Publications by authors named "Carsten Harms"

Up to now, little has been known about backfat thickness (BFT) in dairy cattle. The objective of this study was to investigate the lactation curve and genetic parameters for BFT as well as its relationship with body condition score (BCS) and milk yield (MKG). For this purpose, a dataset was analysed including phenotypic observations of 1929 German Holstein cows for BFT, BCS and MKG recorded on a single research dairy farm between September 2005 and December 2022.

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Objective: The purpose of this study was to develop a method for the isolation, culture, and PEG-mediated protoplast transfection from leaves of in vitro-grown plants of Ricinus communis.

Results: Factors such as the enzymatic composition and the incubation time were evaluated. The enzymatic solution, containing 1.

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This contribution outlines the design and manufacturing of a microfluidic device implemented as a biosensor for retrieval and detection of bacteria RNA. The device is fully made of Cyclo-Olefin Copolymer (COC), which features low auto-fluorescence, biocompatibility and manufacturability by hot-embossing. The RNA retrieval was carried on after bacteria heat-lysis by an on-chip micro-heater, whose function was characterized at different working parameters.

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Traditionally the detection of microbial pathogens in clinical, environmental or food samples has commonly needed the prelevation of cells by culture before the application ofthe detection strategy. This is done to increase cell number thereby overcoming problems associated with the sensitivity of classical detection strategies. However, culture-based methods have the disadvantages of taking longer, usually are more complex and require skilled personnel as well as not being able to detect viable but non cultivable microbial species.

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We have previously investigated the role of polymorphic chemical metabolizing genes in the susceptibility to the development of lung cancer using 110 primary lung cancer patients and 119 matched smoker controls. Together with data from the present study on DNA repair genes, we did not observe significant associations between any single variant genotype for several DNA-repair and chemical-metabolizing genes (XPD [or ERCC2], XRCC1, XRCC3, GSTM1, GSTT1, MPO, and mEH [or EPHX1]) and lung cancer. In the present study, we have further evaluated a nested group of 79 patients and 69 matched controls, and observed that increased chromosome aberrations (CAs) were associated with variant DNA-repair genotypes among both the patient and the control groups, with a significant increase for individuals having the XPD Lys/Gln + Gln/Gln genotypes (P = 0.

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Carcinogenesis is a multi-stage and prolonged process. At the present time, our knowledge of biological activities along the process is incomplete, therefore, a variety of experimental data are used to assess health risk from exposure to environmental chemicals. However, experimental approaches may not be adequate unless human data are available to support the assessment.

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