263 research outputs found
Interaction between ASIP and MC1R in Black and Brown Alpaca
Animal fibres from South American camelids and other fibre or wool bearing species provide important products for use by the human population. The contemporary context includes the competition with petrocarbon-based artificial fibres and concern about excessive persistence of these in the natural environment. Animal fibres present highly valuable characteristics for sustainable production and processing as they are both natural and renewable. On the other hand, their use is recognised to depend on availability of appropriate quality and quantity, the production of which is underpinned by a range of sciences and processes which support development to meet market requirements. This collection of papers combines international experience from South and North America, China and Europe. The focus lies on domestic South American camelids (alpacas, llamas) and also includes research on sheep and goats. It considers latest advances in sustainable development under climate change, breeding and genetics, reproduction and pathology, nutrition, meat and fibre production and fibre metrology. Publication of this book is supported by the Animal Fibre Working Group of the European Federation of Animal Science (EAAP). ‘Advances in Fibre Production Science in South American Camelids and other Fibre Animals’ addresses issues of importance to scientists and animal breeders, textile processors and manufacturers, specialised governmental policy makers and students studying veterinary, animal and applied biological sciences
Interaction of ASP and MC1R in black and brown alpaca.
Alpaca coat colour is a relevant feature both for breeders than textile industries. Agouti (ASP) and Extension (MC1R) are genes known to be involved in coat colour through pigmentation pathways by regulating type, amount and distribution of eumelanin and pheomelanin pigments in melanocytes. In alpaca genotype of ASP and MC1R genes have already been analysed distinctly, but their epistatic interaction have not been evaluated. In this study have been assessed their segregation more insights on black and brown phenotypes. In several mammals MC1R is epistatic over ASP, id est recessive allele in Agouti (a) and dominant allele in Extension locus (E) produces black phenotype. That is confirmed in alpaca where black coat has aH/aΔ57 and aH/ahT genotype on agouti and E/E or E/e genotype on MC1R locus. Otherwise ASP and MC1R in Brown/Red Brown, have a dominant profile at least in one allele as A/A, A/ahT on Agouti and E/e on Extension. Genotype and phenotype comparison clears that receptor and ligand are in concordance to produce pheomelanin and eumelanin in alpaca. Segregation analysis of 12 alpaca families genotyped by coat color, confirm the dominance of brown over black and could be helpful for coat colour classification and genotyping
Letter to Editor: Carpal tunnel syndrome due to an atypical deep soft tissue leiomyoma: The risk of misdiagnosis and mismanagement
A response to Chalidis et al: Carpal tunnel syndrome due to an atypical deep soft tissue leiomyoma: The risk of misdiagnosis and mismanagement. World J Surg Oncol 2007, 5:92
Relationship between spatial ability, visuospatial working memory and self-assessed spatial orientation ability: a study in older adults
This paper describes some novel spatial tasks and questionnaires designed to assess spatial and orientation abilities. The new tasks and questionnaires were administered to a sample of 90 older adults (41 males, age range 57–90), along with some other tests of spatial ability (Minnesota Paper Form Board, Mental Rotations Test, and Embedded Figures Test) and tests of visuospatial working memory (Corsi’s Block Test and Visual Pattern Test). The internal reliability of the new tasks and questionnaires was analyzed, as well as their relationship with the spatial and working memory tests. The results showed that the new spatial tasks are reliable, correlate with working memory and spatial ability tests and, compared with the latters, show stronger correlations with the self-report questionnaires referring to orientation abilities. A model was also tested (with reference to Allen et al. in Intelligence 22:327–355, 1996) in which the new tasks were assumed to relate to spatial ability and predict orientation abilities as assessed by the self-report measures
Fatty acid composition and volatile compounds of caviar from farmed white sturgeon (Acipenser transmontanus)
Caviars are the salt-cured and preserved eggs of many sturgeon species that have been separated from the supporting connective tissue. The most famous and valuable caviars are produced from harvested sturgeons in the area of Caspian Sea, namely Beluga (Huso huso), Osetra (Acipenser gueldenstaedtii) and Sevruga caviar (Acipenser stellatus). Over the past few decades, owing to the
strong demand for sturgeon caviar, the over-exploitation of natural stocks has led to a dramatic decreases of the supplies. To protect these endangered species, in 1997 the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) decided to limit trade of caviar by listing all sturgeon species on the Annex II of the convention.
The lack of supply and the continuous demand for this product have increased the feasibility of caviar production from aquaculture. There are high quality and environmentally friendly alternatives
available such as caviar produced from farmed white sturgeon (Acipenser transmontanus) in Italy, Siberian sturgeon (Acipenser baerii) in France and Germany, Adriatic sturgeon (Acipenser naccarii)
in Italy and Spain. Among pure species, Acipenser stellatus, the beluga and the paddlefish(Polyodon spathula) are reared mainly in extensive or semi-intensive farming on a limited scale.
The successful of producing caviar from farmed sturgeon has arisen several investigations aiming to produce the chemical characterization of the product. Biochemical assays together with sensory
studies have been carried out with the purpose to determine whether compositional and sensory differences might be observed between caviar from farmed and wild sturgeon.
The study was designed to characterize caviar from farmed white sturgeons (Acipenser
transmontanus) subjected to different dietary treatments before eggs collection. Fifty caviar samples from fifty farmed sturgeons have been analyzed for proximate composition, fatty acid and volatile
compounds
Bone refilling in cortical bone multicellular units: Insights into tetracycline double labelling from a computational model
Bone remodelling is carried out by `bone multicellular units' (BMUs) in which
active osteoclasts and active osteoblasts are spatially and temporally coupled.
The refilling of new bone by osteoblasts towards the back of the BMU occurs at
a rate that depends both on the number of osteoblasts and on their secretory
activity. In cortical bone, a linear phenomenological relationship between
matrix apposition rate (MAR) and BMU cavity radius is found experimentally. How
this relationship emerges from the combination of complex, nonlinear
regulations of osteoblast number and secretory activity is unknown.
Here, we extend our previous mathematical model of cell development within a
single BMU to investigate how osteoblast number and osteoblast secretory
activity vary along the BMU's closing cone. MARs predicted by the model are
compared with data from tetracycline double labelling experiments. We find that
the linear phenomenological relationship observed in these experiments between
MAR and BMU cavity radius holds for most of the refilling phase simulated by
our model, but not near the start and end of refilling. This suggests that at a
particular bone site undergoing remodelling, bone formation starts and ends
rapidly. Our model also suggests that part of the observed cross-sectional
variability in tetracycline data may be due to different bone sites being
refilled by BMUs at different stages of their lifetime. The different stages of
a BMU's lifetime depend on whether the cell populations within the BMU are
still developing or have reached a quasi-steady state while travelling through
bone. We find that due to their longer lifespan, active osteoblasts reach a
quasi-steady distribution more slowly than active osteoclasts. We suggest that
this fact may locally enlarge the Haversian canal diameter (due to a local lack
of osteoblasts compared to osteoclasts) near the BMU's point of origin.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables. V3: minor changes: added 2 paragraphs
(BMU cavity in Section 2 and Model Robustness in Section 4), references
[52,54
Characterization of Early and Late Damage in a Mouse Model of Pelvic Radiation Disease
Pelvic radiation disease (PRD), a frequent side effect in patients with abdominal/pelvic cancers treated with radiotherapy, remains an unmet medical need. Currently available preclinical models have limited applications for the investigation of PRD pathogenesis and possible therapeutic strategies. In order to select the most effective irradiation protocol for PRD induction in mice, we evaluated the efficacy of three different locally and fractionated X-ray exposures. Using the selected protocol (10 Gy/day x 4 days), we assessed PRD through tissue (number and length of colon crypts) and molecular (expression of genes involved in oxidative stress, cell damage, inflammation, and stem cell markers) analyses at short (3 h or 3 days after X-ray) and long (38 days after X-rays) post-irradiation times. The results show that a primary damage response in term of apoptosis, inflammation, and surrogate markers of oxidative stress was found, thus determining a consequent impairment of cell crypts differentiation and proliferation as well as a local inflammation and a bacterial translocation to mesenteric lymph nodes after several weeks post-irradiation. Changes were also found in microbiota composition, particularly in the relative abundance of dominant phyla, related families, and in alpha diversity indices, as an indication of dysbiotic conditions induced by irradiation. Fecal markers of intestinal inflammation, measured during the experimental timeline, identified lactoferrin, along with elastase, as useful non-invasive tools to monitor disease progression. Thus, our preclinical model may be useful to develop new therapeutic strategies for PRD treatment
Integrated quantitative PIXE analysis and EDX spectroscopy using a laser-driven particle source
Among the existing elemental characterization techniques, Particle Induced
X-ray Emission (PIXE) and Energy Dispersive X-ray (EDX) spectroscopy are two of
the most widely used in different scientific and technological fields. Here we
present the first quantitative laser-driven PIXE and laser-driven EDX
experimental investigation performed at the Centro de L\'aseres Pulsados in
Salamanca. Thanks to their potential for compactness and portability,
laser-driven particle sources are very appealing for materials science
applications, especially for materials analysis techniques. We demonstrate the
possibility to exploit the X-ray signal produced by the co-irradiation with
both electrons and protons to identify the elements in the sample. We show
that, using the proton beam only, we can successfully obtain quantitative
information about the sample structure through laser-driven PIXE analysis.
These results pave the way towards the development of a compact and
multi-functional apparatus for the elemental analysis of materials based on a
laser-driven particle source.Comment: This project has received funding from the European Research Council
(ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation
programme (ENSURE grant agreement No. 647554). Submitted to Science Advances
on 20th May 2
Design of a modular Autonomous Underwater Vehicle for archaeological investigations
MARTA (MARine Tool for Archaeology) is a modular AUV (Autonomous Underwater Vehicle) designed and developed by the University of Florence in the framework of the ARROWS (ARchaeological RObot systems for the World's Seas) FP7 European project. The ARROWS project challenge is to provide the underwater archaeologists with technological tools for cost affordable campaigns: i.e. ARROWS adapts and develops low cost AUV technologies to significantly reduce the cost of archaeological operations, covering the full extent of an archaeological campaign (underwater mapping, diagnosis and cleaning tasks). The tools and methodologies developed within ARROWS comply with the "Annex" of the 2001 UNESCO Convention for the protection of Underwater Cultural Heritage (UCH). The system effectiveness and MARTA performance will be demonstrated in two scenarios, different as regards the environment and the historical context, the Mediterranean Sea (Egadi Islands) and the Baltic Sea
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