8 research outputs found

    Le reti regionali: gli ecomusei del Friuli Venezia Giulia

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    La rete ecomuseale del Friuli Venezia Giulia e la legge regionale 10/2006; La Regione FVG ha riconosciuto 7 ecomusei, che sostiene avvalendosi del supporto dell'Ente Regionale per il Patrimonio Culturale - ERPAC; il ruolo degli ecomusei nelcostruire quelle comunità di patrimonio e di paesaggio a cui oggi si guarda come ad attori imprescindibili delle politiche territoriali

    Molecular characterization and expression of a divergent α-tubulin in planarian <i>Schmidtea polychroa</i>

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    We report the cloning and sequencing of a cDNA from planarian Schmidtea polychroa (Platyhelminthes, Turbellaria, Tricladida) encoding for an unusual tubulin isoform (SpTub-1) which is specifically expressed in testis. Sequence comparison of SpTub-1 with other known tubulins reveals that it has the highest homology with &#x3b1;-tubulins, even though the analysis of the molecular features shows that this isoform is significantly divergent. Hybridization of SpTub-1 to restriction-digested genomic DNA to Southern blotting produced a multiple banding pattern indicating that in planarian, a tubulin multigene family exists. Using in situ hybridization, we showed that the transcript is specifically detectable in planarian testis, suggesting that it may play a role in spermatogenesis

    The Pathogen of Frogs Amphibiocystidium ranae Is a Member of the Order Dermocystida in the Class Mesomycetozoea

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    The pathogen of frogs Amphibiocystidium ranae was recently described as a new genus. Due to its spherical shape, containing hundred of endospores, it was thought to be closely related to the pathogens of fish, mammals, and birds known as Dermocystidium spp., Rhinosporidium seeberi, and Sphaerothecum destruens in the Mesomycetozoea, but further studies were not conducted to confirm this relationship. To investigate its phylogenetic affinities, total genomic DNA was extracted from samples collected from infected frogs containing multiple cysts (sporangia) and endospores. The universal primers NS1 and NS8, used to amplify the 18S small-subunit rRNA by PCR, yielded ≈1,770-bp amplicons. Sequencing and basic local alignment search tool analyses indicated that the 18S small-subunit rRNA of A. ranae from both Rana esculenta and Rana lessonae was closely related to all of the above organisms. Our phylogenetic analysis placed this pathogen of frogs as the sister group to the genus Dermocystidium and closely related to Rhinosporidium. These data strongly supported the placement of the genus Amphibiocystidium within the mesomycetozoeans, which is in agreement with the phenotypic features that A. ranae shares with the other members of this class. Interestingly, during this study Dermocystidium percae did not group within the Dermocystidium spp. from fish; rather, it was found to be the sister group to Sphaerothecum destruens. This finding suggests that D. percae could well be a member of the genus Sphaerothecum or perhaps represents a new genus
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