Search results for "Protection"

showing 10 items of 1623 documents

Living on the edge: assessing the extinction risk of critically endangered Bonelli’s eagle in Italy

2012

Background: The population of Bonelli’s eagle (Aquila fasciata) has declined drastically throughout its European range due to habitat degradation and unnatural elevated mortality. There are less than 1500 breeding pairs accounted for in Europe, and the species is currently catalogued as Critically Endangered in Italy, where the 22 territories of Sicily, represent nearly 95% of the entire Italian population. However, despite national and European conservation concerns, the species currently lacks a specific conservation plan, and no previous attempts to estimate the risk of extinction have been made. Methodology/Principal Findings: We incorporated the most updated demographic information ava…

MaleBiologiaEaglesBonelli Eagle PVA Extinction risk Sicily Vulnerable species Steppe-land birdsExtinction riskPopulation DynamicsEndangered speciesSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaPopulation Modelinglcsh:MedicineBonelli’s eagleCritically endangeredOrnithologyZoologiaZoologíalcsh:ScienceConservation Scienceeducation.field_of_studyMultidisciplinaryEcologybiologyEcologyBiodiversityCritically endangeredBonelli's eagleItalyEthnologyFemaleChristian ministryResearch ArticlePopulationPopulationExtinction BiologicalRisk AssessmentPopulation MetricsAnimalsTerrestrial EcologyPopulation GrowtheducationBiologyEcosystemSpecies ExtinctionExtinctionPopulation BiologyEndangered Specieslcsh:RComputational BiologyRestoration Ecologybiology.organism_classificationBiodiversitatlcsh:QPopulation EcologyZoologyEnvironmental Protection
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Nest Site Selection by Kentish Plover Suggests a Trade-Off between Nest-Crypsis and Predator Detection Strategies

2014

Predation is one of the main causes of adult mortality and breeding failure for ground-nesting birds. Micro-habitat structure around nests plays a critical role in minimizing predation risk. Plovers nest in sites with little vegetation cover to maximize the incubating adult visibility, but many studies suggest a trade-off between nest-crypsis and predator detection strategies. However, this trade-off has not been explored in detail because methods used so far do not allow estimating the visibility with regards to critical factors such as slope or plant permeability to vision. Here, we tested the hypothesis that Kentish plovers select exposed sites according to a predator detection strategy,…

MaleBiologialcsh:MedicineTrade-offBird eggNesting BehaviorPredationBehavioral EcologyCharadriiformesCoastal EcosystemsNestEscape ReactionZoologiaZoologíalcsh:SciencePredatorAvian BiologyMultidisciplinaryEcologyEcologyReproductionHabitatCrypsisFemaleCoastal EcologyResearch ArticleConservation of Natural ResourcesKentish ploversPredator detection strategiesBiologyPoaceaeEcosystemsCrypsis strategyDogsAnimalsHumansTerrestrial EcologyEcosystemKentish ploverlcsh:REcology and Environmental SciencesBiology and Life Sciencesbiology.organism_classificationSpainPredatory Behaviorlcsh:QPopulation EcologyVisual FieldsZoologyEnvironmental ProtectionPLoS ONE
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Becoming and being a biobank donor: The role of relationships and ethics

2020

Relational aspects, such as involvement of donor’s relatives or friends in the decision-making on participation in a research biobank, providing relatives’ health data to researchers, or sharing research findings with relatives should be considered when reflecting on ethical aspects of research biobanks. The aim of this paper is to explore what the role of donor’s relatives and friends is in the process of becoming and being a biobank donor and which ethical issues arise in this context. We performed qualitative analysis of 40 qualitative semi-structured interviews with biobank donors and researchers. The results show that relatedness to relatives or other types of close relationships playe…

MaleBiomedical ResearchEmotionsFace (sociological concept)Social SciencesFriendsResearch EthicsCognitionSociologyInformed consentMedicine and Health SciencesPsychologyHuman FamiliesResearch Integritymedia_commonBiological Specimen Banks0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinary030305 genetics & heredityQRPublic relationsResearch AssessmentMiddle AgedBiobankResearch PersonnelTissue DonorsGeneral Data Protection RegulationMedicineFemalePsychologyResearch ArticleMedical EthicsAdultScience PolicyScienceDecision MakingClinical Decision-MakingContext (language use)Research and Analysis Methods03 medical and health sciencesGeneticsmedia_common.cataloged_instanceHumansFamilyEuropean union030304 developmental biologyNutritionAgedResearch ethicsMotivationbusiness.industryCognitive PsychologyBiology and Life SciencesLatviaDietCognitive SciencebusinessMedical HumanitiesMedical ethicsNeurosciencePLoS ONE
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Clobetasol promotes neuromuscular plasticity in mice after motoneuronal loss via sonic hedgehog signaling, immunomodulation and metabolic rebalancing

2021

AbstractMotoneuronal loss is the main feature of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, although pathogenesis is extremely complex involving both neural and muscle cells. In order to translationally engage the sonic hedgehog pathway, which is a promising target for neural regeneration, recent studies have reported on the neuroprotective effects of clobetasol, an FDA-approved glucocorticoid, able to activate this pathway via smoothened. Herein we sought to examine functional, cellular, and metabolic effects of clobetasol in a neurotoxic mouse model of spinal motoneuronal loss. We found that clobetasol reduces muscle denervation and motor impairments in part by restoring sonic hedgehog signaling and …

MaleCancer ResearchPhysiology129 StrainBiochemistryMiceDatabases GeneticMedicineMyocyteMotor NeuronsNeuronal PlasticitySkeletalSmoothened ReceptorHedgehog signaling pathwayMuscle atrophyMitochondriaAstrogliosisNeuroprotective AgentsMusclemedicine.symptomInflammation MediatorsSignal TransductionCholera ToxinMice 129 StrainhedgehogImmunologyMotor ActivityNeuroprotectionArticleDatabasesCellular and Molecular NeurosciencesmoothenedGeneticAnimalsHumansHedgehog ProteinsMuscle SkeletalHedgehogGlucocorticoidsMuscle DenervationQH573-671Animalbusiness.industryAmyotrophic Lateral SclerosisGlial biologyCell Biologymedicine.diseaseSaporinsSpineMitochondria MuscleDisease Models AnimalclobetasolinflammationCase-Control StudiesDisease ModelsDiseases of the nervous systemCytologySmoothenedbusinessEnergy MetabolismNeuroscienceOpen Field Test
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Protective activation of the endocannabinoid system during ischemia in dopamine neurons

2006

Endocannabinoids act as neuroprotective molecules promptly released in response to pathological stimuli. Hence, they may represent one component of protection and/or repair mechanisms mobilized by dopamine (DA) neurons under ischemia. Here, we show that the endocannabinoid 2-arachidonoyl-glycerol (2-AG) plays a key role in protecting DA neurons from ischemia-induced altered spontaneous activity both in vitro and in vivo. Accordingly, neuroprotection can be elicited through moderate cannabinoid receptor type-1 (CB1) activation. Conversely, blockade of endocannabinoid actions through CB1 receptor antagonism worsens the outcome of transient ischemia on DA neuronal activity. These findings indi…

MaleCannabinoid receptorDopaminePharmacologyBrain IschemiaMidbrainRats Sprague-DawleyMicePiperidinesReceptor Cannabinoid CB1IschemiaPremovement neuronal activityReceptorMice KnockoutNeuronsmusculoskeletal neural and ocular physiologyEndocannabinoid systemCB1NeuroprotectionElectrophysiologyNeurologylipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)Rimonabantpsychological phenomena and processesmedicine.drugSignal TransductionMorpholinesIschemiaArachidonic AcidsBiologyIn Vitro TechniquesNaphthalenesNeuroprotectionAmidohydrolasesGlycerideslcsh:RC321-571DopamineCannabinoid Receptor ModulatorsmedicineAnimalslcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryEndocannabinoidVentral Tegmental Areamedicine.diseaseBlockadeBenzoxazinesRatsnervous systemPyrazolesNeuroscienceEndocannabinoidsNeurobiology of Disease
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A restricted population of CB1 cannabinoid receptors with neuroprotective activity.

2014

The CB1 cannabinoid receptor, the main molecular target of endocannabinoids and cannabis active components, is the most abundant G protein-coupled receptor in the mammalian brain. Of note, CB1 receptors are expressed at the synapses of two opposing (i.e., GABAergic/inhibitory and glutamatergic/excitatory) neuronal populations, so the activation of one and/or another receptor population may conceivably evoke different effects. Despite the widely reported neuroprotective activity of the CB1 receptor in animal models, the precise pathophysiological relevance of those two CB1 receptor pools in neurodegenerative processes is unknown. Here, we first induced excitotoxic damage in the mouse brain b…

MaleCannabinoid receptorPopulationNeurotoxinsExcitotoxicityGlutamic AcidBiologymedicine.disease_causeNeuroprotectionGlutamatergicMiceOrgan Culture TechniquesReceptor Cannabinoid CB1medicineAnimalsHumansGABAergic NeuronsReceptoreducationCaenorhabditis elegans ProteinsAgedCerebral CortexMice KnockoutNeuronseducation.field_of_studyMultidisciplinaryIntegrasesmusculoskeletal neural and ocular physiologyNeurodegenerative DiseasesBiological SciencesMiddle AgedReceptors GABA-AEndocannabinoid systemCorpus Striatumnervous systemGABAergiclipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)FemaleNeurosciencepsychological phenomena and processesEndocannabinoidsSynaptosomesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
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Endocannabinoids mediate neuroprotection after transient focal cerebral ischemia.

2008

The endocannabinoids anandamide (AEA) and palmitoylethanolamide (PEA) act as endogenous protective factors of the brain, using different pathways of neuroprotection against neuronal damage. Although several in vivo and in vitro studies confirmed the neuroprotective efficacy of endocannabinoids, no experimental settings compare and explore the neuroprotective potential of AEA and PEA in an acute stroke model. In this study, we investigated the neuroprotective potential by infarct measurement after high (30 mg/kg body weight) and low dosage administration (10 mg/kg body weight) of the endocannabinoid PEA in 49 male Wistar rats. In additions we studied infarct volumes of 22 male Wistar rats re…

MaleCannabinoid receptormedicine.medical_treatmentIschemiaPharmacologyNeuroprotectionBrain ischemiachemistry.chemical_compoundCannabinoid Receptor ModulatorsMedicineAnimalsRats WistarMolecular BiologyStrokePalmitoylethanolamidebusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceBrainRecovery of Functionmedicine.diseaseEndocannabinoid systemRatsNeuroprotective AgentschemistryIschemic Attack TransientAnesthesialipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)Neurology (clinical)CannabinoidbusinessDevelopmental BiologyEndocannabinoidsBrain research
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Sex differences in anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity: the benefits of estrogens

2019

Anthracyclines are the cornerstone for many oncologic treatments, but their cardiotoxicity has been recognized for several decades. Female subjects, especially before puberty and adolescence, or after menopause, seem to be more at increased risk, with the prognostic impact of this sex issue being less consistent compared to other cardiovascular risk factors. Several studies imply that sex differences could depend on the lack of the protective effect of sex hormones against the anthracycline-initiated damage in cardiac cells, or on differential mitochondria-related oxidative gene expression. This is also reflected by the results obtained with different diagnostic methods, such as cardiovascu…

MaleCardiac & Cardiovascular SystemsMagnetic Resonance Spectroscopyand protection from anthracycline cardiotoxicitymedicine.disease_causeBioinformaticsRisk FactorsAnthracycline cardiotoxicityGender differenceGender differencesAnthracyclinesGonadal Steroid Hormones1102 Cardiorespiratory Medicine and HaematologyAMERICAN SOCIETYCardioprotectionSex CharacteristicsHeartPrognosisMitochondriaMenopauseEchocardiographyReperfusion InjuryHEART-FAILUREAnthracycline cardiotoxicity; Gender differences; Pathophysiology monitoring and protection from anthracycline cardiotoxicity; Anthracyclines; Biomarkers; Cardiotonic Agents; Cardiotoxicity; Echocardiography; Female; Gonadal Steroid Hormones; Heart; Heart Failure; Humans; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Male; Mitochondria; Nuclear Medicine; Oxidative Stress; Prognosis; Reperfusion Injury; Risk Factors; Sex CharacteristicsFemaleCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicineLife Sciences & BiomedicinePOSITION PAPERCARDIAC DYSFUNCTIONCardiotonic AgentsAnthracyclineSPECKLE-TRACKINGIschemiaDRUG CARDIOTOXICITYPathophysiologymedicineHumansCHILDHOOD-CANCER SURVIVORSBREAST-CANCERPathophysiology monitoring and protection from anthracycline cardiotoxicityHeart FailureCardiotoxicityScience & Technologybusiness.industryWORKING GROUPmedicine.diseaseCardiotoxicityOxidative StressmonitoringCardiovascular System & HematologyHeart failureCardiovascular System & CardiologyRISK-FACTORSNuclear MedicinebusinessOxidative stressAnthracycline cardiotoxicity; Gender differences; Pathophysiology monitoring and protection from anthracycline cardiotoxicityBiomarkersHormone
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Neuroprotective properties of mildronate, a mitochondria-targeted small molecule.

2010

Mildronate, a representative of the aza-butyrobetaine class of drugs with proven cardioprotective efficacy, was recently found to prevent dysfunction of complex I in rat liver mitochondria. The present study demonstrates that mildronate also acts as a neuroprotective agent. In a mouse model of azidothymidine (anti-HIV drug) neurotoxicity, mildronate reduced the azidothymidine-induced alterations in mouse brain tissue: it normalized the increase in caspase-3, cellular apoptosis susceptibility protein (CAS) and iNOS expression assessed by quantitative and semi-quantitative analysis. Mildronate also normalized the changes in cytochrome c oxidase (COX) expression, reduced the expression of glia…

MaleCell signalingAnti-HIV AgentsNitric Oxide Synthase Type IIMice Inbred StrainsMitochondrionPharmacologyNeuroprotectionElectron Transport Complex IVMiceCellular Apoptosis Susceptibility ProteinGlial Fibrillary Acidic ProteinmedicineAnimalsLymphocytesNeuroinflammationGlial fibrillary acidic proteinbiologyCaspase 3General NeuroscienceNeurodegenerationNeurotoxicityBrainmedicine.diseaseDisease Models AnimalNeuroprotective AgentsBiochemistrybiology.proteinNeurotoxicity SyndromesZidovudineCellular apoptosis susceptibility proteinMethylhydrazinesNeuroscience letters
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Nitric oxide is involved in anoxic preconditioning neuroprotection in rat hippocampal slices.

1999

Sublethal anoxia/ischemia protects against subsequent damaging insults in intact brain or hippocampal slices. To help further understand mechanisms underlying anoxic/ischemic preconditioning, we tested three hypotheses which were that: (a) anoxic preconditioning (APC) improves electrical recovery in rat hippocampal slices; (b) anoxic preconditioning requires nitric oxide (NO); and (c) anoxic preconditioning blocks mitochondrial dysfunction that occurs following re-oxygenation after anoxia. Control hippocampal slices underwent a single 'test' anoxic insult. Experimental slices were preconditioned by 3 short anoxic insults prior to the 'test' insult. Evoked potentials (EPs), and NADH redox st…

MaleCentral nervous systemIschemiaHippocampusPharmacologyMitochondrionHippocampal formationIn Vitro TechniquesNitric OxideNeuroprotectionHippocampusNitric oxidechemistry.chemical_compoundmedicineAnimalsRats WistarHypoxia BrainIschemic PreconditioningMolecular Biologybusiness.industryGeneral Neurosciencemedicine.diseaseNADRatsmedicine.anatomical_structureNeuroprotective AgentschemistrySynapsesIschemic preconditioningNeurology (clinical)businessNeuroscienceOxidation-ReductionDevelopmental BiologyBrain research
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