Search results for "ACEA"

showing 10 items of 2814 documents

N-Cinnamoyltetraketide Derivatives from the Leaves of Toussaintia orientalis

2015

Seven N-cinnamoyltetraketides (1−7), including the new Ztoussaintine E (2), toussaintine F (6), and toussaintine G (7), were isolated from the methanol extract of the leaves of Toussaintia orientalis using column chromatography and HPLC. The configurations of E-toussaintine E (1) and toussaintines A (3) and D (5) are revised based on single-crystal X-ray diffraction data from racemic crystals. Both the crude methanol extract and the isolated constituents exhibit antimycobacterial activities (MIC 83.3−107.7 μM) against the H37Rv strain of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Compounds 1, 3, 4, and 5 are cytotoxic (ED50 15.3−105.7 μM) against the MDA-MB-231 triple negative aggressive breast cancer cel…

kemiaToussaintia orientalismedicine.drug_classAntitubercular AgentsPharmaceutical ScienceAnnonaceaeMicrobial Sensitivity TestsAntimycobacterialchemistry01 natural sciencesHigh-performance liquid chromatographyTanzaniaAnalytical ChemistryMycobacterium tuberculosischemistry.chemical_compoundColumn chromatographyDrug DiscoverymedicineHumansTriple negativeNuclear Magnetic Resonance Biomolecularta116PharmacologyChromatographybiologyStrain (chemistry)Molecular Structure010405 organic chemistryCyclohexanonesOrganic ChemistryMycobacterium tuberculosisbiology.organism_classificationtoussaintia orientalis0104 chemical sciences3. Good healthPlant Leavesn-cinnamoyltetraketide010404 medicinal & biomolecular chemistryComplementary and alternative medicinechemistryCinnamatesMolecular MedicineFemaleMethanolDrug Screening Assays AntitumorJournal of Natural Products
researchProduct

Uhanalaisen ketokatkeron (Gentianella campestris) vasteet niittokorkeuden ja -ajan vaihteluun

2007

ketokatkeroKeski-SuomiherbivoriaGentianaceaeperinnebiotooppiniittokompensointi
researchProduct

Chemical composition of salvia argentea L. (laminaceae)

2014

laminaceae s. argentea acido ursolicoSettore CHIM/06 - Chimica Organica
researchProduct

First report of Diplodia africana on Grevillea robusta

2020

Branch cankers and dieback were observed on silky-oak trees (Grevillea robusta) along some streets of Palermo (Sicily, Italy). Fungi isolated from symptomatic branches were identified as Diplodia africana and D. seriata by morphological characters and phylogenetic analyses of combined ITS and translation elongation factor 1-α sequences. Pathogenicity was verified by inoculating twigs of 3-y-old silky-oak plants. This is the first report of D. africana on G. robusta and the first record of D. seriata on this host in the northern hemisphere.

lcsh:BotanyBotryosphaeriaceae silky-oak D. seriata dieback cankerSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataSettore AGR/12 - Patologia VegetaleBotryosphaeriaceae silky-oak D. seriata dieback canker.lcsh:QK1-989
researchProduct

Antinociceptive Effects of Turkish Endemic Eryngium kotschyi Boiss. Roots by Bioactivity Guided Fractionation

2010

Eryngium species (Apiaceae) are well known plants in ethnobotanical culture throughout world and also in Turkey. They are used as antitussive, diuretic as well as for analgesic and antiinflammatory purposes in traditional medicine. This study aimed to evaluate the antinociceptive activity of endemic Eryngium kotschyi Boiss. root extracts by bioguided fractionation. The antinociceptive activity of the extracts/fractions/compound was studied in mice using acetic acid induced writhing test and and hot plate test. The methanolic extract was sequentially partitioned with hexane, dichloromethane and water saturated n-butanol. Among the fractions, the n-BuOH fraction showed the most significant re…

lcsh:Chemistrylcsh:QD241-441Eryngium kotschyilcsh:QD1-999lcsh:Organic chemistrylcsh:BotanyErdem S. A. ARIHAN O. MITAINE-OFFER A. İSKİT A. B. Kartal M. LACAILLE-DUBOIS M. -Antinociceptive Effects of Turkish Endemic Eryngium kotschyi Boiss. Roots by Bioactivity Guided Fractionation- RECORDS OF NATURAL PRODUCTS cilt.10 ss.168-175 2016fractionationtriterpene saponinantinociceptiveApiaceaelcsh:QK1-989
researchProduct

Traceability and Labelling of Food Products from the Consumer Perspective

2017

Traceability of food products plays an important role in improving value chain processes of businesses and their reputation in the marketplace. In the past few years, consumers' concerns about food quality and personal health have been closely related to a continuous improvement of traceability systems and government regulation. Labeling of food products is a very important tool for consumers to acquire information about the quality of food, particularly at the purchase decision stage of the buying process. The objective of this research is to know consumers' preferences in regards to information contained in food labels. More particularly, this study focuses on what information is required…

lcsh:Computer engineering. Computer hardwareSettore AGR/01 - Economia Ed Estimo Ruralelcsh:TP155-156lcsh:TK7885-7895lcsh:Chemical engineeringTraceability Food Products Consumer Perspective Consumers preference Quality productsChemical Engineering Transactions
researchProduct

Pyriproxyfen, a juvenoid hormone analog, does not induce male production in parthenogenetic lineages of Eucypris virens (Crustacea: Ostracoda)

2007

Analogs of juvenoid hormones are increasingly recommended for controlling insect pests in agriculture. One of these analogs, pyriproxyfen, was found to be very potent in inducing male production in Daphnia under laboratory conditions, even after acute exposure. Other studies also demonstrated a major role of juvenoid hormones for the sex determination in arthropods that have sex chromosomes. We exposed parthenogenetic lineages of the freshwater ostracod Eucypris virens to a wide range of pyriproxyfen concentrations, and compared mortality and fecundity between treated and control animals. Animals exposed to the highest concentrations of pyriproxyfen (3-30 nM) experienced a higher mortality …

lcsh:GE1-350EcologybiologyEcologylcsh:Geography. Anthropology. RecreationZoologyParthenogenesisAquatic ScienceFecunditybiology.organism_classificationDaphniaCrustaceanchemistry.chemical_compoundlcsh:GchemistryHormone analogPyriproxyfenPyriproxyfen juvenoid hormones male induction geographic parthenogenesis Ostracodalcsh:GB3-5030lcsh:Physical geographyHatchlinglcsh:Environmental sciencesSex ratioWater Science and Technology
researchProduct

Experimental test on the use of MS-222 for ostracod anaesthesia: concentration, immersion period and recovery time

2010

Anaesthesia of animals may be useful for different purposes, particularly for veterinary reasons or in experimental research, for manipulation or treatment of immobilized but alive animals. Its use in crustaceans is not uncommon, but it has never been described for Ostracoda. We provide brief and preliminary guidelines on the use of the tricaine mesylate (MS-222) on the widespread freshwater ostracod Eucypris virens and we show that this compound is an effective anaesthetic used as a bath treatment at minimum concentrations of 500 mg L-1. This value is considerably higher than that recommended for other aquatic animals like fish. Recovery time, ranging from 5 to 15 minutes, is mostly determ…

lcsh:GE1-350Tricaine mesylateEcologybiologyEucypris virens Crustacea tricaine mesylate sedation surgery markinglcsh:Geography. Anthropology. RecreationAquatic animalAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationImage captureExperimental researchchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryEucypris virenslcsh:GAnesthesiaOstracodImmersion (virtual reality)lcsh:GB3-5030lcsh:Physical geographylcsh:Environmental sciencesWater Science and TechnologyJournal of Limnology
researchProduct

New Insight into Immunity and Immunopathology of Rickettsial Diseases

2011

Human rickettsial diseases comprise a variety of clinical entities caused by microorganisms belonging to the generaRickettsia,Orientia,Ehrlichia, andAnaplasma. These microorganisms are characterized by a strictly intracellular location which has, for long, impaired their detailed study. In this paper, the critical steps taken by these microorganisms to play their pathogenic roles are discussed in detail on the basis of recent advances in our understanding of molecularRickettsia-host interactions, preferential target cells, virulence mechanisms, three-dimensional structures of bacteria effector proteins, upstream signalling pathways and signal transduction systems, and modulation of gene exp…

lcsh:Immunologic diseases. AllergySettore MED/09 - Medicina InternaVirulence FactorsRickettsial diseasesImmunologyRickettsiaceae InfectionsVirulenceImmunopathologyReview ArticleAdaptive ImmunityHost SpecificityMicrobiologyImmune systemBacterial ProteinsImmunityAnimalsHumansImmunology and AllergyAnaplasmaMolecular Targeted TherapyRickettsiaArthropodsPathogenRickettsieaeGeneticsImmunopathology; Rickettsial diseasesbiologyEffectorGeneral Medicinebacterial infections and mycosesbiology.organism_classificationAcquired immune systemOrientiaImmunity InnateGene Expression RegulationHost-Pathogen Interactionslcsh:RC581-607Signal TransductionClinical and Developmental Immunology
researchProduct

Mobile genetic element proliferation and gene inactivation impact over the genome structure and metabolic capabilities of Sodalis glossinidius, the s…

2010

Abstract Background Genome reduction is a common evolutionary process in symbiotic and pathogenic bacteria. This process has been extensively characterized in bacterial endosymbionts of insects, where primary mutualistic bacteria represent the most extreme cases of genome reduction consequence of a massive process of gene inactivation and loss during their evolution from free-living ancestors. Sodalis glossinidius, the secondary endosymbiont of tsetse flies, contains one of the few complete genomes of bacteria at the very beginning of the symbiotic association, allowing to evaluate the relative impact of mobile genetic element proliferation and gene inactivation over the structure and funct…

lcsh:QH426-470Tsetse Flieslcsh:BiotechnologyPseudogeneProphagesBacterial genome sizeBiologyWigglesworthia glossinidiaGenomeEnterobacteriaceaelcsh:TP248.13-248.65GeneticsAnimalsGene SilencingSymbiosisGeneGeneticsfungiSodalis glossinidiusGenomicsbiology.organism_classificationlcsh:GeneticsWigglesworthiaGenes BacterialDNA Transposable ElementsMobile genetic elementsPseudogenesBiotechnologyResearch ArticleBMC Genomics
researchProduct