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1.
Sci Total Environ ; 885: 163727, 2023 Aug 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37120022

ABSTRACT

Tiny ultraviolet (UV) light-emitting diodes (LED)s that are replacing the conventional energy-intensive mercury UV lamps have gained interest since the early 2000's because of their promising advantages. In the context of microbial inactivation (MI) of waterborne microbes, disinfection kinetics of those LEDs exhibited variations among studies, in terms of varying the UV wavelength, the exposure time, power, and dose (UV fluence) as well as other operational conditions. While reported results may appear contradictory when examined separately, they probably are not when analyzed collectively. As such, in this study, we carry out a quantitative collective regression analysis of the reported data to shed light on the kinetics of MI by the emerging UV LEDs technology alongside the effects of varying operational conditions. The main goal is to identify dose response requirements for UV LEDs and to compare them to traditional UV lamps in addition to ascertaining optimal settings that could help in achieving the optimal inactivation outcome for comparable UV doses. The analysis showed that kinetically, UV LEDs are as effective as conventional mercury lamps for water disinfection, and at times more effective, especially for UV resistant microbes. We defined the maximal efficiency at two wavelengths, 260-265 nm and 280 nm, among a wide range of available LED wavelengths. We also defined the UV fluence per log inactivation of tested microbes. At the operational level, we identified existing gaps and developed a framework for a comprehensive analysis program for future needs.


Subject(s)
Water Purification , Microbial Viability , Kinetics , Water Purification/methods , Ultraviolet Rays , Disinfection/methods
2.
Sci Adv ; 6(34): eabb1929, 2020 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32875110

ABSTRACT

The prenatal origins of heart disease in offspring have been established. However, research in species with developmental milestones comparable to humans is lacking, preventing translation of this knowledge to clinical contexts. Using sheep and chickens, two species with similar cardiovascular developmental milestones to humans, we combined in vivo experiments with in vitro studies at organ, cellular, mitochondrial, and molecular levels. We tested mitochondria-targeted antioxidant intervention with MitoQ against cardiovascular dysfunction programmed by developmental hypoxia, a common complication in human pregnancy. Experiments in sheep determined in vivo fetal and adult cardiovascular function through surgical techniques not possible in humans, while those in chicken embryos isolated effects independent of maternal or placental influences. We show that hypoxia generates mitochondria-derived oxidative stress during cardiovascular development, programming endothelial dysfunction and hypertension in adult offspring. MitoQ treatment during hypoxic development protects against this cardiovascular risk via enhanced nitric oxide signaling, offering a plausible intervention strategy.


Subject(s)
Chickens , Placenta , Animals , Antioxidants/metabolism , Antioxidants/pharmacology , Chick Embryo , Female , Hypoxia/metabolism , Mitochondria , Placenta/metabolism , Pregnancy , Sheep
3.
J Physiol ; 596(23): 6105-6119, 2018 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29604064

ABSTRACT

KEY POINTS: Fetal heart rate variability (FHRV) has long been recognised as a powerful predictor of fetal wellbeing, and a decrease in FHRV is associated with fetal compromise. However, the mechanisms by which FHRV is reduced in the chronically hypoxic fetus have yet to be established. The sympathetic and parasympathetic influences on heart rate mature at different rates throughout fetal life, and can be assessed by time domain and power spectral analysis of FHRV. In this study of chronically instrumented fetal sheep in late gestation, we analysed FHRV daily over a 16 day period towards term, and compared changes between fetuses of control and chronically hypoxic pregnancy. We show that FHRV in sheep is reduced by chronic hypoxia, predominantly due to dysregulation of the sympathetic control of the fetal heart rate. This presents a potential mechanism by which a reduction in indices of FHRV predicts fetuses at increased risk of neonatal morbidity and mortality in humans. Reduction in overall FHRV may therefore provide a biomarker that autonomic dysregulation of fetal heart rate control has taken place in a fetus where uteroplacental dysfunction is suspected. ABSTRACT: Although fetal heart rate variability (FHRV) has long been recognised as a powerful predictor of fetal wellbeing, the mechanisms by which it is reduced in the chronically hypoxic fetus have yet to be established. In particular, the physiological mechanism underlying the reduction of short term variation (STV) in fetal compromise remains unclear. In this study, we present a longitudinal study of the development of autonomic control of FHRV, assessed by indirect indices, time domain and power spectral analysis, in normoxic and chronically hypoxic, chronically catheterised, singleton fetal sheep over the last third of gestation. We used isobaric chambers able to maintain pregnant sheep for prolonged periods in hypoxic conditions (stable fetal femoral arterial PO2 10-12 mmHg), and a customised wireless data acquisition system to record beat-to-beat variation in the fetal heart rate. We determined in vivo longitudinal changes in overall FHRV and the sympathetic and parasympathetic contribution to FHRV in hypoxic (n = 6) and normoxic (n = 6) ovine fetuses with advancing gestational age. Normoxic fetuses show gestational age-related increases in overall indices of FHRV, and in the sympathetic nervous system contribution to FHRV (P < 0.001). Conversely, gestational age-related increases in overall FHRV were impaired by exposure to chronic hypoxia, and there was evidence of suppression of the sympathetic nervous system control of FHRV after 72 h of exposure to hypoxia (P < 0.001). This demonstrates that exposure to late gestation isolated chronic fetal hypoxia has the potential to alter the development of the autonomic nervous system control of FHRV in sheep. This presents a potential mechanism by which a reduction in indices of FHRV in human fetuses affected by uteroplacental dysfunction can predict fetuses at increased risk.


Subject(s)
Heart Rate, Fetal , Hypoxia/physiopathology , Animals , Autonomic Nervous System/physiopathology , Female , Pregnancy , Sheep , Sympathetic Nervous System/physiopathology
4.
J Dev Orig Health Dis ; 9(4): 460-466, 2018 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29692274

ABSTRACT

It is now well accepted that exposure to adverse environmental conditions in utero can predispose a fetus to disease later in life. Using an avian model to study the programming of disease has a unique advantage as it allows isolation of the direct effects of adverse conditions on fetal physiology, without any confounding effects via the mother or placenta. However, experiments in avian models are limited by the lack of well-established surgical protocols for the adult bird, which we have established in this study. Surgery was performed on seven young adult Bovan Brown chickens (body weight 1617±214 g, mean±s.d.) in order to instrument them with femoral arterial and venous catheters and a femoral arterial flow probe. Isoflurane and lidocaine were both found to have depressive effects on chicken cardiovascular function. Optimised methods of anaesthesia, intraoperative monitoring, surgical approach, postoperative care, and experimentation are described. Chickens recovered rapidly from surgery without significant blood gas perturbation, and basal in vivo cardiovascular studies were performed following 5 days of recovery. These techniques allow detailed investigation of avian cardiometabolic function, permitting determination of the consequences in later life of direct environmental insults to fetal physiology, isolated from additional effects on maternal physiology and/or placental endocrinology.


Subject(s)
Cardiovascular Physiological Phenomena , Chickens/surgery , Fetal Development , Models, Animal , Placenta/physiology , Surgical Procedures, Operative/methods , Animals , Female , Maternal-Fetal Exchange , Placenta/surgery , Pregnancy
5.
J Physiol ; 596(15): 2991-3006, 2018 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28983923

ABSTRACT

It is now established that adverse conditions during pregnancy can trigger a fetal origin of cardiovascular dysfunction and/or increase the risk of heart disease in later life. Suboptimal environmental conditions during early life that may promote the development of cardiovascular dysfunction in the offspring include alterations in fetal oxygenation and nutrition as well as fetal exposure to stress hormones, such as glucocorticoids. There has been growing interest in identifying the partial contributions of each of these stressors to programming of cardiovascular dysfunction. However, in humans and in many animal models this is difficult, as the challenges cannot be disentangled. By using the chicken embryo as an animal model, science has been able to circumvent a number of problems. In contrast to mammals, in the chicken embryo the effects on the developing cardiovascular system of changes in oxygenation, nutrition or stress hormones can be isolated and determined directly, independent of changes in the maternal or placental physiology. In this review, we summarise studies that have exploited the chicken embryo model to determine the effects on prenatal growth, cardiovascular development and pituitary-adrenal function of isolated chronic developmental hypoxia.


Subject(s)
Cardiovascular Diseases/embryology , Hypoxia/embryology , Animals , Cardiovascular Diseases/physiopathology , Chick Embryo , Fetal Development , Humans , Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System/physiology , Hypoxia/physiopathology , Pituitary-Adrenal System/physiology
6.
J Physiol ; 594(5): 1247-64, 2016 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26926316

ABSTRACT

Although the fetal cardiovascular defence to acute hypoxia and the physiology underlying it have been established for decades, how the fetal cardiovascular system responds to chronic hypoxia has been comparatively understudied. We designed and created isobaric hypoxic chambers able to maintain pregnant sheep for prolonged periods of gestation under controlled significant (10% O2) hypoxia, yielding fetal mean P(aO2) levels (11.5 ± 0.6 mmHg) similar to those measured in human fetuses of hypoxic pregnancy. We also created a wireless data acquisition system able to record fetal blood flow signals in addition to fetal blood pressure and heart rate from free moving ewes as the hypoxic pregnancy is developing. We determined in vivo longitudinal changes in fetal cardiovascular function including parallel measurement of fetal carotid and femoral blood flow and oxygen and glucose delivery during the last third of gestation. The ratio of oxygen (from 2.7 ± 0.2 to 3.8 ± 0.8; P < 0.05) and of glucose (from 2.3 ± 0.1 to 3.3 ± 0.6; P < 0.05) delivery to the fetal carotid, relative to the fetal femoral circulation, increased during and shortly after the period of chronic hypoxia. In contrast, oxygen and glucose delivery remained unchanged from baseline in normoxic fetuses. Fetal plasma urate concentration increased significantly during chronic hypoxia but not during normoxia (Δ: 4.8 ± 1.6 vs. 0.5 ± 1.4 µmol l(-1), P<0.05). The data support the hypotheses tested and show persisting redistribution of substrate delivery away from peripheral and towards essential circulations in the chronically hypoxic fetus, associated with increases in xanthine oxidase-derived reactive oxygen species.


Subject(s)
Blood Gas Analysis/methods , Fetal Heart/physiopathology , Fetal Hypoxia/physiopathology , Heart Function Tests/methods , Remote Sensing Technology/methods , Animals , Blood Gas Analysis/instrumentation , Coronary Circulation , Female , Heart Function Tests/instrumentation , Placental Circulation , Pregnancy , Remote Sensing Technology/instrumentation , Sheep
7.
J Biochem ; 78(4): 705-11, 1975 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2583

ABSTRACT

The difference spectra of hen and turkey egg-white lysozymes [EC 3.2.1.17] produced by acidification were measured. The difference spectra of both lysozymes had peaks at 295 and 301 nm which are characteristic of tryptophyl residues. The pH dependence curves of the extinction differences (delta eplision) at 301 nm and 295 nm for hen lysozyme were identical with the corresponding curves for turkey lysozyme. The pH dependence of delta eplision at 301 nm was analyzed assuming that the extinction at 301 nm is due to Trp 108 only, which interacts with the catalytic carboxyls, Glu 35 and Asp 52. The macroscopic pK values of Glu 35 and Asp 52 in both lysozymes thus determined were 6.0 and 3.3, respectively. These values were in excellent agreement with those determined by measuring the pH dependence of the circular dichroic band at 305 nm (Kuramitsu et al. (1974) J. Biochem, 76, 671-683; (1975) ibid. 77, 291-301). The pH dependence of delta eplision at 295 nm could not be completely explained in terms of the electrostatic effects of the catalytic groups on Trp 108.


Subject(s)
Muramidase , Tryptophan , Animals , Carboxylic Acids , Chickens , Female , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Spectrophotometry , Turkeys
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