648 research outputs found
Lactobacillus fermentum (PCC®) supplementation and gastrointestinal and respiratory-tract illness symptoms: a randomised control trial in athletes
BACKGROUND Probiotics purportedly reduce symptoms of gastrointestinal and upper respiratory-tract illness by modulating commensal microflora. Preventing and reducing symptoms of respiratory and gastrointestinal illness are the primary reason that dietary supplementation with probiotics are becoming increasingly popular with healthy active individuals. There is a paucity of data regarding the effectiveness of probiotics in this cohort. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of a probiotic on faecal microbiology, self-reported illness symptoms and immunity in healthy well trained individuals. METHODS Competitive cyclists (64 males and 35 females; age 35 ± 9 and 36 ± 9 y, VO2max 56 ± 6 and 52 ± 6 ml.kg-1.min-1, mean ± SD) were randomised to either probiotic (minimum 1 × 109 Lactobacillus fermentum (PCC®) per day) or placebo treatment for 11 weeks in a double-blind, randomised, controlled trial. The outcome measures were faecal L. fermentum counts, self-reported symptoms of illness and serum cytokines. RESULTS Lactobacillus numbers increased 7.7-fold (90% confidence limits 2.1- to 28-fold) more in males on the probiotic, while there was an unclear 2.2-fold (0.2- to 18-fold) increase in females taking the probiotic. The number and duration of mild gastrointestinal symptoms were ~2-fold greater in the probiotic group. However, there was a substantial 0.7 (0.2 to 1.2) of a scale step reduction in the severity of gastrointestinal illness at the mean training load in males, which became more pronounced as training load increased. The load (duration×severity) of lower respiratory illness symptoms was less by a factor of 0.31 (99%CI; 0.07 to 0.96) in males taking the probiotic compared with placebo but increased by a factor of 2.2 (0.41 to 27) in females. Differences in use of cold and flu medication mirrored these symptoms. The observed effects on URTI had too much uncertainty for a decisive outcome. There were clear reductions in the magnitude of acute exercise-induced changes in some cytokines. CONCLUSION L. fermentum may be a useful nutritional adjunct for healthy exercising males. However, uncertainty in the effects of supplementation on URTI and on symptoms in females needs to be resolved. TRIAL REGISTRATION The trial was registered in the Australia and New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ACTRN12611000006943).The study was funded by Christian Hansen A/S, Probiomics and the Australian Institute of Sport
Phylogenetic relationships of the Wolbachia of nematodes and arthropods
Wolbachia are well known as bacterial symbionts of arthropods, where they are reproductive parasites, but have also been described from nematode hosts, where the symbiotic interaction has features of mutualism. The majority of arthropod Wolbachia belong to clades A and B, while nematode Wolbachia mostly belong to clades C and D, but these relationships have been based on analysis of a small number of genes. To investigate the evolution and relationships of Wolbachia symbionts we have sequenced over 70 kb of the genome of wOvo, a Wolbachia from the human-parasitic nematode Onchocerca volvulus, and compared the genes identified to orthologues in other sequenced Wolbachia genomes. In comparisons of conserved local synteny, we find that wBm, from the nematode Brugia malayi, and wMel, from Drosophila melanogaster, are more similar to each other than either is to wOvo. Phylogenetic analysis of the protein-coding and ribosomal RNA genes on the sequenced fragments supports reciprocal monophyly of nematode and arthropod Wolbachia. The nematode Wolbachia did not arise from within the A clade of arthropod Wolbachia, and the root of the Wolbachia clade lies between the nematode and arthropod symbionts. Using the wOvo sequence, we identified a lateral transfer event whereby segments of the Wolbachia genome were inserted into the Onchocerca nuclear genome. This event predated the separation of the human parasite O. volvulus from its cattle-parasitic sister species, O. ochengi. The long association between filarial nematodes and Wolbachia symbionts may permit more frequent genetic exchange between their genomes
Discovery of an Unbound Hyper-Velocity Star in the Milky Way Halo
We have discovered a star, SDSS J090745.0+024507, leaving the Galaxy with a
heliocentric radial velocity of +853+-12 km/s, the largest velocity ever
observed in the Milky Way halo. The star is either a hot blue horizontal branch
star or a B9 main sequence star with a heliocentric distance ~55 kpc. Corrected
for the solar reflex motion and to the local standard of rest, the Galactic
rest-frame velocity is +709 km/s.
Because its radial velocity vector points 173.8 deg from the Galactic center,
we suggest that this star is the first example of a hyper-velocity star ejected
from the Galactic center as predicted by Hills and later discussed by Yu &
Tremaine. The star has [Fe/H]~0, consistent with a Galactic center origin, and
a travel time of <80 Myr from the Galactic center, consistent with its stellar
lifetime. If the star is indeed traveling from the Galactic center, it should
have a proper motion of 0.3 mas/yr observable with GAIA. Identifying additional
hyper-velocity stars throughout the halo will constrain the production rate
history of hyper-velocity stars at the Galactic center.Comment: 4 pages, submitted to ApJ Letter
Dietary red meat aggravates dextran sulfate sodium-induced colitis in mice whereas resistant starch attenuates inflammation
Although a genetic component has been identified as a risk factor for developing inflammatory bowel disease, there is evidence that dietary factors also play a role in the development of this disease.
Aims
The aim of this study was to determine the effects of feeding a red meat diet with and without resistant starch (RS) to mice with dextran sulfate sodium (DSS)-induced colitis.
Methods
Colonic experimental colitis was induced in Balb/c mice using DSS. The severity of colitis was evaluated based on a disease activity index (based on bodyweight loss, stool consistency, rectal bleeding, and overall condition of the animal) and a histological score. Estimations were made of numbers of a range of different bacteria in the treatment pools of cecal digesta using quantitative real-time PCR.
Results
Consumption of a diet high in red meat increased DSS-induced colitis as evidenced by higher disease activity and histopathological scores. Addition of RS to the red meat diet exerted a beneficial effect in acute DSS-induced colitis. Subjective analysis of numbers of a range of bacterial targets suggest changes in the gut microbiota abundance were induced by red meat and RS treatments and these changes could contribute to the reported outcomes.
Conclusions
A dietary intake of red meat aggravates DSS-induced colitis whereas co-consumption of resistant starch reduces the severity of colitis.This work was supported by the National Health and Medical Research Council (grant ID 535079) and CSIRO Preventative Health National Research Flagship
Stability of Matter in Magnetic Fields
In the presence of arbitrarily large magnetic fields, matter composed of
electrons and nuclei was known to be unstable if or is too large.
Here we prove that matter {\it is stable\/} if and
.Comment: 10 pages, LaTe
Accumulation of promutagenic DNA adducts in the mouse distal colon after consumption of heme does not induce colonic neoplasms in the western diet model of spontaneous colorectal cancer
Author version made available in accordance with Publisher copyright policy.Scope: Red meat is considered a risk factor for colorectal cancer (CRC). Heme is considered
to promote colonic hyperproliferation and cell damage. Resistant starch (RS) is a food that
ferments in the colon with studies demonstrating protective effects against CRC. By utilizing
the western diet model of spontaneous CRC, we determined if feeding heme (as hemin chloride)
equivalent to a high red meat diet would increase colonic DNA adducts and CRC and whether
RS could abrogate such effects.
Methods and results: Four groups of mice: control, heme, RS and heme + RS were fed
diets for 1 or 18 months. Colons were analyzed for apoptosis, proliferation, DNA adducts
“8-hydroxy-2-deoxyguanosine” and “O6-methyl-2-deoxyguanosine” (O6MeG), and neoplasms.
In the short term, heme increased cell proliferation (p < 0.05). Changes from 1 to 18
months showed increased cell proliferation (p<0.01) and 8-hydroxy-2-deoxyguanosine adducts
(p < 0.05) in all groups, but only heme-fed mice showed reduced apoptosis (p < 0.01) and increasedO6MeGadducts
(p<0.01). The incidence of colon neoplasms was not different between
any interventions.
Conclusion: We identified heme to increase proliferation in the short term, inhibit apoptosis
over the long term, and increase O6MeG adducts in the colon over time although these changes
did not affect colonic neoplasms within this mouse model.Funding for this project was provided by the National Health
and Medical Research Council of Australia (Project number
535079).We would like to acknowledge the Royal Society of Edinburgh
for funding a visit for Dr. SilviaGratz fromUKto Australia
to carry out work associated with this project
Metastable Vacua in Flux Compactifications and Their Phenomenology
In the context of flux compactifications, metastable vacua with a small
positive cosmological constant are obtained by combining a sector where
supersymmetry is broken dynamically with the sector responsible for moduli
stabilization, which is known as the F-uplifting. We analyze this procedure in
a model-independent way and study phenomenological properties of the resulting
vacua.Comment: 21 pages, 19 figures; v2: matches version published in JHE
Strong interlayer coupling in van der Waals heterostructures built from single-layer chalcogenides
Semiconductor heterostructures are the fundamental platform for many
important device applications such as lasers, light-emitting diodes, solar
cells and high-electron-mobility transistors. Analogous to traditional
heterostructures, layered transition metal dichalcogenide (TMDC)
heterostructures can be designed and built by assembling individual
single-layers into functional multilayer structures, but in principle with
atomically sharp interfaces, no interdiffusion of atoms, digitally controlled
layered components and no lattice parameter constraints. Nonetheless, the
optoelectronic behavior of this new type of van der Waals (vdW) semiconductor
heterostructure is unknown at the single-layer limit. Specifically, it is
experimentally unknown whether the optical transitions will be spatially direct
or indirect in such hetero-bilayers. Here, we investigate artificial
semiconductor heterostructures built from single layer WSe2 and MoS2 building
blocks. We observe a large Stokes-like shift of ~100 meV between the
photoluminescence peak and the lowest absorption peak that is consistent with a
type II band alignment with spatially direct absorption but spatially indirect
emission. Notably, the photoluminescence intensity of this spatially indirect
transition is strong, suggesting strong interlayer coupling of charge carriers.
The coupling at the hetero-interface can be readily tuned by inserting
hexagonal BN (h-BN) dielectric layers into the vdW gap. The generic nature of
this interlayer coupling consequently provides a new degree of freedom in band
engineering and is expected to yield a new family of semiconductor
heterostructures having tunable optoelectronic properties with customized
composite layers.Comment: http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2014/04/10/1405435111.abstrac
Multihospital Outbreak of Clostridium difficile Ribotype 027 Infection: Epidemiology and Analysis of Control Measures
Objective. To report a large outbreak of Clostridium difficile infection (CDI; ribotype 027) between June 2007 and August 2008, describe infection control measures, and evaluate the impact of restricting the use of fluoroquinolones in controlling the outbreak. Design. Outbreak investigation in 3 acute care hospitals of the Northern Health and Social Care Trust in Northern Ireland. Interventions. Implementation of a series of CDI control measures that targeted high-risk antibiotic agents (ie, restriction of fluoroquinolones), infection control practices, and environmental hygiene. Results. A total of 318 cases of CDI were identified during the outbreak, which was the result of the interaction between C. difficile ribotype 027 being introduced into the affected hospitals for the first time and other predisposing risk factors (ranging from host factors to suboptimal compliance with antibiotic guidelines and infection control policies). The 30-day all-cause mortality rate was 24.5%; however, CDI was the attributable cause of death for only 2.5% of the infected patients. Time series analysis showed that restricting the use of fluoroquinolones was associated with a significant reduction in the incidence of CDI (coefficient, —0.054; lag time, 4 months; P = .003). Conclusion. These findings provide additional evidence to support the value of antimicrobial stewardship as an essential element of multifaceted interventions to control CDI outbreaks. The present CDI outbreak was ended following the implementation of an action plan improving communication, antibiotic stewardship, infection control practices, environmental hygiene, and surveillanc
Calabi-Yau Duals of Torus Orientifolds
We study a duality that relates the T^6/Z_2 orientifold with N=2 flux to
standard fluxless Calabi-Yau compactifications of type IIA string theory. Using
the duality map, we show that the Calabi-Yau manifolds that arise are abelian
surface (T^4) fibrations over P^1. We compute a variety of properties of these
threefolds, including Hodge numbers, intersection numbers, discrete isometries,
and H_1(X,Z). In addition, we show that S-duality in the orientifold
description becomes T-duality of the abelian surface fibers in the dual
Calabi-Yau description. The analysis is facilitated by the existence of an
explicit Calabi-Yau metric on an open subset of the geometry that becomes an
arbitrarily good approximation to the actual metric (at most points) in the
limit that the fiber is much smaller than the base.Comment: 39 pages; uses harvmac.tex, amssym.tex; v4: minor correction
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