Search results for " invertebrate"

showing 10 items of 91 documents

Parasite community diversity in two Mediterranean labrid fishes Symphodus tinea and Labrus merula

1994

Examination of 111 peacock wrasse [Symphodus tinea (L.)] and 97 brown wrasse (Labrus merula L.) from the Valencian coast (Spain) yielded 24 metazoan parasite species (11 Digenea, three Cestoda, four Nematoda. one Acanlhocephala, five Crustacea). Eighteen species were from 5. tinea and 17 from L. merula; 11 of the 24 species were common to both hosts. Brillouin's diversity index, was applied to fully censused parasite infracommunities. This is the first time that all the metazoan parasites (internal and external) in any position in the host have been analysed for diversity. High values of prevalence, intensity, and diversity parameters indicate that these labrid fishes support diverse parasi…

Diversity indexbiologyWrasseEcologyCestodaLabrusParasite hostingSpecies diversityMarine invertebratesAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDigeneaJournal of Fish Biology
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Marine Animal-Derived Compounds and Autophagy Modulation in Breast Cancer Cells

2021

It is known that in breast cancer biology, autophagy mainly plays a cytoprotective and anti-apoptotic role in vitro, being conceivably responsible for cell resistance to drug exposure and a higher metastatic attitude in vivo. Thus, the development of novel autophagy-targeting agents represents a valuable strategy to improve the efficacy of anticancer interventions. It is widely acknowledged that the enormous biodiversity of marine organisms represents a highly promising reserve for the isolation of bioactive primary and secondary metabolites targeting one or several specific molecular pathways and displaying active pharmacological properties against a variety of diseases. The aim of this re…

Drugautophagymedia_common.quotation_subjectechinodermsAutophagymolluskBiologymedicine.diseaseapoptosiIn vitroanticancer compoundbreast cancerBreast cancermarine invertebrateApoptosisIn vivoCancer researchmedicinecytotoxicityIdentification (biology)Settore BIO/06 - Anatomia Comparata E CitologiacnidarianCytotoxicitydemospongemedia_commonFoundations
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Poor nutritional quality of primary producers and zooplankton driven by eutrophication is mitigated at upper trophic levels

2022

Eutrophication and rising water temperature in freshwaters may increase the total production of a lake while simultaneously reducing the nutritional quality of food web components. We evaluated how cyanobacteria blooms, driven by agricultural eutrophication (in eutrophic Lake Köyliöjärvi) or global warming (in mesotrophic Lake Pyhäjärvi), influence the biomass and structure of phytoplankton, zooplankton, and fish communities. In terms of the nutritional value of food web components, we evaluated changes in the ω-3 and ω-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) of phytoplankton and consumers at different trophic levels. Meanwhile, the lakes did not differ in their biomasses of phytoplankton, zoo…

Ecologyrehevöityminenplanktonontogenetic diet shiftrasvahapotvesiekosysteemitfreshwater food webselkärangattomatperchbenthic invertebratesphytoplanktonahvenmakea vesiravintoaineetbiomassa (ekologia)syanobakteeritravintoketjutEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicspolyunsaturated fatty acidsNature and Landscape ConservationEcology and Evolution
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Polymorphism in Developmental Mode and Its Effect on Population Genetic Structure of a Spionid Polychaete, Pygospio elegans

2012

Population genetic structure of sedentary marine species is expected to be shaped mainly by the dispersal ability of their larvae. Long-lived planktonic larvae can connect populations through migration and gene flow, whereas species with nondispersive benthic or direct-developing larvae are expected to have genetically differentiated populations. Poecilogonous species producing different larval types are ideal when studying the effect of developmental mode on population genetic structure and connectivity. In the spionid polychaete Pygospio elegans, different larval types have been observed between, and sometimes also within, populations. We used microsatellite markers to study population st…

Gene FlowSalinityGenotypePopulationPlant ScienceEnvironmentBiologyENVIRONMENTAL-FACTORSGene flowBALTIC SEA AREAPELAGIC LARVAL DURATIONSpecies SpecificityATLANTIC SALMONReproduction AsexualAnimalseducationMARINE-INVERTEBRATESGenetic diversityPolychaeteeducation.field_of_studyGeographyEcologyfungiGenetic VariationPolychaetaCOD GADUS-MORHUAPOSTGLACIAL COLONIZATIONMarine invertebratesbiology.organism_classificationGenetics PopulationGASTROPOD GENUS ALDERIABenthic zoneLarvaGenetic structureta1181Biological dispersalAnimal MigrationAnimal Science and ZoologyLANDSCAPE GENETICSSALMON SALMO-SALARMicrosatellite RepeatsIntegrative and Comparative Biology
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Cytotoxic capability and the associated proteomic profile of cell-free coelomic fluid extracts from the edible sea cucumber Holothuria tubulosa on He…

2022

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is an aggressive cancer histotype and one of the most common types of cancer worldwide. The identification of compounds that might intervene to restrain neoplastic cell growth appears imperative due to its elevated overall mortality. The marine environment represents a reservoir rich in bioactive compounds in terms of primary and secondary metabolites produced by aquatic animals, mainly invertebrates. In the present study, we determined whether the water-soluble cell-free extract of the coelomic fluid (CFE) of the edible sea cucumber Holothuria tubulosa could play an anti-HCC role in vitro by analyzing the viability and locomotory behavior, cell cycle distribu…

Hepatocellular carcinoma invertebrate echinoderm cell behavior protein profileechinodermSettore CHIM/10 - Chimica Degli Alimenticell behaviorprotein profileinvertebrateSettore BIO/05 - Zoologiahepatocellular carcinomaSettore BIO/06 - Anatomia Comparata E Citologia
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Invertebrate Models in Innate Immunity and Tissue Remodeling Research

2022

The aim of this Special Issue is to highlight the close functional and highly conserved link between innate immunity, homeostasis maintenance, inflammation, tissue remodeling and regeneration [...]

InflammationOrganic ChemistryGeneral MedicineInvertebratesInnate Immunity Regeneration InvertebratesImmunity InnateCatalysisComputer Science ApplicationsInorganic ChemistryAnimalsHomeostasisPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryMolecular BiologySpectroscopyInternational Journal of Molecular Sciences
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The potential of antimicrobial peptides isolated from freshwater crayfish species in new drug development: A review

2021

Abstract The much-publicised increased resistance of pathogenic bacteria to conventional antibiotics has focused research effort on the characterization of new antimicrobial drugs. In this context, antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) extracted from animals are considered a promising alternative to conventional antibiotics. In recent years, freshwater crayfish species have emerged as an important source of bioactive compounds. In fact, these invertebrates rely on an innate immune system based on cellular responses and on the production of important effectors in the haemolymph, such as AMPs, which are produced and stored in granules in haemocytes and released after stimulation. These effectors are …

Innate immune systembiologymedicine.drug_classImmunologyAntibioticsAntimicrobial peptidesFresh WaterContext (language use)Pathogenic bacteriaAstacoideaGram-Positive Bacteriabiology.organism_classificationCrayfishAntimicrobialmedicine.disease_causeAnti-Bacterial AgentsMicrobiologyGram-Negative BacteriamedicineAnimalsAMP Antibiotic Bioactive compound Crustacea Invertebrate Pathogenic bacteriaAntimicrobial PeptidesBacteriaAntimicrobial Cationic PeptidesDevelopmental Biology
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Introduction to Symposium: Poecilogony--A Window on Larval Evolutionary Transitions in Marine Invertebrates

2012

Poecilogony is the intraspecific variation in developmental mode that has been described in some marine invertebrates. Poecilogonous species produce different larval forms (e.g., free-swimming planktotrophic larvae as well as brooded lecithotrophic or adelphophagic larvae). Poecilogony can be a controversial topic, since it is difficult to identify and characterize the phenomenon with certainty. It has been challenging to determine whether poecilogony represents developmental polymorphism with a genetic basis or developmental polyphenism reflecting plastic responses to environmental cues. Other outstanding questions include whether common mechanisms underlie the developmental variation we o…

LarvaPolyphenismEcologyMarine larval ecologyAnimal Science and ZoologyPlant ScienceComparative biologyMarine invertebratesBiologyEvolutionary transitionsIntraspecific competitionIntegrative and Comparative Biology
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Cytotoxic Activity of Tunicate Hemocytes

1996

Tunicates (protochordates) are filter-feeding marine invertebrates with a worldwide distribution. In their larval form, they exhibit many of the features characteristic of the vertebrates. The larva, with a tail, notochord, and dorsal neural tube, upon settlement undergoes a remarkable metamorphosis in which it loses most of its chordate characteristics and becomes a sessile invertebrate adult. Thus, due to these characteristics, tunicates are considered to be the most primitive members of the phylum Chordata. Owing to their position in the phylogenetic line leading to the vertebrates, they have attained importance as experimental organisms and have been examined by researchers from a varie…

Larvamedia_common.quotation_subjectNeural tubeZoologyChordateMarine invertebratesBiologybiology.organism_classificationTunicatemedicine.anatomical_structureNotochordmedicineMetamorphosisDevelopmental biologymedia_common
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Insight into the role of cetaceans in the life cycle of the tetraphyllideans (Platyhelminthes: Cestoda)

2007

Abstract Four types of tetraphyllidean larvae infect cetaceans worldwide: two plerocercoids differing in size, ‘small’ (SP) and ‘large’ (LP), and two merocercoids referred to as Phyllobothrium delphini and Monorygma grimaldii . The latter merocercoid larvae parasitize marine mammals exclusively and exhibit a specialised cystic structure. Adult stages are unknown for any of the larvae and thus the role of cetaceans in the life cycle of these species has been a long-standing problem. The SP and LP forms are thought to be earlier stages of P. delphini and M. grimaldii that are presumed to infect large pelagic sharks that feed on cetaceans. A molecular analysis of the D2 variable region of the …

Life Cycle StagesLarvabiologyEcologyDolphinsCestodaZoologyCetaceaMarine invertebratesCestode Infectionsbiology.organism_classificationHost-Parasite InteractionsTetraphyllideaInfectious DiseasesGenusPlerocercoidAnimalsCestodaParasitologyMesenteriesInternational Journal for Parasitology
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