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1.
Spectrochim Acta A Mol Biomol Spectrosc ; 324: 124982, 2025 Jan 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39173318

ABSTRACT

Imine based positional isomers (8E)-N-(4-((E)-(perfluorophenylimino)methyl)benzylidene)-2,3,4,5,6-pentafluorobenzenamine, L and (10E)-N-(3-(E-Perfluorophenylimino)methyl)benzylidene)-2,3,4,5,6-pentafluorobenzenamine, L1 have been designed, and synthesized by functionalizing two electron deficient aromatic moieties at the para-para'/ortho-ortho' positions in the phenyl core of the L and L1 respectively. The responses of L and L1 towards various anionic species are examined. The positional isomers L and L1 differs not only by showing distinguishable color change upon addition of anions but also differentiates themselves by the way of self-assembling together upon binding with cyanide anion. The naked-eye colorimetric experiments, UV-Vis, Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, and Infra-Red spectroscopic analyses reveal that the isomer L binds fluoride anion through 2:1 stoichiometry ratio. Unlike fluoride complex, the isomer L form aggregates while binding with cyanide ion. On the other hand, isomer L1 does not show any instant color change upon additions of any anion. Interestingly, after thirty minutes, only the color of the cyanide complex is turned into dark brown. While analyzing the spectroscopic results of cyanide complex of L1, it is found that the cyanide complex begins to decompose and finally it is completely decomposed within 30 min. This unprecedented phenomenon about the colorimetric sensing of cyanide and destruction of cyanide complex with respect to time has not been reported in the literature yet. To the best of our knowledge this is the first example of study of sensing controlling the selectivity, mode of binding, self-aggregating and degradation properties of anionic complexes under the influence of positional isomeric effects. This present investigation provides simple and effective strategy to construct the sensor molecules with tunable binding properties in terms of easy to prepare as well as easy to use as a colorimetric sensor. _____________________________________________________________________________________________________.

2.
J Environ Sci (China) ; 147: 200-216, 2025 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39003040

ABSTRACT

Microplastics (MPs) are ubiquitous in the environment, continuously undergo aging processes and release toxic chemical substances. Understanding the environmental behaviors of MPs is critical to accurately evaluate their long-term ecological risk. Generalized two-dimensional correlation spectroscopy (2D-COS) is a powerful tool for MPs studies, which can dig more comprehensive information hiding in the conventional one-dimensional spectra, such as infrared (IR) and Raman spectra. The recent applications of 2D-COS in analyzing the behaviors and fates of MPs in the environment, including their aging processes, and interactions with natural organic matter (NOM) or other chemical substances, were summarized systematically. The main requirements and limitations of current approaches for exploring these processes are discussed, and the corresponding strategies to address these limitations and drawbacks are proposed as well. Finally, new trends of 2D-COS are prospected for analyzing the properties and behaviors of MPs in both natural and artificial environmental processes.


Subject(s)
Environmental Monitoring , Microplastics , Microplastics/analysis , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared/methods , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis
3.
Spectrochim Acta A Mol Biomol Spectrosc ; 324: 124954, 2025 Jan 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39180970

ABSTRACT

We investigated the anharmonicity and intermolecular interactions of N-methylformamide (NMF) and di-N,N-methylformamide (DMF) in the neat liquid phase with particular interest in the amide bands. The vibrational spectra, complex refractive index, and complex electric permittivity were determined in in the mid- (MIR) and near-infrared (NIR) regions (11,500-560 cm-1; 870-17857 nm). Dispersion analysis was based on the Classical Damped Harmonic Oscillator (CDHO) and simultaneous modelling of the real and imaginary components of the spectra. This data delivered insights into the vibrational energy dissipation and self-association in liquid amides. Identification of the MIR and NIR bands was based on anharmonic GVPT2//B3LYP/6-311++G(d,p) calculations. DMF and NMF follow distinct self-association, evidenced in the MIR fingerprint by the two components of the νCO, the analog of the Amide I band. These conclusions are supported by the structural information derived from the NIR spectra. Furthermore, the contribution of overtones and combination bands in the MIR spectra of amides was examined. The conclusions on molecular interactions and structural dynamics of NMF and DMF contribute to a deeper understanding of the effects of changes in the local environment of the amide group.

4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 121(38): e2321008121, 2024 Sep 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39254996

ABSTRACT

We know little about the mechanisms through which leader-follower dynamics during dyadic play shape infants' language acquisition. We hypothesized that infants' decisions to visually explore a specific object signal focal increases in endogenous attention, and that when caregivers respond to these proactive behaviors by naming the object it boosts infants' word learning. To examine this, we invited caregivers and their 14-mo-old infants to play with novel objects, before testing infants' retention of the novel object-label mappings. Meanwhile, their electroencephalograms were recorded. Results showed that infants' proactive looks toward an object during play associated with greater neural signatures of endogenous attention. Furthermore, when caregivers named objects during these episodes, infants showed greater word learning, but only when caregivers also joined their focus of attention. Our findings support the idea that infants' proactive visual explorations guide their acquisition of a lexicon.


Subject(s)
Language Development , Humans , Infant , Female , Male , Attention/physiology , Social Interaction , Electroencephalography , Verbal Learning/physiology , Learning/physiology
5.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39229735

ABSTRACT

Objective: The purpose of this study was to demonstrate heat transfer within oral soft tissues using different lasers under the effect of local anesthetics (LA). Methods: Bovine tongue slices were placed in between two glass slides and at a distance from a thermographic camera. In total, 2-cm-long 240 incisions were made along the surface of the tissue parallel to glass slides and the camera capture field. Incisions were performed using 445-nm and infrared (IR) lasers (970 nm and 980 nm on a continuous wave at 2 W) with 320 µm-initiated (concentrated energy at the tip provided by a blue articulated paper and laser irradiation) and noninitiated (defused energy) fiber (30-sec irradiation period). LA was injected into the specimens before irradiation. The temperature changes in °C (ΔT) and vertical and lateral heat transfer (in mm) were recorded at 10-sec intervals for 30 sec, using thermographic images. The amount of lateral and vertical heat transfer was measured. A repeated analysis of variance statistical comparison test was used to analyze differences between the lateral (width) and the vertical (height) heat transfer for initiated and noninitiated lasers and different lasers. Results: The maximum ΔT in °C utilizing initiated tips of 970, 980, or 445 nm were 11.82 ± 3.46, 7.66 ± 3.24, and 18.94 ± 7.01 and using noninitiated tips were 8.27 ± 1.69, 8.87 ± 2.40, and 12.31 ± 8.65, respectively. Heat transfers (height/width) for initiated were 40.65 ± 10.40/90.65 ± 10.77 mm, 41.50 ± 11.83/83.95 ± 11.20 mm, and 33.70 ± 9.10/95.10 ± 11.17 mm and for noninitiated lasers were 52.95 ± 6.89/96.10 ± 11.17 mm, 47.75 ± 7.41/93.75 ± 14.96 mm, and 31.35 ± 11.40/75.20 ± 19.68 mm, respectively. A statistically significant difference was found between all lasers (p < 0.05) for initiated and noninitiated lasers (except for 970/980 nm for noninitiated lasers). Lower penetration depth (p < 0.05) at 445-nm diode and greater lateral heat spreading (p < 0.05) were identified under LA especially utilizing noninitiated tips without significant difference in IR lasers. Conclusions: LA might negatively influence soft tissues creating scattering when noninitiated tips are used and IR diode laser technology.

6.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39229749

ABSTRACT

Research concerning coordination polymers has been intense due to their significant variability and structural stability. With this in mind, an ionic neodymium coordination polymer was synthesized, composed of an anionic one-dimensional polymer interconnected to a cationic three-dimensional porous polymer, poly[dodecaaquabis(µ-pyridine-4-carbohydrazide-κ2N:O)bis(µ2-4-sulfobenzoato-κ2O:O')bis(µ3-4-sulfobenzoato-κ3O:O':O'')trineodymium(III)] catena-poly[aquabis(µ-pyridine-4-carbohydrazide-κ2N:O)bis(µ2-4-sulfobenzoato-κ2O:O')neodymium(III)] 4.33-hydrate, {[Nd3(C7H4O5S)4(C6H7N3O)2(H2O)12][Nd(C7H4O5S)2(C6H7N3O)2(H2O)]·4.33H2O}n. The ligands used were 4-sulfobenzoate (PSB) and pyridine-4-carbohydrazide, popularly known as isoniazid (INH), an antibiotic drug. The compound crystallizes in the monoclinic space group C2/c, with Z = 4. Solid-state calculations suggest that the crystal structure is mainly stabilized by hydrogen bonds, i.e. O-H...O and N-H...O interactions among the polymers, and by van der Waals interactions involving the organic side chains. This net is tetragonal, 2-nodal 3,4-connected, and can be described as the dmd (sqc 528) type.

7.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; : e2405103, 2024 Sep 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39229787

ABSTRACT

Engineering of hollow particles with tunable internal structures often requires complicated processes and/or invasive cleavage. Halogen-bond driven 3D confined-assembly of block copolymers has shed light on the engineering of polymer organization along with the fabricating of unique nanostructures. Herein, a family of multilevel hollow-structured particles (e.g., fully porous, multi-chamber, multi-shell, and concentric multi-layer architectures) is reported via halogen-bond regulated 3D confined-assembly of amphiphilic polymer networks. To do so, polystyrene-b-poly(2-vinyl pyridine)-b-poly(ethylene oxide) (PS-b-P2VP-b-PEO) amphiphilic triblock copolymer is selected, where P2VP blocks act as halogen acceptor. Meanwhile, poly(3-(2,3,5,6-tetrafluoro-4-iodophenoxy) propyl acrylate) (PTFIPA) is employed as halogen donor. Halogen-bond driven donor-acceptor linking between PTFIPA and P2VP block presented in PS-b-P2VP-b-PEO, can lead to the formation of supramolecular polymeric networks, along with the increased P2VP domain and tunable hydrophobic volume. Therefore, an adjustable packing parameter (p) is thus anticipated, which can enable the morphology transformation sequence until an equilibrium state is reached. Moreover, computer simulations are further utilized as the tool to interpret such morphologies transition and identify the precise distribution of each component. Benefiting from the tunable hollow structure and a substantial surface for transporting purpose, these structurally novel particles open perspectives toward promising applications including encapsulation, nanoreactor, and catalyst support.

8.
Plant Biol (Stuttg) ; 2024 Sep 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39230438

ABSTRACT

While most flowering plants engage in mutualistic interactions with their pollinators, Arisaema species employ a unique, seemingly antagonistic strategy by imprisoning and causing the pollinators to perish within their spathes. Recent studies have revealed that Arisaema thunbergii primarily relies on a fungus gnat, Leia ishitanii, with some individuals possibly escaping female spathes after oviposition. We investigated interactions between A. urashima and its pollinating fungus gnats, given that A. urashima is closely related to A. thunbergii. Specifically, we tested whether decaying A. urashima serve as brood-sites for some pollinators and whether these pollinators can escape seemingly lethal floral traps. We retrieved A. urashima spathes together with adult insect corpses trapped within the spathes and incubated the spathes to see if conspecific insects emerged. In addition, under laboratory conditions, we observed the escape behaviour of Sciophila yokoyamai, whose next-generation adults most frequently emerge from the decaying spathes. Our findings indicate that S. yokoyamai almost always escapes from the female spathe after oviposition while using the inflorescence as a nursery. In contrast, other pollinators of A. urashima, including Mycetophila spp., remain trapped and perished within the spathes. This study demonstrates that A. urashima spathes can function both as lethal traps and mutualistic nurseries, with outcomes differing among pollinator species. Our results also suggest that the contribution of certain pollinators to Arisaema reproduction is underestimated or even neglected, given that information on their pollinator assemblages has been based on floral visitors trapped within the inflorescences.

9.
Front Plant Sci ; 15: 1380969, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39220006

ABSTRACT

Introduction: Equipped with a photosynthetic apparatus that uses the energy of solar radiation to fuel biosynthesis of organic compounds, chloroplasts are the metabolic factories of mature leaf cells. The first steps of energy conversion are catalyzed by a collection of protein complexes, which can dynamically interact with each other for optimizing metabolic efficiency under changing environmental conditions. Materials and methods: For a deeper insight into the organization of protein assemblies and their roles in chloroplast adaption to changing environmental conditions, an improved complexome profiling protocol employing a MS-cleavable cross-linker is used to stabilize labile protein assemblies during the organelle isolation procedure. Results and discussion: Changes in protein:protein interaction patterns of chloroplast proteins in response to four different light intensities are reported. High molecular mass assemblies of central chloroplast electron transfer chain components as well as the PSII repair machinery react to different light intensities. In addition, the chloroplast encoded RNA-polymerase complex was found to migrate at a molecular mass of ~8 MDa, well above its previously reported molecular mass. Complexome profiling data produced during the course of this study can be interrogated by interested readers via a web-based online resource (https://complexomemap.de/projectsinteraction-chloroplasts).

10.
SSM Popul Health ; 27: 101703, 2024 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39220297

ABSTRACT

In the context of the "Chinese Differential Mode of Association" in traditional Chinese culture, this paper examines the heterogeneous effects of interpersonal interactions in different relationships on older adults' depressive emotions from a cultural-psychological perspective. Results using data from Chinese General Social Survey demonstrate that: interactions with children are the most helpful in reducing perceived depression for the elderly, followed by communications with siblings and relatives. However, interactions with friends and other fellows do not significantly reduce older people's perceived depression. This reflects the "Chinese Differential Mode of Association" in interpersonal relationships. When using different perceived depression measures, and Double Debiased Machine Learning (DDML) approaches for robustness and endogeneity tests, above findings are very robust. The impact mechanism is that interactions with children and siblings reduce depressive emotions by decreasing older adults' sense of loneliness, while communications with others do not have such a significant effect. This paper further discusses the roles of different types of interactions with adult children. It is found that receiving and providing emotional support can prominently decrease depressive emotions for older people, whereas the effects of monetary support and non-material assistance are less pronounced. In addition, interpersonal interactions' impacts are more significant for those who are female, older than 75 and with poorer health, as well as older people who exercise less frequently, have higher social status, and hold more traditional beliefs. In the current context of active promotion of healthy aging, findings of this paper have important implications for a deeper understanding and scientific management of depressive emotions among the elderly.

11.
Eur Cardiol ; 19: e15, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39220617

ABSTRACT

Cardiovascular disease is associated with progression to severe COVID-19 and patients with the condition are among those in whom early antiviral therapy should be warranted. The combination of nirmatrelvir/ritonavir (Paxlovid®) has been approved for clinical use by the Food and Drug Administration and European Medicines Agency. Because patients with cardiovascular disease are often on polypharmacy, physicians need to be aware of potential drug-drug interactions (DDIs) when treating COVID-19 with nirmatrelvir/ritonavir. Guidance is given for avoiding DDIs, emphasising that preventing and managing potential DDIs with nirmatrelvir/ritonavir requires thorough assessment and knowledge. The present review summarises the clinical pharmacology of nirmatrelvir/ritonavir and provides details on potential DDIs with a focus on daily practice in patients with cardiovascular disease. Particular attention is needed for drugs that are predominantly metabolised by cytochrome P450 3A4, are substrates of P-glycoprotein and have a narrow therapeutic index. Proper management of potential DDIs must balance the benefit of nirmatrelvir/ ritonavir to prevent severe disease with the risk of serious adverse events.

12.
Chemphyschem ; : e202400607, 2024 Sep 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39222401

ABSTRACT

Throughout the halogen bonding literature, electron withdrawing groups are relied upon heavily for tuning the in- teraction strength between the halogen bond donor and acceptor; however, the interplay of electronic effects associated with various substituents is less of a focus. This work utilizes computational techniques to study the degree of σ- and π- electron donating/accepting character of electron withdrawing groups in a prescribed set of halo-alkyne, halo-benzene, and halo-ethynyl benzene halogen bond donors. We examine how these factors affect the σ-hole magnitude of the donors as well as the binding strength of the corresponding complexes with an ammonia acceptor. Statistical analyses aid the interpretation of how these substituents influence the properties of the halogen bond donors and complexes, and show that the electron withdrawing groups that are both σ- and π-electron accepting form the strongest halogen bond complexes.

13.
Diagn Interv Radiol ; 2024 Sep 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39221690

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Unstructured, free-text dictation (FT), the current standard in breast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) reporting, is considered time-consuming and prone to error. The purpose of this study is to assess the usability and performance of a novel, software-based guided reporting (GR) strategy in breast MRI. METHODS: Eighty examinations previously evaluated for a clinical indication (e.g., mass and focus/non-mass enhancement) with FT were reevaluated by three specialized radiologists using GR. Each radiologist had a different number of cases (R1, n = 24; R2, n = 20; R3, n = 36). Usability was assessed by subjective feedback, and quality was assessed by comparing the completeness of automatically generated GR reports with that of their FT counterparts. Errors in GR were categorized and analyzed for debugging with a final software version. Combined reading and reporting times and learning curves were analyzed. RESULTS: Usability was rated high by all readers. No non-sense, omission/commission, or translational errors were detected with the GR method. Spelling and grammar errors were observed in 3/80 patient reports (3.8%) with GR (exclusively in the discussion section) and in 36/80 patient reports (45%) with FT. Between FT and GR, 41 patient reports revealed no content differences, 33 revealed minor differences, and 6 revealed major differences that resulted in changes in treatment. The errors in all patient reports with major content differences were categorized as content omission errors caused by improper software operation (n = 2) or by missing content in software v. 0.8 displayable with v. 1.7 (n = 4). The mean combined reading and reporting time was 576 s (standard deviation: 327 s; min: 155 s; max: 1,517 s). The mean times for each reader were 485, 557, and 754 s, and the respective learning curves evaluated by regression models revealed statistically significant slopes (P = 0.002; P = 0.0002; P < 0.0001). Overall times were shorter compared with external references that used FT. The mean combined reading and reporting time of MRI examinations using FT was 1,043 s and decreased by 44.8% with GR. CONCLUSION: GR allows for complete reporting with minimized error rates and reduced combined reading and reporting times. The streamlining of the process (evidenced by lower reading times) for the readers in this study proves that GR can be learned quickly. Reducing reporting errors leads to fewer therapeutic faults and lawsuits against radiologists. It is known that delays in radiology reporting hinder early treatment and lead to poorer patient outcomes. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: While the number of scans and images per examination is continuously rising, staff shortages create a bottleneck in radiology departments. The IT-based GR method can be a major boon, improving radiologist efficiency, report quality, and the quality of simultaneously generated data.

14.
Physiol Genomics ; 2024 Sep 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39222066

ABSTRACT

The severity of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) may be linked to host genetic susceptibility. Surfactant protein (SP) genetic variants have been associated with RSV severity, but the impact of SNP-SNP (single nucleotide polymorphism) interactions remains unexplored. Therefore, we employed a novel statistical model to investigate the association of SNP-SNP interactions of SFTP genes with RSV severity in two and three-interaction models. We analyzed available genotype and clinical data from prospectively enrolled 405 children diagnosed with RSV, categorizing them into moderate or severe RSV groups. Using Wang's statistical model, we studied significant associations of SNP-SNP interactions with RSV severity in a case-control design. We observed, 1) association of three interactions with increased risk of severe RSV in a two-SNP model. One intragenic interaction was between SNPs of SFTPA2, and the other two were intergenic, involving SNPs of hydrophilic and hydrophobic SPs alone. 2) association of 22 interactions with RSV severity in a three-SNP model. Among these, 20 were unique, with 12 and 10 interactions associated with increased or decreased risk of RSV severity, respectively, and included at least one SNP of either SFTPA1 or SFTPA2. All interactions were intergenic, except one among SNPs of SFTPA1. The remaining interactions were either among SNPs of hydrophilic SPs alone (n=8) or among SNPs of both hydrophilic or hydrophobic SPs (n=11). Our findings indicate that SNPs of all SFTPs may contribute to genetic susceptibility to RSV severity. However, the predominant involvement of SFTPA1 and/or SFTPA2 SNPs in these interactions underscores their significance in RSV severity.

15.
Plant J ; 2024 Sep 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39259840

ABSTRACT

Trichomes, which originate from the epidermal cell of aerial organs, provide plants with defense and secretion functions. Although numerous genes have been implicated in trichome development, the molecular mechanisms underlying trichome cell formation in plants remain incompletely understood. Here, we using genome-wide association study (GWAS) across 1037 diverse accessions in upland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) to identify three loci associated with leaf pubescence (hair) amount, located on chromosome A06 (LPA1), A08 (LPA2) and A11 (LPA3), respectively. GhHD1, a previously characterized candidate gene, was identified on LPA1 and encodes an HD-Zip transcription factor. For LPA2 and LPA3, we identified two candidate genes, GhGIR1 and GhGIR2, both encoding proteins with WD40 and RING domains that act as inhibitors of leaf hair formation. Expression analysis revealed that GhHD1 was predominantly expressed in hairy accessions, whereas GhGIR1 and GhGIR2 were expressed in hairless accessions. Silencing GhHD1 or overexpressing GhGIR1 in hairy accessions induced in a hairless phenotype, whereas silencing GhGIR2 in hairless accessions resulted in a hairy phenotype. We also demonstrated that GhHD1 interact with both GhGIR1 and GhGIR2, and GhGIR1 can interact with GhGIR2. Further investigation indicated that GhHD1 functions as a transcriptional activator, binding to the promoters of the GhGIR1 and GhGIR2 to active their expression, whereas GhGIR1 and GhGIR2 can suppress the transcriptional activation of GhHD1. Our findings shed light on the intricate regulatory network involving GhHD1, GhGIR1 and GhGIR2 in the initiation and development of plant epidermal hairs in cotton.

16.
Comput Biol Med ; 182: 109109, 2024 Sep 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39260046

ABSTRACT

The cardiovascular system interacts continuously with the respiratory system to maintain the vital balance of oxygen and carbon dioxide in our body. The interplay between the sympathetic and parasympathetic branches of the autonomic nervous system regulates the aforesaid involuntary functions. This study analyzes the dynamics of the cardio-respiratory (CR) interactions using RR Intervals (RRI), Systolic Blood Pressure (SBP), and Respiration signals after first-order differencing to make them stationary. It investigates their variation with cognitive load induced by a virtual reality (VR) based Go-NoGo shooting task with low and high levels of task difficulty. We use Pearson's correlation-based linear and mutual information-based nonlinear measures of association to indicate the reduction in RRI-SBP and RRI-Respiration interactions with cognitive load. However, no linear correlation difference was observed in SBP-Respiration interactions with cognitive load, but their mutual information increased. A couple of open-loop autoregressive models with exogenous input (ARX) are estimated using RRI and SBP, and one closed-loop ARX model is estimated using RRI, SBP, and Respiration. The impulse responses (IRs) are derived for each input-output pair, and a reduction in the positive and negative peak amplitude of all the IRs is observed with cognitive load. Some novel parameters are derived by representing the IR as a double exponential curve with cosine modulation and show significant differences with cognitive load compared to other measures, especially for the IR between SBP and Respiration.

17.
Int J Biol Macromol ; : 135517, 2024 Sep 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39260642

ABSTRACT

Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus are the most prevalent pathogenic bacteria, often resulting in the foodborne disease outbreaks through food spoilage and foodborne infections. To prevent and control food spoilage and foodborne infections induced by Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus, the antibacterial hydrogels were fabricated using fibrinogen hydrolysate-carrageenan (AHs-C) and flavonoids (apigenin and quercetin), and the antibacterial effect of the composite hydrogels against Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus was further investigated. The results of mechanical property exhibited that the composite hydrogels with 0.2 % of apigenin and quercetin (AHs-C-Ap/Que) showed the highest hardness and swelling property compared with the separate addition of apigenin or quercetin. Scanning electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy showed that the dense networks were formed in the hydrogels of AHs-C-Ap/Que., and the average roughness of AHs-C-Ap/Que. significantly increased to 30.70 nm compared with AHs-C. 1H NMR and FTIR spectra demonstrated that apigenin and quercetin were bound to AHs-C by hydrogen bond, hydrophobic interaction and Schiff base, where the interactions between Ap/Que. and AHs-C was stronger compared with the separate addition of apigenin or quercetin. The hydrogels of AHs-C-Ap/Que. showed the highest antibacterial capacity and antibacterial adhesion against Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus. The antibacterial adhesion assay showed that 99 % removal ratios for E. coli and S. aureus were observed in AHs-C-Ap/Que. hydrogels, which showed a great potential to prevent food spoilage and foodborne infections.

18.
Planta ; 260(4): 92, 2024 Sep 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39261328

ABSTRACT

MAIN CONCLUSION: The Ustilaginoidea virens -rice pathosystem has been used as a model for flower-infecting fungal pathogens. The molecular biology of the interactions between U. virens and rice, with an emphasis on the attempt to get a deeper comprehension of the false smut fungus's genomes, proteome, host range, and pathogen biology, has been investigated. Meta-QTL analysis was performed to identify potential QTL hotspots for use in marker-assisted breeding. The Rice False Smut (RFS) caused by the fungus Ustilaginoidea virens currently threatens rice cultivators across the globe. RFS infects rice panicles, causing a significant reduction in grain yield. U. virens can also parasitize other hosts though they play only a minor role in its life cycle. Furthermore, because it produces mycotoxins in edible rice grains, it puts both humans and animals at risk of health problems. Although fungicides are used to control the disease, some fungicides have enabled the pathogen to develop resistance, making its management challenging. Several QTLs have been reported but stable gene(s) that confer RFS resistance have not been discovered yet. This review offers a comprehensive overview of the pathogen, its virulence mechanisms, the genome and proteome of U. virens, and its molecular interactions with rice. In addition, information has been compiled on reported resistance QTLs, facilitating the development of a consensus genetic map using meta-QTL analysis for identifying potential QTL hotspots. Finally, this review highlights current developments and trends in U. virens-rice pathosystem research while identifying opportunities for future investigations.


Subject(s)
Host-Pathogen Interactions , Hypocreales , Oryza , Plant Diseases , Quantitative Trait Loci , Oryza/microbiology , Plant Diseases/microbiology , Hypocreales/pathogenicity , Hypocreales/genetics , Hypocreales/physiology , Virulence/genetics , Quantitative Trait Loci/genetics , Disease Resistance/genetics , Genome, Fungal
19.
Sci Rep ; 14(1): 21283, 2024 Sep 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39261506

ABSTRACT

Recent theoretical advances in the One Health approach have suggested that cancer pathologies should be given greater consideration, as cancers often render their hosts more vulnerable to infectious agents, which could turn them into super spreaders within ecosystems. Although biologically plausible, this hypothesis has not yet been validated experimentally. Using a community of cnidarians of the Hydra genus (Hydra oligactis, Hydra viridissima, Hydra vulgaris) and a commensal ciliate species (Kerona pediculus) that colonizes them, we tested whether tumoral polyps of H. oligactis, compared to healthy ones, played an amplifying role in the number of ciliates, potentially resulting in a higher likelihood of infection for other community members through spillovers. Our results indicate that K. pediculus has a higher proliferation rate on tumoral polyps of H. oligactis than on healthy ones, which results in the infestation of other hydras. However, the magnitude of the spillover differed between recipient species. This study provides to our knowledge the first elements of proof of concept that tumoral individuals in communities could act as super spreaders of symbionts within and between species, and thus affect biotic interactions and dynamics in ecosystems.


Subject(s)
Hydra , Neoplasms , Symbiosis , Animals , Hydra/microbiology , Hydra/physiology , One Health , Ecosystem , Ciliophora/physiology
20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39262094

ABSTRACT

Through killing and instilling fear in their prey, large terrestrial carnivores shape the structure and function of ecosystems globally. Most large carnivore species have experienced severe range and population declines due to human activities, and many are now threatened with extinction. Consequently, the impacts of these predators on food webs have been diminished or lost completely from many ecosystems. Kill rates provide a fundamental metric for understanding large carnivore ecology and assessing and comparing predation within and across ecological communities. Our systematic review of large terrestrial mammalian carnivore kill rates reveals significant positive geographic (North America, Europe, and Africa) and taxonomic (grey wolf Canis lupus, puma Puma concolor, lion Panthera leo, and Eurasian lynx Lynx lynx) bias, with most studies apparently motivated by human-carnivore conflict over access to ungulate prey and wildlife management objectives. Our current understanding of the behaviour and functional roles of many large carnivore species and populations thus remains limited. By synthesising and comparing kill rates, we show that solitary carnivores (e.g. brown bears Ursus arctos and most felids) exhibit higher per capita kill rates than social carnivores. However, ungulate predation by bears is typically limited to predation of neonates during a short period. Lower per capita kill rates by social carnivores suggests group living significantly reduces energetic demands, or, alternatively, that group-living carnivores defend and consume a greater proportion of large prey carcasses, or may acquire more food through other means (e.g. scavenging, kleptoparasitism) than solitary hunters. Kill and consumption rates for Canidae - measured as kilograms of prey per kilogram of carnivore per day - are positively correlated with body mass, consistent with increasing energy costs associated with a cursorial hunting strategy. By contrast, ambush predators such as felids show an opposite trend, and thus the potential energetic advantage of an ambush hunting strategy for carnivores as body mass increases. Additionally, ungulate kill rates remain relatively constant across solitary felid body sizes, indicative of energetic constraints and optimal foraging. Kill rate estimates also reveal potential insights into trophic structuring within carnivore guilds, with subordinate carnivores often killing more than their larger counterparts, which may be indicative of having to cope with food losses to scavengers and dominant competitors. Subordinate carnivores may thus serve an important role in provisioning food to other trophic levels within their respective ecosystems. Importantly, kill rates also clarify misconceptions around the predatory behaviour of carnivores (e.g. spotted hyaenas Crocuta crocuta and wolverines Gulo gulo are often considered scavengers rather than the capable hunters that they are) and thus the potential impacts of various carnivore species on their ecological communities. Despite the importance of kill rates in understanding predator-prey interactions, their utility is not widely recognised, and insufficient research limits our ability to fully appreciate and predict the consequences of modified predation regimes, justify current management actions affecting carnivores, or inform effective conservation measures. Together with other important research on predator-prey interactions, robust kill rate studies that address the research deficiencies we highlight will provide a deeper understanding of the foraging behaviours and potential ecosystem impacts of many of the world's carnivores, thus aiding effective conservation and management actions.

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