scholarly journals Fungal Endophyte Colonization Patterns Alter Over Time in the Novel Association Between Lolium perenne and Epichloë Endophyte AR37

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Flavia Pilar Forte ◽  
Jan Schmid ◽  
Paul P. Dijkwel ◽  
Istvan Nagy ◽  
David E. Hume ◽  
...  
2007 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
pp. 301-306
Author(s):  
M.R. Mcneill ◽  
D.E. Hume ◽  
R. Ashby ◽  
M. Ashby ◽  
P. Brandon ◽  
...  

To investigate the interaction between Argentine stem weevil (Listronotus bonariensis), its parasitoid Microctonus hyperodae, fungal endophyte (Neotyphodium lolii) and its grass host, four endophyte-ryegrass (Lolium perenne) treatments were established on four farms in Wairarapa in autumn 2003. A diploid ryegrass contained either wild-type or AR1 endophyte or was endophytefree, while a tetraploid ryegrass contained AR1 endophyte. Wild-type, AR1 and endophyte-free ryegrasses average 52%, 91% and 2% endophyte-infected tillers for the 3 years of measurement. Moderate increases over time in the proportion of wild-type infected tillers indicated selection pressures favoured endophyte-infected tillers. Endophyte-free tiller populations were 11% lower than AR1 or wild-type but not significantly so. L. bonariensis populations were highest in endophyte-free and wild-type pastures and 80% lower in AR1 pastures. Mean rates of parasitism in L. bonariensis were lower in spring (9%) than autumn (35%), tended to be higher in wild-type than in AR1 diploid ryegrass, and only had a weak relationship with percent endophyte-infection. Keywords: endophyte, Neotyphodium lolii, Lolium perenne, dry matter yields, plant persistence, Listronotus bonariensis, Microctonus hyperodae


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoshihiro Osawa ◽  
Kaho Nomura ◽  
Yoshifumi Kimira ◽  
Seiji Kushibe ◽  
Ken-ichi Takeyama ◽  
...  

AbstractActive collagen oligopeptides (ACOP) are bioactive collagen-derived peptides detected by a recently-established ELISA. To facilitate studies of the function and metabolism of these products, this study aims to determine which of these peptides is recognized by a novel anti-ACOP antibody used in this ELISA. We then investigate the effect of collagen peptide (CP) ingestion and exercise on urinary ACOP concentrations in a cohort of university student athletes using colorimetric, LC–MS/MS, and ELISA. We observed that the antibody showed strong cross-reactivity to Pro-Hyp and Gly-Pro-Hyp and weak cross-reactivity to commercial CP. CP ingestion increased the urinary level of ACOP over time, which correlated highly with urinary levels of peptide forms of Hyp and Pro-Hyp. Physical activity significantly decreased the urinary ACOP level. This study demonstrates changes in urinary ACOP following oral CP intake and physical activity using ELISA with the novel anti-ACOP antibody. Thus, ACOP may be useful as a new biomarker for collagen metabolism.


2021 ◽  
Vol 104 (2) ◽  
pp. 003685042110131
Author(s):  
João Gaspar-Marques ◽  
Teresa Palmeiro ◽  
Iolanda Caires ◽  
Paula Leiria Pinto ◽  
Nuno Neuparth ◽  
...  

Though the approach used to classify chronic respiratory diseases is changing to a treatable-traits (TT) approach, data regarding very elderly patients is lacking. The objectives of this study were to assess TT frequency in very elderly patients and to study the link between extrapulmonary TT and ventilatory defects. Individuals (≥75 years) residing in elderly care centres answered a standardised questionnaire, underwent spirometry, atopy and fractional exhaled nitric oxide assessments and had their blood pressure and peripheral pulse oximetry measured. Pulmonary, extrapulmonary and behavioural TT were evaluated. Outcome variables were an airflow limitation (post-bronchodilator z-score FEV1/FVC<−1.64) and a restrictive spirometry pattern (z-score FEV1/FVC ≥ +1.64 and z-score FVC<−1.64). Seventy-two percent of the individuals who took part in the study ( n = 234) were women, and the median age of participants was 86 (IQR: 7.4). At least one pulmonary TT was identified in 105 (44.9%) individuals. The most frequent extrapulmonary TTs were: persistent systemic inflammation (47.0%), anaemia (34.4%), depression (32.5%) and obesity (27.4). Airflow limitation was exclusively associated with smoking (OR 5.03; 95% CI 1.56–16.22). A restrictive spirometry pattern was associated with cognitive impairment (OR: 3.89; 95% CI: 1.55–9.79). A high frequency of various TTs was found. The novel association between a restrictive spirometry pattern and cognitive impairment highlights the urgency of clinical research on this vulnerable age group.


Author(s):  
Iulia Clitan ◽  
◽  
Adela Puscasiu ◽  
Vlad Muresan ◽  
Mihaela Ligia Unguresan ◽  
...  

Since February 2020, when the first case of infection with SARS COV-2 virus appeared in Romania, the evolution of COVID-19 pandemic continues to have an ascending allure, reaching in September 2020 a second wave of infections as expected. In order to understand the evolution and spread of this disease over time and space, more and more research is focused on obtaining mathematical models that are able to predict the evolution of active cases based on different scenarios and taking into account the numerous inputs that influence the spread of this infection. This paper presents a web responsive application that allows the end user to analyze the evolution of the pandemic in Romania, graphically, and that incorporates, unlike other COVID-19 statistical applications, a prediction of active cases evolution. The prediction is based on a neural network mathematical model, described from the architectural point of view.


2018 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 18-29
Author(s):  
Fatima Batool ◽  
Meher - ul - Nissa ◽  
Asia Khan
Keyword(s):  

This paper explores the novel The Blind Assassin through the lens of Baumeister’s self-defining process. Identity, being an interpretation of self, lies in persistence and consistence over time. Identity crisis is the inability to define basic values, long-term goals and major affiliations, all of which help a person in the process of self-defining. The Blind Assassin being the story of two sisters, Iris Griffen and Laura Griffen, is helpful in developing a comparison of the two characters who are subjected to same upbringing and same social surroundings. The elder sister manages to assert her will in a competitive society while the younger one suffers from identity crisis and finds solace in suicide. Baumeister’s model of identity provides basis to interpret the inability of Laura in defining herself. The more a person is socially compatible the more she is at ease with herself. Her biological, social and sexual needs never addressed, however, she keeps trying to make choices and struggles to realize her potential. She ends up discontented as she is taken as an eccentric and dissatisfied as her own sister gives her the greatest shock of her life. The more a person is allowed to make choices the more successful she is in defining herself. Laura completes her self-defining process by driving off the bridge which Freud interprets as a way of giving birth. This paper helps understanding the ways in which society particularly family affect an individual’s decisions and the ways in which an individual tries to assert her/his will.


2020 ◽  
pp. 26-58
Author(s):  
Jessica R. Valdez

While Benedict Anderson has argued that newspapers enable readers to imagine national community, Charles Dickens’s writings are attentive to the varying ways that the newspaper press might shape, inhibit, or fragment community through its uncontrolled production of miscellaneous content and matter. This first chapter shows the growing distinction that Dickens drew between fiction and nonfiction, novel and newspaper, in his communal visions for serial publication. Early Dickens characterised the newspaper press as a meteorological force of destruction, a thunderstorm threatening to engulf the city of London, yet continually produced to meet the endless public appetite for more news. Over the course of his career, Dickens experimented with other metaphors for the working of serial narrative and its influence on a reading public. From an intangible creature telling stories to a weaver at his loom, Dickens encourages readers to see the instance of a particular serial output linked to its larger structure over time. In doing so, he privileges the power of serial fiction to cultivate new ways of envisioning community.


2016 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
pp. 157-176 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura J. E. Brown ◽  
Tim Adlam ◽  
Faustina Hwang ◽  
Hassan Khadra ◽  
Linda M. Maclean ◽  
...  

The “Novel Assessment of Nutrition and Ageing” (NANA) toolkit is a computerized system for collecting longitudinal information about older adults’ health and behavior. Here, we describe the validation of six items for measuring older adults’ self-reported mood and appetite as part of the NANA system. In Study 1, 48 community-living older adults (aged 65-89 years) completed NANA measures of their current mood and appetite alongside standard paper measures, on three occasions, in a laboratory setting. In Study 2, 40 community-living older adults (aged 64-88 years) completed daily NANA measures of momentary mood and appetite in their own homes, unsupervised, alongside additional measures of health and behavior, over three 7-day periods. The NANA measures were significantly correlated with standard measures of mood and appetite, and showed stability over time. They show utility for tracking mood and appetite longitudinally, and for better understanding links with other aspects of health and behavior.


2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (04) ◽  
pp. 5331-5338
Author(s):  
Urvashi Oswal ◽  
Aniruddha Bhargava ◽  
Robert Nowak

This paper explores a new form of the linear bandit problem in which the algorithm receives the usual stochastic rewards as well as stochastic feedback about which features are relevant to the rewards, the latter feedback being the novel aspect. The focus of this paper is the development of new theory and algorithms for linear bandits with feature feedback which can achieve regret over time horizon T that scales like k√T, without prior knowledge of which features are relevant nor the number k of relevant features. In comparison, the regret of traditional linear bandits is d√T, where d is the total number of (relevant and irrelevant) features, so the improvement can be dramatic if k ≪ d. The computational complexity of the algorithm is proportional to k rather than d, making it much more suitable for real-world applications compared to traditional linear bandits. We demonstrate the performance of the algorithm with synthetic and real human-labeled data.


2010 ◽  
Vol 176 (5) ◽  
pp. 2098-2106 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan Golledge ◽  
Paula Clancy ◽  
Corey Moran ◽  
Erik Biros ◽  
Catherine Rush ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 511-511 ◽  
Author(s):  
Darja Karpova ◽  
Susanne Brauninger ◽  
Eliza Wiercinska ◽  
Ariane Kraemer ◽  
Belinda Stock ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Stem cell mobilization (SCM) with G-CSF is efficient but - although overall safe - inconvenient because of the five-day injection regime and certain contraindications. Side effects, sometimes severe, are frequent. These disadvantages fuel the quest for alternative mobilizing agents. Mobilization with the CXCR4-inhibitor plerixafor is rapid, albeit insufficiently efficacious on its own. POL6326, a potent 2nd generation macrocycle CXCR4 antagonist, has demonstrated rapid mobilization kinetics and efficacy in mice. We herein report the results of a Phase IIa dose escalation trial where SCM in response to POL6326 was compared with G-CSF in healthy volunteer stem cell donors. Methods: In this Phase IIa open label trial, healthy volunteer stem cell donors with average mobilization (121±7 CD34+ cells/μL, MW±SEM)after a five-day course of G-CSF, and a wash-out period of at least 6 weeks, received POL6326 at 500-2500 µg/kg as a single 2-hour i.v. infusion. Safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK) and pharmacodynamics (PD) were assessed in 3-10 subjects/dose group. Subgroups received two doses of POL6326, 1000 and 2500 µg/kg or 1500 and 2500 µg/kg, at least 2 weeks apart (paired intra-individual analysis). For PK and PD blood samples were collected before (0) and at 2, 3, 4, 6, 8 and 24 hrs after infusion start. Complete blood count, CD34+, CFU-C count and PK were assessed at all time points. At 0, 4, 8 and 24 hrs extensive phenotyping of mobilized mature and immature leukocyte subsets was performed. Eight to 14 days after treatment volunteers underwent extensive clinical and laboratory follow-up. Results: POL6326 was very well tolerated. Several volunteers experienced a mild urticarial or itchy macular rash which responded well to H1/H2 blockade. Rating of tolerability/adverse events by volunteers (questionnaire) compared favourably with G-CSF administration. Exposure (Cmax, AUC) was dose-linear. At all doses tested POL6326 mobilized CD34+ progenitor cells and colony-forming cells (CFU-C, Figure 1) exceeding reported peak mobilization with plerixafor in donors at all except the lowest dose levels. In this dataset mobilization after doses of 2000 or 2500 µg/kg did not appear meaningfully stronger than after 1500 µg/kg. The SCM response for CD34+ cells to doses ≥1500 µg/kg was 36.9±2.4/µL (mean±SEM), or 1/3 that of G-CSF (y=0.324x). Good SCM with G-CSF was predictive of good SCM with POL6326 (r=0.63). One/5.7 POL6326-mobilized CD34+ cells was clonogenic (G-CSF: 1 CFU-C/3.4 CD34+ cells) possibly indicating a more immature phenotype of CD34+ cells mobilized by POL6326. POL6326 caused mixed leucocytosis with peak values in the mid-20K/µL. B-lymphocytosis was more and neutrophilia and monocytosis were less pronounced after POL6326 than G-CSF. Compared to G-CSF the subset of plasmocytoid dendritic cell progenitors (pDC) was enriched to a distinct population within the CD34+ cells following SCM with POL6326 as previously described for plerixafor. At the 24 h time point, blood values were well on their way towards normal, and at follow-up all laboratory values had normalized. Summary/Conclusions: The novel CXCR4-antagonist POL6326 is safe, well tolerated, and provides efficient mobilization of HSPCs. Based on the number of mobilized CD34+ cells at higher doses in this study, we conclude that a standard dose of 4x10E6 CD34+ cells/kg can be extracted with a single apheresis for most recipients unless their body weight significantly exceeds the donor weight. However, exploration of alternative dosing regimens may provide even higher mobilization responses. POL6326 can be an effective mobilizing agent for allogeneic donors, including subjects with contra-indications to G-CSF. Figure 1. Mobilization of CD34+ cells (left) and CFU-C (right) over time is shown (mean±SEM for each dose level of POL6326). Figure 1. Mobilization of CD34+ cells (left) and CFU-C (right) over time is shown (mean±SEM for each dose level of POL6326). Figure 2. Figure 2. Disclosures Escot: Polyphor Ltd.: Employment. Douglas:Polyphor Ltd.: Employment. Romagnoli:Polyphor Ltd.: Employment. Chevalier:Polyphor Ltd.: Employment. Dembowsky:Polyphor Ltd.: Consultancy. Hooftman:Polyphor Ltd.: Employment. Bonig:Polyphor Ltd.: Research Funding.


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