905 research outputs found
Swelling of cell walls in mature sweet cherry fruit : factors and mechanisms
Main conclusion: Swelling of sweet cherry cell walls is a physical process counterbalanced by turgor. Cell turgor prevents swelling in intact cells, whereas loss of turgor allows cell walls to swell. Abstract: Swelling of epidermal cell walls precedes skin failure in sweet cherry (Prunus avium) cracking. Swollen cell walls lead to diminished cell:cell adhesions. We identify the mechanism of cell wall swelling. Swelling was quantified microscopically on epidermal sections following freeze/thaw treatment or by determining swelling pressure or swelling capacity of cell wall extracts. Releasing turgor by a freeze/thaw treatment increased cell wall thickness 1.6-fold within 2 h. Pressurizing cell wall extracts at > 12 kPa prevented swelling in water, while releasing the pressure increased swelling. The effect was fully reversible. Across cultivars, cell wall thickness before and after turgor release in two subsequent seasons was significantly correlated (before release of turgor: r = 0.71**, n = 14; after release of turgor: r = 0.73**, n = 14) as was the swelling of cell walls upon turgor release (r = 0.71**, n = 14). Close relationships were also identified for cell wall thickness of fruit of the same cultivars grown in the greenhouse and the field (before release of turgor: r = 0.60, n = 10; after release of turgor: r = 0.78**, n = 10). Release of turgor by heating, plasmolysis, incubation in solvents or surfactants resulted in similar swelling (range 2.0â3.1 ”m). Cell wall swelling increased from 1.4 to 3.0 ”m as pH increased from pH 2.0 to 5.0 but remained nearly constant between pH 5.0 and 8.0. Increasing ethanol concentration decreased swelling. Swelling of sweet cherry cell walls is a physical process counterbalanced by turgor. © 2020, The Author(s)
Calcium decreases cell wall swelling in sweet cherry fruit
Swelling of epidermal cell walls decreases cell-to-cell adhesion and increases cracking susceptibility in sweet cherry. Ca is suggested to decrease cracking susceptibility by crosslinking of cell wall components and, possibly, by decreasing swelling. The objective is to test this hypothesis. The effect of Ca on swelling of anticlinal epidermal cell walls was quantified microscopically in vivo using excised skin sections and in vitro using extracted cell walls. After removal of turgor, cell wall thickness increased. Incubation in CaCl2 decreased cell wall thickness up to 3 mM CaCl2. At higher concentrations thickness remained constant. Decreased cell wall swelling in vivo also occurred with other salts of divalent and trivalent cations, but not with those of monovalent cations. Decreased swelling was due to the Ca cation, the anions had no effect. Ca also decreased swelling of cell walls that were already swollen. CaCl2 also decreased swelling of extracted cell walls in vitro. There was no effect on swelling pressure. The effect on swelling increased as the CaCl2 concentration increased. Chlorides of divalent and trivalent cations, but not those of monovalent cations decreased swelling in vitro. The decrease in swelling among the divalent cations was linearly related to the radius of the cation. The results indicate that Ca decreases cracking susceptibility by decreasing swelling
What Drives a Successful Adoption of E-Learning Modules for Sustainable Management? An Empirical Investigation of Influencing Factors and Challenges
In order to have corporations contributing to the environmental and social challenges of the coming years, employees have to develop competences for sustainable management. These competences are necessary to reduce environmental impacts of production or to increase efficiency in terms of energy consumption. In this context, E-Learning modules can offer learner-centered scenarios in which employees can simulate the consequences of their decisions and thereby develop competences for sustainable management. However, such modules focusing on sustainable management have not been used widely. Therefore, the aim of this paper is to investigate the determinants of a successful adoption and the challenges facing this adoption process of E-Learning modules for sustainable management. To achieve this aim, we conducted a literature review and a qualitative interview study. Thereby, we identified eleven general and eight specific influencing factors as well as twelve related challenges that affect the adoption of E-Learning modules for sustainable management
Jura-PrÀdikat hat eine stark positive Signalwirkung auf das Einkommen
Höhere Bildung wird gemeinhin mit einem höheren Einkommen assoziiert. WĂ€hrend sich dieser Effekt fĂŒr zusĂ€tzliche Schul- und Ausbildungsjahre leicht nachweisen lĂ€sst, ist die Frage, ob auch bessere Studienleistungen mit einem höheren Verdienst verbunden sind, nicht so einfach zu beantworten. Dieser Wochenbericht untersucht den Effekt des PrĂ€dikats im ersten Staatsexamen, das Studierende der Rechtswissenschaften erlangen können, auf das Einkommen. Die Analyse zeigt einen deutlichen, statistisch nachweisbaren positiven Effekt schon relativ frĂŒh in der Erwerbsbiografie der Juristinnen und Juristen. Interessanterweise bleibt der Effekt auch dann bedeutsam, wenn in die statistische Analyse Kontrollvariablen wie die Abiturnote und die elterlichen Berufe einflieĂen. Sechs Jahre nach dem ersten Staatsexamen betrĂ€gt der Einkommenszuwachs allein durch das PrĂ€dikat 13 bis 14 Prozent. Hier zeigt sich die besondere Signalwirkung des PrĂ€dikatsexamens. Dies wird insbesondere dadurch deutlich, dass sich bei anderen Berufsgruppen fĂŒr gute Studienleistungen keine besonderen Einkommenseffekte nachweisen lassen. GrundsĂ€tzlich ist ein Zusammenhang zwischen einem PrĂ€dikat und einem höheren Einkommen zu erwarten. Ăberraschend ist aber die GröĂenordnung des Effekts.Higher education is usually associated with a higher income. While this effect can be verified by examining the extent and duration of an individual's education and training, the question of whether better academic performance is also linked with higher income is more difficult to answer. This weekly report examines whether law students achieve honors in their first state examination affects their future income. The analysis shows a clear, statistically detectable positive effect relatively early in the lawyers' career profiles. Interestingly, the effect remains significant even when control variables such as school grades and parental occupations are taken into account. Six years after the first state examination, the income growth connected solely to the achievement of honors amounted to 13 to 14 percent. The special signal effect of graduating with honors is apparent in the field of law: the fact that good academic performance does not have a demonstrable effect on income in other professions is evidence of this. Essentially, a connection between graduating with honors and a higher income is to be expected; what is surprising is the magnitude of this relationship
Hydropower Operation in a Changing Market Environment â A Swiss Case Study
Hydropower (HP) is expected to play an important role in the European energy transition by providing back-up and storage capacity as well as flexibility for intermittent renewable energies. However, due to low electricity market prices the profitability of HP decreased in recent years. In this paper, we analyze historic revenue potentials and future market prospects for HP taking into account different development paths. Using a short-term HP operation model to capture market opportunities as well as technical and natural constraints of HP plants, we model three representative Swiss HP plants. The results indicate that in the last years, balancing markets could have provided significant additional revenues for HP plants. However, accounting for uncertainties and market characteristics, the potential of balancing markets is reduced but cross-market optimization is still beneficial. Looking into the future, market price prospects for the coming decade are low to modest. Global fuel markets and the European Union Emissions Trading System (ETS) will be the main drivers for decisions for Swiss HP. The revenue potential from balancing markets will be reduced significantly in the future if all Swiss HP operators aim for balancing. While optimized operation across markets helps Swiss HP to increase its revenues, it is limited in scale
Decreased deposition and increased swelling of cell walls contribute to increased cracking susceptibility of developing sweet cherry fruit
Main conclusion: During fruit development, cell wall deposition rate decreases and cell wall swelling increases. The cell wall swelling pressure is very low relative to the fruitâs highly negative osmotic potential. Abstract: Rain cracking of sweet cherry fruit is preceded by the swelling of the cell walls. Cell wall swelling decreases both the cell: cell adhesion and the cell wall fracture force. Rain cracking susceptibility increases during fruit development. The objectives were to relate developmental changes in cell wall swelling to compositional changes taking place in the cell wall. During fruit development, total mass of cell wall, of pectins and of hemicelluloses increases, but total mass of cellulose remains constant. The mass of these cell wall fractions increases at a lower rate than the fruit fresh massâparticularly during stage II and early stage III. During stage III, on a whole-fruit basis, the HCl-soluble pectin fraction, followed by the water-soluble pectin fraction, the NaOH-soluble pectin fraction and the oxalate-soluble pectin fraction all increase. At maturity, just the HCl-soluble pectin decreases. Cell wall swelling increases during stages I and II of fruit development, with little change thereafter. This was indexed by light microscopy of skin sections following turgor release, and by determinations of the swelling capacity, water holding capacity and water retention capacity. The increase in cell wall swelling during development was due primarily to increases in NaOH-soluble pectins. The in vitro swelling of cell wall extracts depends on the applied pressure. The swelling pressure of the alcohol-insoluble residue is low throughout development and surprisingly similar across different cell wall fractions. Thus, swelling pressure does not contribute significantly to fruit water potential. © 2020, The Author(s)
Crack initiation and propagation in sweet cherry skin: A simple chain reaction causes the crack to ârunâ
Rain cracking severely affects the commercial production of many fleshy-fruit species, including of sweet cherries. The objectives were to investigate how the gaping macroscopic cracks (macrocracks) of a rain-cracked fruit can develop from microscopic cracks in the cuticle (microcracks). Incubating fruit in deionized water is well known to cause significant macrocracking. We found that after a lag phase of 2 h, the numbers and lengths of macrocracks increased. Macrocrack number approached an asymptote at 12 h, whereas macrocrack length continued to increase. The rate of macrocrack propagation (extension at the crack tip) was initially 10.8 mm h-1 but then decreased to a near-constant 0.5 mm h-1. Light microscopy revealed three characteristic zones along a developing macrocrack. In zone I (ahead of the crack), the cuticle was intact, the epidermal cells were unbroken and their cell walls were thin. In zone II, the cuticle was fractured, the first epidermal cells died and their cell walls began to thicken (swell). In zone III, most epidermal cells had died, their cell walls were swollen and cell:cell separation began along the middle lamellae. The thickness of the anticlinal epidermal cell walls and the percentage of intact living cells along a crack were closely and negatively related. Cracks were stained by calcofluor white, but there was no binding of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) specific for hemicelluloses (LM11, LM21, LM25). Strong binding was obtained with the anti-homogalacturonan mAb (LM19), indicating the presence of unesterified homogalacturonans on the crack surface. We conclude that macrocrack propagation is related to cell death and to cell wall swelling. Cell wall swelling weakens the cell:cell adhesion between neighbouring epidermal cells, which separate along their middle lamellae. The skin macrocrack propagates like a ârunâ in a fine, knitted fabric
The repeated bout effect of traditional resistance exercises on running performance across three bouts
Purpose This study investigated the repeated bout effect of three typical lower-body resistance training (RT) sessions on maximal and sub-maximal effort running performance. Methods Twelve resistance-untrained men (age 24±4 years; height 1.81±0.10 m; body mass 79.3±10.9 kg; VO2peak 48.2±6.5 mLâkg-1âmin-1; six-repetition maximum squat 71.7±12.2kg) undertook three bouts of RT sessions at six-repetition maximum. Counter-movement-jump (CMJ), lower-body ROM, muscle soreness and creatine kinase (CK) were examined prior to (T0), immediately-post (T1), 24 (T24) and 48 (T48) h post each RT bout. Sub-maximal (i.e. below anaerobic threshold [AT]) and maximal (i.e. above AT) running performance were also conducted at T24 and T48. Results Most indirect muscle damage markers (i.e., CMJ, ROM and muscle soreness) and sub-maximal running performance were significantly improved (P 0.05). Conclusions The initial bout induced the greatest change in CK, however at least two bouts were required to produce protective effects on other indirect muscle damage markers and sub-maximal running performance measures. This suggests that sub-maximal running sessions should be avoided for at least 48 hours post RT until the third bout, although a greater recovery period may be required for maximal running sessions
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