78 research outputs found

    Kiireetöntä keskiviikkoa Kumpulassa

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    The current state of Open Access to research articles from the University of Helsinki

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    Ryhmämme kiinnostuksen kohteena oli Helsingin yliopiston julkaisujen näkyvyys verkossa. Kysymys kuului: kuinka moni tutkimusartikkeleista löytyy avoimesti kokotekstiversiona? Tutkimusotoksena käytimme Helsingin yliopiston JULKI-julkaisutietokannan viitteitä vuosilta 2007 ja 2008. Yritimme etsiä lehtiartikkelien kokotekstiversioita käyttäen kahta yleisesti käytössä olevaa hakukonetta sekä kahta avointen julkaisuarkistojen metatietoja haravoivaa hakukonetta. Avoimesti saatavilla oleva kokotekstiversio löytyi 49,1%:ssa otoksen artikkeleista. Google ja Google Scholar -hakukoneilla tehdyt haut olivat tuloksellisempia kuin avointen julkaisuarkistojen metatietoja haravoivilla hakukoneilla tehdyt haut. Hakujen onnistumisprosentit olivat: Google 42,5%, Google Scholar 38,1%, OpenDOAR 14,3% ja Scientific Commons 15,7%. Kaikkiaan 49,1% artikkeleista löytyi kokotekstiversiona. Englanninkielisten artikkelien saatavuusprosentti oli huomattavasti parempi kuin suomenkielisten. Vaikka Google ja Google Scholar ovat tällä hetkellä parhaita välineitä verkossa avoimesti saatavilla olevien tieteellisten tutkimusartikkelien etsimiseen, tutkimustuloksemme perusteella avointen julkaisuarkistojen metatietoja haravoivia hakukoneita ei kannata jättää huomiotta.Non peer reviewe

    Local C-Reactive Protein Expression in Obliterative Lesions and the Bronchial Wall in Posttransplant Obliterative Bronchiolitis

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    The local immunoreactivity of C-reactive protein (CRP) was studied in a heterotopic porcine model of posttranplant obliterative bronchiolitis (OB). Bronchial allografts and control autografts were examined serially 2–28 days after subcutaneous transplantation. The autografts stayed patent. In the allografts, proliferation of inflammatory cells (P < .0001) and fibroblasts (P = .02) resulted in occlusion of the bronchial lumens (P < .01). Influx of CD4+ (P < .001) and CD8+ (P < .0001) cells demonstrated allograft immune response. CRP positivity simultaneously increased in the bronchial walls (P < .01), in macrophages, myofibroblasts, and endothelial cells. Local CRP was predictive of features characteristic of OB (R = 0.456–0.879, P < .05−P < .0001). Early obliterative lesions also showed CRP positivity, but not mature, collagen-rich obliterative plugs (P < .05). During OB development, CRP is localized in inflammatory cells, myofibroblasts and endothelial cells probably as a part of the local inflammatory response

    Magnetic Nanoparticles in Human Cervical Skin

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    Magnetic iron oxide nanoparticles, magnetite/maghemite, have been identified in human tissues, including the brain, meninges, heart, liver, and spleen. As these nanoparticles may play a role in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases, a pilot study explored the occurrence of these particles in the cervical (neck) skin of 10 patients with Parkinson's disease and 10 healthy controls. Magnetometry and transmission electron microscopy analyses revealed magnetite/maghemite nanoparticles in the skin samples of every study participant. Regarding magnetite/maghemite concentrations of the single-domain particles, no significant between-group difference was emerged. In low-temperature magnetic measurement, a magnetic anomaly at similar to 50 K was evident mainly in the dermal samples of the Parkinson group. This anomaly was larger than the effect related to the magnetic ordering of molecular oxygen. The temperature range of the anomaly, and the size-range of magnetite/maghemite, both refute the idea of magnetic ordering of any iron phase other than magnetite. We propose that the explanation for the finding is interaction between clusters of superparamagnetic and single-domain-sized nanoparticles. The source and significance of these particles remains speculative.Peer reviewe

    Ellagitannins from the Onagraceae Decrease the Performance of Generalist and Specialist Herbivores

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    Phenolics have a role in defenses against herbivores, but the defensive functions of specific groups of phenolics are still poorly understood. For example, ellagitannins (a type of hydrolyzable tannin) are predicted to decrease insect herbivore performance, but the effect of different types of ellagitannins on generalist and specialist herbivores has rarely been assessed. Here, we test the effects of the dominant oligomeric ellagitannins of Oenothera biennis and other Onagraceae on herbivore performance. We fed artificial diets containing between 1 and 100 mg/g of polyphenol fractions comprised of varying amounts and compositions of dimeric oenothein B, the trimeric oenothein A and larger oligomers, to one generalist (Spodoptera exigua) and one specialist (Schinia florida) insect herbivore species. We compared the effects of these ellagitannin fractions on herbivore performance to the effects of artificial diet containing total phenolic extracts from O. biennis, which contained these ellagitannins as well as many additional phenolic metabolites including flavonoid glycosides and caffeic acid derivatives. Both the ellagitannin fractions and O. biennis phenolic extracts had strong negative effects on S. exigua and S. florida performance, with stronger effects on the generalist herbivore. Differences between the effects of the various ellagitannin fractions were small and depended on insect life stage. The defensive effects of these ellagitannins were large, with lethal concentrations as low as 0.1% of the diet. These results highlight the important defensive function of ellagitannins against specialist and generalist herbivores and the need to characterize the effects of these understudied phenolics.</p
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