22 results match your criteria: "Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences. University of Florida[Affiliation]"

Calcium (Ca) is a vital nutrient essential for structural development and signal transmission in both plants and animals. In humans, inadequate calcium intake has been correlated with various diseases, including osteoporosis, cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases, and cancer. In areas where plants serve as a main dietary source, calcium intake is significantly lower than the recommended adequate intake, notably in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs).

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In cattle, oviductal function is controlled by the ovarian sex-steroids estradiol and progesterone. Here, we tested the hypothesis that the exposure to contrasting sex-steroid milieus differentially impacts the oviductal fluid composition. Estrous cycles of non-lactating, multiparous Nelore cows were pre-synchronized and then synchronized with a protocol designed two induce ovulation of large or small follciles.

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Prenatal exposure to environmental contaminants and cord serum metabolite profiles in future immune-mediated diseases.

J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol

July 2024

Crown Princess Victoria's Children's Hospital and Division of Pediatrics, Department of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences, Linköping University, Linköping, SE-581 85, Sweden.

Background: Prenatal exposure to environmental contaminants is a significant health concern because it has the potential to interfere with host metabolism, leading to adverse health effects in early childhood and later in life. Growing evidence suggests that genetic and environmental factors, as well as their interactions, play a significant role in the development of autoimmune diseases.

Objective: In this study, we hypothesized that prenatal exposure to environmental contaminants impacts cord serum metabolome and contributes to the development of autoimmune diseases.

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Impact of Environmental Exposures on Human Breast Milk Lipidome in Future Immune-Mediated Diseases.

Environ Sci Technol

February 2024

Crown Princess Victoria's Children's Hospital and Division of Pediatrics, Department of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences, Linköping University, Linköping SE 58185, Sweden.

The composition of human breast milk (HBM) exhibits significant variability both between individuals and within the same individual. While environmental factors are believed to play a role in this variation, their influence on breast milk composition remains inadequately understood. Herein, we investigate the impact of environmental factors on HBM lipid composition in a general population cohort.

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Climate change could adversely impact the best management practices (BMPs) designed to build a sustainable agro-ecological environment. Cover cropping is a conservation practice capable of reducing nitrate-nitrogen (NO-N) loadings by consuming water and nitrate from the soil. The objective of this study was to investigate how climate change would impact the proven water quality benefits of cereal rye as a winter cover crop (CC) over the climate divisions of Illinois using the DSSAT model.

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Extensive tile drainage usage combined with excess nitrogen fertilization has triggered nutrient loss and water quality issues in Illinois, which over time endorsed the hypoxia formation in the Gulf of Mexico. Past research reported that the use of cereal rye as a winter cover crop (CC) could be beneficial in reducing nutrient loss and improving water quality. The extensive use of CC may aid in reducing the hypoxic zone in the Gulf of Mexico.

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Cord serum metabolic signatures of future progression to immune-mediated diseases.

iScience

March 2023

Crown Princess Victoria's Children's Hospital and Division of Pediatrics, Department of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences, Linköping University, 581 85 Linköping, Sweden.

Previous prospective studies suggest that progression to autoimmune diseases is preceded by metabolic dysregulation, but it is not clear which metabolic changes are disease-specific and which are common across multiple immune-mediated diseases. Here we investigated metabolic profiles in cord serum in a general population cohort (All Babies In Southeast Sweden; ABIS), comprising infants who progressed to one or more immune-mediated diseases later in life: type 1 diabetes (n = 12), celiac disease (n = 28), juvenile idiopathic arthritis (n = 9), inflammatory bowel disease (n = 7), and hypothyroidism (n = 6); and matched controls (n = 270). We observed elevated levels of multiple triacylglycerols (TGs) an alteration in several gut microbiota related metabolites in the autoimmune groups.

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Understanding how species respond to the environment is essential in ecology, evolution, and conservation. Abiotic factors can influence species responses and the multi-dimensional space of abiotic factors that allows a species to grow represents the environmental niche. While niches are often assumed to be constant and robust, they are most likely changing over time and estimation can be influenced by population biology, sampling intensity, and computation methodology.

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Public health measures enacted to mitigate the spread of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) have dampened economic activity by shuttering businesses that provide 'nonessential' goods and services. Not surprisingly, these actions directly impacted demand for nonessential goods and services, but the full impact of this shock on the broader economy will depend on the nature and strength of value chains. In a world where production chains are increasingly fragmented, a shock in one industry (or a group of industries) in one country will affect other domestic industries as well as international trade, leading to impacts on production in other countries.

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Liriomyza trifolii (Diptera: Agromyzidae) is a leafminer that causes ruinous damage to many leafy vegetables including lettuce (Lactuca sativa L.) by stippling and tunneling the leaves. In this study, a population of 125 F families was developed from the intraspecific cross of 'Valmaine' (resistant) and 'Okeechobee' (susceptible) romaine cultivars for inheritance analysis and molecular mapping of the resistance loci controlling stippling damage.

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Cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) have, in insects, important physiological and ecological functions, such as protection against desiccation and as semiochemicals in social taxa, including termites. CHCs are, in termites, known to vary qualitatively and/or quantitatively among species, populations, castes, or seasons. Changes to hydrocarbon profile composition have been linked to varying degrees of aggression between termite colonies, although the variability of results among studies suggests that additional factors might have been involved.

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Cancer is a disease of single cells that expresses itself at the population level. The striking similarities between initiation and growth of tumors and dynamics of biological populations, and between metastasis and ecological invasion and community dynamics suggest that oncology can benefit from an ecological perspective to improve our understanding of cancer biology. Tumors can be viewed as complex, adaptive, and evolving systems as they are spatially and temporally heterogeneous, continually interacting with each other and with the microenvironment and evolving to increase the fitness of the cancer cells.

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Subterranean termite nests are located underground and termites forage out by constructing tunnels to reach food resources, and tunneling behavior is critical in order to maximize the foraging efficiency. Excavation, transportation, and deposition behavior are involved in the tunneling, and termites have to move back and forth to do this. Although there are three sequential behaviors, excavation has been the focus of most previous studies.

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Genetic risk for autoimmunity is associated with distinct changes in the human gut microbiome.

Nat Commun

August 2019

Crown Princess Victoria's Children's Hospital, Region Östergötland, Division of Pediatrics, Linköping University, Linköping, SE 58185, Sweden.

Susceptibility to many human autoimmune diseases is under strong genetic control by class II human leukocyte antigen (HLA) allele combinations. These genes remain by far the greatest risk factors in the development of type 1 diabetes and celiac disease. Despite this, little is known about HLA influences on the composition of the human gut microbiome, a potential source of environmental influence on disease.

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Premise Of The Study: Phloem-limited diseases are becoming increasingly pervasive, threatening the existence of crops worldwide. Studies of phloem diseases are complicated by the inaccessibility of the phloem tissue. Phloem cells are located deep inside the plant body, are interspersed with other cell types, are among the smallest cells in the plant kingdom, and make up a small percentage of the total cell population in a plant.

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Each year new exotic species are transported across the world through global commerce, causing considerable economic and ecological damage. An important component of managing invasion pathways is to identify source populations. Some of the most widespread exotic species are haplodiploid ambrosia beetles.

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Lactating Holstein cows were utilized over two replicate periods (July and September, 1990) to examine the effect of summer heat stress on follicular growth and steroidogenesis. On day of synchronized ovulations, cows were assigned to shade (n=11) or no shade (n=12) management systems. Follicular development was monitored daily by ultrasonography until ovariectomy on Day 8 post estrus.

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The in-vitro biosynthesis of [12-3H] juvenile hormone (JH) III by exposed corpora allata (CA) of teneral, sugar-fed, and blood-fed female Lutzomyia anthophora (Addis) was followed by incubating the CA for 4 h with [12-3H]methyl farnesoate. Synthesis of [12-3H]H III was determined by C18 reversed-phase high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) and preparative gas chromatography. The rate of synthesis of JH III by teneral females was 5.

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Lactating Holstein cows were used to determine if pregnancy rate from embryo transfer (n = 113) differed from contemporary control cows (n = 524) that were artificially inseminated (AI). Holstein heifers (n = 55) were superovulated with FSH-P (32 mg total) and inseminated artificially during estrus and subsequently managed under shade structures. On Day 7 post estrus, embryos were recovered, and primarily excellent to good quality embryos (90.

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Holstein heifers (n = 29) were used to determine whether thermal stress during the first 7 d of embryonic development may increase the incidence of embryonic abnormalities in dairy cattle. Heifers were acclimated to environmental chambers at 20 degrees C for 9 d and superovulated with follicle stimulating hormone-pituitary (FSH-P; 40 mg total), beginning on Days 9 to 11 of the estrous cycle. Prostaglandin F(2)alpha (Lutalyse; 50 mg total) was administered on Day 3 of FSH-P.

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Lactating cows (n = 64) were assigned randomly to shade or no shade treatments for a continuous trial (20 wk) during summer of 1976. Respirations/min and rectal temperatures were higher for no shade cows. Dry matter forage intake was 9.

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Lactating cows (64) were balanced by breed (54 Holstein and 10 Jersey) and assigned randomly to shade (S) or no shade (NS) management treatments for a continuous 20 wk trial beginning 5-5-76. A sub-sample of Holstein cows, five S and five NS, were fitted with jugular catheters 84 days after initiation of experiment. Thyrotropin Releasing Hormone (TRH; 100 mug) was administered intravenously at 1200 h to evaluate prolactin responses.

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