24 research outputs found
(R1493) Discussion on Stability and Hopf-bifurcation of an Infected Prey under Refuge and Predator
The paper deals with the case of non-selective predation in a partially infected prey-predator system, where both the susceptible prey and predator follow the law of logistic growth and some preys avoid predation by hiding. The disease-free preys get infected in due course of time by a certain rate. However, the carrying capacity of the predator population is considered proportional to the sum-total of the susceptible and infected prey. The positivity and boundedness of the solutions of the system are studied and the existence of the equilibrium points and stability of the system are analyzed at these points. The effect of the infected prey-refuge on each population density is also discussed. It is observed that a Hopf-bifurcation may occur about the interior equilibrium, where the refuge parameter is considered as the bifurcation parameter. The analytical findings are illustrated through computer simulation using MAPLE that show the reliability of the model from the ecological point of view
Bifurcation and Stability of Prey-Predator Model with Beddington-DeAngelis Functional Response
In this paper we discuss the harvesting of the prey species making a fraction of them to be accessed by the predator while both the prey and predator are being subjected to Beddington-DeAngelis functional response. It is observed that a Hopf-bifurcation may occur around the interior equilibrium taking the environmental carrying capacity of the prey species as the parameter. Some numerical examples and the corresponding curves are studied using Maple to explain the results of the proposed model
18β-glycyrrhetinic acid triggers curative Th1 response and nitric oxide up-regulation in experimental visceral leishmaniasis associated with the activation of NF-κB
The efficacy of 18β-glycyrrhetinic acid (GRA), a pentacyclic triterpene belonging to the β-amyrin series of plant origin, was evaluated in experimental visceral leishmaniasis. GRA is reported to have antitumor and immunoregulatory activities, which may be attributable in part to the induction of NO. Indeed, an 11-fold increase in NO production was observed with 20 µM GRA in mouse peritoneal macrophages infected with Leishmania donovani promastigotes. In addition to having appreciable inhibitory effects on amastigote multiplication within macrophages (IC50, 4.6 µg/ml), complete elimination of liver and spleen parasite burden was achieved by GRA at a dose of 50 mg/kg/day, given three times, 5 days apart, in a 45-day mouse model of visceral leishmaniasis. GRA treatment resulted in reduced levels of IL-10 and IL-4, but increased levels of IL-12, IFN-γ, TNF-α, and inducible NO synthase, reflecting a switch of CD4+ differentiation from Th2 to Th1. This treatment is likely to activate immunity, thereby imparting resistance to reinfection. GRA induced NF-κB migration into the nucleus of parasite-infected cells and caused a diminishing presence of IκB in the cytoplasm. The lower level of cytoplasmic IκBα in GRA-treated cells resulted from increased phosphorylation of IκBα and higher activity of IκB kinase (IKK). Additional experiments demonstrated that GRA does not directly affect IKK activity. These results suggest that GRA exerts its effects at some level upstream of IKK in the signaling pathway and induces the production of proinflammatory mediators through a mechanism that, at least in part, involves induction of NF-κB activation
The immunomodulatory impact of naturally derived neem leaf glycoprotein on the initiation progression model of 4NQO induced murine oral carcinogenesis: a preclinical study
IntroductionMurine tumor growth restriction by neem leaf glycoprotein (NLGP) was established in various transplanted models of murine sarcoma, melanoma and carcinoma. However, the role of NLGP in the sequential carcinogenic steps has not been explored. Thus, tongue carcinogenesis in Swiss mice was induced by 4-nitroquinoline-1-oxide (4NQO), which has close resemblance to human carcinogenesis process. Interventional role of NLGP in initiation-promotion protocol established during 4NQO mediated tongue carcinogenesis in relation to systemic immune alteration and epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) is investigated.Methods4NQO was painted on tongue of Swiss mice every third day at a dose of 25µl of 5mg/ml stock solution. After five consecutive treatment with 4NQO (starting Day7), one group of mice was treated with NLGP (s.c., 25µg/mice/week), keeping a group as PBS control. Mice were sacrificed in different time-intervals to harvest tongues and studied using histology, immunohistochemistry, flow-cytometry and RT-PCR on different immune cells and EMT markers (e-cadherin, vimentin) to elucidate their phenotypic and secretory status.ResultsLocal administration of 4NQO for consecutive 300 days promotes significant alteration in tongue mucosa including erosion in papillae and migration of malignant epithelial cells to the underlying connective tissue stroma with the formation of cell nests (exophytic-hyperkeratosis with mild dysplasia). Therapeutic NLGP treatment delayed pre-neoplastic changes promoting normalization of mucosa by maintaining normal structure. Flow-cytometric evidences suggest that NLGP treatment upregulated CD8+, IFNγ+, granzyme B+, CD11c+ cells in comparison to 4NQO treated mice with a decrease in Ki67+ and CD4+FoxP3+ cells in NLGP treated cohort. RT-PCR demonstrated a marked reduction of MMP9, IL-6, IL-2, CD31 and an upregulation in CCR5 in tongues from 4NQO+NLGP treated mice in comparison to 4NQO treated group. Moreover, 4NQO mediated changes were associated with reduction of e-cadherin and simultaneous up-regulation of vimentin expression in epithelium that was partially reversed by NLGP.DiscussionEfficacy of NLGP was tested first time in sequential carcinogenesis model and proved effective in delaying the initial progression. NLGP normalizes type 1 immunity including activation of the CD8+T effector functions, reduction of regulatory T cell functions, along with changes in EMT to make the host systemically alert to combat the carcinogenic threat
Inventory of the traditional rice varieties in farming system of southern Assam: A case study
157-163Farmers in the rural parts of the North
eastern region are still known to retain traditional rice varieties in their
farming systems. In the present study, an attempt was made to inventorise the
traditional rice varieties cultivated in<span style="mso-bidi-font-weight:bold;
mso-bidi-font-style:italic"> a village in Barak
Valley, North east India. A total of 18 rice landraces were
collected from the study site retained by the farmers because of their dietary,
cultural and social value. The traditional rice varieties possess several
stress tolerant properties. Such properties act as positive factors in the
retention of the rice landraces in the face of the increasing propaganda for
cultivation of high yielding rice varieties. Traditional rice varieties
represent important genetic reservoirs with valuable traits and there is an
urgent need to provide proper incentives and encourage the farmers to cultivate
rice landraces to help in the in situ
conservation of this important gene pool.
</span
Local soil knowledge of smallholder rice farmers: A case study in Barak Valley, Assam
94-99
Smallholder farmers in traditional farming
systems are an untapped source of traditional knowledge. They are the managers
of well-preserved local soil knowledge and folk soil taxonomy. In the present
study rice farmers in Barak Valley, South Assam,
were inventorised for local soil knowledge in relation to rice farming systems.
The rice farmers were interviewed for the prevalence of folk soil taxonomy and
a total of five major soil types were recorded. Since smallholder farmers
practice their farming systems under various environmental factors, they on the
basis of their local knowledge of soil, etc. shape the crop diversity. The
study revealed that the farmers are faced with heterogeneous soil types and
hence they maintain systematic classification criteria for the nomenclature of
different soils, which was found to be positively correlated to scientific
analysis of the soils.
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Deglycosylation Effect of the Mammalian Sperm Maturation Antigen (SMA2) on Serological Reaction and Acrosome Reaction
Spermatozoal membrane proteins are considered to possess several immunological unique characteristics as the cell is formed behind the blood-testes barriers. Major goat sperm maturation antigen (SMA2) contains one hexosamine along with mannose, galactose and glucose. In the present study, effects of deglycosylation of SMA2 antigen on immunoreactivity and the serological activity was investigated. SMA2 glycoantigen showed positive
immunoreactivity after treatment with sodium borohydride (NaBH4) and moreover this generated a 44 kDa protein band which was negative for periodic acid Schiff reagent. Trifluoromethanesulfonic acid (TFMS) caused aggregation and restricted the free mobility of the treated antigen on SDS-PAGE and the protein band generated by TFMS treatment also showed positive immuno-reactivity. The results supported the views that the protein portion retains its immuno-reactivity even after oxidation of the vicinal hydroxyl group of saccharide component of SMA2 antigen. These data suggest that immunodominent epitopes exist on the core protein by which the SMA2 antigen retains its immuno-reactivity
even after disruption of the saccharide portion. Additional experiments demonstrate that protein epitopes have a role in capacitation and the acrosome reaction (AR) in presence of antibody which is raised against this protein part of SMA2 using the negative staining of FITC-PSA (fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled Pisum sativum agglutinin) probe. Altogether these findings indicate that the protein portion of SMA2 might fulfill the serological activity of the antigen as well as the protein epitope affects the acrosome reaction. In view of this property, we propose that the protein portion of SMA2 antigen might be considered as a potential antigenic target for an immune response
A method to obtain static potentials for electron-molecule scattering
We present a method for calculating the static potential of an arbitrary molecule which is represented by the well-known Gaussian wavefunctions. This potential is given in analytic form which, in additions to elementary functions, contains the error function for which simple and accurate methods for its evaluation exist. As an example we have used this potential, along with polarization-correlation and exchange potentials, to calculate the differential cross sections for the scattering of electrons from the water molecule in the energy range 30–100 eV. Comparison with previous calculations and experimental measurements show that this method produces accurate results for the differential scattering cross sections