543 research outputs found
Health-Promoting Phytochemicals from 11 Mustard Cultivars at Baby Leaf and Mature Stages
Mustard is a Brassica vegetable that provides a number of phytonutrients. However, the phytonutrient profile of mustard has been relatively limited. We analyzed the glucosinolates and their hydrolysis products, carotenoids, total anthocyanin and phenolic contents, and antioxidant capacity of the leaves of 11 mustard cultivars grown in a greenhouse at the baby leaf and mature stages. An aliphatic glucosinolate sinigrin and its hydrolysis products allyl isothiocyanate and 1-cyano-2,3-epithiopropane were the major phytonutrients in the mustard leaves. Carotenoids β-carotene, lutein, violaxanthin, and neoxanthin were detected. We found phytonutrient concentration and their change with plant growth were cultivar-dependent. The %RDA value for vitamin A calculated using β-carotene content and retinol activity equivalents suggests that mustard cultivars used in this study can be a good source of vitamin A. Phenolic contents and antioxidant capacity also varied among cultivars and between physiological stages. Our results suggest that mustard leaves are rich in various phytochemicals and their composition depends on cultivar and the physiological stage. This is the first report on phytochemical composition in various mustard cultivars at different physiological stages
Glucosinolates, Carotenoids, and Vitamins E and K Variation from Selected Kale and Collard Cultivars
Glucosinolates, carotenoids, and fat-soluble vitamins E and K contents were analyzed from various kale and collard cultivars at mature stage. We found a significant difference in these phytonutrients among cultivars. Among kale cultivars, âBeiraâ and âOlympic Redâ were the highest in the total glucosinolate and âToscanoâ kale was the highest in total carotenoid content. âScarletâ kale was highest in tocopherols. For collard, total glucosinolate was the highest in âTop Bunchâ while carotenoids were the highest in âGreen Glaze.â An accession PI261597 was the highest in phylloquinone. In addition to the total content of each phytonutrient class, their composition differed among cultivars, indicating that each cultivar may have differential regulatory mechanisms for biosynthesis of these phytonutrients. Our result indicates that cultivar selection may play an important role in consumption of kale and collard with greater nutritional benefit. Therefore, the result of this study will provide a more thorough profile of essential and nonessential phytonutrients of kale and collard cultivars for consumersâ choice and for future research on nutritional value of these crops
Influence of 1-Methylcyclopropene Treatment on Postharvest Quality of Four Scab (Venturia inaequalis)-Resistant Apple Cultivars
Scab (Venturia inaequalis) is a very serious disease for apples causing up to 80% of loss in yield but there are only a few studies on postharvest quality of scab-resistant cultivars. In this study we evaluated the effect of 1-methylcyclopropene (1-MCP) on fruit quality, total phenolic content, and antioxidant capacity after storage of four scab-resistant cultivars and compared to a standard cultivar, âGolden Delicious.â In general, ethylene production and respiration rates significantly differed among cultivars, between control and 1-MCP-treated fruits, and between storage duration regimes. 1-MCP treatment retarded fruit softening and lowered juice pH but storage effect on soluble solids and acidity depended on cultivar and 1-MCP treatment. Total phenolic content was significantly affected by storage duration and 1-MCP treatment. Antioxidant capacity of the four scab-resistant cultivars was either similar to or significantly higher than that of âGolden Deliciousâ with the 1-MCP-treated fruits having significantly higher antioxidant capacity than the nontreated fruits after storage. Our results clearly show that the quality of four scab-resistant cultivars was comparable to that of âGolden Deliciousâ and 1-MCP effect differed among cultivars. These differences need to be considered in developing storage regime to minimize quality deterioration during long-term storage
Supplementation of H1N1pdm09 Split Vaccine with Heterologous Tandem Repeat M2e5x Virus-like Particles Confers Improved Cross-Protection in Ferrets
Current inďŹuenza vaccines induce strain-speciďŹc immunity to the highly variable hemagglutinin (HA) protein. It is therefore a high priority to develop vaccines that induce broadly cross-protective immunity to different strains of inďŹuenza. Since inďŹuenza A M2 proteins are highly conserved among different strains, ďŹve tandem repeats of the extracellular peptide of M2 in a membrane-anchored form on virus- like particles (VLPs) have been suggested to be a promising candidate for universal inďŹuenza vaccine. In this study, ferrets were intramuscularly immunized with 2009 H1N1 split HA vaccine (âSplitâ) alone, inďŹuenza split vaccine supplemented with M2e5x VLP (âSplit+M2e5xâ), M2e5x VLP alone (âM2e5xâ), or mock immunized. Vaccine efďŹcacy was measured serologically and by protection against a sero- logically distinct viral challenge. Ferrets immunized with Split+M2e5x induced HA strain speciďŹc and conserved M2e immunity. Supplementation of M2e5x VLP to split vaccination signiďŹcantly increased the immunogenicity of split vaccine compared to split alone. The Split+M2e5x ferret group showed evidence of cross-reactive protection, including faster recovery from weight loss, and reduced inďŹammation, as inferred from changes in peripheral leukocyte subsets, compared to mock-immunized animals. In addi- tion, ferrets immunized with Split+M2e5x shed lower viral nasal-wash titers than the other groups. Ferrets immunized with M2e5x alone also show some protective effects, while those immunized with split vaccine alone induced no protective effects compared to mock-immunized ferrets. These stud- ies suggest that supplementation of split vaccine with M2e5x-VLP may provide broader and improved cross-protection than split vaccine alone
Removal of Pb(II) from aqueous solution by a zeoliteânanoscale zero-valent iron composite
The effectiveness of nanoscale zero-valent iron (nZVI) to remove heavy metals from water is reduced by its low durability, poor mechanical strength, and tendency to form aggregates. A composite of zeolite and nanoscale zero-valent iron (ZânZVI) overcomes these problems and shows good potential to remove Pb from water. FTIR spectra support nZVI loading onto the zeolite and reduced Fe0 oxidation in the ZânZVI composite. Scanning electron micrographs show aggregation was eliminated and transmission electron micrographs show well-dispersed nZVI in chain-like structures within the zeolite matrix. The mean surface area of the composite was 80.37 m2/g, much greater than zeolite (1.03 m2/g) or nZVI (12.25 m2/g) alone, as determined by BET-N2 measurement. More than 96% of the Pb(II) was removed from 100 mL of solution containing 100 mg Pb(II)/L within 140 min of mixing with 0.1 g ZânZVI. Tests with solution containing 1000 mg Pb(II)/L suggested that the capacity of the ZânZVI is about 806 mg Pb(II)/g. Energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy showed the presence of Fe in the composite; X-ray diffraction confirmed formation and immobilization of Fe0 and subsequent sorption and reduction of some of the Pb(II) to Pb0. The low quantity of Pb(II) recovered in water-soluble and Ca(NO3)2-extractable fractions indicate low bioavailability of the Pb(II) removed by the composite. Results support the potential use of the ZânZVI composite in permeable reactive barriers
Removal of Pb(II) from aqueous solution by a zeoliteânanoscale zero-valent iron composite
The effectiveness of nanoscale zero-valent iron (nZVI) to remove heavy metals from water is reduced by its low durability, poor mechanical strength, and tendency to form aggregates. A composite of zeolite and nanoscale zero-valent iron (ZânZVI) overcomes these problems and shows good potential to remove Pb from water. FTIR spectra support nZVI loading onto the zeolite and reduced Fe0 oxidation in the ZânZVI composite. Scanning electron micrographs show aggregation was eliminated and transmission electron micrographs show well-dispersed nZVI in chain-like structures within the zeolite matrix. The mean surface area of the composite was 80.37 m2/g, much greater than zeolite (1.03 m2/g) or nZVI (12.25 m2/g) alone, as determined by BET-N2 measurement. More than 96% of the Pb(II) was removed from 100 mL of solution containing 100 mg Pb(II)/L within 140 min of mixing with 0.1 g ZânZVI. Tests with solution containing 1000 mg Pb(II)/L suggested that the capacity of the ZânZVI is about 806 mg Pb(II)/g. Energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy showed the presence of Fe in the composite; X-ray diffraction confirmed formation and immobilization of Fe0 and subsequent sorption and reduction of some of the Pb(II) to Pb0. The low quantity of Pb(II) recovered in water-soluble and Ca(NO3)2-extractable fractions indicate low bioavailability of the Pb(II) removed by the composite. Results support the potential use of the ZânZVI composite in permeable reactive barriers
Robust Chemiresistive Behavior in Conductive Polymer/MOF Composites
Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are promising materials for gas sensing but
are often limited to single-use detection. We demonstrate a hybridization
strategy synergistically deploying conductive MOFs (cMOFs) and conductive
polymers (cPs) as two complementary mixed ionic-electronic conductors in
high-performing stand-alone chemiresistors. Our work presents significant
improvement in i) sensor recovery kinetics, ii) cycling stability, and iii)
dynamic range at room temperature. We demonstrate the effect of hybridization
across well-studied cMOFs based on 2,3,6,7,10,11-hexahydroxytriphenylene (HHTP)
and 2,3,6,7,10,11-hexaiminotripphenylene (HITP) ligands with varied metal nodes
(Co, Cu, Ni). We conduct a comprehensive mechanistic study to relate energy
band alignments at the heterojunctions between the MOFs and the polymer with
sensing thermodynamics and binding kinetics. Our findings reveal that hole
enrichment of the cMOF component upon hybridization leads to selective
enhancement in desorption kinetics, enabling significantly improved sensor
recovery at room temperature, and thus long-term response retention. This
mechanism was further supported by density functional theory calculations on
sorbate-analyte interactions. We also find that alloying cPs and cMOFs enables
facile thin film co-processing and device integration, potentially unlocking
the use of these hybrid conductors in diverse electronic applications
UKIRT Widefield Infrared Survey for Fe+
The United Kingdom Infrared Telescope (UKIRT)Widefield Infrared Survey for Fe+ (UWIFE) is a 180 deg2 imaging survey of the first Galactic quadrant (7Ă° < l < 62Ă° |b| <1Ă°.5) that uses a narrow-band filter centred on the [Fe II] 1.644-ĂÂźm emission line. The [Fe II] 1.644-ĂÂźm emission is a good tracer of dense, shock-excited gas, and the survey will probe violent environments around stars: star-forming regions, evolved stars, and supernova remnants, among others. The UWIFE survey is designed to complement the existing UKIRTW idefield Infrared Survey for H2 (UWISH2). The survey will also complement existing broad-band surveys. The observed images have a nominal 5Ă? detection limit of 18.7 mag for point sources, with a median seeing of 0.83 arcsec. For extended sources, we estimate a surface brightness limit of 8.1 Ă? 10-20 W m-2 arcsec-2. In this paper, we present an overview and some preliminary results of this survey. ĂŠ 2014 The Authors Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society
Normal aging in mice is associated with a global reduction in cortical spectral power and network-specific declines in functional connectivity
Normal aging is associated with a variety of neurologic changes including declines in cognition, memory, and motor activity. These declines correlate with neuronal changes in synaptic structure and function. Degradation of brain network activity and connectivity represents a likely mediator of age-related functional deterioration resulting from these neuronal changes. Human studies have demonstrated both general decreases in spontaneous cortical activity and disruption of cortical networks with aging. Current techniques used to study cerebral network activity are hampered either by limited spatial resolution (e.g. electroencephalography, EEG) or limited temporal resolution (e.g., functional magnetic resonance imaging, fMRI). Here we utilize mesoscale imaging of neuronal activity in Thy1-GCaMP6f mice to characterize neuronal network changes in aging with high spatial resolution across a wide frequency range. We show that while evoked activity is unchanged with aging, spontaneous neuronal activity decreases across a wide frequency range (0.01-4 Hz) involving all regions of the cortex. In contrast to this global reduction in cortical power, we found that aging is associated with functional connectivity (FC) deterioration of select networks including somatomotor, cingulate, and retrosplenial nodes. These changes are corroborated by reductions in homotopic FC and node degree within somatomotor and visual cortices. Finally, we found that whole-cortex delta power and delta band node degree correlate with exploratory activity in young but not aged animals. Together these data suggest that aging is associated with global declines in spontaneous cortical activity and focal deterioration of network connectivity, and that these reductions may be associated with age-related behavioral declines
- âŚ