400 research outputs found
Effect of chlorpyrifos on survival, growth and reproductive performance of Eudrilus eugeniae (Kinberg)
The present laboratory study was conducted to determine the effect of chlorpyrifos on growth and reproduction of the earthworm Eudrilus eugeniae. Chlorpyrifos was mixed with soil substrate at four different dose formulations i.e. D1 (2.5ml/1000ml); D2 (5.0ml/1000ml); D3 (7.5ml/1000ml); D4 (10.0ml/1000ml). Soil substrate withoutchlorpyrifos served as control. Growth and survival rates were determined till four weeks and effects on reproduction are assessed after eight weeks of exposure. A non significant decrease (p > 0.05) was observed in body weight of earthworms which was recorded on day 1, 2, 3, 7, 10 and 14. A dose dependent effect on cocoon production and survivability of hatchlings was observed in all treated groups. The effect of chlorpyrifos on life cycle of earthworm was more in dose D3 (54.25 days) when compared to control (28.75 days) while no worm survived in D4 dose. The present study revealed that chlorpyrifos at high dose levels(7.5ml/1000ml and 10.0ml/1000ml) affect the reproduction and growth of earthworms, primary bioindicators of soil fauna, whereas the base dose (5.0ml/1000ml) may be considered as safe for soil applications
Evaluation of the groundnut model PNUTGRO for crop response to water availability, sowing dates, and seasons
Field experiments were conducted during the 1987, 1991 and 1992 rainy seasons at Patancheru (latitude 17°32′N; longitude 78°16′E; elevation 545 m), Andhra Pradesh, India, to collect data to test and validate the hedgerow version of the groundnut model PNUTGRO for predicting phenological development, light interception, canopy growth, dry matter production, pod and seed yields of groundnut (Arachis hypogaea L.) as influenced by row spacing and plant population. The model was calibrated using the crop growth and phenology data of groundnut (cv. Robut 33-1) obtained from the 1987 and 1991 rainy season experiments. In these experiments groundnut was grown at plant populations ranging from 5 to 45 plants/m2 with and without irrigation. Changes were made in the cultivar-specific coefficients related to the light penetration into the crop canopy and dry matter production. The model was validated against independent data obtained from a 1992 rainy season experiment. In 1992, groundnut was grown at plant populations ranging from 10 to 40 plants/m2 and at row spacings of 20, 30 and 60 cm. The model predicted the occurrence of vegetative and reproductive stages, canopy development, total dry matter production and its partitioning to pods and seed accurately. Maximum leaf area index observed during the season was significantly correlated with simulated values (r2 = 0.95). In spite of some incidence of diseases and pests, the correlation between simulated and observed pod yield was significant (r2 = 0.61). It is concluded from this study that the hedgerow version of the groundnut model PNUTGRO can be used to quantify groundnut growth and yields as influenced by plant population and row spacing
Enhanced insulin sensitivity associated with provision of mono and polyunsaturated fatty acids in skeletal muscle cells involves counter modulation of PP2A
International audienceAims/Hypothesis: Reduced skeletal muscle insulin sensitivity is a feature associated with sustained exposure to excess saturated fatty acids (SFA), whereas mono and polyunsaturated fatty acids (MUFA and PUFA) not only improve insulin sensitivity but blunt SFA-induced insulin resistance. The mechanisms by which MUFAs and PUFAs institute these favourable changes remain unclear, but may involve stimulating insulin signalling by counter-modulation/repression of protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A). This study investigated the effects of oleic acid (OA; a MUFA), linoleic acid (LOA; a PUFA) and palmitate (PA; a SFA) in cultured myotubes and determined whether changes in insulin signalling can be attributed to PP2A regulation. Principal Findings: We treated cultured skeletal myotubes with unsaturated and saturated fatty acids and evaluated insulin signalling, phosphorylation and methylation status of the catalytic subunit of PP2A. Unlike PA, sustained incubation of rat or human myotubes with OA or LOA significantly enhanced Akt-and ERK1/2-directed insulin signalling. This was not due to heightened upstream IRS1 or PI3K signalling nor to changes in expression of proteins involved in proximal insulin signalling, but was associated with reduced dephosphorylation/inactivation of Akt and ERK1/2. Consistent with this, PA reduced PP2Ac demethylation and tyrosine 307 phosphorylation-events associated with PP2A activation. In contrast, OA and LOA strongly opposed these PA-induced changes in PP2Ac thus exerting a repressive effect on PP2A.Conclusions/Interpretation: Beneficial gains in insulin sensitivity and the ability of unsaturated fatty acids to oppose palmitate-induced insulin resistance in muscle cells may partly be accounted for by counter-modulation of PP2A
Quantum circuits with many photons on a programmable nanophotonic chip
Growing interest in quantum computing for practical applications has led to a
surge in the availability of programmable machines for executing quantum
algorithms. Present day photonic quantum computers have been limited either to
non-deterministic operation, low photon numbers and rates, or fixed random gate
sequences. Here we introduce a full-stack hardware-software system for
executing many-photon quantum circuits using integrated nanophotonics: a
programmable chip, operating at room temperature and interfaced with a fully
automated control system. It enables remote users to execute quantum algorithms
requiring up to eight modes of strongly squeezed vacuum initialized as two-mode
squeezed states in single temporal modes, a fully general and programmable
four-mode interferometer, and genuine photon number-resolving readout on all
outputs. Multi-photon detection events with photon numbers and rates exceeding
any previous quantum optical demonstration on a programmable device are made
possible by strong squeezing and high sampling rates. We verify the
non-classicality of the device output, and use the platform to carry out
proof-of-principle demonstrations of three quantum algorithms: Gaussian boson
sampling, molecular vibronic spectra, and graph similarity
Characterising the inhibitory actions of ceramide upon insulin signaling in different skeletal muscle cell models:a mechanistic insight
International audienceCeramides are known to promote insulin resistance in a number of metabolically important tissues including skeletal muscle, the predominant site of insulin-stimulated glucose disposal. Depending on cell type, these lipid intermediates have been shown to inhibit protein kinase B (PKB/Akt), a key mediator of the metabolic actions of insulin, via two distinct pathways: one involving the action of atypical protein kinase C (aPKC) isoforms, and the second dependent on protein phosphatase-2A (PP2A). The main aim of this study was to explore the mechanisms by which ceramide inhibits PKB/Akt in three different skeletal muscle-derived cell culture models; rat L6 myotubes, mouse C2C12 myotubes and primary human skeletal muscle cells. Our findings indicate that the mechanism by which ceramide acts to repress PKB/Akt is related to the myocellular abundance of caveolin-enriched domains (CEM) present at the plasma membrane. Here, we show that ceramide-enriched-CEMs are markedly more abundant in L6 myotubes compared to C2C12 myotubes, consistent with their previously reported role in coordinating aPKC-directed repression of PKB/Akt in L6 muscle cells. In contrast, a PP2A-dependent pathway predominantly mediates ceramide-induced inhibition of PKB/Akt in C2C12 myotubes. In addition, we demonstrate for the first time that ceramide engages an aPKC-dependent pathway to suppress insulin-induced PKB/Akt activation in palmitate-treated cultured human muscle cells as well as in muscle cells from diabetic patients. Collectively, this work identifies key mechanistic differences, which may be linked to variations in plasma membrane composition, underlying the insulin-desensitising effects of ceramide in different skeletal muscle cell models that are extensively used in signal transduction and metabolic studies
Metformin kills and radiosensitizes cancer cells and preferentially kills cancer stem cells
The anti-cancer effects of metformin, the most widely used drug for type 2 diabetes, alone or in combination with ionizing radiation were studied with MCF-7 human breast cancer cells and FSaII mouse fibrosarcoma cells. Clinically achievable concentrations of metformin caused significant clonogenic death in cancer cells. Importantly, metformin was preferentially cytotoxic to cancer stem cells relative to non-cancer stem cells. Metformin increased the radiosensitivity of cancer cells in vitro, and significantly enhanced the radiation-induced growth delay of FSaII tumors (s.c.) in the legs of C3H mice. Both metformin and ionizing radiation activated AMPK leading to inactivation of mTOR and suppression of its downstream effectors such as S6K1 and 4EBP1, a crucial signaling pathway for proliferation and survival of cancer cells, in vitro as well as in the in vivo tumors. Conclusion: Metformin kills and radiosensitizes cancer cells and eradicates radioresistant cancer stem cells by activating AMPK and suppressing mTOR
- …