Search results for " Bentham"

showing 10 items of 14 documents

A comparative study of viral infectivity, accumulation and symptoms induced by broad bean wilt virus 1 isolates

2018

Broad bean wilt virus 1 (BBWV-1, genus Fabavirus, family Secoviridae) is a bipartite positive-sense single-stranded RNA virus distributed worldwide infecting many herbaceous species. Until now, scarce information regarding biological properties of BBWV-1 isolates is available. This work shows a comparative study on virus infectivity (proportion of infected plants over inoculated plants), virus accumulation and symptoms induced by four genetically different BBWV-1 isolates (Ben, B41/99, NSRV and PV0548) which were mechanically inoculated on several herbaceous hosts. The four BBWV-1 isolates infected broad bean, tomato, pepper and Nicotiana benthamiana plants, whereas none of them infected cu…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicinevirusesNicotiana benthamianaPlant Science01 natural sciencesBBWV-1VirusMicrobiologyFabaviru03 medical and health sciencesBroad bean wilt virusPlant virusPepperSecoviridaeSymptomatologyInfectivitybiologySecoviridaeHost (biology)RT-qPCRfungiSettore AGR/12 - Patologia Vegetalefood and beveragesbiology.organism_classification030104 developmental biologyInfectivity010606 plant biology & botanyJournal of Plant Pathology
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Broad bean wilt virus 1 encoded VP47 and SCP are suppressors of plant post-transcriptional gene silencing

2020

Broad bean wilt virus 1 (BBWV-1, genus Fabavirus, family Secoviridae) is a bipartite positive single-stranded RNA (+ssRNA) virus infecting important horticultural and ornamental crops worldwide. RNA1 encodes proteins involved in virus replication, whereas RNA2 encodes the large and small coat proteins (LCP, and SCP, respectively) and two putative movement proteins with overlapping C-terminal but different sizes: 47.2 kDa (VP47) and 37 kDa (VP37). Post-transcriptional gene silencing (PTGS) is a mechanism of gene regulation and defense against pathogens such as viruses. However, most plant viruses encode proteins called viral suppressors of RNA silencing (VSRs) which able to inhibit PTGS. Pre…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicinevirusesNicotiana benthamianaPlant ScienceHorticulture01 natural sciencesVirusBBWV-1PTGS03 medical and health sciencesBroad bean wilt virusFabaviruPlant virusSecoviridaeGeneticsbiologySecoviridaeTurnip crinkle virusfungiSettore AGR/12 - Patologia Vegetalefood and beveragesbiology.organism_classificationRNA silencingSilencing suppressor030104 developmental biologyViral replicationAgronomy and Crop Science010606 plant biology & botany
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RNA2-encoded VP37 protein of Broad bean wilt virus 1 is a determinant of pathogenicity, host susceptibility, and a suppressor of post-transcriptional…

2020

Abstract Broad bean wilt virus 1 (BBWV‐1, genus Fabavirus, family Secoviridae) is a bipartite, single‐stranded positive‐sense RNA virus infecting many horticultural and ornamental crops worldwide. RNA1 encodes proteins involved in viral replication whereas RNA2 encodes two coat proteins (the large and small coat proteins) and two putative movement proteins (MPs) of different sizes with overlapping C‐terminal regions. In this work, we determined the role played by the small putative BBWV‐1 MP (VP37) on virus pathogenicity, host specificity, and suppression of post‐transcriptional gene silencing (PTGS). We engineered a BBWV‐1 35S‐driven full‐length cDNA infectious clone corresponding to BBWV‐…

AgroinfiltrationInfectious cloneDeterminant of pathogenicityvirusesdeterminant of pathogenicityGene ExpressionSoil ScienceNicotiana benthamianaPlant ScienceBBWV-1 determinant of pathogenicity Fabavirus infectious clone Secoviridae VSRBBWV‐1Host SpecificityBBWV-1VirusViral ProteinsBroad bean wilt virusSolanum lycopersicumTobaccoH20 Plant diseasesMolecular BiologyPlant DiseasesVirulencebiologySecoviridaeTurnip crinkle virusfungiinfectious cloneVSRfood and beveragesSettore AGR/12 - Patologia VegetaleRNA virusOriginal ArticlesDeteminant of Pathogenicitybiology.organism_classificationPotato virus XVirologyFabavirusVicia fabaRNA silencingSettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataRNA ViralOriginal ArticleRNA InterferenceCapsicumAgronomy and Crop Science
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Basil (Ocimum basilicum), a new host of Pepino mosaic virus.

2009

Pepino mosaic virus (PepMV), a member of the genus Potexvirus , was first described in 1980 on pepino ( Solanum muricatum ) and was later isolated from different wild species of the genus Solanum (formerly Lycopersicon ) (Soler et al ., 2002). PepMV has been reported in several European countries and in North America, causing disease in tomato. In July 2008, plants of basil ( Ocimum basilicum ) showing interveinal chlorosis on young leaves were observed in three greenhouses in Sicily, in the area where tomato plants were found to be infected by PepMV in 2005 (Davino et al ., 2006). The disease was transmitted mechanically to Nicotiana benthamiana , producing chlorotic spots and leaf deforma…

Basil Pepino mosaic virus.Chlorosisfood.ingredientbiologySpotsfungiBasilicumfood and beveragesNicotiana benthamianaPlant ScienceHorticulturebiology.organism_classificationOcimumLycopersiconfoodPlant virusBotanyGeneticsSolanumAgronomy and Crop Science
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Under Our Eye: Margaret Atwood's Variation on the Panopticon in "The Heart Goes Last"

2020

In her dystopian dark comedy The Heart Goes Last (2015), Margaret Atwood openly refers to Jeremy Bentham’s concept of the Panopticon. The future world depicted in her novel is filled with violence and deprived of both human bonds and hope. Hence, being contained, monitored and — after Foucault — disciplined and punished appears to be the characters’ last resort. Surveillance tempts both sexes as it is politically correct and universal, and it does not privilege one group of people over the other. The article discusses the dystopian vision of the near future as created by Atwood in her 2015 novel, with direct references to the conception of the Panopticon, both in its original meaning propos…

DystopiaPsychoanalysisMetaphorPhilosophymedia_common.quotation_subjectthe PanopticonComedyMichel FoucaultSocial groupOriginal meaningMargaret AtwoodReading (process)surveillancePanopticonJeremy BenthamPrivilege (social inequality)dystopian fictionmedia_commonZagadnienia Rodzajow Literackich/ Problems of Literary Genres
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Analysis of tombusvirus revertants to identify essential amino acid residues within RNA-dependent RNA polymerase motifs

2005

The RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) of Tomato bushy stunt virus (TBSV) contains an arginine- and proline-rich (RPR) motif. This motif functions as an RNA-binding domain and is essential for tombusvirus replication. A mutant carrying three arginine substitutions in this motif rendered the virus unable to replicate in Nicotiana benthamiana plants and protoplasts. When the replicase function was provided in trans, by expressing the TBSV RdRp in N. benthamiana plants, an infectious variant could be isolated. Sequence analysis showed that only the substituted glycine residue (position 216) had reverted to arginine; all other substitutions remained unchanged. This finding suggested that stron…

GeneticsTombusvirusArginineSequence analysisvirusesfungifood and beveragesRNA-dependent RNA polymeraseNicotiana benthamianaBiologyRNA-Dependent RNA Polymerasebiology.organism_classificationVirologyTombusviruschemistry.chemical_compoundTombusviridaechemistryVirologyRNA polymeraseRNA ViralAmino AcidsTomato bushy stunt virusJournal of General Virology
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Revisiting the cysteine-rich proteins encoded in the 3’-proximal open reading frame of the positive-sense single-stranded RNA of some monopartite fil…

2020

A reexamination of proteins with conserved cysteines and basic amino acids encoded by the 3 '-proximal gene of the positive-sense single-stranded RNA of some monopartite filamentous plant viruses has been carried out. The cysteines are involved in a putative Zn-finger domain, which, together with the basic amino acids, form part of the nuclear or nucleolar localization signals. An in-depth study of one of these proteins, p15 from grapevine B virus (GVB), has shown: (i) a three-dimensional structure with four alpha-helices predicted by two independent in silico approaches, (ii) the nucleolus as the main accumulation site by applying confocal laser microscopy to a fusion between p15 and the g…

Models MolecularProtein Conformation alpha-HelicalGrapevine virus BAgroinfiltrationEvolutionProtein ConformationProtein DomainProtein domainNicotiana benthamianaGene ExpressionBiologyEvolution MolecularOpen Reading Frames03 medical and health sciencesViral ProteinsProtein DomainsPlant CellsVirologyTobaccoGene expressionAmino Acid SequenceCloning MolecularGenePhylogeny030304 developmental biologyGenetics0303 health sciencesSequence Homology Amino Acid030306 microbiologyRNASettore AGR/12 - Patologia VegetaleGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationVirologyRecombinant ProteinsPlant LeavesRNA silencingRNA ViralFlexiviridaeSequence AlignmentModel
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CRIMINOLOGY AND ECONOMIC IDEAS IN THE AGE OF ENLIGHTENMENT

2009

My purpose is to point out that during the Age of Enlightenment, and its later 19th century expressions, the most relevant works on law contain examples of economic ideas about criminal phenomena and their legal repression. I will comment the analytic conclusions to which the authors of the time got to, with reference to specific questions such as the definition of crime, the determination of punishment, the judicial procedure. I will take into account some of the most representative European writers: Montesquieu, Beccaria and Bentham. The authors I selected share the characteristic of being all exponents of utilitarianism and of presenting elements which forerun neoclassical economics in t…

Montesquieu Beccaria Bentham Gary Becker Juridical Enlightenment Economic Analysis of LawCriminologypenal lawSettore SECS-P/04 - Storia Del Pensiero Economico
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The ER-Membrane Transport System Is Critical for Intercellular Trafficking of the NSm Movement Protein and Tomato Spotted Wilt Tospovirus.

2015

Plant viruses move through plasmodesmata to infect new cells. The plant endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is interconnected among cells via the ER desmotubule in the plasmodesma across the cell wall, forming a continuous ER network throughout the entire plant. This ER continuity is unique to plants and has been postulated to serve as a platform for the intercellular trafficking of macromolecules. In the present study, the contribution of the plant ER membrane transport system to the intercellular trafficking of the NSm movement protein and Tomato spotted wilt tospovirus (TSWV) is investigated. We showed that TSWV NSm is physically associated with the ER membrane in Nicotiana benthamiana plants. An…

RNA viruses0301 basic medicineLeavesCell MembranesNicotiana benthamianaPlant ScienceEndoplasmic ReticulumPathology and Laboratory MedicineBiochemistrySolanum lycopersicumTospovirusBunyavirusesMedicine and Health SciencesArabidopsis thalianaMovement proteinBiology (General)Integral membrane proteinSecretory PathwaybiologyPlant BiochemistryPlant AnatomyPlasmodesmataProteïnes de membranafood and beveragesPlantsPlants Genetically ModifiedCell biologyTransport proteinPlant Viral Movement ProteinsProtein TransportMedical MicrobiologyCell ProcessesViral PathogensVirusesPathogensCellular Structures and OrganellesTomato Spotted Wilt VirusResearch ArticleBioquímicaCell PhysiologyQH301-705.5Arabidopsis ThalianaImmunologyPlant PathogensBrassicaPlasmodesmaResearch and Analysis MethodsMicrobiologyPlant Viral Pathogens03 medical and health sciencesModel OrganismsPlant and Algal ModelsVirologyTobaccoGeneticsIntegral Membrane ProteinsSecretionMicrobial PathogensMolecular BiologyPlant DiseasesBiology and life sciencesEndoplasmic reticulumfungiOrganismsMembrane ProteinsCell BiologyPlant PathologyRC581-607biology.organism_classificationVirosis (Plantes)VirologyPlant Leaves030104 developmental biologyMembrane TraffickingParasitologyImmunologic diseases. AllergyPLoS Pathogens
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Jeremy Bentham a-t-il influencé les civilistes français avant, pendant et après 1804 ? Retour sur une controverse historiographique

2011

[SHS.DROIT]Humanities and Social Sciences/Law[SHS.DROIT] Humanities and Social Sciences/LawJeremy Bentham1804[ SHS.DROIT ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Lawcivilistes français
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