Biomass can be used as an energy source to thermochemical conversion processes to biocrude production. However, the supply and dependence on only one biomass for biocrude production can be an obstacle due to its seasonality, availability, and logistics costs. In this way, biomass waste and agroindustrial residues can be mixture and used as feedstock to the hydrothermal co-liquefaction (co-HTL) process as an alternative to obtaining biocrude.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Pollut Res Int
February 2024
The numerous oxidation states of the element boron bring great challenges in containing its contamination in receptor bodies. This scenario increases significantly due to the widespread use of boron compounds in various industries in recent years. For this reason, the removal of this contaminant is receiving worldwide attention.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Pollut Res Int
September 2023
The present work presents the results obtained in the production of vanillin-doped alginate biopolymeric film using green chemistry methodology. Alginate dressings are already a therapeutic reality, but they act only by maintaining the appropriate environment for healing. In order to improve their properties, the incorporation of vanillin was proposed due to its antioxidant and antimicrobial potential.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFis the dominant cyanobacterial species causing harmful algal blooms in water bodies worldwide. The blooms release potent toxins and pose severe public health hazards to water bodies, animals, and humans who are in contact with or consume this water. The interaction between and heterotrophic bacteria is thought to contribute to the development of the blooms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe main objective of this study is the degradation of a synthetic solution of atrazine by a modified vermiculite catalyzed ozonation, in a rotating packed bed (RPB) reactor. A 0.5 L RPB reactor was used to perform the experiments, using a Central Composite Design (CCD) response surface to construct the quadratic model based on the factors: pH, catalyst concentration and reactor rotation frequency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe use of dispersed catalysts in aqueous medium inside reactors in advanced oxidative processes is common among researchers. However, due to the difficult separation of these species after treatment, in many cases, the treatment process is unfeasible. In this context, the main target of the work was the evaluation of degradation of the phenolic solution by ozonation titanium dioxide (TiO/P25), supported on zeolite spheres.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Monit Assess
August 2018
Ozone and a Fe/TiO-based catalyst were examined in the degradation of a synthetic solution of benzene toluene and xylene (BTX) in an advanced oxidation process (AOP). The catalyst beads were made from the slurry waste of aluminum production process, by inserting the TiO content and subsequent calcination. The reduction of the BTX concentration load was monitored by the reduction of chemical oxygen demand (COD) and BTX concentration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAmoxicillin is a useful antibiotic to combat bacterial infections. However, this drug can cause serious problems when discarded in waterways due to its great bioaccumulation potential. This compound can be treated via advanced oxidation processes (AOPs), which are capable of converting amoxicillin into carbon dioxide and water.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnat Rec A Discov Mol Cell Evol Biol
February 2003
In addition to their well-known actions within the nervous system, neurotrophins and their receptors are involved in immune system functioning, as demonstrated by their wide distribution in lymphoid tissues and their in vitro actions on immunocompetent cells. Nevertheless, the in vivo roles of neurotrophin-receptor systems in lymphoid tissues, as well as the scope of their influence throughout development and adulthood, are yet to be clarified. In the present study, we used combined morphological and immunohistochemical techniques to investigate the presence and cellular localization of p75NTR, the pan-neurotrophin receptor protein, in rat spleen from newborns to aging individuals, and the structural and innervation changes in the spleens of p75NTR-deficient mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor promotes the survival of multiple neuron types in the central and peripheral nervous system. Moreover, it plays a key role in the development of the enteric nervous system and in the kidney organogenesis. Glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor and their receptors are expressed in the developing tooth as well as in the trigeminal ganglion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPregnancy induces transient and reversible denervation of the mammalian uterus and uterine artery which origin remains still unclear. It is well established that the density of sympathetic innervation is regulated by the levels of peptidergic diffusible growth factors, especially nerve growth factor (NGF). Whether a decrease of NGF and/or its signal-transducing receptor TrkA are involved in this physiological denervation of the uterine artery during pregnancy has not been analyzed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe occurrence of S100 proteins in neurons of the mammalian peripheral nervous system is still controversial. This study was designed to investigate this topic in dorsal root ganglia (DRG) and the enteric nervous system (ENS) of several mammalian species (horse, buffalo, cow, sheep, pig, dog, rabbit and rat), as well as in DRG, paravertebral sympathetic ganglia (SG) and ENS of the adult man. Rat embryos of E17 and E19 were also examined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe nerve growth factor (NGF) receptors p75LNGR and TrkA are expressed by thymic epithelial cells. Presumably, the NGF-TrkA system is involved in the paracrine communication between thymic epithelial cells and thymocytes, whereas the functional role of p75LNGR is still unknown. The thymus of vertebrates undergoes age-related changes that in part depend on hormonal factors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurocalcin (NC) is a recently characterized EF-hand calcium-binding protein present in a discrete population of sensory neurons and their peripheral mechanoreceptors, but its presence in peripheral nervous system neurons other than in the rat is still unknown. The present study was designed to investigate the occurrence of NC in the dorsal root ganglia (DRG) of several mammalian species (horse, buffalo, cow, sheep, pig, dog, and rat), including humans. DRG were fixed, embedded in paraffin, and processed for immunohistochemistry using a polyclonal antibody against NC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe development of Meissner-like and Pacinian corpuscles was studied in mice [from postnatal day (Pd) 0 to 42] by using immunohistochemistry for specific corpuscular constituents. The battery of antigens investigated included PGP 9.5 protein and neurofilaments, as markers for the central axon; S100 protein, vimentin, and p75(LNGFR) protein, to show Schwann-related cells; and epithelial membrane antigen to identify perineurial-related cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell Tissue Res
October 1999
Increasing evidence suggests that some members of the family of the neurotrophins could be involved in immune system functioning. Both neurotrophins and their tyrosine-kinase signal-transducing receptors, the so-called Trk receptors, have been detected in various lymphoid tissues in a number of species. Nevertheless, their cellular localisation remains unclear in most cases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAim: This study analyses the occurrence and distribution of neurotrophins and their receptors in some types of tumours of neural-crest derived cells.
Methods And Results: Light microscopy immunohistochemistry associated with quantitative image analysis was used to study the expression of neurotrophins (nerve growth factor, brain-derived neurotrophic factor and neurotrophin (NT)-3) and their cognate receptors (p75(LNGFR), TrkA, TrkB and TrkC) in histologically defined ganglioneuroma, phaeochromocytoma and paraganglioma. The material was fixed in 10% formaldehyde, paraffin-embedded and processed for indirect peroxidase immunohistochemistry using a battery of poly- and monoclonal antibodies to detect neurotrophins and their receptors, as well as some neuronal, endocrine and glial cell markers.
Increasing evidence suggests that some members of the neurotrophic factor family of neurotrophins could be implicated in the regulation of immune responses. Neurotrophins, as well as their tyrosine kinase signal-transducing receptors (the so-called Trk neurotrophin receptors), have been detected in different lymphoid tissues, although their cellular localization is not well known. In this study we used single and double immunohistochemistry to localize TrkB in situ in the rat thymus (in animals from 0 days to 2 years of age), in cytospin preparations of rat thymic cells, and in two mouse monocyte-macrophage cell lines (RAW 264.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHuman skin, including nerves and sensory corpuscles, displays immunoreactivity (IR) for low- (p75) and high-affinity (TrkA-like) receptors for nerve growth factor (NGF), the best characterized member of the family of neurotrophins. This study was designed to analyze the changes induced by spinal cord and peripheral nerve injuries in the expression of neurotrophin receptors in digital skin, with special reference to nerves and sensory corpuscles. Skin biopsy samples were obtained from 1) the hand and toes of normal subjects, 2) below the level of the lesion of patients with spinal cord injury affecting dorsal and lateral funiculi, 3) the cutaneous territory of entrapped peripheral nerves (median and ulnar nerves), and 4) the cutaneous territory of sectioned and grafted nerves (median nerve).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIncreasing evidence suggests that, in addition to peripheral sensory and sympathetic neurons, the enteric neurons are also under the control of neurotrophins. Recently, neurotrophin receptors have been detected in the developing and adult mammalian enteric nervous system (ENS). Nevertheless, it remains to be established whether neurotrophin receptors are expressed in all enteric neurons and/or in glial cells and whether expression is a common feature in the enteric nervous system of all mammals or if interspecific differences exist.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFS100 protein in the vertebrate peripheral nervous system consists of homo- or heterodimers of S100alpha and S100beta proteins, the first predominating in neurons and the second in glial cells. Recently, however, occurrence of S100beta protein in neurons has been reported. The expression of S100 protein by Schwann cells, as well as their derivatives in sensory corpuscles, depends on the sensory axon (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Increasing evidence suggests that nerve growth factor (NGF), and probably other neurotrophins, are involved in the control of lymphoid organs and immunocompetent cells that express neurotrophins and/or their receptors. In the rat thymus, mRNA for TrkA (an essential component of the NGF signal transducing receptor) has been found primarily in stromal cells. The present study was undertaken to analyze the occurrence and localization of TrkA in the rat and human thymus, using Western blot and immunohistochemical techniques.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Trk proteins are essential constituents of the high-affinity signal-transducing neurotrophin receptors. They are expressed in a variety of non-neuronal tissues, including lymphoid organs, but their cellular localization in these remains to be established, as does the exact role of neurotrophins in the immune system. In this study we used immunohistochemical methods to analyze the cellular distribution of TrkA, TrkB, TrkC, and p75 (the low-affinity pan-neurotrophin receptor) proteins in normal human lymph nodes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The medial wall of the vomeronasal organ (VNO) is lined with a sensory epithelium that is closely related to the olfactory epithelium, which is developed from the olfactory placode. It undergoes continuous replacement during its life span. In other sensory epithelia, cell proliferation is under the control of some trophic factors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study was aimed at analyzing the changes in cutaneous sensory corpuscles from the territory of lesioned nerves and clinically denervated skin of patients with spinal cord injury using immunohistochemical methods. The morphological and biochemical characteristics of the Schwann-related cells of the mature sensory corpuscles (lamellar cells of Meissner corpuscles and inner-core of Pacinian corpuscles) depend upon the axon. To clarify whether this dependence requires structural and/or functional integrity of sensory axons we analyzed immunohistochemically some axonal, Schwann cell and perineurial cell antigens in cutaneous sensory corpuscles from i) the underlesional levels of patients with spinal cord injury affecting dorsal and lateral funiculi; ii) peripheral nerve entrapment, iii) sectioned and grafted nerves.
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