Publications by authors named "Elisa Benini"

Production of European eel offspring has become a reality, but liquid diets during larval culture hold new challenges. This study focused on increasing food amounts without compromising well-being or healthy larvae-bacteria interactions. First-feeding larvae were fed two food amounts (Low = 0.

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European eel (Anguilla anguilla) is a commercially important species for fisheries and aquaculture in Europe and the attempt to close the lifecycle in captivity is still at pioneering stage. The first feeding stage of this species is characterized by a critical period between 20 to 24 days post hatch (dph), which is associated with mortalities, indicating the point of no return. We hypothesized that this critical period might also be associated with larvae-bacterial interactions and the larval immune status.

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Closing the life cycle of European eel (Anguilla anguilla) in captivity is targeted to provide a sustainable, year-round supply of juveniles for aquaculture. Present focus is on the nutritional requirements during the larval first-feeding period. In this study, three experimental diets were tested on hatchery-produced European eel larvae from the onset of the first-feeding stage commencing 10 days post hatch (dph) until 28 dph.

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Establishment of European eel (Anguilla anguilla) hatchery production will rely on selectively bred individuals that produce progeny with the best traits in successive generations. As such, this study used a quantitative genetic breeding design, between four females and nine males (four wild-caught and five cultured), to investigate the effect of paternal origin (wild-caught vs. cultured) and quantify the relative importance of parental effects, including genetic compatibility, on early life history (ELH) performance traits (i.

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The electrophilic metal fragment [(99m)Tc(N)(PNP)](2+) (PNP=diphosphane ligand) has been employed for the labeling of fatty acid chains of different lengths. To provide a site-specific group for the attachment of the metallic moiety, the fatty acid derivatives were functionalized by appending a bis-mercapto or, alternatively, a dithiocarbamato pi-donor chelating systems to one terminus of the carbon chain to yield both dianionic and monoanionic bifunctional ligands (L). The resulting complexes, [(99m)Tc(N)(PNP)(L)] (0/+), exhibited the usual asymmetrical structure in which a Tc(triple bond)N group was surrounded by two different bidentate chelating ligands.

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A general procedure is presented for the preparation of a new class of nitrido asymmetrical Tc-99m complexes containing two different bidentate ligands bound to the same [Tc(N)]2+ core that could be used to design either essential or target specific imaging agents. This procedure is based on the chemical properties of a new monosubstituted [Tc(N)(R2PS)Cl(PPh3)] species composed of a TcN multiple bond and an ancillary phosphine thiol ligand (R2PSH). This intermediate readily reacts with bidentate mononegative ligands (S--Y) containing soft pi-donor coordinating atoms to give neutral pentacoordinate asymmetrical complexes of the type [Tc(N)(R2PS)(S--Y)].

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Nine nitrido technetium compounds comprising bis-substituted Tc(N)(PS)(2) (1-4) (PS = bidentate phosphinothiolate ligands) and Tc(N)(dtc)(2) (5, 6) derivatives (dtc = bidentate dithiocarbamate), and mixed-ligand Tc(N)(PS)(dtc) (7-9) species, were subjected to electrospray ionisation mass spectrometry and MS(n) experiments. Bis-substituted phosphinothiolato complexes 1-4 lead to the straightforward formation of dinuclear species reasonably originating from proton bound dimers. These dinuclear species do not show, under collisionally induced fragmentation processes, the formation of monomeric units but cleavages related to the ligand framework, thereby proving the high stability of the [Tc--H(+)--Tc] bond.

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A new biomolecule labeling method that utilizes the [(99m)Tc(N)(PNP)](2+) metal fragment is presented. Thus, a series of nitrido mixed-ligand M(V) complexes (M = (99m)Tc, (99g)Tc, Re), [M(N)(Ln)(PNP)], where Ln is the dianionic form of a dithiolate or substituted-dithiolate ligand and PNP is an aminodiphosphine, is described. (99m)Tc complexes can be prepared using either a two-step or a three-step procedure starting from generator-eluted pertechnetate through a prereduced mixture of [(99m)Tc(N)]-containing species, followed by sequential or contemporary addition of the relevant dithiolate and aminodiphosphine.

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