6 research outputs found

    Impacts of climate change and human activities on vegetation coverage variation in mountainous and hilly areas in Central South of Shandong Province based on tree-ring

    Get PDF
    IntroductionIt is of great significance to understand the characteristics and influencing factors of vegetation coverage variation in the warm temperate zone. As a typical region of the warm temperate zone in eastern China, the mountainous and hilly region in central-south Shandong Province has fragile ecological environment and soil erosion problem. Studying on vegetation dynamics and its influencing factors in this region will help to better understand the relationship between climate change and vegetation cover change in the warm temperate zone of eastern China, and the influence of human activities on vegetation cover dynamics.MethodsBased on dendrochronology, a standard tree-ring width chronology was established in the mountainous and hilly region of central-south Shandong Province, and the vegetation coverage from 1905 to 2020 was reconstructed to reveal the dynamic change characteristics of vegetation cover in this region. Secondly, the influence of climate factors and human activities on the dynamic change of vegetation cover was discussed through correlation analysis and residual analysis.Results and discussionIn the reconstructed sequence, 23 years had high vegetation coverage and 15 years had low vegetation coverage. After low-pass filtering, the vegetation coverage of 1911ā€“1913, 1945ā€“1951, 1958ā€“1962, 1994ā€“1996, and 2007ā€“2011 was relatively high, while the vegetation coverage of 1925ā€“1927, 1936ā€“1942, 2001ā€“2003, and 2019ā€“2020 was relatively low. Although precipitation determined the variation of vegetation coverage in this study area, the impacts of human activities on the change of vegetation coverage in the past decades cannot be ignored. With the development of social economy and the acceleration of urbanization, the vegetation coverage declined. Since the beginning of the 21st century, ecological projects such as Grain-for-Green have increased the vegetation coverage

    PyK2 and FAK connections to p190Rho guanine nucleotide exchange factor regulate RhoA activity, focal adhesion formation, and cell motility

    Get PDF
    Integrin binding to matrix proteins such as fibronectin (FN) leads to formation of focal adhesion (FA) cellular contact sites that regulate migration. RhoA GTPases facilitate FA formation, yet FA-associated RhoA-specific guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs) remain unknown. Here, we show that proline-rich kinase-2 (Pyk2) levels increase upon loss of focal adhesion kinase (FAK) in mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs). Additionally, we demonstrate that Pyk2 facilitates deregulated RhoA activation, elevated FA formation, and enhanced cell proliferation by promoting p190RhoGEF expression. In normal MEFs, p190RhoGEF knockdown inhibits FN-associated RhoA activation, FA formation, and cell migration. Knockdown of p190RhoGEF-related GEFH1 does not affect FA formation in FAKāˆ’/āˆ’ or normal MEFs. p190RhoGEF overexpression enhances RhoA activation and FA formation in MEFs dependent on FAK binding and associated with p190RhoGEF FA recruitment and tyrosine phosphorylation. These studies elucidate a compensatory function for Pyk2 upon FAK loss and identify the FAKā€“p190RhoGEF complex as an important integrin-proximal regulator of FA formation during FN-stimulated cell motility

    Effects of Planting Density and Nitrogen Application on Soil Greenhouse Gas Fluxes in the Jujubeā€“Alfalfa Intercropping System in Arid Areas

    No full text
    Increasing agricultural yields and reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions are the main themes of agricultural development in the 21st century. This study investigated the yield and GHGs of a jujubeā€“alfalfa intercropping crop, relying on a long-term field location experiment of intercropping in an arid region. The treatments included four planting densities (D1 (210 kg haāˆ’1 sowing rate; six rows), D2 (280 kg haāˆ’1 sowing rate; eight rows), D3 (350 kg haāˆ’1 sowing rate; ten rows)) and four nitrogen levels (N0 (0 kg haāˆ’1), N1 (80 kg haāˆ’1), N2 (160 kg haāˆ’1), and N3 (240 kg haāˆ’1)) in the jujubeā€“alfalfa intercropping system. The results showed that the jujubeā€“alfalfa intercropping system is a the ā€œsourceā€ of atmospheric CO2 and N2O, and the ā€œsinkā€ of CH4; the trend of CO2 fluxes was ā€œsingle peakā€, while the trend of N2O and CH4 fluxes was ā€œdouble peakā€, and there was a tendency for their ā€œvalley peaksā€ to become a ā€œmirrorā€ of each another. The magnitude of emissions under the nitrogen level was N3 > N2 > N1 > N0; the content of soil total nitrogen, quick-acting nitrogen, and the global warming potential (GWP) increased with an increase in the amount of nitrogen that was applied, but the pH showed the opposite tendency. The D2N2 treatment increased the total N, quick N, SOC, and SOM content to reduce the alfalfa GHG emission intensity (GHGI) by only 0.061 kg CO2-eq kgāˆ’1 compared to the other treatments. D2N2 showed a good balance between yield benefits and environmental benefits. The total D2N2 yield was the most prominent among all treatments, with a 47.64% increase in yield in 2022 compared to the D1N0 treatment. The results showed that the optimization of planting density and N fertilization reduction strategies could effectively improve economic efficiency and reduce net greenhouse gas emissions. In the jujubeā€“alfalfa intercropping system, D2N2 (eight rows planted in one film 160 N = 160 kg haāˆ’1) realized the optimal synergistic effect between planting density and nitrogen application, and the results of this study provide theoretical support for the reduction in GHGs emissions in northwest China without decreasing the yield of alfalfa forage

    Inhibition of cytohesins protects against genetic models of motor neuron disease

    No full text
    Mutant genes that underlie Mendelian forms of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and biochemical investigations of genetic disease models point to potential driver pathophysiological events involving endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress and autophagy. Several steps in these cell biological processes are known to be controlled physiologically by small ADP-ribosylation factor (ARF) signaling. Here, we investigated the role of ARF guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs), cytohesins, in models of ALS. Genetic or pharmacological inhibition of cytohesins protects motor neurons in vitro from proteotoxic insults and rescues locomotor defects in a Caenorhabditis elegans model of disease. Cytohesins form a complex with mutant superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1), a known cause of familial ALS, but this is not associated with a change in GEF activity or ARF activation. ER stress evoked by mutant SOD1 expression is alleviated by antagonism of cytohesin activity. In the setting of mutant SOD1 toxicity, inhibition of cytohesin activity enhances autophagic flux and reduces the burden of misfolded SOD1. These observations suggest that targeting cytohesins may have potential benefits for the treatment of ALS
    corecore