181 research outputs found

    Selection of highly fertilization-competent bovine spermatozoa through adhesion to the Fallopian tube epithelium in vitro

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    Mammalian spermatozoa undergo a marked reduction in number during their journey through the female reproductive tract. One of the checkpoints in the selection of fertilizing spermatozoa may be the transient adhesion to the Fallopian tube epithelium, an event previously shown to play a key role in sperm storage. Bovine spermatozoa adhering to the Fallopian tube epithelium in vitro may be synchronously released by sulphated glycoconjugates. In the present study, experiments were designed to quantify the number of spermatozoa selected through adhesion, and to compare the zona pellucida (ZP) binding and fertilization competence of the initial sperm suspension versus the bound and unbound sperm subpopulations. Results showed that: (1) a fraction accounting for about 30% of the initial sperm suspension was selected by in vitro adhesion to oviductal epithelial cell monolayers; (2) selected spermatozoa, collected after heparin-induced release, had a significantly superior ZP binding and fertilization competence (mean +/- SD: 110 +/- 28 bound spermatozoa per oocyte; % cleavage, mean +/- SEM: 89 +/- 4) compared with both the initial sperm suspension (45 +/- 10 bound spermatozoa per oocyte, P < 0.001; % cleavage: 69 +/- 3, P < 0.05) and the unselected subpopulation (30 +/- 4 bound spermatozoa per oocyte, P < 0.001; % cleavage: 58 +/- 3, P < 0.01). These findings support the hypothesis that binding to oviductal cells is not only beneficial for sperm survival but also represents a crucial step for the selection of spermatozoa endowed with superior fertilization competence

    String Breaking in Quenched QCD

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    We present preliminary quenched results on a new operator for the investigation of string-breaking within SU(2)-colour QCD. The ground-state of a spatially-separated static-light meson-antimeson pair is a combination of a state with two distinct mesons, expected to dominate for large separations, and a state where the light-quarks have annihilated, which contributes for short distances. The crossover between these two regimes provides a measure of the string-breaking scale length.Comment: LATTICE98(confine), 3 pages, 4 figure

    Mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress caused by cryopreservation in reproductive cells

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    Mitochondria, fundamental organelles in cell metabolism, and ATP synthesis are respon-sible for generating reactive oxygen species (ROS), calcium homeostasis, and cell death. Mitochon-dria produce most ROS, and when levels exceed the antioxidant defenses, oxidative stress (OS) is generated. These changes may eventually impair the electron transport chain, resulting in decreased ATP synthesis, increased ROS production, altered mitochondrial membrane permeability, and dis-ruption of calcium homeostasis. Mitochondria play a key role in the gamete competence to facilitate normal embryo development. However, iatrogenic factors in assisted reproductive technologies (ART) may affect their functional competence, leading to an abnormal reproductive outcome. Cry-opreservation, a fundamental technology in ART, may compromise mitochondrial function leading to elevated intracellular OS that decreases sperm and oocytes’ competence and the dynamics of fertilization and embryo development. This article aims to review the role played by mitochondria and ROS in sperm and oocyte function and the close, biunivocal relationships between mitochon-drial damage and ROS generation during cryopreservation of gametes and gonadal tissues in different species. Based on current literature, we propose tentative hypothesis of mechanisms involved in cryopreservation-associated mitochondrial dysfunction in gametes, and discuss the role played by antioxidants and other agents to retain the competence of cryopreserved reproductive cells and tissues

    New taxa in the paleocene flora from the cross Valley-Wiman Formation, Marambio (=Seymour) Island, Antarctica

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    The Paleocene at the Marambio Island (James Ross Basin) is represented by three marine sedimentary units. The uppermost unit corresponds to the Cross Valley-Wiman Formation (CVWF), which overlies previous units by a strong erosive discordance. Contrary to the underlayed units, the CVWF is characterized by the preservation of a rich flora of compressions and petrifications; preserving leaves and seeds at it uppermost section (Bahía Pingüino Allomember), that corresponds to lagoon or protected bay facies and which age has been dated as upper Paleocene (C25n, Thanetian). Its fossil records are known since the Dusén studies from 1908, who proposed 87 leaf taxa. Despite its Southern Hemisphere importance, few studies has revised the plant type materials, recognizing a richness reduction from the originally proposed to three fern species, two conifers, and 14 angiosperms. New Argentina field works has permitted identify the 19 previous taxa, recognized two more from Dusén (Mollinedia seymourensis and Phyllites sp. 14), and adds seven new findings (a fertile fern, a filmy fern, and five angiosperms). The unbiased collection of 282 exemplars allows to measure the taphoflora relative abundance. It indicates the dominance (35 %) of ferns (Cladophlebis and Sphenopteris). The most common angiosperm families were: Atherospermathaceae, Lauraceae, Moraceae?, Nothofagaceae, and Winteraceae. The Araucariaceae also were well represented, in agreement with wood studies. The CVWF taphoflora overpass the Paleocene known richness in all the Antarctic Peninsula, adds new elements, and quantify the relative proportion of taxa.Fil: Iglesias, Aimé Lucila. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Patagonia Norte. Instituto de Investigaciones en Biodiversidad y Medioambiente. Universidad Nacional del Comahue. Centro Regional Universidad Bariloche. Instituto de Investigaciones en Biodiversidad y Medioambiente; ArgentinaFil: Gallardo, R.. Departamento de Geologia y Petroleo ; Centro Regional Universitario Bariloche ; Universidad Nacional del Comahue;Fil: Pipo, María Laura. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Patagonia Norte. Instituto de Investigaciones en Biodiversidad y Medioambiente. Universidad Nacional del Comahue. Centro Regional Universidad Bariloche. Instituto de Investigaciones en Biodiversidad y Medioambiente; ArgentinaFil: Santillana, Sergio Nestor. Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Comercio Interno y Culto. Dirección Nacional del Antártico. Instituto Antártico Argentino; ArgentinaFil: Talevi, Marianella. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Patagonia Norte. Instituto de Investigación en Paleobiología y Geología; ArgentinaReunión anual de comunicaciones de la Asociación Paleontológica ArgentinaArgentinaAsociación Paleontológica Argentin

    Protective effects of a SIRT1 inhibitor on primordial follicle activation and growth induced by cyclophosphamide: insights from a bovine in vitro folliculogenesis system

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    Purpose: Although oncological advances have improved survival rates of female cancer patients, they often suffer a reduced fertility due to treatment side effects. In the present study, we evaluated the potential fertoprotective effects of the specific inhibitor of SIRT1, EX-527, on the gonadotoxic action exerted by cyclophosphamide (CPM) on loss of primordial follicles (PFs). Methods: The effects of the CPM metabolite phosphoramide mustard (PM) on follicle activation, growth and viability and the protective action of EX-527 against PM effects were evaluated on bovine ovarian cortical strips in vitro cultured for 1 or 6 days. To understand whether PFs exposed to PM plus EX-527 were able to activate and grow to the secondary stage after suspension of the treatment, strips cultured for 3 days in PM plus EX-527 for 3 days were transferred to plain medium until day 6. Follicle growth and health were evaluated through histology and viability assay at a confocal microscope. In order to investigate the molecular pathways underlying the ovarian response to PM in the presence of EX-527, we analysed the protein level of SIRT1, HuR, PARP1 and SOD2 after 1 day of in vitro culture. Results: We found that (1) PM, the main CPM active metabolite, promotes PF activation; (2) the ovarian stress response induced by PM includes a SIRT1-dependent pathway; and (3) EX-527 reduces PF activation and growth induced by PM. Conclusion: SIRT1 can represent a candidate molecule to be targeted to protect ovarian follicles from alkylating agents and EX-527 could represent a potential fertoprotective agent for cancer patients

    Light hadron spectroscopy with O(a) improved dynamical fermions

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    We present the first results for the static quark potential and the light hadron spectrum using dynamical fermions at β=5.2\beta=5.2 using an O(a) improved Wilson fermion action together with the standard Wilson plaquette action for the gauge part. Sea quark masses were chosen such that the pseudoscalar-vector mass ratio, m_PS/m_V$, varies from 0.86 to 0.67. Finite-size effects are studied by using three different volumes, 8^3\cdot 24, 12^3\cdot 24 and 16^3\cdot 24. Comparing our results to previous ones obtained using the quenched approximation, we find evidence for sea quark effects in quantities like the static quark potential and the vector-pseudoscalar hyperfine splitting.Comment: 38 pages, 14 Postscript figure, LaTe

    Speeding up finite step-size updating of full QCD on the lattice

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    We propose various improvements of finite step-size updating for full QCD on the lattice that might turn finite step-size updating into a viable alternative to the hybrid Monte Carlo algorithm. These improvements are noise reduction of the noisy estimator of the fermion determinant, unbiased inclusion of the hopping parameter expansion and a multi-level Metropolis scheme. First numerical tests are performed for the 2 dimensional Schwinger model with two flavours of Wilson fermions and for QCD two flavours of Wilson fermions and Schr"odinger functional boundary conditions.Comment: 22 pages, 1 figur

    String Breaking in Lattice Quantum Chromodynamics

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    The separation of a heavy quark and antiquark pair leads to the formation of a tube of flux, or string, which should break in the presence of light quark-antiquark pairs. This expected zero temperature phenomenon has proven elusive in simulations of lattice QCD. We present simulation results that show that the string does break in the confining phase at nonzero temperature.Comment: 11 pages RevTeX, including 4 encapsulated Postscript figures. version2: minor corrections to reference

    The Kaon B-parameter with the Wilson Quark Action using Chiral Ward Identities

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    A lattice QCD calculation of the kaon BB parameter BKB_K is carried out with the Wilson quark action in the quenched approximation at β=6/g2=5.96.5\beta=6/g^2=5.9-6.5. The mixing problem of the Δs=2\Delta s=2 four-quark operators is solved non-perturbatively with full use of chiral Ward identities employing four external quarks with an equal off-shell momentum in the Landau gauge. This method, without invoking any effective theory, enables us to construct the weak four-quark operators exhibiting good chiral behavior. Our results for BKB_K with the non-perturbative mixing coefficients show small scaling violation beyond the lattice cut-off a12.5a^{-1}\sim 2.5 GeV. Our estimate concludes BK(NDR,2GeV)=0.69(7)B_K(NDR, 2 GeV)=0.69(7) at a1=2.74.3a^{-1}=2.7-4.3GeV, which agrees with the value obtained with the Kogut-Susskind quark action. For comparison we also calculate BKB_K with one-loop perturbative mixing coefficients. While this yields incorrect values at finite lattice spacing, a linear extrapolation to the continuum limit as a function of aa leads to a result consistent with those obtained with the Ward identity method.Comment: 42 pages, 22 Postscript figures, added a new reference[26

    Effects of non-perturbatively improved dynamical fermions in QCD at fixed lattice spacing

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    We present results for the static inter-quark potential, lightest glueballs, light hadron spectrum and topological susceptibility using a non-perturbatively improved action on a 163×3216^3\times 32 lattice at a set of values of the bare gauge coupling and bare dynamical quark mass chosen to keep the lattice size fixed in physical units (1.7\sim 1.7 fm). By comparing these measurements with a matched quenched ensemble, we study the effects due to two degenerate flavours of dynamical quarks. With the greater control over residual lattice spacing effects which these methods afford, we find some evidence of charge screening and some minor effects on the light hadron spectrum over the range of quark masses studied (MPS/MV0.58M_{PS}/M_{V}\ge0.58). More substantial differences between quenched and unquenched simulations are observed in measurements of topological quantities.Comment: 53 pages, LaTeX/RevTeX, 16 eps figures; corrected clover action expression and various typos, no results change
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