

    Mobilisation du bois et approvisionnement pour une filiĂšre bois Ă©nergie en Languedoc-Roussillon -

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    L'approche Ă©conomique est l'Ă©lĂ©ment clef de la rĂ©flexion sur le dĂ©veloppement du bois Ă©nergie en forĂȘt mĂ©diterranĂ©enne. Les outils d'analyse Ă©conomique sont indispensables pour permettre de juger de l'opportunitĂ© qu'offre le bois Ă©nergie. Des Ă©tudes mĂ©thodologiques existent qui permettent de prendre en compte l'ensemble des facteurs Ă©conomiques pour pouvoir juger de la mise en place durable de la filiĂšre dans un contexte local spĂ©cifique Ă  chaque territoire, comme celle prĂ©sentĂ©e ici et rĂ©alisĂ©e en Languedoc-Roussillo

    Liver fibrogenesis and genetic factors

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    SummaryChronic liver diseases lead to the accumulation of fibrosis in the liver with eventual progression to cirrhosis and its complications. However, there is a wide range of inter-individual variation in the liver fibrogenesis process, thus posing a challenge to physicians to identify patients with poor prognosis. As demographic and environmental factors only account for a small portion of fibrogenesis variability, host genetic factors have been suggested as playing an important role. Due to technical limitations, the first genetic studies were restricted to the evaluation of candidate genes having a known or supposed function in liver fibrogenesis. Recently, technological improvements have made it possible to study the whole human genome in a single scan. Genome-wide association studies have considerably heightened the interest in genetics as part of the study of liver fibrogenesis through their identification of previously unsuspected genes that are statistically associated with liver fibrosis. It is thus possible to determine new diagnostic or prognostic genetic markers for the management of patients with chronic liver diseases. Moreover, functional analyses of these genes may provide new insights into the pathophysiology of liver fibrogenesis

    Recherche et caractérisation de sols résistants aux Pythium spp. en Amazonie brésilienne

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    Aux environs de la ville de Manaus (Amazonie brĂ©silienne), les sols sont localisĂ©s dans deux Ă©cosystĂšmes: ‘terra firme’ recouverte de foret vierge ou cultivĂ©e et ‘varzea’, zones submergĂ©es chaque annĂ©e et cultivĂ©es. 160 Ă©chantillons de sol ont Ă©tĂ© prĂ©levĂ©s dans ccs deux zones, puis analysĂ©s afin de dĂ©terminer leur capacitĂ© de fonte des semis, causĂ©e par les Pythium spp.; 76 de ces sols semblaient non infestĂ©s, ou ne l'Ă©taient que faiblement. Afin de dĂ©terminer leur rĂ©ceptivitĂ© vis‐à‐vis des Pythium spp., les 76 sols ont Ă©tĂ© inoculĂ©s avec 10% d'un sol infestĂ© naturellement, et la capacitĂ© d'infection a Ă©tĂ©Ă©valuĂ©e aprĂ©s des incubations de 4, 8, 12 et 16 semaines par tests biologiques sur jeunes plants de concombre. L'aptitude Ă  supprimer les Pythium spp. n'est apparue que dans les Ă©cosystĂšmes ‘terra firme'et non dans les ‘varzeas’ submergĂ©s. La frĂ©quence des sols pouvant supprimer la maladie semblait dĂ©croitre en fonction de la mise en culture: 82% dans les sols de foret vierge; 67% dans les sols de pĂ©piniĂšres forestiĂ©res; 53% dans les forets gĂ©rĂ©es; 31% dans les sols forestiers mis en culture avec des cultures variĂ©es; 7% dans les sols forestiers mis en culture et portant des cultures maraichĂšres. On a constatĂ© trois types d'aptitude Ă  supprimer les Pythium spp. aprĂ©s inoculation des sols: (1) rĂ©sistance apparaissant rapidement et se maintenant Ă  un niveau Ă©levĂ© et constant (jusqu'Ă  16 semaines); (2) rĂ©sistance initiate Ă©levĂ©e, mais non durable; (3) rĂ©sistance initialement faible, mais croissante avec le temps. Une partie de cette dynamique semble etre sous controle microbien. Le dĂ©veloppement agricole autour de Manaus ainsi que les systĂšmes de culture intensifs peuvent rapidement modifier les Ă©cosystĂšmes microbiens des sols et nuire Ă  leur capacitĂ© naturelle Ă  supprimer les Pythium spp. Copyright © 1987, Wiley Blackwell. All rights reserve

    Permeability of a bubble assembly: From the very dry to the wet limit

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    We measure the permeability of a fluidized bed of monodispersed bubbles with soap solution characteristic of mobile and non-mobile interfaces. These experimental data extend the permeability curves previously published for foam in the dry limit. In the wet limit, these data join the permeability curves of a hard sphere suspension at porosity equal to 0.4 and 0.6 in the cases of mobile and non-mobile interfaces respectively. We show that the model of permeability proposed by Kozeny and Carman and originally validated for packed beds of spheres (with porosity around 0.4) can be successfully applied with no adjustable parameters to liquid fractions from 0.001 up to 0.85 for systems made of monodisperse and deformable entities with non-mobile interfaces

    Surveying activated sludge changes during acclimation with artificial wastewater

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    Many processes in the chemical and pharmaceutical industries generate wastewater containing organic toxic compounds and other kinds of xenobiotics. Usually, biological treatments are used to degrade a great quantity of these substances. However, most of the time, the microorganisms are not adapted and the treatment can be blocked. Therefore, the first step to make a continuous reactor operative is the acclimation, i.e., the adaptation of the microorganisms to a specific substrate. During this particular step of the process there is a selection and a multiplication of specialized microorganisms and physiological transformations can occur in their metabolic system. Furthermore, combining image processing techniques have already been successfully used to elucidate the activated sludge morphological changes for both aggregated and filamentous bacteria contents, during such processes. The experimental set-up is composed of an aerated reactor and a clarifier. The sludge is recycled from the clarifier by a peristaltic pump. The complete mixing inside the reactor is guaranteed by the diffusion of air from its bottom. The reactor was inoculated with biomass collected from a wastewater treatment plant and fed with an artificial wastewater based on meat extract. During acclimation, chemical parameters were measured in the influent, reactor and effluent, in order to verify the stability of the process. To complete the evaluation of the process, microscopy acquisition and image processing and analysis techniques were performed for aggregates and filamentous bacteria characterization for bright field, Gram and poly-ÎČ-hydroxybutyrate (PHB) staining images. The information extracted from those images allowed for aggregates and filamentous bacteria contents inspection, identification of PHB storing microorganisms and, gram-positive and gram-negative filamentous bacteria recognition. Figure 1 presents activated sludge samples at the beginning and at the end of the acclimation phase. It was found in this study that biomass changes during the acclimation phase could be effectively monitored, combining image analysis information and chemical parameters

    CHIMPS: the <sup>13</sup>CO/C<sup>18</sup>O (<i>J</i> = 3 → 2) Heterodyne Inner Milky Way Plane Survey

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    We present the 13CO/C18O (J = 3 → 2) Heterodyne Inner Milky Way Plane Survey (CHIMPS) which has been carried out using the Heterodyne Array Receiver Program on the 15 m James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) in Hawaii. The high-resolution spectral survey currently covers |b| ≀ 0.5° and 28° â‰Č l â‰Č 46°, with an angular resolution of 15 arcsec in 0.5 km s-1 velocity channels. The spectra have a median rms of ˜0.6 K at this resolution, and for optically thin gas at an excitation temperature of 10 K, this sensitivity corresponds to column densities of NH2 ˜ 3 × 1020 cm-2 and NH2 ˜ 4 × 1021 cm-2 for 13CO and C18O, respectively. The molecular gas that CHIMPS traces is at higher column densities and is also more optically thin than in other publicly available CO surveys due to its rarer isotopologues, and thus more representative of the three-dimensional structure of the clouds. The critical density of the J = 3 → 2 transition of CO is ≳104 cm-3 at temperatures of ≀20 K, and so the higher density gas associated with star formation is well traced. These data complement other existing Galactic plane surveys, especially the JCMT Galactic Plane Survey which has similar spatial resolution and column density sensitivity, and the Herschel infrared Galactic Plane Survey. In this paper, we discuss the observations, data reduction and characteristics of the survey, presenting integrated-emission maps for the region covered. Position-velocity diagrams allow comparison with Galactic structure models of the Milky Way, and while we find good agreement with a particular four-arm model, there are some significant deviations

    Embryonic development of pleuropodia of the cicada, Magicicada cassini

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    In many insects the first abdominal segment possesses embryonic appendages called pleuropodia. Here we show the embryogenesis of pleuropodial cells of the periodical cicada, Magicicada cassini (Fisher 1851) (Insecta, Homoptera, Cicadidae). An antibody, anti-horseradish perioxidase (HRP), that is usually neuron-specific strongly marked the pleuropodial anlagen and revealed their ectodermal origin shortly after limb bud formation. Thereafter the cells sank into the epidermis and their apical parts enlarged. A globular part protruded from the body wall. Filamentous structures were marked at the stem region and into the apical dilation. In later embryonic stages the pleuropodia degenerated. Despite the binding of anti-HRP the cells had no morphological neuronal characters and cannot be regarded as neurons. The binding indicates that glycosylated cell surface molecules contribute to the adhesion between the presumably glandular pleuropodial cells. In comparison, anti-HRP does not mark the pleuropodia of Orthoptera

    Gemcitabine and oxaliplatin (GEMOX) in gemcitabine refractory advanced pancreatic adenocarcinoma: a phase II study

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    Gemcitabine and oxaliplatin (GEMOX) are active as first-line therapy against advanced pancreatic cancer. This study aims to evaluate the activity and tolerability of this combination in patients refractory to standard gemcitabine (GEM). A total of 33 patients (median age of 57) were included with locally advanced and metastatic evaluable diseases, who had progressed during or following GEM therapy. The GEMOX regimen consisted of 1000 mg m−2 of GEM at a 100-min infusion on day 1, followed on day 2 by 100 mg m−2 of oxaliplatin at a 2-h infusion; a cycle that was given every 2 weeks. All patients received at least one cycle of GEMOX (median 5; range 1–29). Response by 31 evaluable patients was as follows: PR: 7/31(22.6%), s.d. â©Ÿ8 weeks: 11/31(35.5%), s.d. <8 weeks: 1/31(3.2%), PD: 12/31(38.7%). Median duration of response and TTP were 4.5 and 4.2 months, respectively. Median survival was 6 months (range 0.5–21). Clinical benefit response was observed in 17/31 patients (54.8%). Grade III/IV non-neurologic toxicities occurred in 12/33 patients (36.3%), and grade I, II, and III neuropathy in 17(51%), 3(9%), and 4(12%) patients, respectively. GEMOX is a well-tolerated, active regimen that may provide a benefit to patients with advanced pancreatic cancer after progression following standard gemcitabine treatment
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