The current report summarises the work performed in the context of the European Food Risk Assessment Fellowship Programme (EU-FORA), which included the evaluation of health risks associated with the consumption of botanical preparations of (kratom). is a tree native to Southeast Asia, where its leaves and preparations of the leaves have been used for centuries, among others, as a stimulant or as a traditional herbal medicine. Preparations of the plant have recently gained increasing popularity in other parts of the world, and are presently also accessible via online platforms, e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEthnopharmacological Relevance: A variety of Mediterranean plant species, traditionally used for the prevention and treatment of several health conditions, contain ingredients with potential biological activity of which many remain unexplored. Among the beneficial health effects of bioactive phytochemicals is the activation of cellular defense mechanisms involving the activation of EpRE (electrophile responsive element) - mediated changes in gene expression.
Aim Of The Study: The present study aimed to identify botanicals and their active constituents able to activate the EpRE mediated gene expression within a series of Mediterranean plant species known for their hepatoprotective and/or cardioprotective properties.
This review provides an update on the promises and pitfalls when using in vitro bioassays to evaluate beneficial and adverse health effects of botanicals and botanical preparations. Important issues addressed in the paper are: (i) the type of assays and biological effects available; (ii) false-positives, false-negatives and confounding factors; (iii) matrix and combination effects; (iv) extrapolation of in vitro data to the in vivo situation; (v) when (not) to use bioassays; and (vi) identification of active constituents. It is concluded that in vitro bioassays provide models to detect beneficial as well as adverse activities, but that linking these observations to individual ingredients and extrapolations to the in vivo situation is more complicated than generally anticipated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAttenuated strains of Sabin poliovirus vaccine replicate in the human gut and in rare cases may cause vaccine-associated paralytic poliomyelitis (VAPP). Mutations at specific sites of the genome and recombination between Sabin strains may result in the loss of the attenuated phenotype of OPV (Oral Poliovirus Vaccine) strains and the acquisition of traits characteristic of wild polioviruses, such as increased neurovirulence and loss of temperature sensitivity. In this study, we determined the phenotypic traits such as temperature sensitivity and growth kinetics of eight OPV isolates (six bi-recombinant and two non-recombinant).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe purpose of this study was to determine the tissue distribution and antiviral activity of the CD8 lymphocytes that suppress the replication of feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV). Cell-associated FIV load, CD8alpha(+)beta(low) cells, and CD8 cell-mediated suppression of FIV were measured serially in the blood, thymus, and peripheral lymph nodes after neonatal inoculation. Between 6 and 10 weeks, relative numbers of CD8alpha(+)beta(low) cells increased, whereas CD8alpha(+)beta(high) cells declined in the thymus and blood of infected cats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProblem: Human infants infected in utero with HIV develop thymus insufficiency and progress to AIDS sooner than infants infected peripartum. However, direct analysis of the thymus is difficult due to limited tissue access and variable timing of vertical transmission.
Method Of Study: Fetal and neonatal cats were inoculated with feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) at an equivalent infectious dose.
Objective: To compare lymphocyte subpopulations in the blood and lymphoid tissues of normal kittens between 1 and 90 days of age.
Methods: Lymphocyte subsets within the blood, thymus, and lymph node of 24 normal kittens were quantified by use of two-color fluorescence flow cytometry and were compared at 1, 23, 46, or 90 days after birth.
Results: Blood B and T lymphocytes increased over the 90-day postnatal period.
The objective of this study was to assess the response of the feline thymus to fetal infection with feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV), an animal model for human immunodeficiency virus infection. Thirteen feline embryos from four litters were directly inoculated with FIV during the sixth week postbreeding, a period corresponding to the late second trimester of pregnancy. Thymus tissue was collected and analyzed from randomly selected kittens at 2, 4, and 16 weeks postinoculation (PI) and compared to age-matched control kittens that did not receive fetal inoculations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFoamy virus infection causes cytopathology in several cell types from different species. The mechanism of cell killing by foamy viruses is not known. In this report, the mechanism of cell death induced by simian foamy virus type 1 (SFV-1) infection was investigated in fibroblast and lymphoid derived cells lines.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThymus alterations associated with feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV), an AIDS animal model, were investigated by measuring phenotypic composition of thymocytes, structure of thymic epithelial cells, and transcription of viral RNA in the thymus of FIV-infected juvenile kittens. These kittens either acquired infection by natural vertical transmission or were experimentally inoculated with the virus at defined times of fetal or neonatal life. Thymocytes from FIV-infected cats were analyzed by flow cytometry for the differential expression of CD4, CD8, Pan T, and IgG and subpopulation percentages were compared to values from uninfected littermates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn interleukin-2-dependent feline T-lymphocyte cell line (FCD4-D), of which 65% of cells express CD4, was inoculated with the NCSU-1 isolate of feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV(NCSU-1)) and subsequently monitored for percentage of viable cells, percentage of apoptotic cells, percentage of CD4-expressing cells, and virus production. A decrease in viability from 91% to 12% over an 11-day postinoculation period was associated with an increase in the percentage of cells with nuclear morphology suggestive of apoptosis from < 5% to 97% based on ethidium bromide and acridine orange fluorescence. These changes were associated with a 24% reduction in the percentage of viable CD4-expressing cells at 7 days postinoculation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCreatine phosphokinase regenerates ATP from ADP using creatine phosphate. Isoenzymes of creatine phosphokinase are bound to certain cellular structures or are compartmentalized in areas of the cell, and this has been used as a basis for defining the role of these isoenzymes in energy metabolism. The M isoenzyme of creatine phosphokinase has been morphologically associated with the M-line of striated muscle in many species.
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