151 research outputs found

    Effect of plastic low tunnel and mulch type on soil temperature, growth, earliness and yield of brinjal under net-house and open field in plains of North-Western India

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    A two-year study was conducted to compare the performance of brinjal hybrid BH-2 using paddy straw mulch @ 6 t ha-1, clear plastic mulch (25 μm), black plastic mulch (25 μm), plastic low tunnel and control (bare soil) under net-house and open field at Punjab Agricultural University, Ludhiana, India. The maximum increase in morning and afternoon soil temperature over bare soil was observed using black plastic mulch followed by clear plastic mulch in both net-house and open field whereas paddy straw mulch reduced the soil temperature over bare soil in open field. Under net house, black and clear plastic mulch were better than other treatments and recorded maximum plant height (50.8 cm and 43.7 cm), number of leaves/plant (64.8 and 64.3), early yield (7.1 and 6.6 t ha-1), number of fruits/plant (16.1 and 14.4) and total yield (57.4 and 55.7 t ha-1), respectively. In open field, plastic low tunnel was the best treatment and recorded maximum plant height (40.4 cm), number of leaves/plant (51.2), early yield (5.9 t ha-1), number of fruits/ plant (14.6) and total yield (58.5 t ha-1). The study offers the scope of enhancing brinjal production in spring and early summer which may be highly profitable for farmers

    Inflow occlusion in the era of modern cardiac surgery

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    A cluster-randomised trial comparing home-based primary health care and usual clinic care for epilepsy in a resource-limited country

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    OBJECTIVE: To ascertain whether home-based care with community and primary healthcare workers' support improves adherence to antiseizure medications, seizure control, and quality of life over routine clinic-based care in community samples of people with epilepsy in a resource-poor country. METHODS: Participants included consenting individuals with active epilepsy identified in a population survey in impoverished communities. The intervention included antiseizure medication provision, adherence reinforcement and epilepsy self- and stigma management guidance provided by a primary health care-equivalent worker. We compared the intervention group to a routine clinic-based care group in a cluster-randomised trial lasting 24 months. The primary outcome was antiseizure medication adherence, appraised from monthly pill counts. Seizure outcomes were assessed by monthly seizure aggregates and time to first seizure and impact by the Personal Impact of Epilepsy scale. RESULTS: Enrollment began on 25.09.2017 and was complete by 24.07.2018. Twenty-four clusters, each comprising ten people with epilepsy, were randomised to either home- or clinic-care. Home-care recepients were more likely to have used up their monthly-dispensed epilepsy medicine stock (Regression Coefficient: 0.585; 95% Confidence Intervals, 0.289 to 0.881; P=0.001) and had fewer seizures (Regression coefficient: -2.060; 95%CI, -3.335 to -0.785; P=0.002). More people from clinic-care (n=44; 37%) than home-care (n=23; 19%) exited the trial (P=0.003). The time to first seizure, adverse effects and the personal impact of epilepsy were similar in the two arms. SIGNIFICANCE: Home care for epilepsy compared to clinic care in resource-limited communities improves medication adherence and seizure outcomes and reduces the secondary epilepsy treatment gap

    A chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) extraction protocol for diversity analysis of oil palm (Elaeis sp.)

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    Oil palm chloroplast is maternally inherited, making investigation of the chloroplast diversity an interesting endeavor. This paper describes a method for extracting enriched oil palm chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) done on six palms of different origins from Angola, Nigeria, Ghana, Madagascar and Suriname. Restriction enzyme digestion was used to evaluate the successful extraction of the oil palm cpDNA. The use of a mitochondrial DNA specific- universal primer revealed that most of the cpDNA were free from mitochondrial DNA contamination. Three chloroplast- specific universal primers were also used to evaluate the cpDNA. Their amplicons were cloned and sequenced to confirm that the cpDNA was indeed amplified. A search against the public databases further confirmed that the primers amplied sequences of the Elaeis guineensis Jacq. chloroplast genome. Two of them gave consistent amplifications when tested on cpDNA from the Angolan, Nigerian, Ghanian, Madagascan and Suriname palms

    QTLs for oil yield components in an elite oil palm (Elaeis guineensis) cross

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    Increased modern farming of superior types of the oil palm, Elaeis guineensis Jacq., which has naturally efficient oil biosynthesis, has made it the world’s foremost edible oil crop. Breeding improvement is, however, circumscribed by time and costs associated with the tree’s long reproductive cycle, large size and 10–15 years of field testing. Marker-assisted breeding has considerable potential for improving this crop. Towards this, quantitative trait loci (QTL) linked to oil yield component traits were mapped in a high-yield population. In total, 164 QTLs associated with 21 oil yield component traits were discovered, with cumulative QTL effects increasing in tandem with the number of QTL markers and matching the QT+ alleles for each trait. The QTLs confirmed all traits to be polygenic, with many genes of individual small effects on independent loci, but epistatic interactions are not ruled out. Furthermore, several QTLs maybe pleiotropic as suggested by QTL clustering of inter-related traits on almost all linkage groups. Certain regions of the chromosomes seem richer in the genes affecting a particular yield component trait and likely encompass pleiotropic, epistatic and heterotic effects. A large proportion of the identified additive effects from QTLs may actually arise from genic interactions between loci. Comparisons with previous mapping studies show that most of the QTLs were for similar traits and shared similar marker intervals on the same linkage groups. Practical applications for such QTLs in marker-assisted breeding will require seeking them out in different genetic backgrounds and environments

    Metabolic profiling detects early effects of environmental and lifestyle exposure to cadmium in a human population

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    Background: The ‘exposome’ represents the accumulation of all environmental exposures across a lifetime. Topdown strategies are required to assess something this comprehensive, and could transform our understanding of how environmental factors affect human health. Metabolic profiling (metabonomics/metabolomics) defines an individual’s metabolic phenotype, which is influenced by genotype, diet, lifestyle, health and xenobiotic exposure, and could also reveal intermediate biomarkers for disease risk that reflect adaptive response to exposure. We investigated changes in metabolism in volunteers living near a point source of environmental pollution: a closed zinc smelter with associated elevated levels of environmental cadmium. Methods: High-resolution 1H NMR spectroscopy (metabonomics) was used to acquire urinary metabolic profiles from 178 human volunteers. The spectral data were subjected to multivariate and univariate analysis to identify metabolites that were correlated with lifestyle or biological factors. Urinary levels of 8-oxo-deoxyguanosine were also measured, using mass spectrometry, as a marker of systemic oxidative stress. Results: Six urinary metabolites, either associated with mitochondrial metabolism (citrate, 3-hydroxyisovalerate, 4- deoxy-erythronic acid) or one-carbon metabolism (dimethylglycine, creatinine, creatine), were associated with cadmium exposure. In particular, citrate levels retained a significant correlation to urinary cadmium and smoking status after controlling for age and sex. Oxidative stress (as determined by urinary 8-oxo-deoxyguanosine levels) was elevated in individuals with high cadmium exposure, supporting the hypothesis that heavy metal accumulation was causing mitochondrial dysfunction. Conclusions: This study shows evidence that an NMR-based metabolic profiling study in an uncontrolled human population is capable of identifying intermediate biomarkers of response to toxicants at true environmental concentrations, paving the way for exposome research. Keywords: metabonomics, cadmium, environmental health, exposome, metabolomics, molecular epidemiolog
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