Publications by authors named "Maria Michela Spiriti"

Article Synopsis
  • Genome Resources Banks (GRBs) are essential for collecting and managing genetic material to protect biodiversity for research and conservation purposes.
  • They help in species preservation and genetic management, particularly for endangered animals, by storing genetic information securely to counteract population risks.
  • The article discusses the ethical concerns around wildlife biobanking practices and suggests using a tool called ETHAS to ensure these procedures maintain high ethical standards throughout their development and operation.
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Nowadays, most zoos have taken prominent and active positions in endangered species conservation and educating visitors about the value of biodiversity. However, to be effective and trusted in their mission, they must act ethically and have a good reputation. Yet, the drivers that can influence their reputation are still little investigated, and there are still few studies focused on assessing the reputation of these institutions.

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Most people lack direct experience with wildlife and form their risk perception primarily on information provided by the media. The way the media frames news may substantially shape public risk perception, promoting or discouraging public tolerance towards wildlife. At the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, bats were suggested as the most plausible reservoir of the virus, and this became a recurrent topic in media reports, potentially strengthening a negative view of this ecologically important group.

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Article Synopsis
  • ARTs, initially used for domestic and lab animals, are now being applied in wildlife conservation to enhance genetic management and increase population numbers.
  • The use of ARTs in wildlife raises ethical concerns that haven't been thoroughly examined yet.
  • This study introduces an ethical analysis framework based on the Ethical Matrix (EM) and uses ovum pick-up (OPU) procedures for the northern white rhinoceros as a case study to guide similar assessments for other endangered species.
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Assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs) can make a difference in biodiversity conservation. Their application, however, can create risks and raise ethical issues that need addressing. Unfortunately, there is a lack of attention to the topic in the scientific literature and, to our knowledge, there is no tool for the ethical assessment of ARTs in the context of conservation that has been described.

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Recently our findings have shown that the integration of the gene coding for the rat gluco-corticoid receptor (GR receptor) in Nicotiana langsdorffii plants induced morphophysiological effects in transgenic plants through the modification of their hormonal pattern. Phytohormones play a key role in plant responses to many different biotic and abiotic stresses since a modified hormonal profile up-regulates the activation of secondary metabolites involved in the response to stress. In this work transgenic GR plants and isogenic wild type genotypes were exposed to metal stress by treating them with 30ppm cadmium(II) or 50ppm chromium(VI).

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Background: The World Anti-Doping Agency fears the use of gene doping to enhance athletic performances. Thus, a bioanalytical approach based on end point PCR for detecting markers' of transgenesis traceability was developed.

Results: A few sequences from two different vectors using an animal model were selected and traced in different tissues and at different times.

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Surface plasmon resonance imaging (SPRi) was used as the transduction principle for the development of optical-based sensing for transgenes detection in human cell lines. The objective was to develop a multianalyte, label-free, and real-time approach for DNA sequences that are identified as markers of transgenosis events. The strategy exploits SPRi sensing to detect the transgenic event by targeting selected marker sequences, which are present on shuttle vector backbone used to carry out the transfection of human embryonic kidney (HEK) cell lines.

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An immobilisation procedure based on the direct coupling of thiolated probes (Probe-C6-SH) to bare gold sensor surfaces has been compared with a reference immobilisation method, based on the coupling of biotinylated probes onto a streptavidin-coated dextran-modified surface. The instrumentations used were a quartz crystal microbalance (QCM) and the optical instruments Biacore X and Spreeta based on surface plasmon resonance (SPR). The performances of the DNA-based sensors resulting from direct coupling of thiolated DNA probes onto electrodes of quartz crystals or gold SPR-chips have been studied in terms of the main analytical parameters, i.

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An immobilisation procedure based on the direct coupling of thiol-derivatised oligonucleotide probes to bare gold sensor surfaces has been used for DNA sensing applications. The instrumentation used relies on surface plasmon resonance (SPR) transduction; in particular the commercially available instruments BIACORE X and SPREETA, have been employed in this study. The performances of the SPR-based DNA sensors resulting from direct coupling of thiol-derivatised DNA probes onto gold chips, have been studied in terms of the main analytical parameters, i.

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