16 results match your criteria: "CNRS (National Center for Scientific Research)[Affiliation]"

This study focuses on the promising use of biospeckle technology to detect water stress in plants, a complex physiological mechanism. This involves monitoring the temporal activity of biospeckle pattern to study the occurrence of stress within the leaf. The effects of water stress in plants can involve physical and biochemical changes.

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Bone health is controlled by the balance between bone formation by osteoblasts and degradation by osteoclasts. A disequilibrium in favor of bone resorption leads to osteolytic diseases characterized by decreased bone density. Osteoclastic resorption is dependent on the assembly of an adhesion structure: the actin ring, also called podosome belt or sealing zone, which is composed of a unique patterning of podosomes stabilized by microtubules.

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A wide range of literature connects sex ratio and mating behaviours in non-human animals. However, research examining sex ratio and human mating is limited in scope. Prior work has examined the relationship between sex ratio and desire for short-term, uncommitted mating as well as outcomes such as marriage and divorce rates.

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Objective: Sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD) comprises several subtypes as defined by genetic and prion protein characteristics, which are associated with distinct clinical and pathological phenotypes. To date, no clinical test can reliably diagnose the subtype. We established two procedures for the antemortem diagnosis of sCJD subtype using diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).

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A systemic approach to assess the potential and risks of wildlife culling for infectious disease control.

Commun Biol

July 2020

Medical Research Council Centre for Global Infectious Disease Analysis, Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Imperial College London, London, UK.

The maintenance of infectious diseases requires a sufficient number of susceptible hosts. Host culling is a potential control strategy for animal diseases. However, the reduction in biodiversity and increasing public concerns regarding the involved ethical issues have progressively challenged the use of wildlife culling.

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Reconstituted High-density Lipoprotein Therapy Improves Survival in Mouse Models of Sepsis.

Anesthesiology

April 2020

From Réunion Island University, French Institute of Health and Medical Research (INSERM) U1188, Diabetes atherothrombosis Réunion Indian Ocean (DéTROI), CYROI Plateform, Saint-Denis de La Réunion, France (S.T., J.Y-S., C.P., M.B., D.C., O.M.) Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP), Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Bichat-Claude Bernard Hospital, Paris, France (S.T., C.G., N.Z., P.M.) INSERM U1148, Laboratory for Vascular Translational Science, Paris France (C.G., N.Z., L.L.) Réunion Island University, INSERM U1187, CNRS (National Center for Scientific Research) 9192, IRD (Institute for Research and Development) 249, PIMIT Laboratory, Infectious Processes in Tropical Island Environment, CYROI Plateform 2, Saint-Denis de La Réunion, France (W.V.) INSERM U1152, Physiopathology and Epidemiology of Respiratory Diseases, Paris, France (P.M.) INSERM U1137, Infection, Antimicrobials, Modelling, Evolution, Paris, France (E.D.) AP-HP, Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Paris-Sud Hospitals, Paris-Sud University, Bicêtre Hospital, Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, France (J.D.) Clinical Research Unit (Bio-CANVAS: biomarkers in CardioNeuroVascular DISEASES) U942, Paris, France (J.D.) Réunion Island University-affiliated Hospital, France (D.C., O.M.).

Background: High-density lipoproteins exert pleiotropic effects including antiinflammatory, antiapoptotic, and lipopolysaccharide-neutralizing properties. The authors assessed the effects of reconstituted high-density lipoproteins (CSL-111) intravenous injection in different models of sepsis.

Methods: Ten-week-old C57BL/6 mice were subjected to sepsis by cecal ligation and puncture or intraperitoneal injection of Escherichia coli or Pseudomonas aeruginosa pneumonia.

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Temperature modifies activity, inter-individual relationships and group structure in a fish.

Curr Zool

April 2017

Université de Lorraine, Unité de Recherche Animal et Fonctionnalités des Produits Animaux, USC INRA 340, F-54506 Vandœuvre-lès-Nancy Cedex 09, France and CNRS (National Center for Scientific Research) Délégation Régionale Centre Est., 17 Rue Notre Dame des Pauvres, F-54500 Vandœuvre-lès-Nancy, France.

A host of abiotic factors modify fish social behavior. However, few studies have characterized the effects of temperature on behavior. In this study, brown trout fry were reared at 5 different temperatures (4°C, 6°C, 8°C, 10°C, and 12°C).

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Future perspectives in melanoma research "Melanoma Bridge", Napoli, November 30th-3rd December 2016.

J Transl Med

November 2017

Cancer Diagnosis Program, Division of Cancer Treatment and Diagnosis, NCI, NIH, Rockville, MD, USA.

Major advances have been made in the treatment of cancer with targeted therapy and immunotherapy; several FDA-approved agents with associated improvement of 1-year survival rates became available for stage IV melanoma patients. Before 2010, the 1-year survival were quite low, at 30%; in 2011, the rise to nearly 50% in the setting of treatment with Ipilimumab, and rise to 70% with BRAF inhibitor monotherapy in 2013 was observed. Even more impressive are 1-year survival rates considering combination strategies with both targeted therapy and immunotherapy, now exceeding 80%.

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Despite the ever-increasing role of pesticides in modern agriculture, their deleterious effects are still underexplored. Here we examine the effect of A6, a pesticide derived from the naturally-occurring α-terthienyl, and structurally related to the endocrine disrupting pesticides anilinopyrimidines, on living zebrafish larvae. We show that both A6 and an anilinopyrimidine, cyprodinyl, decrease larval survival and affect central neurons at micromolar concentrations.

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Temperature is the main abiotic factor that influences the life cycle of poikilotherms. The present study investigated the thermal tolerance and phenotypic plasticity of several parameters (development time, morphometric measures, bioenergetics) for both embryos and fry of a cold stenothermal fish species, brown trout (Salmo trutta L.) in order to allow for a holistic evaluation of the potential effects of temperature.

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Sequential Coherence in Sentence Pairs Enhances Imagery during Comprehension: An Individual Differences Study.

PLoS One

June 2016

INSERM U846, Stem Cell and Brain Research Institute, Integrative Neuroscience Department, 18 Avenue Doyen Lépine, Bron, France; Université de Lyon, Université Lyon 1, Bron, France.

The present study investigates how sequential coherence in sentence pairs (events in sequence vs. unrelated events) affects the perceived ability to form a mental image of the sentences for both auditory and visual presentations. In addition, we investigated how the ease of event imagery affected online comprehension (word reading times) in the case of sequentially coherent and incoherent sentence pairs.

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A living thick nanofibrous implant bifunctionalized with active growth factor and stem cells for bone regeneration.

Int J Nanomedicine

May 2016

INSERM, UMR 1109, Osteoarticular and Dental Regenerative Nanomedicine Laboratory, FMTS, Faculté de Médecine, Strasbourg, France ; Faculté de Chirurgie Dentaire, Université de Strasbourg, Strasbourg, France.

New-generation implants focus on robust, durable, and rapid tissue regeneration to shorten recovery times and decrease risks of postoperative complications for patients. Herein, we describe a new-generation thick nanofibrous implant functionalized with active containers of growth factors and stem cells for regenerative nanomedicine. A thick electrospun poly(ε-caprolactone) nanofibrous implant (from 700 μm to 1 cm thick) was functionalized with chitosan and bone morphogenetic protein BMP-7 as growth factor using layer-by-layer technology, producing fish scale-like chitosan/BMP-7 nanoreservoirs.

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Oxidative stress, including the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), has been reported to be a key event in the etiology of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Cu has been found in high concentrations in amyloid plaques, a hallmark of AD, where it is bound to the main constituent amyloid-β (Aβ) peptide. Whereas it has been proposed that Cu-Aβ complexes catalyze the production of ROS via redox-cycling between the Cu(I) and Cu(II) state, the redox chemistry of Cu-Aβ and the precise mechanism of redox reactions are still unclear.

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The recent discovery of a model compounds of [NiFe] hydrogenase that catalyzes the heterolytic cleavage of the H(2) molecule into a proton and a stable hydride in water solution under room conditions opened up the possibility to understand the mechanism of H(2) uptake by this peculiar class of enzymes. The simplest model compound belongs to the class of NiRu bimetallic cationic complexes mimicking, in water solution and at room conditions, the hydrogenase active site. By using first-principles molecular dynamics computer simulations, in the Car-Parrinello scheme, we investigated models including the water solvent and nitrate counterions.

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When the world's population took off: the springboard of the Neolithic Demographic Transition.

Science

July 2011

CNRS (National Center for Scientific Research), UPR2147 and EPHE (Practical School of High Studies), 44, rue de l'Amical Mouchez, Paris 75014, France.

During the economic transition from foraging to farming, the signal of a major demographic shift can be observed in cemetery data of world archaeological sequences. This signal is characterized by an abrupt increase in the proportion of juvenile skeletons and is interpreted as the signature of a major demographic shift in human history, known as the Neolithic Demographic Transition (NDT). This expresses an increase in the input into the age pyramids of the corresponding living populations with an estimated increase in the total fertility rate of two births per woman.

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During the hibernation season, mammalian hibernators alternate between prolonged bouts of torpor with a reduced body temperature (Tb) and short arousals with a return to euthermy. Evidence is presented here to show that this metabolic-and also physiological and neuroanatomical-rhythm is controlled by a clock, the torpor-arousal (TA) clock. The temperature dependence of torpor bout duration in 3 species of Spermophilus (published data) may be described by assuming that the TA clock is a circadian clock (probably not the suprachiasmatic clock) that has lost its temperature compensation.

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