960 research outputs found
Evolution of protein bound Maillard reaction end-products and free Amadori compounds in low lactose milk in presence of fructosamine oxidase I
Thermal treatments and storage influence milk quality, particularly in low lactose milk as the higher concentration of reducing sugars can lead to the increased formation of the Maillard reaction products (MRPs). The control of the Amadori products (APs) formation is the key step to mitigate the Maillard reaction (MR) in milk. The use of fructosamine oxidases, (Faox) provided promising results. In this paper, the effects of Faox I were evaluated by monitoring the concentration of free and bound MRPs in low lactose milk during shelf life. Results showed that the enzyme reduced the formation of protein-bound MRPs down to 79% after six days at 37 °C. Faox I lowered the glycation of almost all the free amino acids resulting effective on basic and polar amino acids. Data here reported corroborate previous findings on the potentiality of Faox enzymes in controlling the early stage of the MR in foods
Family dissolution and labour supply decisions over the life cycle
Life-history data can clarify the consequences of household split and divorce on the probability of working. Indeed, employment choices are affected by the occurrence of family dissolution episodes. The effect is stronger for women. The magnitude of this effect increases with the presence of children
Divorce and well-being. Disentangling the role of stress and socio economic status
We investigate the happiness variations associated with divorce by drawing data
from a retrospective panel dataset based on the third wave of the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE) and covering 14 European countries. This dataset proposes as a powerful tool to control for reporting style heterogeneity in happiness self-evaluations. Indeed, in addition to individual fixed-effects, we control for full migration trajectories in order to remove bias in well-being evaluations produced by cross-country heterogeneity in the cultural norms and societal values individuals have been exposed during their life-cycle. Happiness is found to increase
in the period after divorce for both men and women. We show that this pattern goes through a decrease in stress and financial hardship
Essays on the Economics of Migration: an Empirical Perspective
This thesis comprises three essays on determinants and consequences of international labor migration at individual, family and country level.
The first chapter explores the effect of parents' absence due to migration on the educational outcomes of children left behind. The estimated reduced form model relies on an educational production function where the total effect of migration is the combination of the positive effect of remittances, and the negative effect of a parent's absence. The results suggest that parental absence offsets the positive impact of remittances on children's schooling achievements and that a mother's absence is more detrimental than a father's absence.
The second chapter examines the effects of family size and demographic structure on offspring's international migration. The potential endogeneity of parental fertility choices is addressed by using infertility shocks and miscarriage before first birth as exogenous variation in family size. The positive correlation between fertility and migration disappears when the potential endogeneity of sibship size is addressed. A deeper analysis reveals that the chances to migrate are not equally distributed across children within the family. Older siblings are more likely to migrate, while having more sisters than brothers may increase the chances of migration, particularly among girls.
The third chapter studies the effect of granting the right to vote in local elections to non citizens of non Eu origin. In the spirit of a differences-in-differences strategy, election results and economic outcomes of municipalities with more immigrants entitled to vote are compared with municipalities with a smaller share of immigrant voters, before and after the introduction of a new law. Preliminary results indicate that, depending on the economic and demographic context, and on the immigration policies, the effect can vary substantially: the pro immigrants parties can either gain on lose votes, with relevant consequences for public good expenditures
Pharmacological inhibition of PKCθ counteracts muscle disease in a mouse model of duchenne muscular dystrophy
Inflammation plays a considerable role in the progression of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD), a severe muscle disease caused by a mutation in the dystrophin gene. We previously showed that genetic ablation of Protein Kinase C θ (PKCθ) in mdx, the mouse model of DMD, improves muscle healing and regeneration, preventing massive inflammation. To establish whether pharmacological targeting of PKCθ in DMD can be proposed as a therapeutic option, in this study we treated young mdx mice with the PKCθ inhibitor Compound 20 (C20). We show that C20 treatment led to a significant reduction in muscle damage associated with reduced immune cells infiltration, reduced inflammatory pathways activation, and maintained muscle regeneration. Importantly, C20 treatment is efficient in recovering muscle performance in mdx mice, by preserving muscle integrity. Together, these results provide proof of principle that pharmacological inhibition of PKCθ in DMD can be considered an attractive strategy to modulate immune response and prevent the progression of the disease
Investigating alcohol consumption during pregnancy for the prevention of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD)
The term FASD (Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders) is used to
describe the entire spectrum of pathologies and disorders caused
by alcohol exposure in uterus. Alcohol assumed in pregnancy
passes directly through the placental barrier causing a broad range
of symptoms whose severity can greatly vary in degree. The alcohol
teratogenic effect may result in physical damage and specific
facial anomalies, growth delays, neurological defects along with
intellectual disabilities and behavioral problems. Children affected
show difficulties in verbal learning, memory, visual-spatial abilities,
attention, logic and math abilities, information processing, executive
functions as well as in many other domains and in general coping
with daily life. Total abstention from alcohol during pregnancy is
strongly recommended, as a safe threshold of consumption has
not been established yet. Hence, the early identification of alcohol
consumption in pregnancy is crucial. Specific methodologies to
overcome difficulties related to the identification of alcohol behavior
in pregnant women are needed and intervention protocols should
be implemented to prevent damage in offsprings. This paper
gives an overview on this pathology, from clinical delineation
to epidemiology and risk factors with a special focus to promote
alcohol-free pregnanc
Corticolimbic catecholamines in stress: A computational model of the appraisal of controllability
Appraisal of a stressful situation and the possibility to control or avoid it is thought to involve frontal-cortical mechanisms. The precise mechanism underlying this appraisal and its translation into effective stress coping (the regulation of physiological and behavioural responses) are poorly understood. Here, we propose a computational model which involves tuning motivational arousal to the appraised stressing condition. The model provides a causal explanation of the shift from active to passive coping strategies, i.e. from a condition characterised by high motivational arousal, required to deal with a situation appraised as stressful, to a condition characterised by emotional and motivational withdrawal, required when the stressful situation is appraised as uncontrollable/unavoidable. The model is motivated by results acquired via microdialysis recordings in rats and highlights the presence of two competing circuits dominated by different areas of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex: these are shown having opposite effects on several subcortical areas, affecting dopamine outflow in the striatum, and therefore controlling motivation. We start by reviewing published data supporting structure and functioning of the neural model and present the computational model itself with its essential neural mechanisms. Finally, we show the results of a new experiment, involving the condition of repeated inescapable stress, which validate most of the model's prediction
X-ray spectroscopy of the z=6.4 quasar J1148+5251
We present the 78-ks Chandra observations of the quasar SDSS
J1148+5251. The source is clearly detected in the energy range 0.3-7 keV with
42 counts (with a significance ). The X-ray spectrum is
best-fitted by a power-law with photon index absorbed by a gas
column density of .
We measure an intrinsic luminosity at 2-10 keV and 10-40 keV equal to , comparable with luminous local and
intermediate-redshift quasar properties. Moreover, the X-ray to optical
power-law slope value () of J1148 is consistent
with the one found in quasars with similar rest-frame 2500 \AA ~luminosity
(\AA). Then we use Chandra data
to test a physically motivated model that computes the intrinsic X-ray flux
emitted by a quasar starting from the properties of the powering black hole and
assuming that X-ray emission is attenuated by intervening, metal-rich () molecular clouds distributed on kpc scales in the host
galaxy. Our analysis favors a black hole mass and a molecular hydrogen mass , in good agreement with estimates obtained from previous studies. We
finally discuss strengths and limits of our analysis.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, MNRAS in pres
A Thomason model structure on the category of small n-fold categories
We construct a cofibrantly generated Thomason model structure on the category of small n-fold categories and prove that it is Quillen equivalent to the standard model structure on the category of simplicial sets. An n-fold functor is a weak equivalence if and only if the diagonal of its n-fold nerve is a weak equivalence of simplicial sets. We introduce an n-fold Grothendieck construction for multisimplicial sets, and prove that it is a homotopy inverse to the n-fold nerve. As a consequence, the unit and counit of the adjunction between simplicial sets and n-fold categories are natural weak equivalences
Protective role of carbonic anhydrases III and VII in cellular defense mechanisms upon redox unbalance
Under oxidative stress conditions, several constitutive cellular defense systems are activated, which involve both enzymatic systems
and molecules with antioxidant properties such as glutathione and vitamins. In addition, proteins containing reactive sulfhydryl
groups may eventually undergo reversible redox modifications whose products act as protective shields able to avoid further
permanent molecular oxidative damage either in stressful conditions or under pathological circumstances. After the recovery of
normal redox conditions, the reduced state of protein sulfhydryl groups is restored. In this context, carbonic anhydrases (CAs)
III and VII, which are human metalloenzymes catalyzing the reversible hydration of carbon dioxide to bicarbonate and proton,
have been identified to play an antioxidant role in cells where oxidative damage occurs. Both proteins are mainly localized in
tissues characterized by a high rate of oxygen consumption, and contain on their molecular surface two reactive cysteine
residues eventually undergoing S-glutathionylation. Here, we will provide an overview on the molecular and functional features
of these proteins highlighting their implications into molecular processes occurring during oxidative stress conditions
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