In order to estimate the effects on aquatic organisms of long-term exposure to low doses of yttrium (Y) as a potential emerging contaminant, ecotoxicological and metabolomic data were collected on the model organism Daphnia magna, a keystone species in freshwater ecosystems. Following an initial acute toxicity assessment, a 21-day chronic exposure experiment was conducted using a sublethal concentration of 27 μg L⁻¹ of Y, corresponding to the effective concentrations inducing 10 % effect (EC) value for mortality endpoint and simulating the environmental Y level in aquatic systems. Results from the 21-day two-factor experiment combining microcrustacean survival, growth and reproduction bioassays and targeted gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) metabolomics indicated significant adverse effects of chronic exposure to Y on D.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Pollut
November 2023
Multigenerational toxicity testing is a valuable tool for understanding the long-term effects of contaminants on aquatic organisms. This review focuses on the use of multigenerational tests with Daphnia, a widely used model organism in aquatic toxicological studies. The review highlights the importance of studying multiple generations to assess Daphnia spp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground And Objective: The capacity to promote and disseminate the best evidence-based practices in terms of digital health innovations and technologies represents an important goal for countries and governments. To support the digital health maturity across countries the Global Digital Health Partnership (GDHP) was established in 2019. The mission of the GDHP is to facilitate global collaboration and knowledge-sharing in the design of digital health services, through the administration of surveys and white papers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnvironmental pollutants are claimed to be major factors involved in the progressive decline of the fertility rate worldwide. Exposure to the heavy metal Cadmium (Cd) has been associated with reproductive toxicity due to its ionic mimicry. However, the possible direct accumulation of Cd in human sperm cells has been poorly investigated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCOVID-19 is a major global health threat, with millions of confirmed cases and deaths worldwide. Containment and mitigation strategies, including vaccination, have been implemented to reduce transmission and protect the population. We conducted two systematic reviews to collect nonrandomized studies investigating the effects of vaccination on COVID-19-related complications and deaths in the Italian population.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCalorie restriction is recognized as a useful nutritional approach to improve the endocrine derangements and low fertility profile associated with increased body weight. This is particularly the case for dietary regimens involving ketosis, resulting in increased serum levels of ketone bodies such as β-hydroxy-butyrate (β-HB). In addition to serum, β-HB is detected in several biofluids and β-HB levels in the follicular fluid are strictly correlated with the reproductive outcome in infertile females.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Environ Res Public Health
December 2022
Background: Peristomal skin complications (PSCs) are the most common skin problems seen after ostomy surgery. They have a considerable impact on a patient's quality of life and contribute to a higher cost of care.
Methods: A systematic review was conducted, querying three databases.
Perfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) are persistent pollutants, raising concerns for human health. Legacy PFAS perfluoro-octanoic acid (PFOA) accumulate in brains of people at high environmental exposure, especially in areas enriched with dopaminergic neurons (DN). exposure to 10 ng/mL PFOA for 24 h was also associated with an altered molecular and functional phenotype of DN differentiated from human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFrom seminal evidence in the early 2000s, the opportunity to drive the specific knockdown of a protein of interest (POI) through pharmacological entities called Proteolysis Targeting Chimeric molecules, or PROTACs, has become a possible therapeutic option with the involvement of these compounds in clinical trials for cancers and autoimmune diseases. The fulcrum of PROTACs pharmacodynamics is to favor the juxtaposition between an E3 ligase activity and the POI, followed by the ubiquitination of the latter and its degradation by the proteasome system. In the face of an apparently modular design of these drugs, being constituted by an E3 ligase binding moiety and a POI-binding moiety connected by a linker, the final structure of an efficient PROTAC degradation enhancer often goes beyond the molecular descriptors known to influence the biological activity, specificity, and pharmacokinetics, requiring a rational improvement through appropriate molecular strategies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of 3-nitrooxypropanol (3-NOP), a potent methane inhibitor, on total and metabolically active methanogens in the rumen of dairy cows over the course of the day and over a 12-wk period. Rumen contents of 8 ruminally cannulated early-lactation dairy cows were sampled at 2, 6, and 10 h after feeding during wk 4, 8, and 12 of a randomized complete block design experiment in which 3-NOP was fed at 60 mg/kg of feed dry matter. Cows (4 fed the control and 4 fed the 3-NOP diet) were blocked based on their previous lactation milk yield or predicted milk yield.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiarrhea is a major cause of illness and death in preweaned calves and causes significant economic losses to producers. A better understanding of the fecal microbiota in diarrheic and nondiarrheic calves could lead to improved treatment and prevention strategies. The purpose of this study was to compare the fecal microbiota of diarrheic and nondiarrheic calves to improve our understanding of what constitutes a healthy fecal microbiota in preweaned calves.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe development of a robust microbiome is critical to the health of dairy calves, but relatively little is known about the progression of the microbiome through the weaning transition. In this study, fecal samples were obtained from ten female Holstein calves at 6 timepoints between 2-13 weeks of age. Calves were fed acidified milk until weaning at 8 weeks old and had access to starter grain throughout the study.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Tourette Syndrome (TS) is a highly prevalent childhood neuropsychiatric disorder (about 1 %), characterized by multiple motor and one or more vocal tics. The syndrome is commonly associated to comorbid conditions (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Infections are the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Invasive fungal infections (IFI) comprise a group of diseases caused by Cryptococcus, Histoplasma, Aspergillus and Candida. Few studies of IFI have been published in patients with SLE and associated factors have not been completely defined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The deficiency of human acid beta-glucosidase (hGCase) causes Gaucher disease, a rare genetically-inherited disorder currently treated by enzyme replacement therapy using recombinant CHO-derived GCase. In an attempt to provide an alternative and more efficient production system, a chimeric cDNA coding for hGCase operatively linked to the signal peptide of rice glutelin 4 (GluB4) was put under the control of the GluB4 endosperm-specific promoter and inserted into the genome of a waxy rice.
Results: Molecular, immunological and biochemical analyses showed that recombinant hGCase, targeted to the protein storage vacuoles of rice endosperm cells, is equivalent to the native protein and has a glycosylation pattern compatible with direct therapeutic use.
Few biochemical and molecular details are available on microspore growth and development. In this work, a nuclease was partially purified from diffusates of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) microspores by using concanavalin-A as ligand.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAML1, a gene encoding a protein of the PEBP2/CBF family of transcription factors is disrupted by translocations associated with human leukemia. In the t(8;21) acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), AML1 was found fused to a gene on chromosome 8 that we designated CDR (also known as ETO and MTG8). Immunoprecipitation experiments followed by immunoblotting using a combination of antibodies against different epitopes of one of the predicted chimeric proteins encoded by a fully characterized fusion transcript enabled us to visualize a chimeric protein in the t(8;21) Kasumi-1 cell line.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeat shock response in cultured cells has been studied extensively; however few data are available on heat shock response in an intact organ of a living animal. In this study we analyzed the kinetics of expression of the heat shock protein 70 gene family (heat shock protein 70, heat shock cognate protein 73 and glucose-regulated protein 78) in the liver of the thermally stressed rat. New synthesis of heat shock protein 70 and heat shock cognate protein 73 was shown in liver slices pulse labeled in vitro with 35S-methionine.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe expression of some genes has been comparatively studied in transplanted rat liver and in liver reperfused after ischemia in situ. Experiments on protein synthesis by tissue slices from cold-stored or transplanted livers show that rat livers that retain a good capacity for protein synthesis during storage undergo a profound impairment in the capacity for protein synthesis during the first hours after transplantation. This recovers in the following hours.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Reperfusion of the liver after non-necrogenic ischemia induces the expression of the HSP gene and the synthesis of the hsp 70 protein, the best known among stress (heat-shock) proteins.
Experimental Design: We have studied the time course of the induction and the effects of cycloheximide treatment on the expression of c-fos, c-jun and the heat-shock gene HSP 70 in ischemic-reperfused livers; extracts of these livers have also been examined for the binding to a synthetic oligonucleotide containing the heat-shock consensus sequence (HSE) in order to reveal the possible presence of an active heat-shock factor (HSF) in ischemic-reperfused tissue.
Results: Expression of HSP 70 gene appears only after a certain threshold of cell damage, is preceded by induction of c-fos and c-jun but does not depend on ongoing protein synthesis.
We have studied the expression of different members of the HSP 70 gene family in MH1C1, FAO, and 3924A hepatoma cell lines, which possess different growth rates and show different levels of histone H3 gene expression. The cells have been subjected to mild (42 degrees C/1 h) or severe (45 degrees C/25 min) heat shock that causes a decrease in cell proliferation and histone H3 gene expression correlated to the severity of stress: previous mild heat shock protects against the effects of the subsequent severe exposure. All cell lines, irrespective of their growth rate, show a high constitutive expression of the HSC 73 gene, which is barely detectable in normal liver, and a good induction of the heat-inducible HSP 70 gene, which, however, seems to be induced less than in the normal tissue.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe virulence of Staphylococcus epidermidis strain slime producer was examined in an experimental model of foreign body infection in mice. In the course of this experimental infection the mice were injected with two antibiotics (clindamycin and cefazolin) active in vitro toward the Staphylococcus strain used. The results obtained after a week of antibiotic therapy show that clindamycin alone has a therapeutic action against the infection caused by S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFG Batteriol Virol Immunol
July 1989
The present research aimed at studying the action of an association of Bifidobacterium bifidum and Lactobacillus acidophilus, in controlling an experimental severe infection by Salmonella enteritidis administered in mouse per os. The behaviour of some parameters was undertaken, checking for the pH of intestinal content; the condition of the colonization in the intestinal wall by means of scanning electron microscopy and plates cultures; the presence of antibodies IgA in intestinal content; the index of mortality in the diversely treated animal's groups. The reported data show a string incidence of the administration of Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus in increasing the animal's resistance against the lethal infection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSulbenicillin, a wide broad spectrum penicillin, is active against a lot of gram positive and gram negative bacteria. The AA. studied the activity of this molecule against urinary infections causing germs, by evaluating two parameters: his antiadhesive capability and the Killing curves, in comparison with mezlocillin and piperacillin.
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