40 research outputs found

    The Effect of Plant Inbreeding and Stoichiometry on Interactions with Herbivores in Nature: Echinacea angustifolia and Its Specialist Aphid

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    Fragmentation of once widespread communities may alter interspecific interactions by changing genetic composition of interacting populations as well as their abundances and spatial distributions. In a long-term study of a fragmented population of Echinacea angustifolia, a perennial plant native to the North American prairie, we investigated influences on its interaction with a specialist aphid and tending ants. We grew plant progeny of sib-matings (I), and of random pairings within (W) and between (B) seven remnants in a common field within 8 km of the source remnants. During the fifth growing season, we determined each plant's burden of aphids and ants, as well as its size and foliar elemental composition (C, N, P). We also assayed composition (C, N) of aphids and ants. Early in the season, progeny from genotypic classes B and I were twice as likely to harbor aphids, and in greater abundance, than genotypic class W; aphid loads were inversely related to foliar concentration of P and positively related to leaf N and plant size. At the end of the season, aphid loads were indistinguishable among genotypic classes. Ant abundance tracked aphid abundance throughout the season but showed no direct relationship with plant traits. Through its potential to alter the genotypic composition of remnant populations of Echinacea, fragmentation can increase Echinacea's susceptibility to herbivory by its specialist aphid and, in turn, perturb the abundance and distribution of aphids

    Resveratrol promotes endothelial cell wound healing under laminar shear stress through an estrogen receptor-α-dependent pathway

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    Restenosis is an adverse outcome of angioplasty, characterized by vascular smooth muscle cell (VSMC) hyperplasia. However, therapies targeting VSMC proliferation delay reendothelialization, increasing the risk of thrombosis. Resveratrol (RESV) inhibits restenosis and promotes reendothelialization after arterial injury, but in vitro studies assessing RESV-mediated effects on endothelial cell growth contradict these findings. We thus hypothesized that fluid shear stress, mimicking physiological blood flow, would recapitulate RESV-dependent endothelial cell wound healing. Since RESV is an estrogen receptor (ER) agonist, we tested whether RESV promotes reendothelialization through an ER-α-dependent mechanism. Mice fed a high-fat diet or a diet supplemented with RESV were subjected to carotid artery injury. At 7 days after injury, RESV significantly accelerated reendothelialization compared with vehicle. In vitro wound healing assays demonstrated that RESV exhibits cell-type selectivity, inhibiting VSMC, but not endothelial cell growth. Under laminar shear stress (LSS), RESV dramatically enhanced endothelial cell wound healing and increased both the activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and endothelial cell proliferation. Under LSS, small interfering RNA against ER-α, but not endothelial nitric oxide synthase, abolished RESV-induced ERK activation, endothelial cell proliferation, and wound healing. Thus these studies suggest that the EC phenotype induced by LSS better models the prohealing effects of RESV and that RESV and LSS interact to promote an ER-α-dependent mitogenic effect in endothelial cells

    Chromatographic analysis of trans resveratrol in Italian wines: Comparisons between FL, UV and MS detection

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    Resveratrol (3,5,4'-trihydroxystilbene) is a phytoalexin that belongs to the group of stilbenes, known to occur in gropes and consequently in grape products. Its presence in wine is an important qualitative parameter because of the several beneficial effects on human health. The aim of this work is the development of a high-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) method for the determination of trans resveratrol in wines, and comparisons between the results obtained by different detection techniques: UV-vis spectroscopy, fluorescence spectroscopy and mass spectrometry. Resveratrol is analysed on a C-18 column using gradient elution. The method permits direct injection of sample, revealing to be time-saving, overcoming the need of sample pre-treatment steps. Detection limits were 154.8 ng mL(-1) by HPLC-UV, 118.0 ng mL(-1) by HPLC-FL and 48.0 ng mL(-1) by HPLC-MS. Trans resveratrol has been then quantified in a group of 52 wines derived from different Italian regions, cultivars and winemaking technologies by HPLC-UV
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