32 research outputs found
A Relationship between Carotenoid Accumulation and the Distribution of Species of the Fungus Neurospora in Spain
The ascomycete fungus Neurospora is present in many parts of the world, in particular in tropical and subtropical areas, where it is found growing on recently burned vegetation. We have sampled the Neurospora population across Spain. The sampling sites were located in the region of Galicia (northwestern corner of the Iberian peninsula), the province of Cåceres, the city of Seville, and the two major islands of the Canary Islands archipelago (Tenerife and Gran Canaria, west coast of Africa). The sites covered a latitude interval between 27.88° and 42.74°. We have identified wild-type strains of N. discreta, N. tetrasperma, N. crassa, and N. sitophila and the frequency of each species varied from site to site. It has been shown that after exposure to light Neurospora accumulates the orange carotenoid neurosporaxanthin, presumably for protection from UV radiation. We have found that each Neurospora species accumulates a different amount of carotenoids after exposure to light, but these differences did not correlate with the expression of the carotenogenic genes al-1 or al-2. The accumulation of carotenoids in Neurospora shows a correlation with latitude, as Neurospora strains isolated from lower latitudes accumulate more carotenoids than strains isolated from higher latitudes. Since regions of low latitude receive high UV irradiation we propose that the increased carotenoid accumulation may protect Neurospora from high UV exposure. In support of this hypothesis, we have found that N. crassa, the species that accumulates more carotenoids, is more resistant to UV radiation than N. discreta or N. tetrasperma. The photoprotection provided by carotenoids and the capability to accumulate different amounts of carotenoids may be responsible, at least in part, for the distribution of Neurospora species that we have observed across a range of latitudes
Impact of Daily Thermocycles on Hatching Rhythms, Larval Performance and Sex Differentiation of Zebrafish
In the wild, water temperature cycles daily: it warms up after sunrise, and cools rapidly after sunset. Surprisingly, the impact of such daily thermocycles during the early development of fish remains neglected. We investigated the influence of constant vs daily thermocycles in zebrafish, from embryo development to sexual differentiation, by applying four temperature regimens: two constant (24°C and 28°C) and two daily thermocycles: 28:24°C, TC (thermophase coinciding with daytime, and cryophase coinciding with night-time) and 24:28°C, CT (opposite to TC) in a 12:12 h light:dark cycle (LD). Embryo development was temperature-dependent but enhanced at 28°C and TC. Hatching rhythms were diurnal (around 4 h after lights on), but temperature- and cycle-sensitive, since hatching occurred sooner at 28°C (48 hours post fertilization; hpf) while it was delayed at 24°C (96 hpf). Under TC, hatching occurred at 72 hpf, while under CT hatching displayed two peaks (at 70 hpf and 94 hpf). In constant light (LL) or darkness (DD), hatching rhythms persisted with tau close to 24 h, suggesting a clock-controlled "gating" mechanism. Under 28°C or TC, larvae showed the best performance (high growth and survival, and low malformations). The sex ratio was strongly influenced by temperature, as the proportion of females was higher in CT and TC (79 and 83% respectively), contrasting with 28°C and 24°C, which led to more males (83 and 76%). Ovarian aromatase (cyp19a) expression in females was highest in TC and CT (6.5 and 4.6 fold higher than at 28°C, respectively); while anti-müllerian hormone (amh) expression in males increased in testis at 24°C (3.6 fold higher compared to TC) and particularly at 28°C (14.3 fold increase). Taken together, these findings highlight the key role of environmental cycles during early development, which shaped the daily rhythms in fish embryo and larvae, and ultimately influenced sex differentiation
Biocontrol Potential of Forest Tree Endophytes
Peer reviewe
A922 Sequential measurement of 1 hour creatinine clearance (1-CRCL) in critically ill patients at risk of acute kidney injury (AKI)
Meeting abstrac
Oxidative Stress in Wild Boars Naturally and Experimentally Infected with Mycobacterium bovis
Reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (ROS-RNS) are important defence substances involved in the immune response against pathogens. An excessive increase in ROS-RNS, however, can damage the organism causing oxidative stress (OS). The organism is able to neutralise OS by the production of antioxidant enzymes (AE); hence, tissue damage is the result of an imbalance between oxidant and antioxidant status. Though some work has been carried out in humans, there is a lack of information about the oxidant/antioxidant status in the presence of tuberculosis (TB) in wild reservoirs. In the Mediterranean Basin, wild boar (Sus scrofa) is the main reservoir of TB. Wild boar showing severe TB have an increased risk to Mycobacterium spp. shedding, leading to pathogen spreading and persistence. If OS is greater in these individuals, oxidant/antioxidant balance in TB-affected boars could be used as a biomarker of disease severity. The present work had a two-fold objective: i) to study the effects of bovine TB on different OS biomarkers (namely superoxide dismutase (SOD), catalasa (CAT), glutathione peroxidase (GPX), glutathione reductase (GR) and thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS)) in wild boar experimentally challenged with Mycobacterium bovis, and ii) to explore the role of body weight, sex, population and season in explaining the observed variability of OS indicators in two populations of free-ranging wild boar where TB is common. For the first objective, a partial least squares regression (PLSR) approach was used whereas, recursive partitioning with regression tree models (RTM) were applied for the second. A negative relationship between antioxidant enzymes and bovine TB (the more severe lesions, the lower the concentration of antioxidant biomarkers) was observed in experimentally infected animals. The final PLSR model retained the GPX, SOD and GR biomarkers and showed that 17.6% of the observed variability of antioxidant capacity was significantly correlated with the PLSR X's component represented by both disease status and the age of boars. In the samples from free-ranging wild boar, however, the environmental factors were more relevant to the observed variability of the OS biomarkers than the TB itself. For each OS biomarker, each RTM was defined as a maximum by one node due to the population effect. Along the same lines, the ad hoc tree regression on boars from the population with a higher prevalence of severe TB confirmed that disease status was not the main factor explaining the observed variability in OS biomarkers. It was concluded that oxidative damage caused by TB is significant, but can only be detected in the absence of environmental variation in wild boar
The European Solar Telescope
The European Solar Telescope (EST) is a project aimed at studying the magnetic connectivity of the solar atmosphere, from the deep photosphere to the upper chromosphere. Its design combines the knowledge and expertise gathered by the European solar physics community during the construction and operation of state-of-the-art solar telescopes operating in visible and near-infrared wavelengths: the Swedish 1m Solar Telescope, the German Vacuum Tower Telescope and GREGOR, the French TĂ©lescope HĂ©liographique pour lâĂtude du MagnĂ©tisme et des InstabilitĂ©s Solaires, and the Dutch Open Telescope. With its 4.2 m primary mirror and an open configuration, EST will become the most powerful European ground-based facility to study the Sun in the coming decades in the visible and near-infrared bands. EST uses the most innovative technological advances: the first adaptive secondary mirror ever used in a solar telescope, a complex multi-conjugate adaptive optics with deformable mirrors that form part of the optical design in a natural way, a polarimetrically compensated telescope design that eliminates the complex temporal variation and wavelength dependence of the telescope Mueller matrix, and an instrument suite containing several (etalon-based) tunable imaging spectropolarimeters and several integral field unit spectropolarimeters. This publication summarises some fundamental science questions that can be addressed with the telescope, together with a complete description of its major subsystems
Cerebellar Hemangioblastoma with Leptomeningeal Spread and a Fatal Outcome: A Rare Case Report with MDM2 and EGFR Alterations
Luis Miguel Chinchilla-TĂĄbora,1 Javier Ortiz RodrĂguez-Parets,1 Ălvaro Otero-RodrĂguez,2 Laura Ruiz MartĂn,2 Juan Carlos Paniagua Escudero,3 Luis Miguel Navarro MartĂn,4 BelĂ©n Cigarral GarcĂa,4 Adelaida Nieto Palacios,5 Idalia GonzĂĄlez Morais,1 JosĂ© MarĂa SayaguĂ©s,1 MarĂa Dolores Ludeña de la Cruz1 1Department of Pathology, University Hospital of Salamanca and Institute for Biomedical Research of Salamanca, Salamanca, Spain; 2Department of Neurosurgery, University Hospital of Salamanca and Institute for Biomedical Research of Salamanca, Salamanca, Spain; 3Department of Radiology, University Hospital of Salamanca and Institute for Biomedical Research of Salamanca, Salamanca, Spain; 4Department of Clinical Oncology, University Hospital of Salamanca and Institute for Biomedical Research of Salamanca, Salamanca, Spain; 5Department of Radiation Oncology, University Hospital of Salamanca and Institute for Biomedical Research of Salamanca, Salamanca, SpainCorrespondence: Luis Miguel Chinchilla-TĂĄbora, Department of Pathology, University Hospital of Salamanca and Institute for Biomedical Research of Salamanca, Paseo de San Vicente, 58-182, Salamanca, PC. 37007, Spain, Tel +34 923291100. Extension: 56738, Email [email protected]: Hemangioblastoma (HB) is a Central Nervous System (CNS) tumor with a generally favorable behavior and prognosis, classified as WHO grade 1. Sporadic HB is not related to any inherited disease, and it usually appears in a single location. Sporadic or VHL-related HBs show variable patterns of growth velocity. Cases of growing HB can cause mild symptoms such as headache, but some cases develop serious complications such as accumulation of cerebrospinal fluid in the brain with secondary neurological damage sometimes being irreversible when early treatment is not started. Our case showed some clinical characteristics more frequently observed in VHL-related HB rather than sporadic HB, and the presence of alterations in MDM2 and EGFR that could be related to the oncogenesis of these tumors. Even when the treatment of choice for HB is surgery, the presence of these genetic alterations could open a new window for research aimed at assessing the possibility of new therapies with TKIs-EGFR and anti-MDM2 inhibitors in those HB cases with multifocal recurrences or cases with an adverse clinical behavior.Keywords: haemangioblastoma, mouse double minute 2, epidermal growth factor receptor, hydrocephalus, immunohistochemistry, fluorescence in situ hybridizatio