158 results match your criteria: "BOKU - University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences[Affiliation]"

Acquired antibiotic resistances have been reported in lactobacilli of various animal and food sources, but there are no data from wild boar. The objective was a preliminary examination of the antibiotic resistance prevalence of intrinsically vancomycin-resistant lactobacilli isolated from wild boar intestines and analysis of the genetic determinants implicated. Out of three wild boars, 121 lactobacilli were recovered and grouped according to their whole cell protein patterns.

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Wedge-filtering of geomorphologic terrestrial laser scan data.

Sensors (Basel)

February 2013

Department of Structural Engineering and Natural Hazards, Institute of Mountain Risk Engineering, BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences, Peter Jordan-Str. 82, 1180 Vienna, Austria.

Terrestrial laser scanning is of increasing importance for surveying and hazard assessments. Digital terrain models are generated using the resultant data to analyze surface processes. In order to determine the terrain surface as precisely as possible, it is often necessary to filter out points that do not represent the terrain surface.

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Dairy goat production systems: status quo, perspectives and challenges.

Trop Anim Health Prod

January 2013

Division of Livestock Sciences, Department of Sustainable Agricultural Systems, (BOKU)-University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences, Gregor-Mendel-Strasse 33, 1180, Vienna, Austria.

Goat production concentrated in developing countries (tropics, dry areas), contributes largely to the livelihoods of low and medium income farmers. Farming systems in these areas have evolved to cope with the formidable constraints imposed by harsh natural and economic conditions by adapting integrated crop/livestock production strategies. In Asia, Africa and Latin America, due to its almost exclusive extensive nature, goat production relies mainly on grazing on communal lands that hardly provide the minimum nutrient requirements due to overstocking and degradation.

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Increased feed costs affect the livelihoods of dairy sheep farmers in the Middle East. Farmers endure high risks with large fluctuations in the price of grain used as animal feed, which is further affected by drought and declining range productivity. Using agricultural by-products and treated straw or vetch grazing for supplementing sheep diets would provide resource-poor dairy farmers with increased options to reduce feed costs, but the effects of such feeds on the quality of yogurt (the main product) need to be better understood.

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High feed costs are major obstacles for resource-poor dairy sheep farmers in West Asia, along with large fluctuation in grain and straw prices. Farmers need low-cost diets using locally available feeds that can provide sufficient milk of good quality. Two experimental trials were conducted on Awassi milking ewes to evaluate nonconventional and balanced low-cost diets against the traditional unbalanced diet used by farmers (control) on the total yields (milk, fat, protein, and total solids) and milk composition (fat, protein, total solids, and lactose), an important indicator of milk quality.

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Italian ryegrass silage in winter feeding of organic dairy cows: forage intake, milk yield and composition.

J Sci Food Agric

February 2011

Department of Sustainable Agricultural Systems, Division of Livestock Sciences, BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences, Gregor Mendel Straße 33, A-1180 Vienna, Austria.

Background: Organic milk production aims at efficient use of home-grown feeds, especially forages, to minimise the quantity of purchased feeds. In conventional agriculture, Italian ryegrass (Lolium multiflorum Lam.) is known for its high energy content and palatability, and the aim of the present study was to examine its suitability as feed for organic dairy cows.

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Assessing the long-term species composition predicted by PrognAus.

For Ecol Manage

January 2010

Institute of Forest Growth, Department of Forest and Soil Sciences, BOKU - University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences, Vienna, 1190 Peter Jordanstraße 82 Vienna, Austria.

Tree growth models are supposed to contain stand growth laws as so called "emergent properties" which derive from interactions of individual-tree growth and mortality functions. This study investigates whether the evolving tree species composition in a long term simulation by the distance-independent tree growth model PrognAus matches the species composition of the potential natural vegetation type which is expected to occur if one refrains from further management interventions and major disturbances, climate change, and changes in site conditions can be excluded. For this purpose the development of 6933 sample plots of the Austrian National Forest Inventory was predicted for 2500 years.

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Humanization strategies for an anti-idiotypic antibody mimicking HIV-1 gp41.

Protein Eng Des Sel

December 2010

Department of Biotechnology, Institute for Applied Microbiology, BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences, Muthgasse 11, A-1190 Vienna, Austria.

Anti-idiotypic antibodies could represent an alternative vaccination approach in human therapy. The anti-idiotypic antibody Ab2/3H6 was generated in mouse and is directed against the human monoclonal antibody 2F5, which broadly and potently neutralizes primary HIV-1 isolates. Ab2/3H6 is able to mimic the antigen recognition site of 2F5 making it a putative candidate for HIV-1 vaccine purposes.

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The study aimed at determining the effect of inulin and/or a multispecies probiotic formulation on gastrointestinal tract (GIT) morphology, immunological and haematological parameters. Forty-eight newly weaned piglets were assigned to four feeding groups, receiving a standard basal diet (control), supplemented with 0.4% inulin, probiotics (1 x 10(9) CFU/kg as fed, enterococci, lactobacilli, bifidobacteria) or a combination of both (synbiotic).

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A novel heterodimeric beta-galactosidase with a molecular mass of 105 kDa was purified from crude cell extracts of the soil isolate Lactobacillus pentosus KUB-ST10-1 using ammonium sulphate fractionation followed by hydrophobic interaction and affinity chromatography. The electrophoretically homogenous enzyme has a specific activity of 97 U(oNPG)/mg protein. The K(m), k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m) values for lactose and o-nitrophenyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside (oNPG) were 38 mM, 20 s(-1), 530 M(-1).

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Mountain refuges are an excellent example of public stand-alone infrastructures equipped with energy and water supply, and wastewater and waste disposal systems suited to operating under unfavourable conditions, often comprising lengthy distances for transportation or scarce resources. An international project was undertaken to evaluate the existing supply and disposal schemes at 100 mountain refuges both individually and in an integrated manner. On the basis of the results obtained guidelines to be applied in the sustainable planning, construction and operation of supply and disposal systems will be published in the near future.

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The specific isoflavone composition of nutritional supplements is commonly not-labeled, although the stated amounts are strongly dependent on the present isoflavone conjugates. Hence, 11 soy-based dietary supplements were characterized via a newly established ultra performance liquid chromatography (UPLC) method, on both their native conjugated isoflavone spectra, as well as on quantitative amounts derived as total aglycones after enzymatic hydrolysis utilizing Helix pomatia juice. Capitalizing on sub-2 microm particles, the established RP-UPLC technique facilitated efficient chromatographic separation of all 12 soy intrinsic isoflavone forms within 10 min.

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The effect of inulin and a multispecies probiotic formulation on performance and microbial parameters in a 28 days feeding trial with newly weaned piglets was assessed. Forty-eight piglets were allocated to a 2 × 2 factorial experiment involving two levels of inulin supplementation (0% or 0.4%) and two levels of probiotics (0 or 1 × 10(9) CFU/kg as fed, comprising enterococci, lactobacilli and bifidobacteria).

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The Salicaceae family comprises a large number of high-biomass species with remarkable genetic variability and adaptation to ecological niches. Salix caprea survives in heavy metal contaminated areas, translocates and accumulates Zn/Cd in leaves. To reveal potential selective effects of long-term heavy metal contaminations on the genetic structure and Zn/Cd accumulation capacity, 170 S.

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In the absence of exogenous electron donors monofunctional heme peroxidases can slowly degrade hydrogen peroxide following a mechanism different from monofunctional catalases. This pseudo-catalase cycle involves several redox intermediates including Compounds I, II and III, hydrogen peroxide reduction and oxidation reactions as well as release of both dioxygen and superoxide. The rate of decay of oxyferrous complex determines the rate-limiting step and the enzymes' resistance to inactivation.

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Considering the inappropriate use of synthetic pesticides on vegetables in West Africa, the rationale behind this research was to assess the extent to which consumers can function as demanders of risk reduced vegetables and hence act as innovators towards vegetable safety. Using the cases of Kumasi and Accra in Ghana, the study examined possible consumer responses to product certification that communicates freedom from pesticides (e.g.

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Recombinant beta-galactosidase from Lactobacillus plantarum WCFS1, homologously over-expressed in L. plantarum, was purified to apparent homogeneity using p-aminobenzyl 1-thio-beta-d-galactopyranoside affinity chromatography and subsequently characterized. The enzyme is a heterodimer of the LacLM-family type, consisting of a small subunit of 35kDa and a large subunit of 72kDa.

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Metabolic profiling reveals local and systemic responses of host plants to nematode parasitism.

Plant J

June 2010

Department of Applied Plant Sciences and Plant Biotechnology, Institute of Plant Protection, BOKU - University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences, Vienna, Peter Jordan-Strasse 82, A-1190 Vienna, Austria.

The plant parasitic beet cyst nematode Heterodera schachtii induces syncytial feeding structures in Arabidopsis roots. The feeding structures form strong sink tissues that have been suggested to be metabolically highly active. In the present study, metabolic profiling and gene targeted expression analyses were performed in order to study the local and systemic effects of nematode infection on the plant host.

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Evolution of structure and function of Class I peroxidases.

Arch Biochem Biophys

August 2010

Metalloprotein Research Group, Division of Biochemistry, Department of Chemistry, BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences, Muthgasse 18, A-1190 Vienna, Austria.

The phylogenetics of Class I of the heme peroxidase-catalase superfamily currently representing over 940 known sequences in all available genomes of prokaryotes and eukaryotes has been analysed. The robust reconstructed tree for 193 Class I peroxidases with 6 selected Class II representatives reveals all main trends of molecular evolution. It suggests how the ancestral peroxidase gene might have been transferred from prokaryotic into eukaryotic genomes.

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Infective second-stage juveniles of the obligate plant-parasitic root-knot and cyst nematodes invade plant roots to induce specialized feeding structures. Here, we present data on the distribution of plasmodesmata in cell walls of syncytia and giant cells induced by cyst and root-knot nematodes. An Arabidopsis and a tobacco line were used, containing viral movement proteins fused to green fluorescent protein as a localization marker for plasmodesmata.

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Background: The effect of osmolarity on cellular physiology has been subject of investigation in many different species. High osmolarity is of importance for biotechnological production processes, where high cell densities and product titers are aspired. Several studies indicated that increased osmolarity of the growth medium can have a beneficial effect on recombinant protein production in different host organisms.

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A wide range of enteropathogens cause costly diarrhoeal diseases in fattening piglets and account for food-related infections in humans. The objective of this study was to screen beneficial bacterial strains from the gastrointestinal tract of various animal sources for antagonistic activity against diverse pathogens associated with hazardous pig production times. Using agar spot assays, 15 well-characterized strains belonging to Lactobacillus, Enterococcus, Bifidobacterium and Bacillus were studied for inhibition of Clostridium perfringens type A, various serovars of enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli and Salmonella enterica, as well as Brachyspira pilosicoli.

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The heterologous production of the industrially relevant fungal enzyme pyranose 2-oxidase in the prokaryotic host E. coli was investigated using 3 different expression systems, i.e.

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The homotetrameric flavoprotein pyranose 2-oxidase (P2Ox) has several proposed biotechnological applications, among others as a biocatalyst for carbohydrate transformations toward higher-value products. To improve some of the catalytic properties of P2Ox from Trametes multicolor, we selected a semirational enzyme engineering approach, namely, saturation mutagenesis of the amino acid His450 located at a pivotal point of the active site loop and subsequent screening of the libraries thus obtained for improved activity with the sugar substrate d-galactose. A variant with improved catalytic characteristics identified was H450G, which showed a significant, 3.

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Yeast surface display libraries of human IgG1 Fc regions were prepared in which loop sequences at the C-terminal tip of the CH3 domain were randomized. A high percentage of these library members bound to soluble CD64 and Protein A indicating that the randomization step did not grossly interfere with the overall structure of the displayed Fc. Sorting these libraries by FACS for binders against HER2/neu yielded antigen-specific Fc binders (Fcab; Fc antigen binding) of which one was affinity matured, resulting in Fcab clone H10-03-6 which showed >10-fold improvement in antigen-binding activity versus the parental clone.

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