170 research outputs found
Evidence of collaborative opportunities to ensure long-term sustainability in African farming
Farmers face the challenge of increasing production to feed a growing population and support livelihoods, whilst
also improving the sustainability and resilience of cropping systems. Understanding the key factors that influence
farming management practices is crucial for determining farmers’ adaptive capacity and willingness to engage in
cooperative strategies. To that end, we investigated management practices that farmers adopt and the factors
underlying farmers’ decision-making. We also aimed to identify the constraints that impede the adoption of
strategies perceived to increase farming resilience and to explore how the acceleration of technology adoption
through cooperation could ensure the long-term sustainability of farming. Surveys were distributed to farming
stakeholders and professionals who worked across the contrasting environments of Morocco. We used descriptive
statistics and analysis by log-linear modelling to predict the importance of factors influencing farmers’ decision-
making. The results show that influencing factors tended to cluster around environmental pressures, crop
characteristics and water availability with social drivers playing a lesser role. Subsidies were also found to be an
important factor in decision-making. Farming stakeholders generally believed that collaborative networks are
likely to facilitate the adoption of sustainable agricultural practices. We conclude that farmers need both eco-
nomic incentives and technical support to enhance their adaptive capacity as this can lessen the socioeconomic
vulnerability inherent in arid and semi-arid regions
Excitonic luminescence of the I-intercalated HfS
Photoluminescence from bulk HfS grown by the chemical vapor transport
(CVT) method is reported. A series of emission lines is apparent at low
temperature in the energy range of 1.4 - 1.5 eV. Two groups of the observed
excitonic transitions followed by their replicas involving acoustic and optical
phonons are distinguished using classical intensity correlation analysis. The
emission is attributed to the recombination of excitons bound to iodine (I)
molecules intercalated between layers of HfS. The I molecules are
introduced to the crystal during the growth as halogen transport agents in the
CVT growth process. Their presence in the crystal is confirmed by secondary ion
mass spectroscopy.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Judgments of learning index relative confidence, not subjective probability
The underconfidence-with-practice (UWP) effect is a common finding in calibration studies concerned with judgments of learning (JOLs) elicited on a percentage scale. The UWP pattern is present when, in a procedure consisting of multiple study-test cycles, mean scale JOLs underestimate mean recall performance on cycle 2 and beyond. Although this pattern is present both for items recalled and unrecalled on the preceding cycle, to date research has concentrated mostly on the sources of UWP for the latter type of items. The present study aimed at bridging this gap. In three experiments, we examined calibration on the third of three cycles. The results of Experiment 1 demonstrated the typical pattern of higher recall and scale JOLs for previously recalled items compared to unrecalled ones. More important, they also revealed that even though the UWP effect was found for both items previously recalled once and twice, its magnitude was greater for the former class of items. Experiments 2 and 3, which employed a binary betting task and a binary 0/100% JOL task, respectively, demonstrated that people can accurately predict future recall for previously recalled items with binary decisions. In both experiments, the UWP effect was absent both for items recalled once and twice. We suggest that the sensitivity of scale JOLs, but not binary judgments, to the number of previous recall successes strengthens the claim of Hanczakowski, Zawadzka, Pasek, and Higham (2013) that scale JOLs reflect confidence in, rather than the subjective probability of, future recall
Dedifferentiation of Foetal CNS Stem Cells to Mesendoderm-Like Cells through an EMT Process
Tissue-specific stem cells are considered to have a limited differentiation potential. Recently, this notion was challenged by reports that showed a broader differentiation potential of neural stem cells, in vitro and in vivo, although the molecular mechanisms that regulate plasticity of neural stem cells are unknown. Here, we report that neural stem cells derived from mouse embryonic cortex respond to Lif and serum in vitro and undergo epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT)-mediated dedifferentiation process within 48 h, together with transient upregulation of pluripotency markers and, more notably, upregulation of mesendoderm genes, Brachyury (T) and Sox17. These induced putative mesendoderm cells were injected into early gastrulating chick embryos, which revealed that they integrated more efficiently into mesoderm and endoderm lineages compared to non-induced cells. We also found that TGFβ and Jak/Stat pathways are necessary but not sufficient for the induction of mesendodermal phenotype in neural stem cells. These results provide insights into the regulation of plasticity of neural stem cells through EMT. Dissecting the regulatory pathways involved in these processes may help to gain control over cell fate decisions
IlsA, A Unique Surface Protein of Bacillus cereus Required for Iron Acquisition from Heme, Hemoglobin and Ferritin
The human opportunistic pathogen Bacillus cereus belongs to the B. cereus group that includes bacteria with a broad host spectrum. The ability of these bacteria to colonize diverse hosts is reliant on the presence of adaptation factors. Previously, an IVET strategy led to the identification of a novel B. cereus protein (IlsA, Iron-regulated leucine rich surface protein), which is specifically expressed in the insect host or under iron restrictive conditions in vitro. Here, we show that IlsA is localized on the surface of B. cereus and hence has the potential to interact with host proteins. We report that B. cereus uses hemoglobin, heme and ferritin, but not transferrin and lactoferrin. In addition, affinity tests revealed that IlsA interacts with both hemoglobin and ferritin. Furthermore, IlsA directly binds heme probably through the NEAT domain. Inactivation of ilsA drastically decreases the ability of B. cereus to grow in the presence of hemoglobin, heme and ferritin, indicating that IlsA is essential for iron acquisition from these iron sources. In addition, the ilsA mutant displays a reduction in growth and virulence in an insect model. Hence, our results indicate that IlsA is a key factor within a new iron acquisition system, playing an important role in the general virulence strategy adapted by B. cereus to colonize susceptible hosts
Enterobactin-Mediated Delivery of β-Lactam Antibiotics Enhances Antibacterial Activity against Pathogenic Escherichia coli
The design, synthesis, and characterization of enterobactin–antibiotic conjugates, hereafter Ent-Amp/Amx, where the β-lactam antibiotics ampicillin (Amp) and amoxicillin (Amx) are linked to a monofunctionalized enterobactin scaffold via a stable poly(ethylene glycol) linker are reported. Under conditions of iron limitation, these siderophore-modified antibiotics provide enhanced antibacterial activity against Escherichia coli strains, including uropathogenic E. coli CFT073 and UTI89, enterohemorrhagic E. coli O157:H7, and enterotoxigenic E. coli O78:H11, compared to the parent β-lactams. Studies with E. coli K-12 derivatives defective in ferric enterobactin transport reveal that the enhanced antibacterial activity observed for this strain requires the outer membrane ferric enterobactin transporter FepA. A remarkable 1000-fold decrease in minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) value is observed for uropathogenic E. coli CFT073 relative to Amp/Amx, and time-kill kinetic studies demonstrate that Ent-Amp/Amx kill this strain more rapidly at 10-fold lower concentrations than the parent antibiotics. Moreover, Ent-Amp and Ent-Amx selectively kill E. coli CFT073 co-cultured with other bacterial species such as Staphylococcus aureus, and Ent-Amp exhibits low cytotoxicity against human T84 intestinal cells in both the apo and iron-bound forms. These studies demonstrate that the native enterobactin platform provides a means to effectively deliver antibacterial cargo across the outer membrane permeability barrier of Gram-negative pathogens utilizing enterobactin for iron acquisition.Pacific Southwest Regional Center of Excellence for Biodefense and Emerging Infectious DiseaseKinship Foundation. Searle Scholars ProgramMassachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemistr
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