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1.
Biogerontology ; 6(4): 245-53, 2005.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16333758

ABSTRACT

Neonatal thymus graft and thymus calf extract (TME) in vivo treatment exert similar corrective actions on different mouse age-related alterations. The aim of the present paper is to investigate whether a vegetal extract, wheat sprout extract (WESPRE), could mimic the thymus action on recovering age-related alterations and if this extract can cure an age-associated pathology, the cataract in dogs. Present experiments were carried out by using WESPRE and TME in vivo in old mice to check their ability to recover the altered DNA synthesis in hepatocyte primary cultures. Old mice treated with WESPRE and TME showed a recovery of hepatocyte DNA synthesis levels when compared with the old untreated ones. The increase of DNA and protein contents observed in aged animals is reduced by WESPRE treatments to levels observed in young mice hepatocytes. We measured also WESPRE phosphorylation activity by endogenous kinase: it was from 10 to 40 times higher with respect to wheat seeds. Old dogs were orally treated for a month and the lens opacity analysed before and after the treatment. Results showed a reduction from 25 to 40% of lens opacity. The efficacy of wheat sprouts in the recovery of age-related alterations and in treating age-associated pathologies could be due to the contemporary presence of small regulatory acid peptides, a remarkable level of highly energetic phosphoric radicals and antioxidant molecules, peculiarities that may be, to some extent, related to the aging process regulation.


Subject(s)
Aging , Plant Extracts , Thymus Extracts , Thymus Gland , Vegetables , Animals , Dogs , Mice , Aging/pathology , DNA Replication , Hepatocytes/cytology , Lens, Crystalline/pathology , Mice, Inbred BALB C , Phosphorylation , Plant Extracts/therapeutic use , Thymus Gland/transplantation , Vegetables/chemistry , Thymus Extracts/therapeutic use
2.
Water Res ; 37(10): 2357-64, 2003 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12727245

ABSTRACT

Chronic toxicity tests carried out on species of the genus Daphnia (Crustacea: Cladocera) are bioassays commonly used in ecotoxicology. Mortality in the cohorts exposed to toxicants can be examined by the analysis of survival curves. The shape of these curves may be very different because of inter-individual heterogeneity: the less rectangular is the shape the more different is the probability of dying of daphnids in the cohort. Aim of this paper is to analyze the characteristics-in particular the shape-of survival curves of cohorts of Daphnia magna exposed to heavy metals in chronic toxicity tests. Experimental curves were fitted by a mathematical model recently proposed, which puts emphasis just on this heterogeneity, described by the parameter of the model S(0). The information contained in S(0) is very useful for the present purposes: the higher the value of S(0) the less rectangular the shape of the curve and, as a consequence, the higher the age-at-death heterogeneity of the cohort is thought to be. The model contains a second parameter, omega, representing the maximum potential ability of the individuals to survive in a specific environment and is related with the maximal life span. The model fitted well the survival curves in most cases and both S(0) and omega showed statistically different values between treatments, useful for comparisons. It was concluded that S(0) provides a quantitative estimation of curve "rectangularization", useful to check different sensitivities to a specific toxicant concentration among daphnids belonging to the same cohort, while omega provides an estimate of maximal life span.


Subject(s)
Daphnia , Models, Theoretical , Water Pollutants/toxicity , Animals , Longevity , Survival Analysis
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