933 research outputs found
Diversity of lactic acid bacteria of the bioethanol process
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Bacteria may compete with yeast for nutrients during bioethanol production process, potentially causing economic losses. This is the first study aiming at the quantification and identification of Lactic Acid Bacteria (LAB) present in the bioethanol industrial processes in different distilleries of Brazil.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>A total of 489 LAB isolates were obtained from four distilleries in 2007 and 2008. The abundance of LAB in the fermentation tanks varied between 6.0 × 10<sup>5 </sup>and 8.9 × 10<sup>8 </sup>CFUs/mL. Crude sugar cane juice contained 7.4 × 10<sup>7 </sup>to 6.0 × 10<sup>8 </sup>LAB CFUs. Most of the LAB isolates belonged to the genus <it>Lactobacillus </it>according to rRNA operon enzyme restriction profiles. A variety of <it>Lactobacillus </it>species occurred throughout the bioethanol process, but the most frequently found species towards the end of the harvest season were <it>L. fermentum </it>and <it>L. vini</it>. The different rep-PCR patterns indicate the co-occurrence of distinct populations of the species <it>L. fermentum </it>and <it>L. vini</it>, suggesting a great intraspecific diversity. Representative isolates of both species had the ability to grow in medium containing up to 10% ethanol, suggesting selection of ethanol tolerant bacteria throughout the process.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>This study served as a first survey of the LAB diversity in the bioethanol process in Brazil. The abundance and diversity of LAB suggest that they have a significant impact in the bioethanol process.</p
Thermorheological and textural behaviour of gluten-free gels obtained from chestnut and rice flours
Nowadays, as celiac disease is becoming more
common the consumers’ demand for gluten-free products
with high nutritional and taste quality is increasing. This
work deals with the study of the impact of four novelty
gluten-free sources: chestnut flour (Cf), whole rice flour
(Rw), Carolino rice flour (Rc) and Agulha rice flour (Ra).
Textural, thermorheological and stability performance of
gluten-free gels using different experimental techniques
were evaluated. Mixed gels were also produced for comparison.
Texture parameters were determined from the texture
profile analysis using a texturometer. Thermorheological
oscillatory measurements were conducted in a stresscontrolled
rheometer in order to clarify the kinetics of gel
formation and to characterise the structure of the matured
gels. The stability of the gels was evaluated using transmittance
profiling of the gels under gravitational fields
(LUMiSizer®). Texture studies suggested that gels from mixtures of chestnut flour at 30 % and rice flour at 20 %
showed the right texture to develop gel-based new desserts.
Rheological results showed that the thermal profiles on
heating of Cf gels were similar to those obtained for Rw
and Ra, whereas Rc gels exhibited a particular pattern. Once
the final gelatinisation temperature was achieved, no significant
differences on the viscoelastic properties were noticed
for all the tested gels. Stability tests showed that gels with
Rc should present an industrial advantage over the other
assayed formulations, since the stability of these gels is of
the order of four times larger
Informational Gene Phylogenies Do Not Support a Fourth Domain of Life for Nucleocytoplasmic Large DNA Viruses
Mimivirus is a nucleocytoplasmic large DNA virus (NCLDV) with a genome size (1.2 Mb) and coding capacity ( 1000 genes) comparable to that of some cellular organisms. Unlike other viruses, Mimivirus and its NCLDV relatives encode homologs of broadly conserved informational genes found in Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukaryotes, raising the possibility that they could be placed on the tree of life. A recent phylogenetic analysis of these genes showed the NCLDVs emerging as a monophyletic group branching between Eukaryotes and Archaea. These trees were interpreted as evidence for an independent “fourth domain” of life that may have contributed DNA processing genes to the ancestral eukaryote. However, the analysis of ancient evolutionary events is challenging, and tree reconstruction is susceptible to bias resulting from non-phylogenetic signals in the data. These include compositional heterogeneity and homoplasy, which can lead to the spurious grouping of compositionally-similar or fast-evolving sequences. Here, we show that these informational gene alignments contain both significant compositional heterogeneity and homoplasy, which were not adequately modelled in the original analysis. When we use more realistic evolutionary models that better fit the data, the resulting trees are unable to reject a simple null hypothesis in which these informational genes, like many other NCLDV genes, were acquired by horizontal transfer from eukaryotic hosts. Our results suggest that a fourth domain is not required to explain the available sequence data
Factors Associated with Colposcopy-Histopathology Confirmed Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia among HIV-Infected Women from Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
Introduction: Despite the availability of preventive strategies (screening tests and vaccines), cervical cancer continues to
impose a significant health burden in low- and medium-resourced countries. HIV-infected women are at increased risk for
infection with human papillomavirus (HPV) and thus development of cervical squamous intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN).
Methods:Study participants included HIV-infected women enrolling the prospective open cohort of Evandro Chagas
Clinical Research Institute, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation (IPEC/FIOCRUZ). At cohort entry, women were subjected to
conventional Papanicolaou test, HPV-DNA test and colposcopy; lesions suspicious for CIN were biopsied. Histopathology
report was based on directed biopsy or on specimens obtained by excision of the transformation zone or cervical
conization. Poisson regression modeling was used to assess factors associated with CIN2+diagnosis.
Results:The median age of the 366 HIV-infected women included in the study was 34 years (interquartile range: 28–41
years). The prevalence of CIN1, CIN2 and CIN3 were 20.0%, 3.5%, and 2.2%, respectively. One woman was found to have
cervical cancer. The prevalence of CIN2+was 6.0%. Factors associated with CIN2+diagnosis in the multivariate model were
age,years compared to350 cells/mm3 (aPR = 6.03 95%CI 1.50–24.3) and concomitant
diagnosis of vulvar and/or vaginal intraepithelial lesion (aPR = 2.68 95%CI 0.99–7.24).
Discussion:Increased survival through wide-spread use of highly active antiretroviral therapy might allow for the
development of cervical cancer. In Brazil, limited cytology screening and gynecological care adds further complexity to the
HIV-HPV co-infection problem. Integrated HIV care and cervical cancer prevention programs are needed for the prevention
of cervical cancer mortality in this group of wome
Is trade liberalization a solution to the unemployment problem?
This paper examines how trade liberalization affects the growth rate of sectoral employment in developed and developing countries. The estimation results imply that trade openness in the form of higher trade volumes has not been successful in generating jobs in developing countries. The overall weak, negative employment response to trade volumes may be explained by the negative output response to trade openness in these countries. Our estimates also indicate that higher trade volumes have adverse effect on industrial employment in developed countries. Moreover, while they have positive effect on employment in industry and services in developing countries, trade barriers have adverse effect on employment growth in services for developed countries. Our overall results imply that while trade barriers have relatively little adverse effects and/or in some case a positive effect on employment both in developing and developed countries, higher trade volumes have an adverse effect on industrial employment in developed economies. Thus, trade openness is not in itself a solution to the unemployment problems of developing countries and yet it has not been the prime factor to blame for the lower employment levels in developed countries.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Fatores de risco e complicações em hipertensos/diabéticos de uma regional sanitária do nordeste brasileiro
Objetivou-se com este estudo identificar os fatores de risco e a complicações associadas em usuários com hipertensão/diabetes, cadastrados no HIPERDIA da Secretaria Executiva Regional VI em Fortaleza, CE. O estudo documental analítico abordou 2.691 pessoas. Do total, 73,6% eram mulheres; 44,6% tinham 60-79 anos, com média de 60,8 anos; 87,4% eram brancos, amarelos ou pardos; 63,7% tinham até oito anos de estudo; 79,7% não eram fumantes; 56,6% sedentários; 59,6% apresentavam sobrepeso/obesidade; 48,4% possuíam antecedente familiar de doença cardiovascular. Verificou-se associação entre sedentarismo e sobrepeso/obesidade com diabéticos e diabéticos hipertensos; antecedente familiar de doença cardiovascular com os hipertensos e diabéticos hipertensos; acidente vascular encefálico, doença arterial coronariana e insuficiência renal crônica com hipertensos e diabéticos hipertensos; infarto e acidente vascular encefálico com diabéticos. O antecedente familiar cardiovascular associou-se com doença arterial coronariana e infarto. Evidenciou-se a presença relevante de fatores de risco e complicações, destacando a necessidade da educação em saúde com os usuários
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