Search results for "Interaction"

showing 10 items of 5710 documents

Data from: Carry-over effects of conditions at the wintering grounds on breeding plumage signals in a migratory bird: roles of phenotypic plasticity …

2016

To understand the consequences of ever-changing environment on the dynamics of phenotypic traits, distinguishing between selection processes and individual plasticity is crucial. We examined individual consistency/plasticity in several male secondary sexual traits expressed during the breeding season (white wing and forehead patch size, UV reflectance of white wing patch and dorsal melanin colouration) in a migratory pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleuca) population over an 11-year period. Furthermore, we studied carry-over effects of three environmental variables (NAO, a climatic index; NDVI, a vegetation index; and rainfall) at the wintering grounds (during pre-breeding moult) on the expres…

medicine and health caredifferential mortalitymicroevolutionLife SciencesMedicineseasonal interactionsUV reflectanceFicedula hypoleucamelaninsecondary sexual trait
researchProduct

Data from: Species’ ecological functionality alters the outcome of fish stocking success predicted by a food-web model

2018

Fish stocking is used worldwide in conservation and management but its effects on food-web dynamics and ecosystem stability are poorly known. To better understand these effects and predict the outcomes of stocking, we used an empirically validated network model of a well-studied lake ecosystem. We simulate two stocking scenarios with two native fish species valuable for fishing. In the first scenario, we stock planktivorous fish (whitefish) larvae in the ecosystem. This leads to 1% increase in adult whitefish biomasses and decreases the biomasses of the top predator (perch). In the second scenario, we also stock perch larvae in the ecosystem. This decreases the planktivorous whitefish and t…

medicine and health carefeeding interactionsallometric trophic network modelLife SciencesMedicinefood-web dynamics
researchProduct

Data from: Age-related effects of chronic hantavirus infection on female host fecundity

2016

1. Pathogens often cause detrimental effects to their hosts and, consequently, may influence host population dynamics that may, in turn, feed back to pathogen transmission dynamics. Understanding fitness effects of pathogens upon animal host populations can help to predict the risks that zoonotic pathogens pose to humans. 2. Here we determine whether chronic infection by Puumala hantavirus (PUUV) affects important fitness-related traits, namely the probability of breeding, reproductive effort and mother and offspring condition, in the bank vole (Myodes glareolus). Using 9 years empirical data in a PUUV endemic area in Central Finland, we found differences between reproductive characteristic…

medicine and health carefemale fecunditydisease transmissionendemic pathogenPuumala hantavirusMyodes glareolusLife SciencesMedicinehost-pathogen interactionResource allocation
researchProduct

Data from: Divergent ectoparasite infections in sympatric cichlid species in Lake Victoria

2018

Parasitism has been proposed as a factor in host speciation, as an agent affecting coexistence of host species in species rich communities, and as a driver of post-speciation diversification. Young adaptive radiations of closely related host species of varying ecological and genomic differentiation provide interesting opportunities to explore interactions between patterns of parasitism, divergence and coexistence of sympatric host species. Here, we explored patterns in ectoparasitism in a community of 16 fully sympatric cichlid species at Makobe Island in Lake Victoria, a model system of vertebrate adaptive radiation. We asked if host niche, host abundance or host genetic differentiation ex…

medicine and health carehost-parasite interactionsJanzen-Connell mechanismGenomic differentiationMedicinesympatric speciationLife sciencesincipient species
researchProduct

Data from: Collective defence portfolios of ant hosts shift with social parasite pressure

2014

Host defences become increasingly costly as parasites breach successive lines of defence. Because selection favours hosts that successfully resist parasitism at the lowest possible cost, escalating coevolutionary arms races are likely to drive host defence portfolios towards ever more expensive strategies. We investigated the interplay between host defence portfolios and social parasite pressure by comparing 17 populations of two Temnothorax ant species. When successful, collective aggression not only prevents parasitation but also spares host colonies the cost of searching for and moving to a new nest site. However, once parasites breach the host's nest defence, host colonies should resort…

medicine and health carehost-parasite interactionsProtomognathus americanussocial insectsTemnothorax curvispinosusbrood parasitesdefence portfoliosMedicineTemnothorax longispinosusLife sciencesfrontline defences
researchProduct

Data from: Quality attracts parasites: host condition-dependent chemo-orientation of trematode larvae

2014

1. Environmental factors impairing physiological condition of organisms are assumed to predispose them to parasite infections. This is because host immune function is typically condition-dependent. However, poor physiological condition has been reported to reduce host susceptibility to parasites in various systems. 2. We examined whether such an effect can be due to altered exposure of hosts to active parasite transmission stages by investigating chemo-orientation of free-swimming cercariae larvae of a parasite Echinoparyphium aconiatum towards its snail host Lymnaea stagnalis. 3. We used both long-term and short-term feeding treatments to manipulate the body condition and physiological tra…

medicine and health carehost-parasite interactionscercariachemical detectionparasitic diseaseshost findingMedicineLymnaea stagnalisLife sciencesEchinoparyphium aconiatum
researchProduct

Data from: Phosphorus limitation enhances parasite impact: feedback effects at the population level

2014

Background: Nutrient deficiency affects the growth and population dynamics of consumers. Endoparasites can be seen as consumers that drain carbon (C) or energy from their host while simultaneously competing for limiting resources such as phosphorus (P). Depending on the relative demands of the host and the parasite for the limiting nutrient, intensified resource competition under nutrient limitation can either reduce the parasite?s effect on the host or further reduce the fitness of the nutrient-limited host. So far, knowledge of how nutrient limitation affects parasite performance at the host population level and how this affects the host populations is limited. Results: We followed the po…

medicine and health carenutrient limitationDaphnia magnafungiGlugoides intestinalisMedicineHost-parasite interactionLife sciences
researchProduct

 A Mechanistic Approach to theIn VivoAnti-Inflammatory Activity of Sesquiterpenoid Compounds Isolated fromInula viscosa

2001

The present study was designed to examine the anti-inflammatory activity of the sesquiterpenoids ilicic acid and inuviscolide, isolated from Inula viscosa, on cell degranulation, leukotriene biosynthesis, neurogenic drive and glucocorticoid-like interactions. Swiss female mice were used to measure the ear oedema induced by phorbol esters or ethyl phenylpropiolate (EPP), and the paw oedema induced by phospholipase A(2) (PLA(2)) or serotonin. Drug treatment consisted of one topically-applied dose in the ear models and a subcutaneous or intraperitoneal injection in the paw models. Quantitative analysis of leukotriene B(4) (LTB(4)) formation was performed on rat peritoneal neutrophils by high p…

medicine.drug_classLeukotriene B4medicine.medical_treatmentIntraperitoneal injectionPharmaceutical SciencePharmacologyBiologyPharmacognosyLeukotriene B4Cell DegranulationAnti-inflammatoryAnalytical ChemistryInhibitory Concentration 50MiceStructure-Activity Relationshipchemistry.chemical_compoundPhospholipase A2In vivoDrug DiscoverymedicineAnimalsDrug InteractionsGlucocorticoidsInflammationPharmacologyPhospholipase ADose-Response Relationship DrugMolecular StructureAnti-Inflammatory Agents Non-SteroidalOrganic ChemistryComplementary and alternative medicineBiochemistryMechanism of actionchemistrybiology.proteinMolecular MedicineFemaleInulaPlant Preparationsmedicine.symptomSesquiterpenesPhytotherapyPlanta Medica
researchProduct

Non-covalent interactions of N-phenyl-1,5-dimethyl-1H-imidazole-4-carboxamide 3-oxide derivatives—a case of intramolecular N-oxide hydrogen bonds

2017

The crystal structures of new N-phenyl-1,5-dimethyl-1H-imidazole-4-carboxamide 3-oxide derivatives are reported. The results of X-ray diffraction showed the existence of intramolecular hydrogen bonding between carboxamide nitrogen donors and N-oxide oxygen acceptors. The use of Quantum Theory of Atoms in Molecules allowed its classification as a strong interaction, with energy about 10 kcal/mol, and of intermediate character between closed shell and shared bonds. Comparison of experimental data and quantum theoretical calculations indicated that a substituent attached to the phenyl ring in the para position influences the strength and geometry of the title hydrogen bonding. Stronger π-elect…

medicine.drug_classLow-barrier hydrogen bondintramolecular hydrogen bondSubstituentCarboxamideN-oxide group010402 general chemistry01 natural scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundComputational chemistrymedicineNon-covalent interactionsHirshfeld surface analysisPhysical and Theoretical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_classification010405 organic chemistryHydrogen bondIntermolecular forceAtoms in moleculesCondensed Matter Physicshydrogen bonding0104 chemical sciencesCrystallographychemistryQTAIMIntramolecular forcesubstituent effectStructural Chemistry
researchProduct

Antibodies to cell surface ganglioside GD3 perturb inductive epithelial-mesenchymal interactions

1988

Abstract Most epithelial sheets emerge during embryogenesis by a branching and growth of the epithelium. The surrounding mesenchyme is crucial for this process. We report that branching morphogenesis and the formation of a new epithelium from the mesenchyme in the embryonic kidney can be blocked by a monoclonal antibody reacting with a surface glycolipid, disialoganglioside G D3 . In contrast, a more than 10-fold excess of antibodies to adhesive glycoproteins (N-CAM, L -CAM, fibronectin) fails to inhibit morphogenesis. Although the anti-G D3 antibody affected epithelial development, the disialoganglioside G D3 was expressed not in the epithelium, but in the mesenchyme surrounding the develo…

medicine.drug_classMesenchymeMorphogenesisFluorescent Antibody TechniqueBiologyKidneyMonoclonal antibodyEpitheliumGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyMesodermMiceOrgan Culture TechniquesCell–cell interactionGangliosidesMorphogenesismedicineAnimalsGanglioside GD3Embryonic InductionMembrane GlycoproteinsAntibodies MonoclonalEmbryonic stem cellEpitheliumFibronectinsCell biologyFibronectinmedicine.anatomical_structureBiochemistryAntigens Surfacebiology.proteinUreterCell Adhesion MoleculesCell
researchProduct