50 research outputs found

    Infochemical-mediated preference behavior of the maize weevil, Sitophilus zeamais Motschulsky, when searching for its hosts

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    Behavioral responses of S. zeamais to odours from pulverized wheat, brown rice, sorghum, buckwheat, peanut and cork were compared in a Y-tube-olfactometerbioassay. Results showed that both sexes responded to host volatiles and males were more sensitive than females. The strongest responses to grains of wheat and brown rice were found, and insects reared on these were dramatically heavier than on other tested materials (grain sorghum, buckwheat, peanut and cork). Multiple-choices tests, in which volatiles from males that were removed from the wheat within different minutes were simultaneously presented in the chamber, were used to study whether males can release aggregation pheromone if not on the grain. The pheromone was released by males within about 13 minutes after removal from the grains. Responses to pheromones produced by males were skewed toward females although both sexes were attracted. Both sexes responded most strongly to the odour source comprising pheromone with host volatiles

    New Insight into Intrachromosomal Deletions Induced by Chrysotile in the gpt delta Transgenic Mutation Assay

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    BACKGROUND: Genotoxicity is often a prerequisite to the development of malignancy. Considerable evidence has shown that exposure to asbestos fibers results in the generation of chromosomal aberrations and multilocus mutations using various in vitro approaches. However, there is less evidence to demonstrate the contribution of deletions to the mutagenicity of asbestos fibers in vivo. OBJECTIVES: In the present study, we investigated the mutant fractions and the patterns induced by chrysotile fibers in gpt delta transgenic mouse primary embryo fibroblasts (MEFs) and compared the results obtained with hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) in an attempt to illustrate the role of oxyradicals in fiber mutagenesis. RESULTS: Chrysotile fibers induced a dose-dependent increase in mutation yield at the redBA/gam loci in transgenic MEF cells. The number of λ mutants losing both redBA and gam loci induced by chrysotiles at a dose of 1 μg/cm(2) increased by > 5-fold relative to nontreated controls (p < 0.005). Mutation spectra analyses showed that the ratio of λ mutants losing the redBA/gam region induced by chrysotiles was similar to those induced by equitoxic doses of H(2)O(2). Moreover, treatment with catalase abrogated the accumulation of γ-H2AX, a biomarker of DNA double-strand breaks, induced by chrysotile fibers. CONCLUSIONS: Our results provide novel information on the frequencies and types of mutations induced by asbestos fibers in the gpt delta transgenic mouse mutagenic assay, which shows great promise for evaluating fiber/particle mutagenicity in vivo
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