10 research outputs found

    Patients with chronic fatigue syndrome performed worse than controls in a controlled repeated exercise study despite a normal oxidative phosphorylation capacity

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    Background: The aim of this study was to investigate the possibility that a decreased mitochondrial ATP synthesis causes muscular and mental fatigue and plays a role in the pathophysiology of the chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS/ME).Methods: Female patients (n = 15) and controls (n = 15) performed a cardiopulmonary exercise test (CPET) by cycling at a continuously increased work rate till maximal exertion. The CPET was repeated 24 h later. Before the tests, blood was taken for the isolation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), which were processed in a special way to preserve their oxidative phosphorylation, which was tested later in the presence of ADP and phosphate in permeabilized cells with glutamate, malate and malonate plus or minus the complex I inhibitor rotenone, and succinate with rotenone plus or minus the complex II inhibitor malonate in order to measure the ATP production via Complex I and II, respectively. Plasma CK was determined as a surrogate measure of a decreased oxidative phosphorylation in muscle, since the previous finding that in a group of patients with external ophthalmoplegia the oxygen consumption by isolated muscle mitochondria correlated negatively with plasma creatine kinase, 24 h after exercise.Results: At both exercise tests the patients reached the anaerobic threshold and the maximal exercise at a much lower oxygen consumption than the controls and this worsened in the second test. This implies an increase of lactate, the product of anaerobic glycolysis, and a decrease of the mitochondrial ATP production in the patients. In the past this was also found in patients with defects in the mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation. However the oxidative phosphorylation in PBMC was similar in CFS/ME patients and controls. The plasma creatine kinase levels before and 24 h after exercise were low in patients and controls, suggesting normality of the muscular mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation.Conclusion: The decrease in mitochondrial ATP synthesis in the CFS/ME patients is not caused by a defect in the enzyme complexes catalyzing oxidative phosphorylation, but in another factor

    Previsual symptoms of Xylella fastidiosa infection revealed in spectral plant-trait alterations

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    Plant pathogens cause significant losses to agricultural yields, and increasingly threaten food security, ecosystem integrity, and societies in general. Xylella fastidiosa (Xf) is one of the most dangerous plant bacteria worldwide, causing several diseases with profound impacts on agriculture and the environment. Primarily occurring in the Americas, its recent discovery in Asia and Europe demonstrates a dramatically broadened geographic range. The Xf pathogen has thus re-emerged as a global threat, with its poorly contained expansion in Europe creating a socio-economic, cultural, and political disaster. Xf represents a threat of global proportion because it can infect over 350 plant species worldwide, and the early detection of Xf has been identified as a critical need for its eradication. Here, we show that changes in plant functional traits retrieved from airborne imaging spectroscopy and thermography reveal Xf infection in trees before symptoms are visible. We obtained accuracies of disease detection exceeding 80% when high-resolution solar-induced fluorescence quantified by 3D simulations and thermal-based stress indicators were coupled with photosynthetic traits sensitive to rapid pigment dynamics and degradation. Moreover, we found that the visually asymptomatic trees originally scored as affected via spectral plant trait alterations (presumed false positives) developed Xf symptoms four months later at almost double the rate of the asymptomatic trees classified as not affected by remote sensing. We demonstrate that spectral plant trait alterations caused by Xf infection are detectable at the landscape scale before symptoms are visible, a critical requirement to help eradicate some of the most devastating plant diseases worldwide.JRC.D.1-Bio-econom

    Dilated cardiomyopathy and mild myopathic syndrome in a 40-year-old man

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    New Learning and the Classification of Learning Environments in Secondary Education

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    Contains fulltext : 64692.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)This article presents a new classification scheme for learning environments in secondary education, based on a review of recent literature on new learning and a review of existing classification schemes. This new classification scheme emphasizes new forms of learning and is organized around three main aspects of learning environments that may be assumed to influence such learning: (a) learning goals, (b) the division of teacher and learner roles, and (c) the roles of the learners in relation to each other. It is then argued that teachers might use this classification scheme to design and evaluate their own learning environments. In addition, the scheme provides a clear framework for a next generation of process–product research

    Entry of Mycobacterium tuberculosis into Mononuclear Phagocytes

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