keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38711300/an-integrative-approach-highlights-the-discrepancy-in-the-genetic-phenotypic-and-presumptive-taxonomic-structure-of-phoxinus-actinopterygii-leuciscidae-phoxininae-in-bulgaria
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anja Palandačić, Oleg A Diripasko, Sandra Kirchner, Tihomir Stefanov, Nina G Bogutskaya
The present drainage network of Bulgaria is the result of a complex Neogene and Quaternary evolution. Karst, which has developed on 23% of the territory, further complicates the hydrological pattern. Fresh waters of Bulgaria drain into the Black Sea and the Aegean Sea basins and can be roughly divided into the Danube (Middle and Lower Danube), non-Danube Black Sea, East Aegean, and West Aegean hydrological regions. Phoxinus, a small leuciscid fish, has a mosaic distribution in all four of these regions, inhabiting small mountainous and semi-mountainous streams...
May 6, 2024: Journal of Fish Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38707955/beyond-immune-balance-the-pivotal-role-of-decidual-regulatory-t-cells-in-unexplained-recurrent-spontaneous-abortion
#22
REVIEW
Qing-Hui Li, Qiu-Yan Zhao, Wei-Jing Yang, Ai-Fang Jiang, Chun-E Ren, Yu-Han Meng
Recurrent spontaneous abortion (RSA) is defined as two or more consecutive pregnancy failures, which brings tremendous stress to women of childbearing age and seriously affects family well-being. However, the reason in about 50% of cases remains unknown and is defined as unexplained recurrent spontaneous abortion (URSA). The immunological perspective in URSA has attracted widespread attention in recent years. The embryo is regarded as a semi-allogeneic graft to the mother. A successful pregnancy requires transition to an immune environment conducive to embryo survival at the maternal-fetal interface...
2024: Journal of Inflammation Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38705491/shaping-down-syndrome-brain-cognitive-and-molecular-changes-due-to-aging-using-adult-animals-from-the-ts66yah-murine-model
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chiara Lanzillotta, Monika Rataj Baniowska, Francesca Prestia, Chiara Sette, Valérie Nalesso, Marzia Perluigi, Eugenio Barone, Arnaud Duchon, Antonella Tramutola, Yann Herault, Fabio Di Domenico
Down syndrome (DS) is the most common condition with intellectual disability and is caused by trisomy of Homo sapiens chromosome 21 (HSA21). The increased dosage of genes on HSA21 is associated with early neurodevelopmental changes and subsequently at adult age with the development of Alzheimer-like cognitive decline. However, the molecular mechanisms promoting brain pathology along aging are still missing. The novel Ts66Yah model represents an evolution of the Ts65Dn, used in characterizing the progression of brain degeneration, and it manifest phenotypes closer to human DS condition...
May 4, 2024: Neurobiology of Disease
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38705405/identification-of-udp-glucuronosyltransferase-ugt-isoforms-involved-in-the-metabolism-of-chlorophenols-cps
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kai Yang, Ruo-Yong Jia, Xiao-Song Li, Shao-You Lu, Jian-Jun Liu, Zhi-Peng Zhang, Zhong-Ze Fang
Chlorophenols (CPs) are a group of pollutants that pose a great threat to the environment, they are widely used in industrial and agricultural wastes, pesticides, herbicides, textiles, pharmaceuticals and plastics. Among CPs, pentachlorophenol was listed as one of the persistent organic pollutants (POPs) by the Stockholm convention. This study aims to identify the UDP-glucosyltransferase (UGT) isoforms involved in the metabolic elimination of CPs. CPs' mono-glucuronide was detected in the human liver microsomes (HLMs) incubation mixture with co-factor uridine-diphosphate glucuronic acid (UDPGA)...
May 3, 2024: Chemosphere
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38705078/genotype-specific-nonphotochemical-quenching-responses-to-nitrogen-deficit-are-linked-to-chlorophyll-a-to-b-ratios
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Seema Sahay, Marcin Grzybowski, James C Schnable, Katarzyna Głowacka
Non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) protects plants from photodamage caused by excess light energy. Substantial variation in NPQ has been reported among different genotypes of the same species. However, comparatively little is known about how environmental perturbations, including nutrient deficits, impact natural variation in NPQ kinetics. Here, we analyzed a natural variation in NPQ kinetics of a diversity panel of 225 maize (Zea mays L.) genotypes under nitrogen replete and nitrogen deficient field conditions...
May 1, 2024: Journal of Plant Physiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38702598/variation-and-plasticity-in-life-history-traits-and-fitness-of-wild-arabidopsis-thaliana-populations-are-not-related-to-their-genotypic-and-ecological-diversity
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Raul de la Mata, Almudena Mollá-Morales, Belén Méndez-Vigo, Rafael Torres-Pérez, Juan Carlos Oliveros, Rocío Gómez, Arnald Marcer, Antonio R Castilla, Magnus Nordborg, Carlos Alonso-Blanco, F Xavier Picó
BACKGROUND: Despite its implications for population dynamics and evolution, the relationship between genetic and phenotypic variation in wild populations remains unclear. Here, we estimated variation and plasticity in life-history traits and fitness of the annual plant Arabidopsis thaliana in two common garden experiments that differed in environmental conditions. We used up to 306 maternal inbred lines from six Iberian populations characterized by low and high genotypic (based on whole-genome sequences) and ecological (vegetation type) diversity...
May 3, 2024: BMC ecology and evolution
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38702311/cd74-supports-accumulation-and-function-of-regulatory-t-cells-in-tumors
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elisa Bonnin, Maria Rodrigo Riestra, Federico Marziali, Rafael Mena Osuna, Jordan Denizeau, Mathieu Maurin, Juan Jose Saez, Mabel Jouve, Pierre-Emmanuel Bonté, Wilfrid Richer, Fabien Nevo, Sebastien Lemoine, Nicolas Girard, Marine Lefevre, Edith Borcoman, Anne Vincent-Salomon, Sylvain Baulande, Helene D Moreau, Christine Sedlik, Claire Hivroz, Ana-Maria Lennon-Duménil, Jimena Tosello Boari, Eliane Piaggio
Regulatory T cells (Tregs) are plastic cells playing a pivotal role in the maintenance of immune homeostasis. Tregs actively adapt to the microenvironment where they reside; as a consequence, their molecular and functional profiles differ among tissues and pathologies. In tumors, the features acquired by Tregs remains poorly characterized. Here, we observe that human tumor-infiltrating Tregs selectively overexpress CD74, the MHC class II invariant chain. CD74 has been previously described as a regulator of antigen-presenting cell biology, however its function in Tregs remains unknown...
May 3, 2024: Nature Communications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38699869/latitudinal-variation-in-thermal-performance-of-the-common-coral-pocillopora-spp
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
P J Edmunds, D Combosch, H Torrado, K Sakai, F Sinniger, S C Burgess
Understanding how tropical corals respond to temperatures is important to evaluating their capacity to persist in a warmer future. We studied the common Pacific coral Pocillopora over 44° of latitude, and used populations at three islands with different thermal regimes to compare their responses to temperature using thermal performance curves (TPCs) for respiration and gross photosynthesis. Corals were sampled in the local autumn from Moorea, Guam, and Okinawa where mean (± s.d.) annual seawater temperature is 28...
May 3, 2024: Journal of Experimental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38699242/macrophage-based-drug-delivery-key-challenges-and-strategies
#29
REVIEW
Qian Guo, Zhong-Ming Qian
As a natural immune cell and antigen presenting cell, macrophages have been studied and engineered to treat human diseases. Macrophages are well-suited for use as drug carriers because of their biological characteristics, such as excellent biocompatibility, long circulation, intrinsic inflammatory homing and phagocytosis. Meanwhile, macrophages' uniquely high plasticity and easy re-education polarization facilitates their use as part of efficacious therapeutics for the treatment of inflammatory diseases or tumors...
August 2024: Bioactive Materials
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38698928/resource-based-trade-offs-and-the-adaptive-significance-of-seasonal-plasticity-in-butterfly-wing-melanism
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andrew M Stoehr, Katelyn Glaenzer, Devin VanWanzeele, Samantha Rumschlag
Phenotypic plasticity is the ability of an organism to alter its phenotype in response to environmental cues. This can be adaptive if the cues are reliable predictors of impending conditions and the alterations enhance the organism's ability to capitalize on those conditions. However, since traits do not exist in isolation but as part of larger interdependent systems of traits (phenotypic integration), trade-offs between correlated plastic traits can make phenotypic plasticity non- or maladaptive. We examine this problem in the seasonally plastic wing melanism of a pierid (Order Lepidoptera, Family Pieridae) butterfly, Pieris rapae L...
May 2024: Ecology and Evolution
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38698926/population-density-effects-on-gamete-traits-and-fertilisation-dynamics-under-varying-sperm-environments-in-mussels
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Craig D H Sherman, Vincent Careau, Clelia Gasparini, Kim J Weston, Jonathan P Evans
Gamete traits can vary widely among species, populations and individuals, influencing fertilisation dynamics and overall reproductive fitness. Sexual selection can play an important role in determining the evolution of gamete traits with local environmental conditions determining the strength and direction of sexual selection. Here, we test for signatures of post-mating selection on gamete traits in relation to population density, and possible interactive effects of population density and sperm concentration on sperm motility and fertilisation rates among natural populations of mussels...
May 2024: Ecology and Evolution
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38698860/steroid-receptor-coactivators-in-treg-and-th17-cell-biology-and-function
#32
REVIEW
Yosi Gilad, Ortal Shimon, Sang Jun Han, David M Lonard, Bert W O'Malley
Steroid receptor coactivators (SRCs) are master regulators of transcription that play key roles in human physiology and pathology. SRCs are particularly important for the regulation of the immune system with major roles in lymphocyte fate determination and function, macrophage activity, regulation of nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) transcriptional activity and other immune system biology. The three members of the p160 SRC family comprise a network of immune-regulatory proteins that can function independently or act in synergy with each other, and compensate for - or moderate - the activity of other SRCs...
2024: Frontiers in Immunology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38698633/effects-of-social-environments-on-male-primate-hpg-and-hpa-axis-developmental-programming
#33
REVIEW
Ella R Brown, Lee T Gettler, Stacy Rosenbaum
Developmental plasticity is particularly important for humans and other primates because of our extended period of growth and maturation, during which our phenotypes adaptively respond to environmental cues. The hypothalamus-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) and hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axes are likely to be principal targets of developmental "programming" given their roles in coordinating fitness-relevant aspects of the phenotype, including sexual development, adult reproductive and social strategies, and internal responses to the external environment...
July 2024: Developmental Psychobiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38698245/intraspecific-variation-in-fine-root-morphology-of-european-beech-a-root-order-based-analysis-of-phenotypic-root-morphospace
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Eva Rüther, Dietrich Hertel, Christoph Leuschner
Fine roots are multifunctional organs that may change function with ageing or root branching events from primarily absorptive to resource transport and storage functions. It is not well understood, how fine root branching patterns and related root functional differentiation along the longitudinal root axis change with soil chemical and physical conditions. We examined the variation in fine root branching patterns (the relative frequency of 1st to 4th root orders) and root morphological and chemical traits of European beech trees with soil depth (topsoil vs...
May 2, 2024: Oecologia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38696386/characterization-of-microsatellite-markers-in-the-coding-regions-of-the-penaeus-vannamei-genome
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Iasmim Santos Mangabeira-Silva, Paulo Eduardo Toscano Soares, Yago Tomaz Vieira da Silva, Beatriz Helena Dantas Rodrigues de Albuquerque, Maryana Thalyta Ferreira Câmera de Oliveira, Larissa Alves Honorato Ferreira, Maria Fernanda Bezerra de Souza, Danyllo Vieira de Lucena, Jessica Marina Paiva Pereira, Roseli Pimentel Pinheiro E Silva, Daniel Carlos Ferreira Lanza
In this study, an extensive analysis of microsatellite markers (Single Tandem Repeats-STRs) in Penaeus vannamei was conducted at an advanced level. The markers were thoroughly examined, characterized, and specific markers located within coding regions were identified. Out of a total of 306 STRs, 117 were classified as perfect markers based on their single repeat motif. Among these perfect markers, 62 were found to be associated with predicted coding genes (mRNA), which were involved in various functions such as binding, catalytic activity, ATP-dependent activity, transcription, structural and molecular regulation...
2024: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38695252/targeting-tumor%C3%A2-associated-macrophages-critical-players-in-tumor-progression-and-therapeutic-strategies-review
#36
REVIEW
Pengfei Su, Ou Li, Kun Ke, Zhichen Jiang, Jianzhang Wu, Yuanyu Wang, Yiping Mou, Weiwei Jin
Tumor‑associated macrophages (TAMs) are essential components of the tumor microenvironment (TME) and display phenotypic heterogeneity and plasticity associated with the stimulation of bioactive molecules within the TME. TAMs predominantly exhibit tumor‑promoting phenotypes involved in tumor progression, such as tumor angiogenesis, metastasis, immunosuppression and resistance to therapies. In addition, TAMs have the potential to regulate the cytotoxic elimination and phagocytosis of cancer cells and interact with other immune cells to engage in the innate and adaptive immune systems...
June 2024: International Journal of Oncology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38694273/transgenerational-plasticity-in-aphids-reared-in-a-poor-resource-environment
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Vincenzo Trotta, Pierluigi Forlano, Vittoria Caccavo, Paolo Fanti, Donatella Battaglia
The changing environmental conditions can affect insect biology over multiple generations and phenotypic plasticity is important for coping with these changes. Transgenerational plasticity occurs when the environment in which the parents developed influences the plastic response of the offspring phenotype. In the present study, the plastic effects of resource limitation on important life history traits such as body size, fecundity, survival, and resistance to starvation of the pea aphid Acyrthosiphon pisum were investigated over two generations...
2024: Curr Res Insect Sci
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38692461/environmental-conditions-shape-learning-in-larval-zebrafish
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elia Gatto, Tyrone Lucon-Xiccato, Cristiano Bertolucci
Growing evidence reveals notable phenotypic plasticity in cognition among teleost fishes. One compelling example is the positive impact of enriched environments on learning performance. Most studies on this effect have focused on juvenile or later life stages, potentially overlooking the importance of early life plasticity. To address this gap, we investigated whether cognitive plasticity in response to environmental factors emerges during the larval stage in zebrafish. Our findings indicate that larvae exposed to an enriched environment after hatching exhibited enhanced habituation learning performance compared to their counterparts raised in a barren environment...
April 29, 2024: Behavioural Processes
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38692065/formyl-peptide-enhances-cancer-immunotherapy-by-activating-antitumoral-neutrophils-and-t-cells
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Haixia Sun, Shuxin Li, Qiaoli Wang, Chunxiang Luo, Lanyi Zhong, Guohui Wan, Ziqian Li, Gexin Zhao, Xianzhang Bu, Musheng Zeng, Guokai Feng
Neutrophils are heterogeneous and plastic, with the ability to polarize from antitumour to protumour phenotype and modulate tumour microenvironment components. While some advances have been made, the neutrophil-targeting therapy remains underexplored. Activation of formyl peptide receptors (FPRs) by formylated peptides is needed for local control of infection through the recruitment of activated neutrophils while the potential contribution of antitumour activity remains underexplored. Here, we demonstrate that neutrophils can be harnessed to suppress tumour growth through the action of the formyl peptide (FP) on the formyl peptide receptor (FPR)...
April 30, 2024: Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38691245/investigating-the-genetic-control-of-plant-development-in-spring-barley-under-speed-breeding-conditions
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nicola Rossi, Wayne Powell, Ian J Mackay, Lee Hickey, Andreas Maurer, Klaus Pillen, Karen Halliday, Rajiv Sharma
This study found that the genes, PPD-H1 and ELF3, control the acceleration of plant development under speed breeding, with important implications for optimizing the delivery of climate-resilient crops. Speed breeding is a tool to accelerate breeding and research programmes. Despite its success and growing popularity with breeders, the genetic basis of plant development under speed breeding remains unknown. This study explored the developmental advancements of barley genotypes under different photoperiod regimes...
April 30, 2024: TAG. Theoretical and Applied Genetics. Theoretische und Angewandte Genetik
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