435 research outputs found

    Beneficial effects of probionts and their modes of action

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    Development and use of a polarized equine upper respiratory tract mucosal explant system to study the early phase of pathogenesis of a European strain of equine arteritis virus

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    The upper respiratory tract mucosa represents the first line of defense, which has to be overcome by pathogens before invading the host. Considering the economic and ethical aspects involved in using experimental animals for pathogenesis studies, respiratory mucosal explants, in which the tissue's three-dimensional architecture is preserved, may be ideal alternatives. Different respiratory mucosal explant cultures have been developed. However, none of them could be inoculated with pathogens solely at the epithelium side. In the present study, equine nasal and nasopharyngeal explants were embedded in agarose (3%), leaving the epithelium side exposed to allow apical inoculation. Morphometric analysis did not show degenerative changes during 72 h of cultivation. The number of apoptotic cells in the mucosa slightly increased over time. After validation, the system was used for apical infection with a European strain (08P178) of equine arteritis virus (EAV) (107.6TCID50/mL per explant). Impermeability of agarose to virus particles was demonstrated by the absence of labeled microspheres (40nm) and a lack of EAV-antigens in RK13 cells seeded underneath the agarose layer in which inoculated explants were embedded. At 72 hpi, 27% of the EAV-positive cells were CD172a+ and 19% were CD3+ in nasal explants and 45% of the EAV-positive cells were CD172a+ and 15% were CD3+ in nasopharyngeal explants. Only a small percentage of EAV-positive cells were IgM+. This study validates the usefulness of a polarized mucosal explant system and shows that CD172a+ myeloid cells and CD3+ T lymphocytes represent important EAV-target cells in the respiratory mucosa

    Columnaris disease in fish: a review with emphasis on bacterium-host interactions

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    Flavobacterium columnare (F. columnare) is the causative agent of columnaris disease. This bacterium affects both cultured and wild freshwater fish including many susceptible commercially important fish species. F. columnare infections may result in skin lesions, fin erosion and gill necrosis, with a high degree of mortality, leading to severe economic losses. Especially in the last decade, various research groups have performed studies aimed at elucidating the pathogenesis of columnaris disease, leading to significant progress in defining the complex interactions between the organism and its host. Despite these efforts, the pathogenesis of columnaris disease hitherto largely remains unclear, compromising the further development of efficient curative and preventive measures to combat this disease. Besides elaborating on the agent and the disease it causes, this review aims to summarize these pathogenesis data emphasizing the areas meriting further investigation

    Scanning electron microscopic study of the posterior ciliary veins in domestic ungulates

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    Vascular corrosion casts of 12 equine, 15 bovine and 50 porcine eyes were studied scanning electron microscopically for the presence of posterior ciliary veins. These veins drain a postequatorial segment of the choroid and emerge near the posterior bulbar pole. They complement the four vorticose veins that emerge near or at the equatorial zone of the eyeball and the slender choroidoretinal veins that drain the peridiscal area of the choroid. Posterior ciliary veins were observed in all equine and bovine eyes examined. In these species they presented a large variation in size, number and position. In contrast, posterior ciliary veins were only present in two porcine eyes where they were represented by one and two vessels, respectively. The morphology and variability of these vessels is illustrated and their nomenclature and functional significance are discussed

    Ontwikkeling van het maagdarmstelsel bij het zeepaardje (Hippocampus erectus P.)

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    Seahorses have become an endangered species because of overfishing. Aquaculture could potentially compensate for this decline, but its effect is limited since most seahorses raised in captivity die at the age of 5 days. In this study the histological analysis of the alimentary tract of larvae aged 7 and 33 days is described, to help understand their digestive mechanisms. At day 7 a lot of mucines could be found in the oesophagus. These are suggestive of pre-gastric digestion. At both ages, the stomach was noticed as a sac-like distension cranial to the midgut, lacking gastric glands. A solid tubulus-shaped structure in between swimbladder and hindgut is suggestive of a regressing pneumatic duct

    Scanning electron microscopic study of different hair types in various breeds of rabbits

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    The microarchitecture of the cover hairs, wool hairs and tactile (sinus) hairs of feral, New Zealand White and Angora rabbits was studied by means of scanning electron microscopy. The morphology and variability of the cuticular scale patterns, hair cortex, medullary arrangement and profile of the hairs are described, illustrated and compared with findings resulting from conventional light microscopy, cuticular casting and medullary impregnation. All parameters examined in cover hairs presented a considerable variation along the length of the hair shaft. In wool hairs, in contrast, only the cuticular scale pattern was subject to manifest segmental variation, whereas the shaft diameter, cortical profile and medullar composition changed little over the entire length of the hair. The tactile hairs of the head were characterised by a round profile of the hair shaft, a cylindrical central medullar canal, and a thick cortex covered by cuticular scales that were arranged in a waved pattern and oriented transversally in relation to the longitudinal axis of the hair. It was concluded that the scanning electron microscopic observation of hair samples is a fast and valuable method for identifying hair types with useful applications in different disciplines such as mammalian biology, the textile industry and forensic medicine

    Angiopoietins differentially influence in vitro angiogenesis by endothelial cells of different origin

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    Angiopoietins are important growth factors for vascular development and quiescence. They are promising targets for pro-or anti-angiogenic therapies in diverse pathologies, but the mechanisms of the ANGPT/TIE2 system are complex and not well understood. In the present study, the separate and combined effects of angiopoietin 1 and angiopoietin 2 were studied, using a recently developed in vitro angiogenesis model that allows both a quantitative and qualitative evaluation of the angiogenic cascade. This cell culture model was performed with microvascular endothelial cells (ECs) originating from different vascular beds, i.e. dermal ECs and cardiac ECs. In addition, the expression of the angiopoietins and the receptors, TIE1 and TIE2 was analyzed with RT-qPCR. This study revealed that the angiopoietins provoked a differential response in the two endothelial cultures. Both angiopoietin 1 as well as angiopoietin 2 elicited an angiogenic cascade in the dermal ECs but not in the cardiac ECs. In addition, the RT-qPCR data revealed marked differences in the endogenous expression pattern of these factors, indicating that the origin of endothelial cells might have an important impact on their angiogenic potential
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