2,650 research outputs found
Evolution of secondary metabolites in legumes (Fabaceae)
AbstractLegumes produce a high diversity of secondary metabolites which serve as defence compounds against herbivores and microbes, but also as signal compounds to attract pollinating and fruit-dispersing animals. As nitrogen-fixing organisms, legumes produce more nitrogen containing secondary metabolites than other plant families. Compounds with nitrogen include alkaloids and amines (quinolizidine, pyrrolizidine, indolizidine, piperidine, pyridine, pyrrolidine, simple indole, Erythrina, simple isoquinoline, and imidazole alkaloids; polyamines, phenylethylamine, tyramine, and tryptamine derivatives), non-protein amino acids (NPAA), cyanogenic glucosides, and peptides (lectins, trypsin inhibitors, antimicrobial peptides, cyclotides). Secondary metabolites without nitrogen are phenolics (phenylpropanoids, flavonoids, isoflavones, catechins, anthocyanins, tannins, lignans, coumarins and furanocoumarins), polyketides (anthraquinones), and terpenoids (especially triterpenoid, steroidal saponins, tetraterpenes). While some secondary metabolites have a wide distribution (flavonoids, triterpenes, pinitol), however, others occur in a limited number of taxa. The distributions of secondary metabolites with an irregular occurrence are mapped on a molecular phylogeny of the Fabaceae, reconstructed from a combined data set of nucleotide sequences from rbcL, matK and ITS genes. In most cases, the distribution patterns of secondary metabolites do not agree with the phylogeny of the plants producing them. In contrary, the distribution of many secondary metabolites is patchy and irregular. Thus, the use of phytochemical data to reconstruct a phylogeny of plants is often not informative and can be misleading. The patchy distribution may be due to convergent evolution, a contribution of endophytic fungi or more likely, to an early acquisition of the key genes of secondary metabolism in the evolution of land plants among others by horizontal gene transfer from bacteria. Thus it would be a matter of gene regulation whether these genes are active in some but not all taxa
Mode of action and toxicology of plant toxins and poisonous plants
Abstract Plants have evolved the strategy to produce bioactive natural products as a means of defence against herbivores and microbes. Some plants produce toxins that can severely damage or kill a herbivore. The molecular mode of action of neurotoxins, cytotoxins, metabolic poisons, mutagens and toxins that affect skin and mucosal tissues are summarised and discussed. Important poisonous plants of Europe, their toxins and toxicology are tabulated, as this group of plants can provide lead compounds for the development of natural pesticides against insects, slugs or rodents
Effects of a Novel Dental Gel on Plaque and Gingivitis: A Comparative Study.
ObjectivesThe goal of this prospective, randomized, controlled, double-blinded study was to evaluate the effects of a novel dental gel on plaque and gingival health. The dental gel was designed to (1) break up and prevent re-accumulation of microbial biofilm, and (2) inhibit metal mediated inflammation.Materials and methodsTwenty-five subjects with moderate gingival inflammation (Löe and Silness Gingival Index ≥2) and pocket depths <4 were randomly assigned to brush twice daily for 21 days with the test or the control dental gel. On Days 0, 7, 14 and 21, plaque levels (Quigley-Hein, Turesky Modification Plaque Index), gingival inflammation (Löe and Silness Gingival Index) and gingival bleeding (modified Sulcus Bleeding Index) were determined by one blinded, investigator using a pressure sensitive probe.ResultsAfter 3 weeks, all 3 clinical indices were significantly improved in both groups (P<0.05) and significantly lower in the test group (P<0.05).ConclusionThe novel dental gel formulation was provided effective plaque control and reduced gingival inflammation.Clinical relevanceA novel dentifrice formulation may be an effective tool for plaque removal and maintaining gingival health
On the complex structure of Yang-Mills theory
We consider the coupled set of spectral Dyson-Schwinger equations in
Yang-Mills theory for ghost and gluon propagators, which gives us access to the
ghost and gluon spectral functions. The set-up is used for a systematic
analytic evaluation of the constraints on generalised spectral representations
in Yang-Mills theory that are most relevant for informed spectral
reconstructions. We also provide numerical results for the coupled set of
spectral functions for a large range of potential mass gaps of the gluon, and
discuss the limitations and extensions of the present work.Comment: 30 pages, 16 figure
On the quark spectral function in QCD
We calculate the spectral function of light quark flavours in 2+1 flavour
vacuum QCD in the isospin-symmetric approximation. We employ spectral
Dyson-Schwinger equations and compute the non-perturbative quark propagator
directly in real-time, using recent spectral reconstruction results from
Gaussian process regression of gluon propagator data in 2+1 flavour lattice
QCD. Our results feature a pole-like peak structure at time-like momenta larger
than the propagator's gapping scale as well as a negative scattering continuum,
which we exploit assuming an analytic pole-tail split during the iterative
solution. The computation is augmented with a general discussion of the impact
of the quark-gluon vertex and the gluon propagator on the analytic structure of
the quark propagator. In particular, we investigate under which conditions the
quark propagator shows unphysical complex poles. Our results offer a wide range
of applications, encompassing the ab-initio calculation of transport as well as
resonance properties in QCD.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figure
Het meten van kennisdoorwerking : meten van de doorwerking van onderzoekskennis in de biologische landbouw : onderzoeksproject "dierenwelzijn in de biologische melkveehouderij"
Het project “Kennisbenutting in de Biologische Landbouw” ontwikkelt een methode voor het meten van de doorwerking van onderzoekskennis in de biologische praktijk. Tegelijk met het ontwikkelen wordt de methode toegepast in verschillende pilots. Zo wordt de aanpak ontwikkeld, toegepast en getest. Deze pilot gaat over onderzoek naar dierenwelzijn in de biologische melkveehouderij (koeien). Het betreft hier een groep van projecten die in een periode van ongeveer vier jaar zijn uitgevoerd. Welzijn van dieren heeft uiteenlopende aspecten die vaak in afzonderlijke projecten zijn onderzocht. In de praktijk van het boerenbedrijf moet de ondernemer een keuze maken hoe hij de diverse welzijnsaspecten met elkaar combineert om tot een aanpak voor zijn eigen bedrijf te komen. De complexiteit van deze casus is dan ook de vertaling van een brede projectenportfolio naar meetbare benutting in de bedrijfspraktijk
BOLD Noise Assumptions in fMRI
This paper discusses the assumption of Gaussian noise in the
blood-oxygenation-dependent (BOLD) contrast for functional MRI
(fMRI). In principle, magnitudes in MRI images follow a Rice
distribution. We start by reviewing differences between Rician and
Gaussian noise. An analytic expression is derived for the null
(resting-state) distribution of the difference between two Rician
distributed images. This distribution is shown to be symmetric,
and an exact expression for its standard deviation is derived.
This distribution can be well approximated by a Gaussian, with
very high precision for high SNR, and high precision for lower
SNR. Tests on simulated and real MR images show that subtracting
the time-series mean in fMRI yields asymmetrically distributed
temporal noise. Subtracting a resting-state time series from the
first results in symmetric and nearly Gaussian noise. This has
important consequences for fMRI analyses using standard
statistical tests
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