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1.
Curr Res Insect Sci ; 6: 100086, 2024.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39193173

RESUMEN

Dehydration and tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV) infection substantially impact the feeding of western flower thrips, Frankliniella occidentalis. Until now, the dynamics between these biotic and abiotic stresses have not been examined for thrips. Here, we report water balance characteristics and changes in other biological parameters during infection with TSWV for the western flower thrips. There were no apparent differences in water balance parameters during TSWV infection of male or female thrips. Our results show that, although water balance characteristics of western flower thrips are minimally impacted by TSWV infection, the increase in feeding and activity when dehydration and TSWV are combined suggests that virus transmission could be increased under periods of drought. Importantly, survival and progeny generation were impaired during TSWV infection and dehydration bouts. The negative impact on survival and reproduction suggests that the interactions between TSWV infection and dehydration will likely reduce thrips populations. The opposite effects of dehydration on feeding/activity and survival/reproduction for virus infected thrips suggest the impact of vectorial capacity will likely be minor for TSWV transmission. As water stress significantly impacts insect-plant-virus dynamics, these studies highlight that all interactions and effects need to be measured to understand thrips-TSWV interactions in their role as viral vector to plants.

2.
Pharmaceutics ; 13(11)2021 Oct 31.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34834229

RESUMEN

The buccal mucosa provides an alternative route of drug delivery that can be more beneficial compared to other administration routes. Although numerous studies and reviews have been published on buccal drug delivery, an extensive review of the permeability data is not available. Understanding the buccal mucosa barrier could provide insights into the approaches to effective drug delivery and optimization of dosage forms. This paper provides a review on the permeability of the buccal mucosa. The intrinsic permeability coefficients of porcine buccal mucosa were collected. Large variability was observed among the published permeability data. The permeability coefficients were then analyzed using a model involving parallel lipoidal and polar transport pathways. For the lipoidal pathway, a correlation was observed between the permeability coefficients and permeant octanol/water partition coefficients (Kow) and molecular weight (MW) in a subset of the permeability data under specific conditions. The permeability analysis suggested that the buccal permeation barrier was less lipophilic than octanol. For the polar pathway and macromolecules, a correlation was observed between the permeability coefficients and permeant MW. The hindered transport analysis suggested an effective pore radius of 1.5 to 3 nm for the buccal membrane barrier.

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