1,198 research outputs found

    Menstrual and Fertility Tracking Apps and the Post Roe v. Wade Era

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    In the first section of the paper, I will place current conversations about data privacy within the broader context of restrictions that have been placed on reproductive rights by examining historical trajectories. Emphasis will be placed on the historical trajectory of how past policies and ideologies have worked against Roe v. Wade, and how this trajectory contributes to a decrease in access to abortions. In addition, recent news stories have documented the overturning of Roe v. Wade in several jurisdictions within the United States, which confirms the criminalization of abortion. In light of this, experts have raised awareness about the risk of sharing personal data on MFTAs as these online apps can potentially release data that may expose women who seek to have an abortion which would ultimately result in prosecution. The second section of the paper aims to gather and summarize the range of concerns on data security and privacy in relation to the recent implementation of criminalized abortion laws in the U.S. due to the overturning of Roe v. Wade in June 2022. This paper aimed to provide current literature with a new understanding of menstrual and fertility tracking applications in a post Roe v. Wade era. In addition, the paper aimed to show how responses to the overturning of Roe v. Wade is historically significant

    A superoxide dismutase biosensor for measuring the antioxidant capacity of blueberry based integrators

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    The antioxidant capacity of capsules containing blueberry based products which are included among the group of integrators owing to their antioxidant capacity and produced by various films was investigated. The results of the investigation are compared to rank these products in order to their antioxidant capacity. In order to measure antioxidant capacity, our laboratory has recently developed a special electrochemical method based on a superoxide dismutase (SOD) biosensor to determine the superoxide radical. The results obtained by applying the SOD biosensor method to various blueberry based integrators were compared with the results obtained with the spectrophotometric (FRAP) method based on N,N-dimethyl-p-phenylendiamine (DMPD-FeCl3) and with those obtained also using the ORAC fluorimetric (TRAP) method. One of the more interesting aspect of the article is the good agreement it evidences of the results of the three methods for measuring antioxidant capacity. The three methods differ among themselves: an Electron Transfer (ET) method, a Hydrogen Atom Trasnfer Metod (HAT) and an electrochemical based biosensor method of the Morning Superoxide Radical (MSR) type. It is also shown how the antioxidant capacity of the fresh vegetable is in any case always greater then of any food supplement obtained from the same type of vegetable

    Activity of bacterial seed endophytes of landrace durum wheat for control of Fusarium foot rot

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    Five bacterial endophytic isolates obtained from durum wheat seeds (Iandrace "Timilia reste nere") and identified as belonging to Pantoea (isolates A1, F7, F15 and GI) and Paenibacillus (isolate B) genera on the basis of 16S rDNA gene sequences, were assayed in vitro and in vivo for their ability to inhibit Fusarium culmorum growth and the disease (Fusarium foot rot) it causes in durum wheat. All isolates significantly reduced in vitro growth of F. culmorum in comparison with the control. After 120 hours of incubation, isolates B and GI showed the greatest mycelial growth inhibition, i.e., respectively, 76 and 74%. When durum wheat "Simeto" seeds were treated with bacterial isolates singly or in combinations and then inoculated with F. culmorum, all treatments with endophytes showed increased, but not statistically significant, seed germination. Except for isolate Al, all bacterial isolates stimulated vegetative parameters of durum wheat seedlings. Mixture of isolates F7 + F15 was the most effective in improving shoot height (+94%), root length (+47%) and vigour index (+81%). Mixture of isolates A1 + B reduced Fusarium foot rot incidence (-21%) and severity (-30%), and isolate A1 reduced incidence (-15%) and severity (-16%) of the disease. These results indicate potential of bacterial seed endophytes, identified in this study, for control of Fusarium foot rot and suggest that bacterial seed endophytes may provide a new biocontrol agent for an environmentally sustainable durum wheat disease management programme

    Natural based products for cleaning copper and copper alloys artefacts

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    Copper alloys objects can deteriorate their conservation state through irreversible corrosion. Since in the cultural heritage field every artefact is unique and any loss irreplaceable, solutions for conservation are needed. Hence, there is the necessity to stop the corrosion process with a suitable cleaning and conservation process to avoid further degradation processes without changing its morphological aspect. Chelating solutions are commonly used in chemical cleaning, mainly sodium salts of ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA). However, it is resistant to water purification procedures and is not biodegradable. The goal of this study was to see if applying an ecologically friendly chelating agent as an alternative to EDTA cleaning procedures for cultural heritage was suitable. In this study were chosen six natural-based chelators that could be a new green non-toxic alternative to EDTA in corrosion-inhibiting properties. They were tested for cleaning copper artefacts exposed to atmospheric environment in polluted areas. The study considered four amino acids, a glucoheptonate (CSA) and an industrial green chelator (GLDA). The effectiveness was tested on corrosion copper compounds and on laboratory corroded copper sheets. Finally, the cleaning efficacy was tested on four Roman coins and a modern copper painting. To define the cleaning efficacy, surface analytical investigations have been carried out by means ICP-OES, UV-VIS, µ-Raman, spectro-colorimetry, XRD and FTIR. Among the amino acids, alanine was the most effective, showing an unaltered noble patina and a good effective copper recovery from corrosion patinas

    AMBRA1 is able to induce mitophagy via LC3 binding, regardless of PARKIN and p62/SQSTM1

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    Damaged mitochondria are eliminated by mitophagy, a selective form of autophagy whose dysfunction associates with neurodegenerative diseases. PINK1, PARKIN and p62/SQTMS1 have been shown to regulate mitophagy, leaving hitherto ill-defined the contribution by key players in 'general' autophagy. In basal conditions, a pool of AMBRA1 - an upstream autophagy regulator and a PARKIN interactor - is present at the mitochondria, where its pro-autophagic activity is inhibited by Bcl-2. Here we show that, upon mitophagy induction, AMBRA1 binds the autophagosome adapter LC3 through a LIR (LC3 interacting region) motif, this interaction being crucial for regulating both canonical PARKIN-dependent and -independent mitochondrial clearance. Moreover, forcing AMBRA1 localization to the outer mitochondrial membrane unleashes a massive PARKIN- and p62-independent but LC3-dependent mitophagy. These results highlight a novel role for AMBRA1 as a powerful mitophagy regulator, through both canonical or noncanonical pathways

    Contingent infrastructure and the dilution of ‘Chineseness’: Reframing roads and rail in Kampala and Addis Ababa

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    Amid growing interest in China’s role in financing and building infrastructure in Africa, there is still little research on how Chinese-financed infrastructures are negotiated and realised at the city and metropolitan scale. We compare the Light Rail Transit in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia with the expressway linking Kampala to Entebbe airport in Uganda, examining the processes of bargaining behind these transport infrastructures and their emergent effects on urban land use and city-dwellers’ mobility. We find that both projects were designed and implemented through opaque negotiations between African national elites and Chinese agencies, with little or no engagement from city authorities, leading to haphazard outcomes that are poorly integrated with broader planning. Yet we also suggest that despite being enabled and mediated by Chinese agencies, such projects do not embody a Chinese global vision. They instead reflect the entrepreneurial activities of Chinese contractors and the varying ways in which these connect with African national governments’ shifting priorities. Moreover, as they are subsumed into the urban context, these transposed infrastructures have been rapidly repurposed and their ‘Chineseness’ diluted, with one morphing into an infrastructure for the poor and the other into a site of private value extraction. We thus argue that, far from representing a domineering or neo-colonial influence, Chinese-financed infrastructures that land in institutionally complex African city-regions can be rapidly swallowed up into the political-economic landscape, producing contingent benefits and disbenefits that are far removed from the visions of any planners – Chinese or African, past or present

    Application of single pan thermal analysis to Cu-Sn peritectic alloys

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    Single pan thermal analyses (SPTA) have been performed on Cu-14.5 wt.% Sn, Cu-21.3 wt.% Sri and Cu-26.8 wt.% Sit peritectic alloys. For this purpose, a SPTA assembly has been built and calibrated. As the latent heat is a function of temperature and composition during solidification of alloys, a new heat flow model coupled to a Cu-Sn thermodynamic database has been defined for the calculation of the corresponding evolutions of the solid mass fraction, f(s)(T). To verify the accuracy of this model, a close comparison with a micro-segregation model that includes back-diffusion in the primary alpha-solid phase has also been conducted successfully. The thermal analyses have finally shown that the Cu-Sn phase diagram recently assessed in the review of Liu et al. is the most reliable. (C) 2007 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved

    Reproductive biology of chuquiraga avellanedae (aSteraceae), an endemic Shrub of Patagonia

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    Chuquiraga avellanedae (Asteraceae) es una especie endémica de la estepa patagónica que representa un componente fundamental de los ecosistemas de la región. Conocer el sistema reproductivo, la dependencia a los agentes polinizadores y el ensamble de visitantes florales es importante para la comprensión de los patrones de flujo génico y la cantidad y la calidad de las semillas producidas. Los objetivos de este trabajo fueron determinar el grado de autoincompatibilidad de C. avellanedae y evaluar si es una especie ambófila.Mediante cruces controlados se puso a prueba la capacidad de producir semillas bajo distintos tratamientos: polinización cruzada, autopolinización forzada, polinización por viento, autopolinización espontánea y control. Además, se realizaron observaciones de los insectos polinizadores durante dos temporadas. La producción de semillas fue significativamente mayor en el tratamiento de polinización cruzada y el control, diferenciándose de la autopolinización forzada y la polinización por viento. No hubo producción de semillas en el tratamiento de autopolinización espontánea. Las flores fueron frecuentemente visitadas por especies de Hymenoptera y Diptera. Hubo variación inter-anual en la abundancia de los taxones más frecuentes que componen el ensamble de polinizadores. Chuquiraga avellanedae resultó autoincompatible y con un ensamble de polinizadores generalista. Los insectos polinizadores son cruciales para el éxito reproductivo de este arbusto. Coincidiendo con otros antecedentes, este trabajo indica que la interacción C. avellanedae-insectos representa un componente relevante en procesos y servicios ecosistémicos a nivel regional.Chuquiraga avellanedae (Asteraceae) is an endemic species of the Patagonian steppes and a key component of the ecosystem. Knowing the reproductive system and the dependence on pollinating agents is important for understanding gene flow and seed production. The objectives were to determine whether this species is self-incompatible and ambophilous. M&M: A field experiment was carried out and the following treatments were applied: cross-pollination, self-pollination, wind pollination, spontaneous pollination and control. Pollinating insects were recorded during two seasons. Results: Seed production was significantly higher in the cross-pollination treatment and the control, differing from self-pollination and wind pollination. There was no seed production in the spontaneous pollination treatment. Flowers were frequently visited by insects mainly belonging to Hymenoptera and Diptera. There was interannual variation in the abundance of the major pollinator taxa. Conclusions: Chuquiraga avellanedae is considered a self-incompatible species and a generalist-pollinated plant visited by many pollinators. This work reveals that pollinator insects are crucial for the reproductive success of this shrub. In agreement with previous knowledge, these findings indicate that the interaction C. avellanedae-insects represents a relevant component for ecosystem processes and services at regional scale.Fil: Zaffaroni, Facundo T.. Universidad Nacional de la Patagonia "San Juan Bosco"; ArgentinaFil: Campanella, María Victoria. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Centro Nacional Patagónico. Instituto Patagónico para el Estudio de los Ecosistemas Continentales; ArgentinaFil: Martínez, Fernando Joaquín. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Centro Nacional Patagónico. Instituto Patagónico para el Estudio de los Ecosistemas Continentales; Argentina. Universidad Nacional de la Patagonia "San Juan Bosco"; Argentin

    Geldanamycin-induced osteosarcoma cell death is associated with hyperacetylation and loss of mitochondrial pool of heat shock protein 60 (hsp60)

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    Osteosarcoma is one of the most malignant tumors of childhood and adolescence that is often resistant to standard chemo- and radio-therapy. Geldanamycin and geldanamycin analogs have been recently studied as potential anticancer agents for osteosarcoma treatment. Here, for the first time, we have presented novel anticancer mechanisms of geldanamycin biological activity. Moreover, we demonstrated an association between the effects of geldanamycin on the major heat shock proteins (HSPs) and the overall survival of highly metastatic human osteosarcoma 143B cells. We demonstrated that the treatment of 143B cells with geldanamycin caused a subsequent upregulation of cytoplasmic Hsp90 and Hsp70 whose activity is at least partly responsible for cancer development and drug resistance. On the other hand, geldanamycin induced upregulation of Hsp60 gene expression, and a simultaneous loss of hyperacetylated Hsp60 mitochondrial protein pool resulting in decreased viability and augmented cancer cell death. Hyperacetylation of Hsp60 seems to be associated with anticancer activity of geldanamycin. In light of the fact that mitochondrial dysfunction plays a critical role in the apoptotic signaling pathway, the presented data may support a hypothesis that Hsp60 can be another functional part of mitochondria-related acetylome being a potential target for developing novel anticancer strategies
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