180 research outputs found
Removal Efficiency of Cr6+ by Indigenous Pichia sp. Isolated from Textile Factory Effluent
Resistance of the indigenous strains P. jadinii M9 and P. anomala M10, to high Cr6+ concentrations and their ability to reduce chromium in culture medium was studied. The isolates were able to tolerate chromium concentrations up to 104 μg mL−1. Growth and reduction of Cr6+ were dependent on incubation temperature, agitation, Cr6+ concentration, and pH. Thus, in both studied strains the chromium removal was increased at 30°C with agitation. The optimum pH was different, with values of pH 3.0 and pH 7.0 in the case of P. anomala M10 and pH 7.0 using P. jadinii M9. Chromate reduction occurred both in intact cells (grown in culture medium) as well as in cell-free extracts. Chromate reductase activity could be related to cytosolic or membrane-associated proteins. The presence of a chromate reductase activity points out a possible role of an enzyme in Cr6+ reduction
Freshwater biodiversity and conservation in mediterranean climate streams of Chile.
In Chile, mediterranean climate conditions only occur in the Central Zone (ChMZ). Despite its small area, this mediterranean climate region (med-region) has been recognised as a hotspot for biodiversity. However, in contrast to the rivers of other med-regions, the rivers in the ChMZ have been studied infrequently, and knowledge of their freshwater biodiversity is scarce and fragmented. We gathered information on the freshwater biodiversity of ChMZ, and present a review of the current knowledge of the principal floral and faunal groups. Existing knowledge indicates that the ChMZ has high levels of endemism, with many primitive species being of Gondwanan origin. Although detailed information is available on most floral groups, most faunal groups remain poorly known. In addition, numerous rivers in the ChMZ remain completely unexplored. Taxonomic specialists are scarce, and the information available on freshwater biodiversity has resulted from studies with objectives that did not directly address biodiversity issues. Research funding in this med-region has a strong applied character and is not focused on the knowledge of natural systems and their biodiversity. Species conservation policies are urgently required in this highly diverse med-region, which is also the most severely impacted and most populated region of the country
Genetic and phenotypic diversity characterization of natural populations of the parasitoid Parvilucifera sinerae
Parasites exert important top-down control of their host populations. The host−parasite
system formed by Alexandrium minutum (Dinophyceae) and Parvilucifera sinerae (Perkinsozoa)
offers an opportunity to advance our knowledge of parasitism in planktonic communities. In
this study, DNA extracted from 73 clonal strains of P. sinerae, from 10 different locations along the
Atlantic and Mediterranean coasts, was used to genetically characterize this parasitoid at the species
level. All strains showed identical sequences of the small and large subunits and internal transcribed
spacer of the ribosomal RNA, as well as of the β-tubulin genes. However, the phenotypical
characterization showed variability in terms of host invasion, zoospore success, maturation time,
half-maximal infection, and infection rate. This characterization grouped the strains within 3 phenotypic
types distinguished by virulence traits. A particular virulence pattern could not be
ascribed to host-cell bloom appearance or to the location or year of parasite-strain isolation; rather,
some parasitoid strains from the same bloom significantly differed in their virulence traits. Identical
markers such as ITS and β-tubulin genes of P. sinerae strains from different geographic areas
and from different years precludes their use in assessing intra-specific diversity and could indicate
a recent dispersion of this species.Versión del editor2,393
Structural Equation Models to estimate Dynamic Effective Connectivity Networks in Resting fMRI. A comparison between individuals with Down syndrome and controls
Emerging evidence suggests that an effective or functional connectivity network does not use a static process over time but incorporates dynamic connectivity that shows changes in neuronal activity patterns. Using structural equation models (SEMs), we estimated a dynamic component of the effective network through the effects (recursive and nonrecursive) between regions of interest (ROIs), taking into account the lag 1 effect. The aim of the paper was to find the best structural equation model (SEM) to represent dynamic effective connectivity in people with Down syndrome (DS) in comparison with healthy controls. Twenty-two people with DS were registered in a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) resting-state paradigm for a period of six minutes. In addition, 22 controls, matched by age and sex, were analyzed with the same statistical approach. In both groups, we found the best global model, which included 6 ROIs within the default mode network (DMN). Connectivity patterns appeared to be different in both groups, and networks in people with DS showed more complexity and had more significant effects than networks in control participants. However, both groups had synchronous and dynamic effects associated with ROIs 3 and 4 related to the upper parietal areas in both brain hemispheres as axes of association and functional integration. It is evident that the correct classification of these groups, especially in cognitive competence, is a good initial step to propose a biomarker in network complexity studies
Bloom dynamics and life cycle strategies of two toxic dinoflagellates in a coastal upwelling system (NW Iberian Peninsula)
A study of Gymnodinium catenatum and Alexandrium minutum blooms on the Galician coast was conducted from 2005 to 2007 in order to increase knowledge of the mechanisms governing recurrent blooms of these species. Considerable differences in their bloom dynamics were observed. G. catenatum blooms occurred in autumn and winter, following the pattern previously reported in the literature: they began offshore and were advected to the Galician rias when a relaxation of the coastal upwelling occurred. On the other hand, A. minutum blooms developed inside embayments in spring and summer during the upwelling season and were associated with water stability and stratification. Both the vegetative population and the cyst distribution of A. minutum were related to less saline water from freshwater river outputs, which supports a saline-gradient relationship postulated herein for this species. Dinoflagellates may produce both long-term double-walled cysts (resting) and short-term pellicle cysts. Resting cyst deposition and distribution in sediments showed that seeding occurred during the blooms of both species. However, the relationship between the cyst distribution in the sediments in Baiona Bay and the intensity and occurrence of G. catenatum blooms, suggests that the latter are not directly related to resting cyst germination. Moreover, the results presented in the present study point to other difference between the two species, such as the detection of pellicle cysts only for A. minutum. Finally we discuss how the life cycle strategies of these two species may help to explain the different mechanisms of bloom formation reported herein.Versión del editor2,277
"English frenzy" among Spanish higher education students : neoliberal subjects in a global job market
The acquisition of English has become a necessity for both students and workers in the current global economic context. This phenomenon has resulted in an "English frenzy", a fever motivated by the language ideology of necessitation - which in turn is influenced by neoliberalism - through which English has become the key skill needed for students and workers to become employable subjects. This dissertation aims at depicting some of the ideologies of English language present in Spanish higher education students, the next generation of neoliberal subjects in the current economy. In order to do so, we first pose the state and status of English in South Korea as a comparison to our case study. English has become an extremely valuable language for South Koreans, motivated by the promise that the knowledge of the language seems to guarantee. English, therefore, becomes an index of the competence and social status of the speaker, as well as his/her success and competitiveness. Our aim is to give testimony of the embeddedness of Park's "promise of English" ideology through the analysis of six interviews with higher education students of the UAB and Universitat Pompeu Fabra. We suggest that the Spanish students' relationship with English is similar to that of the South Korean population in terms of the ideology of self-deprecation, university degrees and their belief and hopes to have access to a better job, but not as extreme in terms of their search for geographical mobility to perfect their English skills
Las anomalías precoces de la continuidad en el discurso constituyen biomarcadores predictivos de psicosis
Language is being systematized as an area of clinical research because it contains features that function as a biomarker for the prediction of psychosis. The aim of the study was to contrast two types of continuity features such as connection, iteration, and referential distance, and, on the other hand, those of verbal fluency, understood as the presence of aberrant pauses. Clinical interviews of 10 patients diagnosed with schizophrenia, 10 CHR and 10 healthy controls were analyzed. For the analysis of referentiality, sentence windows were selected and for verbal fluency, 15 minutes of speech were considered. The results suggest the presence of abnormalities in referentiality and verbal fluency among the CHR population. These similarities are found in terms of occurrence and similarity to those of the schizophrenia group, which supports our hypothesis that they are predictive biomarkers.El lenguaje se está sistematizando como área de pesquisa clínica porque contiene características que funcionan como un biomarcador para la predicción de psicosis. El objetivo del estudio fue contrastar dos tipos de características de continuidad discursiva entre personas que cursan Estados Mentales de Alto Riesgo (CHR) y personas con diagnóstico de esquizofrenia. Nos referimos, por una parte, a características referenciales, tales como conexión, iteración y distancia referencial, y, por otra, a las de fluidez verbal, entendida como la presencia de pausas aberrantes. Se analizaron entrevistas clínicas de 10 pacientes diagnosticados de esquizofrenia, 10 CHR y 10 controles sanos. Para el análisis de la referencialidad se seleccionaron ventanas de oraciones y para la fluidez verbal se consideraron 15 minutos de habla. Los resultados apuntan a que existe presencia de anomalías en referencialidad y en fluidez verbal entre la población CHR. Dichas similitudes se dan en cuanto a ocurrencia y similitud respecto a las del grupo con esquizofrenia, lo que refrenda nuestra hipótesis de que constituyen biomarcadores predictivos.
Complexity Analysis of the Default Mode Network Using Resting-State fMRI in Down Syndrome: Relationships Highlighted by A Neuropsychological Assessment
Background: Studies on complexity indicators in the field of functional connectivity derived from resting-state fMRI (rs-fMRI) in Down syndrome (DS) samples and their possible relationship with cognitive functioning variables are rare. We analyze how some complexity indicators estimated in the subareas that constitute the default mode network (DMN) might be predictors of the neuropsychological outcomes evaluating Intelligence Quotient (IQ) and cognitive performance in persons with DS. Methods: Twenty-two DS people were assessed with the Kaufman Brief Test of Intelligence (KBIT) and Frontal Assessment Battery (FAB) tests, and fMRI signals were recorded in a resting state over a six-minute period. In addition, 22 controls, matched by age and sex, were evaluated with the same rs-fMRI procedure. Results: There was a significant difference in complexity indicators between groups: the control group showed less complexity than the DS group. Moreover, the DS group showed more variance in the complexity indicator distributions than the control group. In the DS group, significant and negative relationships were found between some of the complexity indicators in some of the DMN networks and the cognitive performance scores. Conclusions: The DS group is characterized by more complex DMN networks and exhibits an inverse relationship between complexity and cognitive performance based on the negative parameter estimates
Resting-state default mode network connectivity in young individuals with Down syndrome
Background: Down syndrome (DS) is a chromosomal disorder that causes intellectual disability. Few studies have been conducted on functional connectivity using restingstate fMRI (functional magnetic resonance imaging) signals or more specifically, on the relevant structure and density of the default mode network (DMN). Although data on this issue have been reported in adult DS individuals (age: >45 years), the DMN properties in young DS individuals have not been studied. The aim of this study was to describe the density and structure of the DMN network from fMRI signals in young DS (age: <36 years). Method: A sample of 22 young people with DS between the ages of 16 and 35 (M = 25.5 and SD = 5.1) was recruited in various centers for people with intellectual disability (ID). In addition to sociodemographic data, a six-minute fMRI session was recorded with a 3. T Philips Ingenia scanner. A control group of 22 young people, matched by age and gender, was obtained from the Human Connectome Project (to compare the networks properties between groups). Results: The values of the 48 ROIs that configured the DMN were obtained, and the connectivity graphs for each subject, the average connectivity graph for each group, the clustering and degree values for each ROI, and the average functional connectivity network were estimated. Conclusions: A higher density of overactivation was identified in DS group in the ventral, sensorimotor, and visual DMN networks, although within a framework of a wide variability of connectivity patterns in comparison with the control group network. These results extend our understanding of the functional connectivity networks pattern and intrasubject variability in DS
Bloom dynamics of an exceptional red tide of the toxigenic dinoflagellate
The toxic dinoflagellate Alexandrium minutum generally proliferates in semi-enclosed sites such as estuaries, harbours and lagoons, where stratification, restricted circulation and accumulation of resting cysts set suitable conditions for its development. In the Galician Rías (NW Iberian Peninsula), its blooms follow also this pattern. They are recurrent in small, shallow estuarine bays inside the Rías, but rarely detected, and if so in minor amount, out of these areas. However, a massive proliferation of A. minutum from June to July 2018 in the Rías Baixas (Vigo and Pontevedra) changed this picture. The bloom initiated in semi-enclosed waters, as previously described for this species, but thereafter spread to the whole embayments where persisted more than one month. It generated a noticeable red tide with disperse patches that became heavily concentrated inside the port of Vigo. During that period shellfish harvesting closures and paralytic shellfish toxins in certain marine invertebrates and fish were reported for the first time in Spain. Meteorological conditions (higher than usual rains/runoff, sustained temperature increment and oscillating wind pattern promoting a series of upwelling-relaxation cycles) fostered optimal circumstances for the outbreak of A. minutum: strong vertical stratification and the alternation of retention and dispersion processes. Simulations from a particle tracking model portrayed the observed bloom development phases: onset, transport within the surface layer towards the interior parts of the Ría of Vigo, and dispersion all over the embayment. High concentrations of resting cysts were detected several months after the bloom, which may have favoured flourish of A. minutum in the following years, markedly in 2020
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