A B C D E F G H I J-K L M N O P Q R S T U V W-Z 0-9
Guerchicoff, A. - Delécluse, A. - Rubinstein, C.P.
Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 2001;67(3):1090-1096
2001

Descripción: In the same way that cry genes, coding for larvicidal delta endotoxins, constitute a large and diverse gene family, the cyt genes for hemolytic toxins seem to compose another set of highly related genes in Bacillus thuringiensis. Although the occurrence of Cyt hemolytic factors in B. thuringiensis has been typically associated with mosquitocidal strains, we have recently shown that cyt genes are also present in strains with different pathotypes; this is the case for the morrisoni subspecies, which includes strains biologically active against dipteran, lepidopteran, and coleopteran larvae. In addition, while one Cyt type of protein has been described in all of the mosquitocidal strains studied so far, the present study confirms that at least two Cyt toxins coexist in the more toxic antidipteran strains, such as B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis and subsp. morrisoni PG14, and that this could also be the case for many others. In fact, PCR screening and Western blot analysis of 50 B. thuringiensis strains revealed that cyt2-related genes are present in all strains with known antidipteran activity, as well as in some others with different or unknown host ranges. Partial DNA sequences for several of these genes were determined, and protein sequence alignments revealed a high degree of conservation of the structural domains. These findings point to an important biological role for Cyt toxins in the final in vivo toxic activity of many B. thuringiensis strains.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Figuerola, E.L.M. - Guerrero, L.D. - Rosa, S.M. - Simonetti, L. - Duval, M.E. - Galantini, J.A. - Bedano, J.C. - Wall, L.G. - Erijman, L.
PLoS ONE 2012;7(11)
2012

Descripción: The rise in the world demand for food poses a challenge to our ability to sustain soil fertility and sustainability. The increasing use of no-till agriculture, adopted in many areas of the world as an alternative to conventional farming, may contribute to reduce the erosion of soils and the increase in the soil carbon pool. However, the advantages of no-till agriculture are jeopardized when its use is linked to the expansion of crop monoculture. The aim of this study was to survey bacterial communities to find indicators of soil quality related to contrasting agriculture management in soils under no-till farming. Four sites in production agriculture, with different soil properties, situated across a west-east transect in the most productive region in the Argentinean pampas, were taken as the basis for replication. Working definitions of Good no-till Agricultural Practices (GAP) and Poor no-till Agricultural Practices (PAP) were adopted for two distinct scenarios in terms of crop rotation, fertilization, agrochemicals use and pest control. Non-cultivated soils nearby the agricultural sites were taken as additional control treatments. Tag-encoded pyrosequencing was used to deeply sample the 16S rRNA gene from bacteria residing in soils corresponding to the three treatments at the four locations. Although bacterial communities as a whole appeared to be structured chiefly by a marked biogeographic provincialism, the distribution of a few taxa was shaped as well by environmental conditions related to agricultural management practices. A statistically supported approach was used to define candidates for management-indicator organisms, subsequently validated using quantitative PCR. We suggest that the ratio between the normalized abundance of a selected group of bacteria within the GP1 group of the phylum Acidobacteria and the genus Rubellimicrobium of the Alphaproteobacteria may serve as a potential management-indicator to discriminate between sustainable vs. non-sustainable agricultural practices in the Pampa region. © 2012 Figuerola et al.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Rios, C.A. - Gravielle, M.S. - Mitnik, D.M. - Silkin, V.M.
J. Phys. Conf. Ser. 2012;388(PART 13)
2012

Descripción: Photoelectron emission spectra induced by grazing incidence of intense and ultrashort laser pulses on a metal surface are studied within a distorted-wave formalism. The proposed aproximation, named Band-Structure Based-Volkov (BSB-V) approach, includes a precise description of the surface potential, incorporating information of the band structure of the solid. Results are compared with the numerical solution of the time-dependent Schrodinger equation and with values derived from simpler theoretical models. © Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/documento de conferencia

Apesteguía, S. - Gómez, R.O. - Rougier, G.W.
Zool. J. Linn. Soc. 2012;166(2):342-360
2012

Descripción: Herein we describe a new rhynchocephalian taxon from the Middle Jurassic of Patagonia, Argentina, representing the first Jurassic record of the group in South America. The new taxon, consisting of a complete dentary, is ascribed to Sphenodontia based on the presence of a deep and wide Meckelian groove, long posterior process, well-developed coronoid process, and acrodont teeth showing dental regionalization including successional, alternate hatchling, and additional series. This allocation is reinforced by a phylogenetic analysis that places the new taxon in a basal position within a clade of sphenodontians that excludes Diphydontosaurus and Planocephalosaurus. Additionally, the new taxon clusters within a Gondwanan clade with the Indian Godavarisaurus from the Jurassic Kota Formation, sharing the presence of recurved and relatively large posterior successional teeth that are ribbed and bear a peculiar anterolingual groove. This sister-group relationship is intriguing from a palaeobiogeographical viewpoint, as it suggests some degree of endemism during the initial stages of the breakup of Pangaea. We also discuss the ontogenetic stage of the new taxon and provide insights on the evolution of successional dentition in rhynchocephalians. © 2012 The Linnean Society of London.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Cortiñas, G. - Haesemeyer, C. - Walker, M.E. - Weibel, C.
Invent. Math. 2010;181(2):421-448
2010

Descripción: The K-theory of a polynomial ring R[t] contains the K-theory of R as a summand. For R commutative and containing ℚ, we describe K*(R[t])/K*(R) in terms of Hochschild homology and the cohomology of Kähler differentials for the cdh topology. We use this to address Bass' question, whether Kn(R)=Kn(R[t]) implies Kn(R)=Kn(R[t1,t2]). The answer to this question is affirmative when R is essentially of finite type over the complex numbers, but negative in general. © 2010 The Author(s).
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Santoferrara, L.F. - Gómez, M.I. - Alder, V.A.
J. Plankton Res. 2011;33(3):457-468
2011

Descripción: Although there have been many ecological field studies on the key components of planktonic food webs, there are still gaps in knowledge on some groups, environments and seasons. This is the first report on the spatial distribution of the density and biomass of almost all the taxonomic groups and size fractions of protozooplankton across a cold-temperate shelf during winter. Twenty-eight stations (two or three depths) were sampled on four cross-shelf transects in Patagonian waters (south-western Atlantic; 47-55°S, 60-69°W) during September 2006. Loricate ciliates, radiolarians and foraminiferans showed the lowest densities, and were distributed mainly in coastal, slope or the whole shelf waters, respectively. The density and biomass of aloricate ciliates and heterotrophic nanoflagellates and dinoflagellates were low and homogeneous both vertically and across the shelf south of 51°S, but peaked in the upper 40 m in offshore waters at 47°S. Microplanktonic aloricate ciliates, which represented 53% of the total protozooplankton biomass, reached values as high as 16 μg CL-1 on the last transect. Consequently, both protozooplankton biomass and its ratio to chlorophyll a concentration were significantly higher in the northern offshore waters. These trends were linked to higher subsurface temperature and chlorophyll a concentration, and lower copepod nauplii biomass. Our results probably reflect changes in both the availability of food resources and predators and the physical structure of the water column, which are a consequence of the different environmental conditions that coexist over the large latitudinal and longitudinal gradients covered during late winter. © The Author 2010.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Fernández Do Porto, D.A. - Auzmendi, J. - Peña, D. - García, V.E. - Moffatt, L.
PLoS ONE 2013;8(2)
2013

Descripción: Immune responses are qualitatively and quantitatively influenced by a complex network of receptor-ligand interactions. Among them, the CD137:CD137L pathway is known to modulate innate and adaptive human responses against Mycobacterium tuberculosis. However, the underlying mechanisms of this regulation remain unclear. In this work, we developed a Bayesian Computational Model (BCM) of in vitro CD137 signaling, devised to fit previously gathered experimental data. The BCM is fed with the data and the prior distribution of the model parameters and it returns their posterior distribution and the model evidence, which allows comparing alternative signaling mechanisms. The BCM uses a coupled system of non-linear differential equations to describe the dynamics of Antigen Presenting Cells, Natural Killer and T Cells together with the interpheron (IFN)-γ and tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α levels in the media culture. Fast and complete mixing of the media is assumed. The prior distribution of the parameters that describe the dynamics of the immunological response was obtained from the literature and theoretical considerations Our BCM applies successively the Levenberg-Marquardt algorithm to find the maximum a posteriori likelihood (MAP); the Metropolis Markov Chain Monte Carlo method to approximate the posterior distribution of the parameters and Thermodynamic Integration to calculate the evidence of alternative hypothesis. Bayes factors provided decisive evidence favoring direct CD137 signaling on T cells. Moreover, the posterior distribution of the parameters that describe the CD137 signaling showed that the regulation of IFN-γ levels is based more on T cells survival than on direct induction. Furthermore, the mechanisms that account for the effect of CD137 signaling on TNF-α production were based on a decrease of TNF-α production by APC and, perhaps, on the increase in APC apoptosis. BCM proved to be a useful tool to gain insight on the mechanisms of CD137 signaling during human response against Mycobacterium tuberculosis. © 2013 Fernández Do Porto et al.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Romorini, L. - Coso, O.A. - Pecci, A.
Biochim. Biophys. Acta Mol. Cell Res. 2009;1793(3):496-505
2009

Descripción: Apoptosis is the predominant process controlling cell deletion during post-lactational mammary gland remodeling. The members of the Bcl-2 protein family, whose expression levels are under the control of lactogenic hormones, internally control this mechanism. Epidermal growth factor (EGF) belongs to a family of proteins that act as survival factors for mammary epithelial cells upon binding to specific membrane tyrosine kinase receptors. Expression of EGF peaks during lactation and dramatically decreases in the involuting mammary gland. Though it was suggested that the protective effect of EGF is mediated through the phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3K) or MEK/ERK kinases activities, little is known about the downstream mechanisms involved on the anti-apoptotic effect of EGF on mammary epithelial cells; particularly the identity of target genes controlling apoptosis. Here, we focused on the effect of EGF on the survival of mammary epithelial cells. We particularly aimed at the characterization of the signaling pathways that were triggered by this growth factor, impinge upon expression of Bcl-2 family members and therefore have an impact on the regulation of cell survival. We demonstrate that EGF provokes the induction of the anti-apoptotic isoform Bcl-XL and the phosphorylation and down-regulation of the pro-apoptotic protein Bad. The activation of JNK and PI3K/AKT signaling pathways promotes the induction of Bcl-XL while AKT activation also leads to Bad phosphorylation and down-regulation. This protective effect of EGF correlates mainly with the up-regulation of Bcl-XL than with the down-regulation of Bad. In fact, HC11 cells unable to express bcl-X, die even in the presence of EGF. In this context, Bcl-XL emerges as a key anti-apoptotic molecule critical for mediating EGF cell survival. © 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Arenas, A. - Ramírez, G.P. - Balbuena, M.S. - Farina, W.M.
Front. Physiol. 2013;4 AUG
2013

Descripción: Cognitive experiences during the early stages of life play an important role in shaping future behavior. Behavioral and neural long-term changes after early sensory and associative experiences have been recently reported in the honeybee. This invertebrate is an excellent model for assessing the role of precocious experiences on later behavior due to its extraordinarily tuned division of labor based on age polyethism. These studies are mainly focused on the role and importance of experiences occurred during the first days of the adult lifespan, their impact on foraging decisions, and their contribution to coordinate food gathering. Odor-rewarded experiences during the first days of honeybee adulthood alter the responsiveness to sucrose, making young hive bees more sensitive to assess gustatory features about the nectar brought back to the hive and affecting the dynamic of the food transfers and the propagation of food-related information within the colony. Early olfactory experiences lead to stable and long-term associative memories that can be successfully recalled after many days, even at foraging ages. Also they improve memorizing of new associative learning events later in life. The establishment of early memories promotes stable reorganization of the olfactory circuits inducing structural and functional changes in the antennal lobe (AL). Early rewarded experiences have relevant consequences at the social level too, biasing dance and trophallaxis partner choice and affecting recruitment. Here, we revised recent results in bees' physiology, behavior, and sociobiology to depict how the early experiences affect their cognition abilities and neural-related circuits. © 2013 Arenas, Ramírez, Balbuena and Farina.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Ballarini, F. - Moncada, D. - Martinez, M.C. - Alen, N. - Viola, H.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 2009;106(34):14599-14604
2009

Descripción: In daily life, memories are intertwined events. Little is known about the mechanisms involved in their interactions. Using two hippocampus-dependent (spatial object recognition and contextual fear conditioning) and one hippocampus-independent (conditioned taste aversion) learning tasks, we show that in rats subjected to weak training protocols that induce solely short term memory (STM), long term memory (LTM) is promoted and formed only if training sessions took place in contingence with a novel, but not familiar, experience occurring during a critical time window around training. This process requires newly synthesized proteins induced by novelty and reveals a general mechanism of LTM formation that begins with the setting of a "learning tag" established by a weak training. These findings represent the first comprehensive set of evidences indicating the existence of a behavioral tagging process that in analogy to the synaptic tagging and capture process, need the creation of a transient, protein synthesis-independent, and input specific tag.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Fernández Bonder, J. - Martínez, S. - Rossi, J.D.
J. Differ. Equ. 2004;198(1):129-148
2004

Descripción: In this paper, we study the asymptotic behavior of the best Sobolev trace constant and extremals for the immersion W1,p(Ω) Lq(∂Ω) in a bounded smooth domain when it is contracted in one direction. We find that the limit problem, when rescaled in a suitable way, is a Sobolev-type immersion in weighted spaces over a projection of Ω, W1,p(P(Ω), α) Lq(P(Ω), β). For the special case p = q, this problem leads to an eigenvalue problem with a nonlinear boundary condition. We also study the convergence of the eigenvalues and eigenvectors in this case. © 2003 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Brousse, B.N. - Moglioni, A.G. - Alho, M.M. - Álvarez-Larena, Á. - Moltrasio, G.Y. - D'Accorso, N.B.
Arkivoc 2002;2002(10):14-23
2002

Descripción: Preparation of chiral heterocyclic compounds of the thiadiazoline types, starting from natural terpenones such as fenchone, camphor and menthone, is described. Stereochemical assignment of the compounds synthesized was performed by NMR spectroscopy and X-ray analysis.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Rouge, P.D. - Brousse, B.N. - Moglioni, A.G. - Cozzi, G.A. - Alvarez-Larena, A. - D'Accorso, N. - Moltrasio, G.Y.
Arkivoc 2005;2005(12):8-21
2005

Descripción: Preparation of chiral heterocyclic compounds of the thiadiazoline types, starting from natural α,β-unsaturated and bicyclic terpenones is described. Stereochemical assignment of the compounds synthesized was performed by NMR spectroscopy and X-ray analysis. ©ARKAT.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Pérez-Llanos, M. - Rossi, J.D.
J. Math. Anal. Appl. 2010;363(2):502-511
2010

Descripción: In this paper we study the behaviour of the solutions to the eigenvalue problem corresponding to the p (x)-Laplacian operator{(- div (| ∇ u |p (x) - 2 ∇ u) = Λp (x) | u |p (x) - 2 u,, in Ω,; u = 0,, on ∂ Ω,) as p (x) → ∞. We consider a sequence of functions pn (x) that goes to infinity uniformly in over(Ω, -). Under adequate hypotheses on the sequence pn, namely that the limits∇ ln pn (x) → ξ (x), and frac(pn, n) (x) → q (x) exist, we prove that the corresponding eigenvalues Λpn and eigenfunctions upn verify that(Λpn)1 / n → Λ∞, upn → u∞ uniformly in over(Ω, -), where Λ∞, u∞ is a nontrivial viscosity solution of the following problem{(min {- Δ∞ u∞ - | ∇ u∞ |2 log (| ∇ u∞ |) 〈 ξ, ∇ u∞ 〉, | ∇ u∞ |q - Λ∞ u∞ q} = 0, in Ω,; u∞ = 0, on ∂ Ω .). © 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Ayón-Beato, E. - Giribet, G. - Hassane, M.
J. High Energy Phys. 2009;2009(5)
2009

Descripción: We study AdS-waves in the three-dimensional new theory of massive gravity recently proposed by Bergshoeff, Hohm, and Townsend. The general configuration of this type is derived and shown to exhibit different branches, with different asymptotic behaviors. In particular, for the special fine tuning m 2 = 1/(2l 2), solutions with logarithmic fall-off arise, while in the range -1/(2l 2)$">m 2 > -1/(2l 2), spacetimes with Schrödinger isometry group are admitted as solutions. Spacetimes that are asymptotically AdS 3, both for the Brown-Henneaux and for the weakened boundary conditions, are also identified. The metric function that characterizes the profile of the AdS-wave behaves as a massive excitation on the spacetime, with an effective mass given by m eff 2 = m 2-1/(2l 2). For the critical value m 2 = -1/(2l 2), the value of the effective mass precisely saturates the Breitenlohner-Freedman bound for the AdS 3 space where the wave is propagating on. The analogies with the AdS-wave solutions of topologically massive gravity are also discussed. Besides, we consider the coupling of both massive deformations to Einstein gravity and find the exact configurations for the complete theory, discussing all the different branches exhaustively. One of the effects of introducing the Chern-Simons gravitational term is that of breaking the degeneracy in the effective mass of the generic modes of pure New Massive Gravity, producing a fine structure due to parity violation. Another effect is that the zoo of exact logarithmic specimens becomes considerably enlarged. © 2009 SISSA.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Fernandezbonder, J. - Orive, R. - Rossi, J.D.
ANZIAM J. 2008;49(2):213-230
2008

Descripción: In this paper we study the best constant in the Sobolev trace embedding H1 (Ω) → Lq(∂Ω) in a bounded smooth domain for 1 < q ≤ 2+ = 2(N - 1)/(N - 2), that is, critical or subcritical q. First, we consider a domain with periodically distributed holes inside which we impose that the involved functions vanish. There exists a critical size of the holes for which the limit problem has an extra term. For sizes larger than critical the best trace constant diverges to infinity and for sizes smaller than critical it converges to the best constant in the domain without holes. Also, we study the problem with the holes located on the boundary of the domain. In this case another critical exists and its extra term appears on the boundary. Copyright © Australian Mathematical Society 2007.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Bonder, J.F. - Orive, R. - Rossi, J.D.
Glasgow. Math. J. 2009;51(3):619-630
2009

Descripción: In this paper we study homogenisation problems for Sobolev trace embedding H1(Ω) Lq(∂Ω) in a bounded smooth domain. When q = 2 this leads to a Steklov-like eigenvalue problem. We deal with the best constant of the Sobolev trace embedding in rapidly oscillating periodic media, and we consider H1 and Lq spaces with weights that are periodic in space. We find that extremals for these embeddings converge to a solution of a homogenised limit problem, and the best trace constant converges to a homogenised best trace constant. Our results are in fact more general; we can also consider general operators of the form aε(x, ∇u) with non-linear Neumann boundary conditions. In particular, we can deal with the embedding W1,p(Ω) Lq(∂Ω). © 2009 Glasgow Mathematical Journal Trust.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Wisniacki, D.A. - Borondo, F. - Vergini, E. - Benito, R.M.
Phys Rev E. 2000;62(6)
2000

Descripción: Fil:Wisniacki, D.A. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Levy, L.M. - Cabrera, G.M. - Wright, J.E. - Seldes, A.M.
Molecules 2000;5(3):354-355
2000

Descripción: A screening of metabolites guided by antimicrobial and citotoxic bioassays was conducted with several fungi. The bioactive compounds were isolated and identified from the active extracts.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

de Iannino, N.I. - Ugalde, R.A.
J. Bacteriol. 1989;171(5):2842-2849
1989

Descripción: The chvA gene product of Agrobacterium tumefaciens is required for virulence and attachment of bacteria to plant cells. Three chvA mutants were studied. In vivo, they were defective in the synthesis, accumulation, and secretion of beta-(1-2)glucan; however, the 235-kilodalton (kDa) protein known to be involved in the synthesis of beta-(1-2)glucan (A. Zorreguieta and R. Ugalde, J. Bacteriol. 167:947-951, 1986) was present and active in vitro. was present and active in vitro. Two molecular forms of cyclic beta-(1-2)glucan, designated types I and II, were resolved by gel chromatography. Type I beta-(1-2)glucan was substituted with nonglycosidic residues, and type II beta-(1-2)glucan was nonsubstituted. Wild-type cells accumulated type I beta-(1-2)glucan, and chvA mutant cells accumulated mainly type II beta-(1-2)glucan and a small amount of type I beta-(1-2)glucan. Inner membranes of wild-type and chvA mutants formed in vitro type II nonsubstituted beta-(1-2)glucan. A 75-kDa inner membrane protein is proposed to be the chvA gene product. chvA mutant inner membranes had increased levels of 235-kDa protein; partial trypsin digestion patterns suggested that the 235-kDa protein (the gene product of the chvB region) and the gene product of the chvA region form a complex in the inner membrane that is involved in the synthesis, secretion, and modification of beta-(1-2)glucan. All of the defects assigned to the chvA mutation were restored after complementation with plasmid pCD522 containing the entire chvA region.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Piola, L. - Fuchs, J. - Oneto, M.L. - Basack, S. - Giménez, R. - Massaro, R. - Papa, J.C. - Kesten, E. - Casabé, N.
Pesqui. Agropecu. Bras. 2009;44(8):874-880
2009

Descripción: The objective of this work was to evaluate the effects of chlorpyrifos on earthworms and on soil functional parameters. An integrated laboratory-field study was performed in a wheat fi eld in Argentina, sprayed with chlorpyrifos at two recommended application rates (240 or 960 g ha -1 a.i.). Laboratory tests included neutral red retention time, comet assay (single cell gel electrophoresis), and avoidance behavior, each using the earthworm Eisenia andrei exposed in soil collected 1 or 14 days after pesticide application, and the bait-lamina test. Field tests assessed organic matter breakdown using the litterbag and bait-lamina assays. Earthworm populations in the field were assessed using formalin application and hand-sorting. The neutral red retention time and comet assays were sensitive biomarkers to the effects of chlorpyrifos on the earthworm E. andrei; however, the earthworm avoidance test was not sufficiently robust to assess these effects. Feeding activity of soil biota, assessed by the bait lamina test, was significantly inhibited by chlorpyrifos after 97 days, but recovered by the 118th day of the test. Litterbag test showed no significant differences in comparison to controls. Earthworm abundance in the fi eld was too low to adequately test the sensitivity of this assessment endpoint.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Gímez, M.I. - Piola, A.R. - Kattner, G. - Alder, V.A.
J. Plankton Res. 2011;33(8):1304-1310
2011

Descripción: Both the biomass of autotrophic dinoflagellates and its contribution to total chlorophyll were found to increase significantly with seawater temperature and the level of stratification in southern Patagonian waters during spring and winter. The highest peak of biomass corresponded to a single species, Prorocentrum minimum (Pavillard) Schiller, and was detected in middle shelf waters, coinciding with the primary productivity and CO 2 uptake maxima reported for the area under spring conditions. © The Author 2011. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Giordano, D. - Boron, I. - Abbruzzetti, S. - van Leuven, W. - Nicoletti, F.P. - Forti, F. - Bruno, S. - Cheng, C.-H.C. - Moens, L. - di Prisco, G. - Nadra, A.D. - Estrin, D. - Smulevich, G. - Dewilde, S. - Viappiani, C. - Verde, C.
PLoS ONE 2012;7(12)
2012

Descripción: The Antarctic icefish Chaenocephalus aceratus lacks the globins common to most vertebrates, hemoglobin and myoglobin, but has retained neuroglobin in the brain. This conserved globin has been cloned, over-expressed and purified. To highlight similarities and differences, the structural features of the neuroglobin of this colourless-blooded fish were compared with those of the well characterised human neuroglobin as well as with the neuroglobin from the retina of the red blooded, hemoglobin and myoglobin-containing, closely related Antarctic notothenioid Dissostichus mawsoni. A detailed structural and functional analysis of the two Antarctic fish neuroglobins was carried out by UV-visible and Resonance Raman spectroscopies, molecular dynamics simulations and laser-flash photolysis. Similar to the human protein, Antarctic fish neuroglobins can reversibly bind oxygen and CO in the Fe 2+ form, and show six-coordination by distal His in the absence of exogenous ligands. A very large and structured internal cavity, with discrete docking sites, was identified in the modelled three-dimensional structures of the Antarctic neuroglobins. Estimate of the free-energy barriers from laser-flash photolysis and Implicit Ligand Sampling showed that the cavities are accessible from the solvent in both proteins. Comparison of structural and functional properties suggests that the two Antarctic fish neuroglobins most likely preserved and possibly improved the function recently proposed for human neuroglobin in ligand multichemistry. Despite subtle differences, the adaptation of Antarctic fish neuroglobins does not seem to parallel the dramatic adaptation of the oxygen carrying globins, hemoglobin and myoglobin, in the same organisms. © 2012 Giordano et al.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Ugalde, R.A. - Coira, J.A. - Brill, W.J.
J. BACTERIOL. 1986;168(1):270-275
1986

Descripción: Previous work showed that two different strains derived from a culture of Rhizobium meliloti 102F51 differed with respect to phage specificity, agglutinability by alfalfa seed lectin, and synthesis of a galactose-containing polysaccharide (R.A. Ugalde, J. Handelsman, and W.J. Brill, J. Bacteriol. 166:148-154, 1986). Inner membranes from the more competitive strain incorporated glactose from UDP-galactose when a thermostable factor was present. This factor has now been identified as UDP-galacturonic acid. UDP-glucuronic acid was also active as a donor; however, this activity may be due to the presence of a 4-epimerase. Galacturonic acid, together with galactose, is incorporated into the reaction product, which appears to be a polysaccharide formed by several repeating units of these two monosaccharides. Partial acid hydrolysis liberates the disaccharide with galactose at the reducing end.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Alvarez, H.M. - Souto, M.F. - Viale, A. - Pucci, O.H.
FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 2001;200(2):195-200
2001

Descripción: Nocardia globerula strain 432 was able to synthesize triacylglycerols (TAG) during cultivation on 2,6,10,14-tetramethyl pentadecane (pristane) under nitrogen-limiting conditions. Within these cells, 4,8,12-trimethyl tridecanoic acid was the major fatty acid detected. Fatty acids with an odd number of carbon atoms and minor amounts of even-numbered fatty acids were also observed. Experiments carried out with acrylic acid, an inhibitor of β-oxidation, suggested that odd-numbered fatty acids such as C15:0, C17:0 and 10-methyl C17:0 were synthesized de novo using propionyl-CoA, the β-oxidation product, as precursor. Although N. globerula 432 incorporated mainly straight chain fatty acids into TAG, the branched fatty acid 4,8,12-trimethyl tridecanoic acid also appeared, to some extent, in the acylglycerols. The importance of TAG biosynthesis by pristane-grown cells of N. globerula strain 432 is discussed. © 2001 Federation of European Microbiological Societies.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Koopmann, G.E. - Del C. Batlle, A.M.
Int. J. Biochem. 1987;19(4):373-377
1987

Descripción: 1. 1. The effect of several metals and reagents on the decarboxylation rate of uroporphyrinogen I by using a 16-fold purified preparation of Uroporphyrinogen Decarboxylase from Rhodopseudomonas palustris, was studied. 2. 2. 1 mM Hg2+ and Cu2+ were strong inhibitors, 1 mM Zn2+ and Fe2+ under certain conditions and 1 mM Fe3+ and Cr3+ also inactivated the enzyme, but Pb2+, Cd2+, and Al3+ did not. Metals inhibition was reversed by 1 mM GSH or CvSH. 3. 3. 0.1 mM DTNB and PCMB, 1 mM pyridoxal phosphate and 100 mM chloral hydrate, as well as 1 mM 2-methoxy-5-nitrotropone and 0.2 mM diethylpyrocarbonate inhibited Uroporphyrinogen Decarboxylase; while GSH, CySH, N-ethylmaleimide, sodium thioglycolate, 1,4-dithioerythritol, EDTA and O-phenantroline did not modify activity. 4. 4. Data obtained would indicate that one cysteine, one or two histidine residues and probably a lysine group are required for enzyme activity. © 1987.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Harvey, M.A. - Suarez, S.A. - Ibañez, A. - Doctorovich, F. - Baggio, R.
Acta Crystallogr. Sect. E Struct. Rep. Online 2012;68(11):m1377-m1378
2012

Descripción: The molecular structure of the title compound, [Zn(CH3COO) 2(C12H12N2)], consists of isolated molecules bisected by a twofold rotation axis which goes through the ZnII cation and halves the organic base through the central C-C bond. The Zn II ion is coordinated by two N atoms from one molecule of the aromatic base and four O atoms from two bidentate, symmetry-related acetate anions, which coordinate asymmetrically [Zn-O distances of 2.058(2) and 2.362(3)Å], while the two Zn-N bond distances are equal as imposed by symmetry [2.079(2)Å]. The crystal structure is supported by a number of weak C-H⋯O interactions and C-H⋯π contacts, with no π-π interactions present, mainly hindered by the substituent methyl groups and the relative molecular orientation. The result is a three-dimensional structure in which each molecule is linked to eight different neighbors.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Dickenstein, A. - Matusevich, L.F. - Sadykov, T.
Adv. Math. 2005;196(1):78-123
2005

Descripción: We undertake the study of bivariate Horn systems for generic parameters. We prove that these hypergeometric systems are holonomic, and we provide an explicit formula for their holonomic rank as well as bases of their spaces of complex holomorphic solutions. We also obtain analogous results for the generalized hypergeometric systems arising from lattices of any rank. © 2004 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Herscovich, E. - Richarte, M.G.
Phys Lett Sect B Nucl Elem Part High-Energy Phys 2010;689(4-5):192-200
2010

Descripción: We obtain a black hole solution in the Einstein-Gauss-Bonnet theory for the string cloud model in a five-dimensional spacetime. We analyze the event horizons and naked singularities. Later, we compute the Hawking temperature TH, the specific heat C, the entropy S, and the Helmholtz free energy F of the black hole. The entropy was computed using the Wald formulation. In addition, the quantum correction to the Wald's entropy is considered for the string cloud source. We mainly explore the thermodynamical global and local stability of the system with vanishing or non-vanishing cosmological constant. The global thermodynamic phase structure indicates that the Hawking-Page transition is achieved for this model. Further, we observe that there exist stable black holes with small radii and that these regions are enlarged when choosing small values of the string cloud density and of the Gauss-Bonnet parameter. Besides, the rate of evaporation for these black holes are studied, determining whether the evaporation time is finite or not. Then, we concentrate on the dynamical stability of the system, studying the effective potential for s-waves propagating on the string cloud background. © 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Amster, P. - Averbuj, C.G. - Mariani, M.C. - Rial, D.
J. Math. Anal. Appl. 2005;303(2):688-695
2005

Descripción: We consider a boundary value problem for a nonlinear differential equation which arises in an option pricing model with transaction costs. We apply the method of upper and lower solutions in order to obtain solutions for the stationary problem. Moreover, we give conditions for the existence of solutions of the general evolution equation. © 2004 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Ferreira, R. - de Pablo, A. - Rossi, J.D.
J. Differ. Equ. 2007;240(1):196-215
2007

Descripción: We study the asymptotic behaviour of nonnegative solutions of the nonlinear diffusion equation in the half-line with a nonlinear boundary condition,{Mathematical expression} with p, q, λ > 0. We describe in terms of p, q and λ when the solution is global in time and when it blows up in finite time. For blow-up solutions we find the blow-up rate and the blow-up set and we describe the asymptotic behaviour close to the blow-up time, showing that a phenomenon of asymptotic simplification takes place. We finally study the appearance of extinction in finite time. © 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Posadas, D.M. - Ruiz-Ranwez, V. - Bonomi, H.R. - Martín, F.A. - Zorreguieta, A.
Cell. Microbiol. 2012;14(6):965-982
2012

Descripción: Brucella is an intracellular pathogen responsible of a zoonotic disease called brucellosis. Brucella survives and proliferates within several types of phagocytic and non-phagocytic cells. Like in other pathogens, adhesion of brucellae to host surfaces was proposed to be an important step in the infection process. Indeed, Brucella has the capacity to bind to culture human cells and key components of the extracellular matrix, such as fibronectin. However, little is known about the molecular bases of Brucella adherence. In an attempt to identify bacterial genes encoding adhesins, a phage display library of Brucella suis was panned against fibronectin. Three fibronectin-binding proteins of B. suis were identified using this approach. One of the candidates, designated BmaC was a very large protein of 340kDa that is predicted to belong to the type I (monomeric) autotransporter family. Microscopy studies showed that BmaC is located at one pole on the bacterial surface. The phage displaying the fibronectin-binding peptide of BmaC inhibited the attachment of brucellae to both, HeLa cells and immobilized fibronectin in vitro. In addition, a bmaC deletion mutant was impaired in the ability of B. suis to attach to immobilized fibronectin and to the surface of HeLa and A549 cells and was out-competed by the wild-type strain in co-infection experiments. Finally, anti-fibronectin or anti-BmaC antibodies significantly inhibited the binding of wild-type bacteria to HeLa cells. Our results highlight the role of a novel monomeric autotransporter protein in the adhesion of B. suis to the extracellular matrix and non-phagocytic cells via fibronectin binding. © 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Carreira, V.P. - Mensch, J. - Fanara, J.J.
Heredity 2009;102(3):246-256
2009

Descripción: Even though substantial progress has been made to elucidate the physiological and environmental factors underpinning differences in body size, little is known about its genetic architecture. Furthermore, all animal species bear a specific relationship between the size of each organ and overall body size, so different body size traits should be investigated as well as their sexual dimorphism that may have an important impact on the evolution of body size. We have surveyed 191 co-isogenic lines of Drosophila melanogaster, each one of them homozygous for a single P-element insertion, and assessed the effects of mutations on different body size traits compared to the P-element-free co-isogenic control. Nearly 60% of the lines showed significant differences with respect to the control for these traits in one or both sexes and almost 35% showed trait- and sex-specific effects. Candidate gene mutations frequently increased body size in males and decreased it in females. Among the 92 genes identified, most are involved in development and/or metabolic processes and their molecular functions principally include protein-binding and nucleic acid-binding activities. Although several genes showed pleiotropic effects in relation to body size, few of them were involved in the expression of all traits in one or both sexes. These genes seem to be important for different aspects related to the general functioning of the organism. In general, our results indicate that the genetic architecture of body size traits involves a large fraction of the genome and is largely sex and trait specific. © 2009 Macmillan Publishers Limited All rights reserved.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Forgács, P. - Lozano, G.S. - Moreno, E.F. - Schaposnik, F.A.
J. High Energy Phys. 2005(7):2021-2039
2005

Descripción: We derive Bogomolny-type equations for the abelian Higgs model defined on the noncommutative torus and discuss its vortex like solutions. To this end, we carefully analyze how periodic boundary conditions have to be handled in noncommutative space and discuss how vortex solutions are constructed. We also consider the extension to an U(2) × U(1) model, a simplified prototype of the noncommutative standard model. © SISSA 2005.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Giacomini, D. - Páez-Pereda, M. - Theodoropoulou, M. - Labeur, M. - Refojo, D. - Gerez, J. - Chervin, A. - Berner, S. - Losa, M. - Buchfelder, M. - Renner, U. - Stalla, G.K. - Arzt, E.
Endocrinology 2006;147(1):247-256
2006

Descripción: The molecular mechanisms governing the pathogenesis of ACTH-secreting pituitary adenomas are still obscure. Furthermore, the pharmacological treatment of these tumors is limited. In this study, we report that bone morphogenetic protein-4 (BMP-4) is expressed in the corticotrophs of human normal adenohypophysis and its expression is reduced in corticotrophinomas obtained from Cushing's patients compared with the normal pituitary. BMP-4 treatment of AtT-20 mouse corticotrophinoma cells has an inhibitory effect on ACTH secretion and cell proliferation. AtT-20 cells stably transfected with a dominant-negative form of the BMP-4 signal cotransducer Smad-4 or the BMP-4 inhibitor noggin have increased tumorigenicity in nude mice, showing that BMP-4 has an inhibitory role on corticotroph tumorigenesis in vivo. Because the activation of the retinoic acid receptor has an inhibitory action on Cushing's disease progression, we analyzed the putative interaction of these two pathways. Indeed, retinoic acid induces both BMP-4 transcription and expression and its antiproliferative action is blocked in Smad-4dn- and noggin-transfected Att-20 cells that do not respond to BMP-4. Therefore, retinoic acid induces BMP-4, which participates in the antiproliferative effects of retinoic acid. This new mechanism is a potential target for therapeutic approaches for Cushing's disease. Copyright © 2006 by The Endocrine Society.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Cignoli, R. - Torrell, A.T.
J. Math. Anal. Appl. 1996;199(3):637-653
1996

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Ferraro, R. - Fiorini, F.
Phys Lett Sect B Nucl Elem Part High-Energy Phys 2010;692(3):206-211
2010

Descripción: In the context of Born-Infeld determinantal gravity formulated in an n-dimensional spacetime with absolute parallelism, we found an exact 3-dimensional vacuum circular symmetric solution without cosmological constant consisting in a rotating spacetime with non-singular behavior. The space behaves at infinity as the conical geometry typical of 3-dimensional General Relativity without cosmological constant. However, the solution has no conical singularity because the space ends at a minimal circle that no freely falling particle can ever reach in a finite proper time. The space is curved, but no divergences happen since the curvature invariants vanish at both asymptotic limits. Remarkably, this very mechanism also forbids the existence of closed timelike curves in such a spacetime. © 2010 Elsevier B.V.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Tepper, M. - Musé, P. - Almansa, A. - Mejail, M.
Lect. Notes Comput. Sci. 2013;8259 LNCS(PART 2):560-567
2013

Descripción: Computing the minimum spanning tree (MST) is a common task in the pattern recognition and the computer vision fields. However, little work has been done on efficient general methods for solving the problem on large datasets where graphs are complete and edge weights are given implicitly by a distance between vertex attributes. In this work we propose a generic algorithm that extends the classical Boruvka's algorithm by using nearest neighbors search structures to significantly reduce time and memory consumption. The algorithm can also compute in a straightforward way approximate MSTs thus further improving speed. Experiments show that the proposed method outperforms classical algorithms on large low-dimensional datasets by several orders of magnitude. © Springer-Verlag 2013.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

El-Oirdi, M. - El-Rahman, T.A. - Rigano, L. - El-Hadrami, A. - Rodriguez, M.C. - Daayf, F. - Vojnov, A. - Bouarab, K.
Plant Cell 2011;23(6):2405-2421
2011

Descripción: Plants have evolved sophisticated mechanisms to sense and respond to pathogen attacks. Resistance against necrotrophic pathogens generally requires the activation of the jasmonic acid (JA) signaling pathway, whereas the salicylic acid (SA) signaling pathway is mainly activated against biotrophic pathogens. SA can antagonize JA signaling and vice versa. Here, we report that the necrotrophic pathogen Botrytis cinerea exploits this antagonism as a strategy to cause disease development. We show that B. cinerea produces an exopolysaccharide, which acts as an elicitor of the SA pathway. In turn, the SA pathway antagonizes the JA signaling pathway, thereby allowing the fungus to develop its disease in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum). SA-promoted disease development occurs through Nonexpressed Pathogen Related1. We also show that the JA signaling pathway required for tomato resistance against B. cinerea is mediated by the systemin elicitor. These data highlight a new strategy used by B. cinerea to overcome the plant's defense system and to spread within the host. © 2011 American Society of Plant Biologists. All rights reserved.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Cortazar, C. - Elgueta, M. - Rossi, J.D. - Wolanski, N.
J. Differ. Equ. 2007;234(2):360-390
2007

Descripción: We study a nonlocal diffusion operator in a bounded smooth domain prescribing the flux through the boundary. This problem may be seen as a generalization of the usual Neumann problem for the heat equation. First, we prove existence, uniqueness and a comparison principle. Next, we study the behavior of solutions for some prescribed boundary data including blowing up ones. Finally, we look at a nonlinear flux boundary condition. © 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

del Valle, R.A. - Scasso, R.A.
Rev. Asoc. Geol. Argent. 2004;59(1):38-44
2004

Descripción: The Larsen Basin is the depositional area including all the upper Mesozoic-lower Cenozoic sedimentary rocks on the continental shelf of the northern Antarctic Peninsula. The western boundary between the basin fill and the rocks forming its technical basement, is not exposed, and was defined on the basis of aeromagnetic data. On petrological grounds, the Mesozoic marine sedimentary rocks exposed on western Tabarin Peninsula, at the north-eastern extremity of the Antarctic Peninsula, are assigned to the lower part of the Aptian-Eocene regressive megasequence that forms the basin filling. These rocks are faulted against sediments of the Antarctic Peninsula magmatic arc, suggesting that post- depositional tectonic movements probably occurred. This compressional deformation is assigned to mid-Cretaceous times, when the Coniacian partial basin inversion was accompanied by westward-verging deformation at the western basin margin. Although the original extent of the basin cannot be discerned from these data, the lithostratigraphical evidence and geographical position of the basin sediments, together with terrestrial magnetic data, confirm that the Larsen Basin extends onto the southern part of Tabarin Peninsula, and indicate that the western limit of the basin is located northward of the previously proposed limit. © 2004 Asociación Geológica Argentina.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Bonomo, F. - Mattia, S. - Oriolo, G.
Theor Comput Sci 2011;412(45):6261-6268
2011

Descripción: The Double Traveling Salesman Problem with Multiple Stacks is a vehicle routing problem in which pickups and deliveries must be performed in two independent networks. The items are stored in stacks and repacking is not allowed. Given a pickup and a delivery tour, the problem of checking if there exists a valid distribution of items into s stacks of size h that is consistent with the given tours, is known as Pickup and Delivery Tour Combination (PDTC) problem. In the paper, weshow that the PDTC problem canbesolved in polynomial time when the number of stacks s is fixed but the size of each stack is not. We build upon the equivalence between the PDTC problem and the bounded coloring(BC) problemonpermutation graphs: for the latter problem, s is the number of colors and h is the number of vertices that can get a same color. We show that the BC problem can be solved in polynomial time when s is a fixed constant on co-comparability graphs, a superclass of permutation graphs. To the contrary, the BC problem is known to be hard on permutation graphs when h ≥ 6 is a fixed constant, but s is unbounded. © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Bonfiglio, J.J. - Inda, C. - Senin, S. - Maccarrone, G. - Refojo, D. - Giacomini, D. - Turck, C.W. - Holsboer, F. - Arzt, E. - Silberstein, S.
Mol. Endocrinol. 2013;27(3):491-510
2013

Descripción: CRH is a key regulator of neuroendocrine, autonomic, and behavioral response to stress. CRHstimulated CRH receptor 1 (CRHR1) activates ERK1/2 depending on intracellular context. In a previous work, we demonstrated that CRH activates ERK1/2 in limbic areas of the mouse brain (hippocampus and basolateral amygdala). ERK1/2 is an essential mediator of hippocampal physiological processes including emotional behavior, synaptic plasticity, learning, and memory. To elucidate the molecular mechanisms by which CRH activates ERK1/2 in hippocampal neurons, we used the mouse hippocampal cell line HT22. We document for the first time that ERK1/2 activation in response to CRH is biphasic, involving a first cAMP- and B-Raf-dependent early phase and a second phase that critically depends on CRHR1 internalization and β-arrestin2. By means of mass-spectrometry-based screening, we identified B-Raf-associated proteins that coimmunoprecipitate with endogenous B-Raf after CRHR1 activation. Using molecular and pharmacological tools, the functional impact of selected B-Raf partners in CRH-dependent ERK1/2 activation was dissected. These results indicate that 14-3-3 proteins, protein kinase A, and Rap1, are essential for early CRH-induced ERK1/2 activation, whereas dynamin and vimentin are required for the CRHR1 internalization-dependent phase. Both phases of ERK1/2 activation depend on calcium influx and are affected by calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II inactivation. Thus, this report describes the dynamics and biphasic nature of ERK1/2 activation downstream neuronal CRHR1 and identifies several new critical components of the CRHR1 signaling machinery that selectively controls the early and late phases of ERK1/2 activation, thus providing new potential therapeutic targets for stress-related disorders. © 2013 by The Endocrine Society.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Moreno, G.A. - Dalvit, D.A.R. - Calzetta, E.
New J. Phys. 2010;12
2010

Descripción: We propose a method to probe dispersive atom-surface interactions by measuring via two-photon Bragg spectroscopy the dynamic structure factor of a Bose-Einstein condensate above corrugated surfaces. This method takes advantage of the condensate coherence to reveal the spatial Fourier components of the lateral Casimir-Polder interaction energy. © IOP Publishing Ltd and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Da Rocha, M. - Guccione, J.A. - Guccione, J.J.
J. Algebra 2007;307(2):727-768
2007

Descripción: Let k be a field and let H be a rigid braided Hopf k-algebra. In this paper we continue the study of the theory of braided Hopf crossed products began in [J.A. Guccione, J.J. Guccione, Theory of braided Hopf crossed products, J. Algebra 261 (2003) 54-101]. First we show that to have an H-braided comodule algebra is the same that to have an H†-braided module algebra, where H† is a variant of H*, and then we study the maps [,] and (,), that appear in the Morita context introduced in the above cited paper. © 2006.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Solari, H.G. - Natiello, M.A. - Vázquez, M.
Phys Rev E. 1996;54(4):3185-3195
1996

Descripción: Fil:Solari, H.G. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Fernández, J.G. - Larrondo, H.A. - Figliola, A. - Serrano, E. - Rostas, J.A.P. - Hunter, M. - Rosso, O.A.
AIP Conf. Proc. 2007;913:196-202
2007

Descripción: Recent experimental results suggest that basal electroencephalogram (EEG)changes reflect the widespread functional evolution in neuronal circuits, occurring in chicken brain during the "synapse maturation" period, between 3 and 8 weeks' posthatch. In present work a quantitative analysis based on the Algorithmic Complexity (Lempel and Ziv Complexity) is performed. It is shown that this complexity presents a peak at week 2 posthatch 2, and a tendency to stabilize its values after the week 5 posthatch. © 2007 American Institute of Physics.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/documento de conferencia

Sztarker, J. - Tomsic, D.
J. Neurosci. 2011;31(22):8175-8180
2011

Descripción: Experiments with insects and crabs have demonstrated their remarkable capacity to learn and memorize complex visual features (Giurfa et al., 2001; Pedreira and Maldonado, 2003; Chittka and Niven, 2009). Such abilities are thought to require modular brain processing similar to that occurring in vertebrates (Menzel and Giurfa, 2001). Yet, physiological evidence for this type of functioning in the small brains of arthropods is still scarce (Liu et al., 1999, 2006; Menzel and Giurfa, 2001). In the crab Chasmagnathus granulatus, the learning rate as well as the long-term memory of a visual stimulus has been found to be reflected in the performance of identified lobula giant neurons (LGs) (Tomsic et al., 2003). The memory can only be evoked in the training context, indicating that animals store two components of the learned experience, one related to the visual stimulus and one related to the visual context (Tomsic et al., 1998; Hermitte et al., 1999). By performing intracellular recordings in the intact animal, we show that the ability of crabs to generalize the learned stimulus into new space positions and to distinguish it from a similar but unlearned stimulus, two of the main attributes of stimulus memory, is reflected by the performance of the LGs. Conversely, we found that LGs do not support the visual context memory component. Our results provide physiological evidence that the memory traces regarding "what" and "where" are stored separately in the arthropod brain. © 2011 the authors.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Gilbert, C.D. - Sigman, M.
Neuron 2007;54(5):677-696
2007

Descripción: All cortical and thalamic levels of sensory processing are subject to powerful top-down influences, the shaping of lower-level processes by more complex information. New findings on the diversity of top-down interactions show that cortical areas function as adaptive processors, being subject to attention, expectation, and perceptual task. Brain states are determined by the interactions between multiple cortical areas and the modulation of intrinsic circuits by feedback connections. In perceptual learning, both the encoding and recall of learned information involves a selection of the appropriate inputs that convey information about the stimulus being discriminated. Disruption of this interaction may lead to behavioral disorders, including schizophrenia. © 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Chialvo, D.R. - Balenzuela, P. - Fraiman, D.
AIP Conf. Proc. 2008;1028:28-45
2008

Descripción: We review the recent proposal that the most fascinating brain properties are related to the fact that it always stays close to a second order phase transition. In such conditions, the collective of neuronal groups can reliably generate robust and flexible behavior, because it is known that at the critical point there is the largest abundance of metastable states to choose from. Here we review the motivation, arguments and recent results, as well as further implications of this view of the functioning brain. © 2008 American Institute of Physics.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/documento de conferencia

Méndez-Díaz, I. - Zabala, P.
Discrete Appl Math 2006;154(5 SPEC ISS):826-847
2006

Descripción: Fil:Méndez-Díaz, I. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Delle Donne, D. - Marenco, J.
Discrete Optim. 2011;8(4):540-554
2011

Descripción: In this work we study a particular way of dealing with interference in combinatorial optimization models representing wireless communication networks. In a typical wireless network, co-channel interference occurs whenever two overlapping antennas use the same frequency channel, and a less critical interference is generated whenever two overlapping antennas use adjacent channels. This motivates the formulation of the minimum-adjacency vertex coloring problem which, given an interference graph G representing the potential interference between the antennas and a set of prespecified colors/channels, asks for a vertex coloring of G minimizing the number of edges receiving adjacent colors. We propose an integer programming model for this problem and present three families of facet-inducing valid inequalities. Based on these results, we implement a branch-and-cut algorithm for this problem, and we provide promising computational results. © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Zhang, Z. - Ramirez, J. - Reboutier, D. - Brault, M. - Trouverie, J. - Pennarun, A.-M. - Amiar, Z. - Biligui, B. - Galagovsky, L. - Rona, J.-P.
Plant Cell Physiol. 2005;46(9):1494-1504
2005

Descripción: Brassinosteroids (BRs) are involved in numerous physiological processes associated with plant development and especially with cell expansion. Here we report that two BRs, 28-homobrassinolide (HBL) and its direct precursor 28-homocastasterone (HCS), promote cell expansion of Arabidopsis thaliana suspension cells. We also show that cell expansions induced by HBL and HCS are correlated with the amplitude of the plasma membrane hyperpolarization they elicited. HBL, which promoted the larger cell expansion, also provoked the larger hyperpolarization. We observed that membrane hyperpolarization and cell expansion were partially inhibited by the proton pump inhibitor erythrosin B, suggesting that proton pumps were not the only ion transport system modulated by the two BRs. We used a voltage clamp approach in order to find the other ion transport systems involved in the PM hyperpolarization elicited by HBL and HCS. Interestingly, while anion currents were inhibited by both HBL and HCS, outward rectifying K+ currents were increased by HBL but inhibited by HCS. The different electrophysiological behavior shown by HBL and HCS indicates that small changes in the BR skeleton might be responsible for changes in bioactivity. © 2005 JSPP.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

De Luca, P. - Moiola, C.P. - Zalazar, F. - Gardner, K. - Vazquez, E.S. - De Siervi, A.
Prostate Cancer Prostatic Dis. 2013;16(3):233-238
2013

Descripción: Background:Loss or mutations of the BRCA1 gene are associated with increased risk of breast and ovarian cancers and with prostate cancer (PCa) aggressiveness. Previously, we identified GADD153 as a target of BRCA1 protein, which increases doxorubicin sensitivity in human p53 -/- PCa cells (PC3). Considering that p53 is a crucial target in cancer therapy, in this work we investigated p53 role in the regulation of transcription of GADD153.Methods:We performed reverse transcription quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR), western blot and luciferase assays to analyze GADD153 and/or BRCA1 expression in response to ultraviolet or doxorubicin exposure in PC3 p53 stable-transfected cells and LNCaP (p53+/+) cells. BRCA1 protein recruitment to GADD153 promoter was studied by chromatin immunoprecipitation-qPCR. To assess expression of BRCA1 and/or p53 target genes, we used a panel of stable-transfected PCa cell lines. We finally analyzed these genes in vivo using BRCA1-depleted PCa xenograft models.Results:We found that GADD153 was highly induced by doxorubicin in PC3 cells; however, this response was totally abolished in LNCaP (p53wt) and in p53-restituted PC3 cells. Furthermore, BRCA1 protein associates to GADD153 promoter after DNA damage in the presence of p53. Additionally, we demonstrated that BRCA1 and/or p53 modulate genes involved in DNA damage and cell cycle regulation (cyclin D1, BLM, BRCA2, DDB2, p21 WAF1/CIP1, H3F3B, GADD153, GADD45A, FEN1, CCNB2), EMT (E-cadherin, β-catenin, vimentin, fibronectin, slug, snail) and Hedgehog pathways (SHH, IHH, DHH, Gli1, PATCH1). Furthermore, xenograft studies demonstrated that BRCA1 knockdown in PC3 cells increased tumor growth and modulated these genes in vivo.Conclusions:Although BRCA1 induces GADD153 in a p53 independent manner, p53 abolished GADD153 induction in response to DNA damage. In addition, several important PCa targets are modulated by BRCA1 and p53. Altogether, these data might be important to understand the therapy response of PCa patients.© 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited All rights reserved.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Jahn, A.E. - Cueto, V.R. - Sagario, M.C. - Matnani, A.M. - Vidoz, J.Q. - De Casenave, J.L. - Di Giacomo, A.G.
Ornitol. Neotrop. 2009;20(2):275-283
2009

Temas:   Caparú -  Cerrado -  Chaco -  El bagual -  Monte -  Ñacuñán -  Philopatry

Descripción: Very little information currently exists on site fidelity patterns among Neotropical Austral migratory birds, which migrate wholly within South America. We banded migratory birds at three sites in South America, one located in the tropics and two at south temperate latitudes. We document breeding site fidelity among seven species and winter site fidelity among four species. Knowledge of patterns of site fidelity among migratory birds in South America is important for understanding the constraints affecting their populations throughout the annual cycle and ultimately for conservation planning. Accepted 8 April 2009. © The Neotropical Ornithological Society.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Vizentin-Bugoni, J. - Areta, J.I. - Di Giacomo, A.G. - Di Giacomo, A.S. - Jacobs, F. - Afonso Coimbra, M.A. - Dias, R.A.
Bird Conserv. Int. 2013;23(2):147-158
2013

Descripción: The Marsh Seedeater Sporophila palustris is one of the most endangered and least known of the capuchino seedeaters. Breeding populations are patchy, occurring in north-east Argentina, southern Brazil, and Uruguay. We present data on the breeding biology of the species, and describe nests and eggs, behaviour (including courtship, nesting, incubation and parental care), breeding sites and food items. Marsh Seedeaters breed in well-preserved grasslands with wet soils and tall vegetation. In general, these habitats are used for extensive livestock ranching. Main threats are overgrazing, widespread use of fire, conversion of grasslands to pastures of exotic grasses and rice fields, afforestation, and illegal trapping. Most breeding sites are located in Important Bird Areas, but only one in Brazil and one in Argentina are protected. We propose a series of actions to promote the conservation of Marsh Seedeaters and other endangered birds that coexist in grassland habitats. Copyright © BirdLife International 2013 Â.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Minoli, S. - Kauer, I. - Colson, V. - Party, V. - Renou, M. - Anderson, P. - Gadenne, C. - Marion-Poll, F. - Anton, S.
PLoS ONE 2012;7(3)
2012

Temas:   pheromone -  sucrose -  article -  association -  behavior -  controlled study -  female -  locomotion -  male -  moth

Descripción: The effect of repeated exposure to sensory stimuli, with or without reward is well known to induce stimulus-specific modifications of behaviour, described as different forms of learning. In recent studies we showed that a brief single pre-exposure to the female-produced sex pheromone or even a predator sound can increase the behavioural and central nervous responses to this pheromone in males of the noctuid moth Spodoptera littoralis. To investigate if this increase in sensitivity might be restricted to the pheromone system or is a form of general sensitization, we studied here if a brief pre-exposure to stimuli of different modalities can reciprocally change behavioural and physiological responses to olfactory and gustatory stimuli. Olfactory and gustatory pre-exposure and subsequent behavioural tests were carried out to reveal possible intra- and cross-modal effects. Attraction to pheromone, monitored with a locomotion compensator, increased after exposure to olfactory and gustatory stimuli. Behavioural responses to sucrose, investigated using the proboscis extension reflex, increased equally after pre-exposure to olfactory and gustatory cues. Pheromone-specific neurons in the brain and antennal gustatory neurons did, however, not change their sensitivity after sucrose exposure. The observed intra- and reciprocal cross-modal effects of pre-exposure may represent a new form of stimulus-nonspecific general sensitization originating from modifications at higher sensory processing levels. © 2012 Minoli et al.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Di Giacomo, A.S. - Di Giacomo, A.G.
Ornitol. Neotrop. 2008;19(SUPPL):401-414
2008

Temas:   Argentina -  History -  Ornithology

Descripción: Fil:Di Giacomo, A.S. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Anton, S. - Evengaard, K. - Barrozo, R.B. - Anderson, P. - Skals, N.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 2011;108(8):3401-3405
2011

Descripción: Modulation of sensitivity to sensory cues by experience is essential for animals to adapt to a changing environment. Sensitization and adaptation to signals of the same modality as a function of experience have been shown in many cases, and some of the neurobiological mechanisms underlying these processes have been described. However, the influence of sensory signals on the sensitivity of a different modality is largely unknown. In males of the noctuid moth, Spodoptera littoralis, the sensitivity to the female-produced sex pheromone increases 24 h after a brief preexposure with pheromone at the behavioral and central nervous level. Here we show that this effect is not confined to the same sensory modality: the sensitivity of olfactory neurons can also be modulated by exposure to a different sensory stimulus, i.e., a pulsed stimulus mimicking echolocating sounds from attacking insectivorous bats. We tested responses of preexposed male moths in a walking bioassay and recorded from neurons in the primary olfactory center, the antennal lobe. We show that brief exposure to a bat call, but not to a behaviorally irrelevant tone, increases the behavioral sensitivity of male moths to sex pheromone 24 h later in the same way as exposure to the sex pheromone itself. The observed behavioral modification is accompanied by an increase in the sensitivity of olfactory neurons in the antennal lobe. Our data provide thus evidence for cross-modal experience-dependent plasticity not only on the behavioral level, but also on the central nervous level, in an insect.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Martinez, C. - Loiseau, I. - Resende, M.G.C. - Rodriguez, S.
Electron. Notes Theor. Comput. Sci. 2011;281:69-83
2011

Descripción: We propose a new algorithm for the Capacitated Arc Routing Problem (CARP). Our motivation to deal with this problem is related to its application in several real world scenarios such as street sweeping, urban waste collection and electric meter reading just to mention a few. Based on BRKGA metaheuristic, our algorithm introduces a new random key encoding for CARP, mutation to random keys strings, a restart phase to avoid stagnation and local search. The algorithm was tested with several well-known instances from the literature. The results obtained were competitive in terms of objective function value and required computational time. © 2011 Elsevier B.V.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Giménez, J. - Penchaszadeh, P.E.
Helgol. Mar. Res. 2010;64(1):21-26
2010

Descripción: The mode, season, and time of brooding, egg diameter, egg number per brood, and the characteristics of newly released juveniles of Psolus patagonicus were investigated off Mar del Plata, Buenos Aires, Argentina, between October 1999 and February 2001. Individuals were attached to the Patagonian scallop, Zygochlamys patagonica. Spawning occurs between February and March. The mean egg diameter, 887 ± 26 μm, is the highest reported for the family Psolidae. Eggs are brooded under the mother's sole until they develop into crawling juveniles within 7 months. The largest embryos reached a length of 1,941 ± 228 μm in September. During the brooding period (February-September) the number of brooded embryos decreased while their size increased. Our study confirms brooding behaviour in female P. patagonicus. © Springer-Verlag and AWI 2009.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Gloag, R. - Fiorini, V.D. - Reboreda, J.C. - Kacelnik, A.
Proc. R. Soc. B Biol. Sci. 2012;279(1734):1831-1839
2012

Descripción: Despite the costs to avian parents of rearing brood parasitic offspring, many species do not reject foreign eggs from their nests.We show that where multiple parasitism occurs, rejection itself can be costly, by increasing the risk of host egg loss during subsequent parasite attacks. Chalk-browed mockingbirds (Mimus saturninus) are heavily parasitized by shiny cowbirds (Molothrus bonariensis), which also puncture eggs in host nests. Mockingbirds struggle to prevent cowbirds puncturing and laying, but seldom remove cowbird eggs once laid. We filmed cowbird visits to nests with manipulated clutch compositions and found that mockingbird eggs were more likely to escape puncture the more cowbird eggs accompanied them in the clutch. A Monte Carlo simulation of this 'dilution effect', comparing virtual hosts that systematically either reject or accept parasite eggs, shows that acceptors enjoy higher egg survivorship than rejecters in host populations where multiple parasitism occurs. For mockingbirds or other hosts in which host nestlings fare well in parasitized broods, this benefit might be sufficient to offset the fitness cost of rearing parasite chicks, making egg acceptance evolutionarily stable. Thus, counterintuitively, high intensities of parasitism might decrease or even reverse selection pressure for host defence via egg rejection. © 2012 The Royal Society.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Velikovsky, C.A. - Goldbaum, F.A. - Cassataro, J. - Estein, S. - Bowden, R.A. - Bruno, L. - Fossati, C.A. - Giambartolomei, G.H.
Infect. Immun. 2003;71(10):5750-5755
2003

Descripción: The immunogenicity and protective efficacy of recombinant lumazine synthase from Brucella spp. (rBLS) administered with different adjuvants was evaluated in mice. Mice were immunized with rBLS in the absence or the presence of aluminum hydroxide gel (BLS-A1), monophosphoryl lipid A (BLS-MPA), or incomplete Freund's adjuvant (BLS-IFA). rBLS per se induced a vigorous immunoglobulin G (IgG) response, with high titers of IgG1 as well as IgG2. All the adjuvants increased this response; the BLS-IFA formulation was the most effective at inducing BLS-specific IgG antibodies. In addition, after in vitro stimulation with rBLS, spleen cells from BLS-IFA-, BLS-A1-, or BLS-MPA-immunized mice proliferated and produced interleukin-2 (IL-2), gamma interferon (IFN-γ), IL-10, and IL-4, suggesting the induction of a mixed Th1-Th2 response. Immunization with rBLS protected mice against challenge with B. abortus 544. The levels of protection in the spleen were similar for all adjuvants, but only BLS-A1 and BLS-IFA were effective in the liver. Our results indicate that BLS might be a useful candidate for the development of subunit vaccines against brucellosis, since it elicits antigen-specific cellular responses, with production of IFN-γ and protection, independently of the adjuvant formulation used.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Ruiz-Ranwez, V. - Posadas, D.M. - Van der Henst, C. - Estein, S.M. - Arocena, G.M. - Abdian, P.L. - Martín, F.A. - Sieira, R. - De Bolle, X. - Zorreguieta, A.
Infect. Immun. 2013;81(3):996-1007
2013

Descripción: Brucella is responsible for brucellosis, one of the most common zoonoses worldwide that causes important economic losses in several countries. Increasing evidence indicates that adhesion of Brucella spp. to host cells is an important step to establish infection. We have previously shown that the BmaC unipolar monomeric autotransporter mediates the binding of Brucella suis to host cells through cell-associated fibronectin. Our genome analysis shows that the B. suis genome encodes several additional potential adhesins. In this work, we characterized a predicted trimeric autotransporter that we named BtaE. By expressing btaE in a nonadherent Escherichia coli strain and by phenotypic characterization of a B. suis δbtaE mutant, we showed that BtaE is involved in the binding of B. suis to hyaluronic acid. The B. suis δbtaE mutant exhibited a reduction in the adhesion to HeLa and A549 epithelial cells compared with the wild-type strain, and it was outcompeted by the wild-type strain in the binding to HeLa cells. The knockout btaE mutant showed an attenuated phenotype in the mouse model, indicating that BtaE is required for full virulence. BtaE was immunodetected on the bacterial surface at one cell pole. Using old and new pole markers, we observed that both the BmaC and BtaE adhesins are consistently associated with the new cell pole, suggesting that, in Brucella, the new pole is functionally differentiated for adhesion. This is consistent with the inherent polarization of this bacterium, and its role in the invasion process. © 2013, American Society for Microbiology.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Perez-Pepe, M. - Slomiansky, V. - Loschi, M. - Luchelli, L. - Neme, M. - Thomas, M.G. - Boccaccio, G.L.
PLoS ONE 2012;7(12)
2012

Descripción: The spontaneous and reversible formation of foci and filaments that contain proteins involved in different metabolic processes is common in both the nucleus and the cytoplasm. Stress granules (SGs) and processing bodies (PBs) belong to a novel family of cellular structures collectively known as mRNA silencing foci that harbour repressed mRNAs and their associated proteins. SGs and PBs are highly dynamic and they form upon stress and dissolve thus releasing the repressed mRNAs according to changes in cell physiology. In addition, aggregates containing abnormal proteins are frequent in neurodegenerative disorders. In spite of the growing relevance of these supramolecular aggregates to diverse cellular functions a reliable automated tool for their systematic analysis is lacking. Here we report a MATLAB Script termed BUHO for the high-throughput image analysis of cellular foci. We used BUHO to assess the number, size and distribution of distinct objects with minimal deviation from manually obtained parameters. BUHO successfully addressed the induction of both SGs and PBs in mammalian and insect cells exposed to different stress stimuli. We also used BUHO to assess the dynamics of specific mRNA-silencing foci termed Smaug 1 foci (S-foci) in primary neurons upon synaptic stimulation. Finally, we used BUHO to analyze the role of candidate genes on SG formation in an RNAi-based experiment. We found that FAK56D, GCN2 and PP1 govern SG formation. The role of PP1 is conserved in mammalian cells as judged by the effect of the PP1 inhibitor salubrinal, and involves dephosphorylation of the translation factor eIF2α. All these experiments were analyzed manually and by BUHO and the results differed in less than 5% of the average value. The automated analysis by this user-friendly method will allow high-throughput image processing in short times by providing a robust, flexible and reliable alternative to the laborious and sometimes unfeasible visual scrutiny. © 2012 Perez-Pepe et al.
...ver más

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Marshall, G. - Mocskos, P. - Swinney, H.L. - Huth, J.M.
Phys Rev E. 1999;59(2):2157-2167
1999

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Krmpotic, D. - Mindlin, G.B. - Pérez-García, C.
Phys Rev E. 1996;54(4):3609-3613
1996

Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo