1,521 research outputs found
Tissue location of resistance in apple to the rosy apple aphid established by electrical penetration graphs
A study of the constitutive resistance of the apple cultivar Florina, Malus domestica Borkh. (Rosaceae), to the rosy apple aphid, Dysaphis plantaginea (Passerini) (Homoptera Aphididae), was performed for the first time by the electrical penetration graph (DC-EPG) system, using the susceptible apple cultivar Smoothe as control. All experiments were conducted with apterous adult virginoparae. The results showed a constitutive resistance in Florina due to a much longer period before the first probe reflecting surface factors. Some weak indications were found for pre-phloem resistance and initiating phloem access was not affected as inferred from equal time to show phloem salivation. However, the complete absence of phloem ingestion indicates a major resistance factor in the phloem sieve elements, most likely in the sieve element sap. Surface factors could have affected tissue related variables and this should be studied further. Anyhow, the strong constitutive resistance in Florina, either on the surface alone or in the phloem as well, effectively prevented reliable experiments on induced resistance, previously detected by molecular methods
Response of female Cydia molesta (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) to plant derived volatiles
Peach shoot volatiles were attractive to mated female oriental fruit moth, Cydia molesta (Busck), in a dual choice arena. No preference was observed between leaf odours from the principle host plant, peach, and the secondary host plant, apple. Twenty-two compounds were identified in headspace volatiles of peach shoots using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Green leaf volatiles accounted for more than 50% of the total emitted volatiles. A bioassay-assisted fractionation using different sorbent polymers indicated an attractant effect of compounds with a chain length of 6-8 carbon atoms. The major compounds of this fraction were tested either singly or in combinations for behavioural response of females. Significant bioactivity was found for a three-component mixture of (Z)-3-hexen-1-yl acetate, (Z)-3-hexen-1-ol and benzaldehyde in a 4:1:1 ratio. This synthetic mixture elicited a similar attractant effect as the full natural blend from peach shoots as well as the bioactive fractio
An Atypical Presentation of Crohn Disease in the Elderly. A Case report and Literature review
The Authors present a case of an insidious onset of Crohn
Disease (CD) in an elderly patient. Diagnosis complicated by
extraintestinal manifestation properly of old age could be delayed
and often made after surgery on the histological specimen as in our
case.
CD is uncommon as primary manifestation in old age, often
unsuspected, incorrectly diagnosed and in many case the clinical fea -
tures may lead to late diagnosis. Differential diagnosis of CD in
elder people with fever, diarrhoea and abdominal pain is difficult
and other symptoms affecting intestinal tract can closely mimic CD
symptoms, although the pattern of clinical presentation in older
patient resemble those in younger
Trends and risk factors for syphilis infection in Piedmont Region, Italy, 2002-2008
Background: This work aims to analyze trends of syphilis infections in the Piedmont Region (Italy) between
2002 and 2008, and to evaluate risk factors for infection.
Methods: Syphilis trends were described according to socio-demographic characteristics, sexual behavior,
condom use, number of partners and HIV infection. Independent risk factors for syphilis among men having
sex with men (MSM), men having sex with women (MSW), and women were identified through logistic
regression comparing cases with 12,773 negative patients.
Results: Between 2002 and 2008, 1,046 cases of syphilis were diagnosed, with peaks in 2004 and 2007. The
risk of a syphilis diagnosis was independently associated with being older than 24, having a low education
level, homosexual behavior, HIV self-reported infection (for MSM and MSW), number of partners (for MSW
and women) and non- consistent condom use (for women).
Conclusions: Recent outbreaks suggest that the attention to syphilis can’t be lowered. Screening, treatment
of cases and notification of partners should be reinforced and integrated with sexual health education and
counselling in high-risk environments. Surveillance data must be continuously collected
Cd[B2(SO4)4] and H2[B2(SO4)4] – a phyllosilicate-analogous borosulfate and its homeotypic heteropolyacid
Borosulfates consist of heteropolyanionic networks of corner-shared (SO4)- and (BO4)-tetrahedra charge compensated by metal or non-metal cations. The anionic substructures differ significantly, depending on the different branching of the silicate-analogous borosulfate building blocks. However, only one acid has been characterized by single crystal X-ray diffraction so far. Herein, we present H-2[B-2(SO4)(4)] as the first phyllosilicate analogue representative, together with the homeotypic representative Cd[B-2(SO4)(4)]. The latter can be considered the cadmium salt of the former. Their crystal structures and crystallographic relationship are elucidated. For H-2[B-2(SO4)(4)], the bonding situation is examined using Hirshfeld-surface analysis. Further, the optical and thermal properties of Cd[B-2(SO4)(4)] are investigated by FTIR and UV-Vis spectroscopy, thermogravimetry, as well as temperature-programmed powder X-ray diffraction
Environ Mol Mutagen
Epigenetic changes such as DNA methylation may be a molecular mechanism through which environmental exposures affect health. Methylation of Alu and long interspersed nucleotide elements (LINE-1) is a well-established measure of DNA methylation often used in epidemiologic studies. Yet, few studies have examined the effects of host factors on LINE-1 and Alu methylation in children. We characterized the relationship of age, sex, and prenatal exposure to persistent organic pollutants (POPs), dichlorodiphenyl trichloroethane (DDT), dichlorodiphenyldichloroethylene (DDE), and polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs), with DNA methylation in a birth cohort of Mexican-American children participating in the CHAMACOS study. We measured Alu and LINE-1 methylation by pyrosequencing bisulfite-treated DNA isolated from whole blood samples collected from newborns and nine-year old children (n\ue2\u20ac\u2030=\ue2\u20ac\u2030358). POPs were measured in maternal serum during late pregnancy. Levels of DNA methylation were lower in nine-year olds compared to newborns and were higher in boys compared to girls. Higher prenatal DDT/E exposure was associated with lower Alu methylation at birth, particularly after adjusting for cell type composition (P\ue2\u20ac\u2030=\ue2\u20ac\u20300.02 for o,p' -DDT). Associations of POPs with LINE-1 methylation were only identified after examining the co-exposure of DDT/E with PBDEs simultaneously. Our data suggest that repeat element methylation can be an informative marker of epigenetic differences by age and sex and that prenatal exposure to POPs may be linked to hypomethylation in fetal blood. Accounting for co-exposure to different types of chemicals and adjusting for blood cell types may increase sensitivity of epigenetic analyses for epidemiological studies.P01 ES009605/ES/NIEHS NIH HHS/United StatesP01 ES009605/ES/NIEHS NIH HHS/United StatesR01 ES015572/ES/NIEHS NIH HHS/United StatesR01 OH007400/OH/NIOSH CDC HHS/United States2015-04-27T00:00:00
Sweet cherry extract as permeation enhancer of tyrosine kinase inhibitors: a promising prospective for future oral anticancer therapies
Although patients would rather oral therapies to injections, the gastrointestinal tract's low permeability makes this method limiting for most compounds, including anticancer drugs. Due to their low bioavailability, oral antitumor therapies suffer from significant variability in pharmacokinetics and efficacy. The improvement of their pharmacokinetic profiles can be achieved by a new approach: the use of natural extracts enriched with polyphenolic compounds that act as intestinal permeability enhancers. Here, we propose a safe sweet cherry extract capable of enhancing oral absorption. The extract was characterized by the HPLC-UV/MS method, evaluated for in vitro antioxidant activity, safety on the Caco-2 cell line, and as a potential permeation enhancer. The sweet cherry extract showed a high antioxidant capacity (ABTS and DPPH assays were 211.74 and 48.65 mu mol of Trolox equivalent/g dried extract, respectively), high content of polyphenols (8.44 mg of gallic acid per gram of dry extract), and anthocyanins (1.80 mg of cyanidin-3-glucoside equivalent per g of dry extract), reassuring safety profile (cell viability never lower than 98%), and a significant and fully reversible ability to alter the integrity of the Caco-2 monolayer (+81.5% of Lucifer yellow permeability after 2 h). Furthermore, the ability of the sweet cherry extract to improve the permeability (P-app) and modify the efflux ratio (ER) of reference compounds (atenolol, propranolol, and dasatinib) and selected pyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidine derivatives was investigated. The obtained results show a significant increase in apparent permeability across the Caco-2 monolayer (tripled and quadrupled in most cases), and an interesting decrease in efflux ratio when compounds were co-incubated with sweet cherry extract
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