6 research outputs found

    DINÂMICA NÃO LINEAR DE UMA COBERTURA DE BAMBU TENSIONADA

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    We present a study on the nonlinear dynamics of a tensioned bamboo roof. Quasistatic loads, such as self-weight, initial pretension, and equivalent static wind loads are considered. Step-by-step numerical time integration via Finite Differences is implemented to solve the nonlinear differential equations of motion. As large displacements are considered, and large pretension axial forces are applied, geometric nonlinearity is present in the formulation. Also, linear elastic behavior of the bamboo is implemented, based on experimental data. Future work will implement random nature of wind forces using a synthetic wind approach, and nonlinear material behavior.Apresentamos um estudo de dinâmica não linear de uma cobertura de bambu tensionada. Ambas as cargas quase estáticas, tais como peso próprio e pretensão inicial, e as cargas de vento aleatório variando no tempo são consideradas. A integração numérica no passo a passo no tempo é implementada via Diferenças Finitas para resolver as equações diferenciais não lineares do movimento. Como grandes deslocamentos são considerados, e grandes pretensões das forças axiais são aplicadas, a não linearidade geométrica está presente na formulação. Além disso, o comportamento elástico linear do bambu é implementada, baseada em dados experimentais. O trabalho futuro vai implementar natureza aleatória das forças do vento usando uma abordagem vento sintético e comportamento do material não-linear

    Cysticercosis in experimentally and naturally infected pigs: parasitological and immunological diagnosis

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    Our objective was to evaluate the diagnosis of swine cysticercosis by examining "ante mortem" (inspection of the tongue), "post mortem" (inspection and detailed necropsy) and ELISA for research in serum of antibodies (Ab-ELISA) and antigens (Ag-ELISA). Seven (7) pigs were experimentally infected orally with eggs of Taenia solium and another 10 were naturally infected. In the pigs experimentally infected, inspection of the tongue was negative in all animals, in the routine inspection detailed necropsy and cysticercis were identified in all of them. In pigs with heavy natural infection, inspection of the tongue identified cysticerci in two (20%), while at inspection with necropsy the parasites were identified in large quantities in all animals. In ELISA for antibody search (Ab-ELISA) TS-14 recombinant protein was used, and in search for antigen (Ag-ELISA) a monoclonal antibody against this protein. In animals experimentally infected, blood was collected weekly for 140 days. The Ab-ELISA identified an increase in titers of antibody to cysticerci 21 days after infection, and at the end of the experimental period six animals (86%) were positive to the test. The search for circulating antigens (Ag-ELISA) was positive in two pigs 28 to 91 days after infection. All naturally infected pigs were positive for Ag-ELISA and Ab-ELISA. The search for antibodies and antigens by ELISA in serum from 30 pigs of a local farm and without history of cysticercosis was negative. Thus, the use of TS-14 antigen in ELISA test (Ab-ELISA) can be useful for the diagnosis of cysticercosis in pigs with low infection

    Plant responses to stresses: role of ascorbate peroxidase in the antioxidant protection

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    When plants are exposed to stressful environmental conditions, the production of Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) increases and can cause significant damage to the cells. Antioxidant defenses, which can detoxify ROS, are present in plants. A major hydrogen peroxide detoxifying system in plant cells is the ascorbate-glutathione cycle, in which, ascorbate peroxidase (APX) enzymes play a key role catalyzing the conversion of H2O2 into H2O, using ascorbate as a specific electron donor. Different APX isoforms are present in distinct subcellular compartments, such as chloroplasts, mitochondria, peroxisome, and cytosol. The expression of APX genes is regulated in response to biotic and abiotic stresses as well as during plant development. The APX responses are directly involved in the protection of plant cells against adverse environmental conditions. Furthermore, mutant plants APX genes showed alterations in growth, physiology and antioxidant metabolism revealing those enzymes involvement in the normal plant development

    Changes in protein expression of pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas exposed in situ to urban sewage

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    The composition and concentration of substances in urban effluents are complex and difficult to measure. These contaminants elicit biological responses in the exposed organisms. Proteomic analysis is a powerful tool in environmental toxicology by evidencing alterations in protein expression due to exposure to contaminants and by providing a useful framework for the development of new potential biomarkers. The aim of this study was to determine changes in protein expression signatures (PES) in the digestive gland of oysters Crassostrea gigas transplanted to two farming areas (LIS and RIB) and to one area contaminated by sanitary sewage (BUC) after 14 days of exposure. This species is one of the most cultivated molluscs in the world. The identified proteins are related to the cytoskeleton (CKAP5 and ACT2), ubiquitination pathway conjugation (UBE3C), G protein-coupled receptor and signal transduction (SVEP1), and cell cycle/division (CCNB3). CKAP5 showed higher expression in oysters kept at BUC in comparison with those kept at the farming areas, while ACT2, UBE3C, SVEP1, and CCNB3 were suppressed. The results suggest that these changes might lead to DNA damage, apoptosis, and interference with the immune system in oyster C. gigas exposed to sewage and give initial information on PES of C. gigas exposed to sanitary sewage, which can subsequently be useful in the development of more sensitive tools for biomonitoring coastal areas, particularly those devoted mainly to oyster farming activities.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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