Search results for "digestive"

showing 10 items of 2631 documents

Reduced CD27−IgD− B Cells in Blood and Raised CD27−IgD− B Cells in Gut-Associated Lymphoid Tissue in Inflammatory Bowel Disease

2019

The intestinal mucosa in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) contains increased frequencies of lymphocytes and a disproportionate increase in plasma cells secreting immunoglobulin (Ig)G relative to other isotypes compared to healthy controls. Despite consistent evidence of B lineage cells in the mucosa in IBD, little is known of B cell recruitment to the gut in IBD. Here we analyzed B cells in blood of patients with Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) with a range of disease activities. We analyzed the frequencies of known B cell subsets in blood and observed a consistent reduction in the proportion of CD27−IgD− B cells expressing all Ig isotypes in the blood in IBD (independent o…

mass cytometrylcsh:Immunologic diseases. Allergyimmune system diseasesinflammatory bowel diseasememory B cellsGALThemic and immune systemschemical and pharmacologic phenomenabiologicslcsh:RC581-607digestive system diseasesustekinumabFrontiers in Immunology
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Dissimilar Regulation of Antimicrobial Proteins in the Midgut of Spodoptera exigua Larvae Challenged with Bacillus thuringiensis Toxins or Baculoviru…

2015

Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) and lysozymes are the main effectors of the insect immune system, and they are involved in both local and systemic responses. Among local responses, midgut immune reaction plays an important role in fighting pathogens that reach the insect body through the oral route, as do many microorganisms used in pest control. Under this point of view, understanding how insects defend themselves locally during the first phases of infections caused by food-borne pathogens is important to further improve microbial control strategies. In the present study, we analyzed the transcriptional response of AMPs and lysozymes in the midgut of Spodoptera exigua (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae…

media_common.quotation_subjectAntimicrobial peptidesMolecular Sequence DataBacillus thuringiensislcsh:MedicineInsectSpodopteraSpodopteraMicrobiologyHemolysin ProteinsBacterial ProteinsBacillus thuringiensisExiguaHemolymphAnimalsAmino Acid SequencePest Control Biologicallcsh:SciencePhylogenymedia_commonMultidisciplinarybiologyBacillus thuringiensis ToxinsSequence Homology Amino AcidMonophenol Monooxygenasefungilcsh:RMidgutbiology.organism_classificationEndotoxinsSettore AGR/11 - ENTOMOLOGIA GENERALE E APPLICATALarvaNoctuidaeInsect ProteinsMuramidaselcsh:QBaculoviridaeDigestive SystemAntimicrobial Cationic PeptidesResearch ArticlePLoS ONE
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Lipid-Based Edible Films and Coatings

2009

The quality of food products depends on their organoleptic, nutritional, and microbiological properties, all of which are subject to dynamic changes during storage and distribution. Such changes are mainly due to interactions between foods and their surrounding environment or to migration between different components within a composite food.

media_common.quotation_subjectFood productsdigestive oral and skin physiologyOrganolepticEnvironmental scienceQuality (business)sense organsFood scienceskin and connective tissue diseasesMoisture transfermedia_common
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Data from: Sibling cooperation in earwig families provides insights into the early evolution of social life

2013

The evolutionary transition from solitary to social life is driven by direct and indirect fitness benefits of social interactions. Understanding the conditions promoting the early evolution of social life therefore requires identification of these benefits in nonderived social systems, such as animal families where offspring are mobile and able to disperse and will survive independently. Family life is well known to provide benefits to offspring through parental care, but research on sibling interactions generally focused on fitness costs to offspring due to competitive behaviors. Here we show experimentally that sibling interactions also reflect cooperative behaviors in the form of food sh…

medicine and health caredigestive oral and skin physiologyMedicineSibling cooperationForficula auriculariaLife sciences
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Data from: Burying beetles regulate the microbiome of carcasses and use it to transmit a core microbiota to their offspring

2017

Necrophagous beetles utilize carrion, a highly nutritious resource that is susceptible to intense microbial competition, by treating it with antimicrobial anal and oral secretions. However, how this regulates the carcass microbiota remains unclear. Here, we show that carcasses prepared by the burying beetle Nicrophorus vespilloides undergo significant changes in their microbial communities subsequent to their burial and ‘preparation’. Prepared carcasses hosted a microbial community that was more similar to that of beetles’ anal and oral secretions than to the native carcass community or the surrounding soil, indicating that the beetles regulated the carcass microbiota. A core microbial comm…

medicine and health carefluids and secretionsanimal diseasespreservationdigestive oral and skin physiologymicrobial successiontechnology industry and agricultureLife SciencesMedicinefood and beveragesYarrowiasymbiosis
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Data from: Food limitation constrains host immune responses to nematode infections

2016

Trade-offs in the allocation of finite-energy resources among immunological defences and other physiological processes are believed to influence infection risk and disease severity in food-limited wildlife populations. However, this prediction has received little experimental investigation. Here we test the hypothesis that food limitation impairs the ability of wild field voles (Microtus agrestis) to mount an immune response against parasite infections. We conducted a replicated experiment on vole populations maintained in large outdoor enclosures during boreal winter, using food supplementation and anthelmintic treatment of intestinal nematodes. Innate immune responses against intestinal p…

medicine and health careivermectinVolefield experimentdigestive oral and skin physiologyLife SciencesMedicineEco-immunology
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Tropane-derived11C-labelled and18F-labelled DAT ligands

2013

Radiolabelling of cocaine-derived 3-phenyltropanes for dopamine transporter positron emission tomography with 18F and 11C is reviewed. Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

medicine.diagnostic_testbiologyStereochemistryeducationfungiOrganic ChemistryTropanedigestive systemBiochemistryhumanitiesAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryPositron emission tomographyDrug Discoverymedicinebiology.proteinRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingSpectroscopyDopamine transporterJournal of Labelled Compounds and Radiopharmaceuticals
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Variación de tamaño de la hiperplasia nodular focal mediante resonancia magnética

2013

Objective: To evaluate the changes in the size of focal nodular hyperplasia (FNH) during longterm magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) follow-up.

medicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industrydigestive oral and skin physiologyFocal nodular hyperplasiaMagnetic resonance imagingequipment and suppliesmedicine.diseaseMedicineRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingsense organsskin and connective tissue diseasesNuclear medicinebusinesshuman activitiesCartographyRadiología
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Differential Effects of Antibiotic Therapy on the Structure and Function of Human Gut Microbiota

2013

The human intestinal microbiota performs many essential functions for the host. Antimicrobial agents, such as antibiotics (AB), are also known to disturb microbial community equilibrium, thereby having an impact on human physiology. While an increasing number of studies investigate the effects of AB usage on changes in human gut microbiota biodiversity, its functional effects are still poorly understood. We performed a follow-up study to explore the effect of ABs with different modes of action on human gut microbiota composition and function. Four individuals were treated with different antibiotics and samples were taken before, during and after the AB course for all of them. Changes in the…

medicine.drug_classAntibioticslcsh:MedicineGut floradigestive systemMicrobiologyAntibiotic resistanceRNA Ribosomal 16SDrug Resistance BacterialmedicineHumansMicrobiomeMode of actionlcsh:ScienceMultidisciplinarybiologyMicrobiotalcsh:RBiodiversitybiology.organism_classificationAntimicrobialResistomeAnti-Bacterial AgentsGastrointestinal TractMetagenomicsMetagenomelcsh:QResearch ArticleFollow-Up StudiesPLoS ONE
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Mucin 1 downregulation associates with corticosteroid resistance in chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps

2013

Background A number of patients with chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps (CRSwNP) are resistant to oral corticosteroids. Mucin 1 (MUC1) shows anti-inflammatory properties, and its cytoplasmic tail (CT) interacts with transcription factors, facilitating their nuclear translocation. Because glucocorticoid receptor (GR) nuclear translocation is key to the anti-inflammatory effect of corticosteroids, we hypothesized that MUC1 is involved in the effectiveness of corticosteroids. Objective To analyze the role of MUC1 in corticosteroid effectiveness in different cohorts of patients with CRSwNP and elucidate the possible mechanisms involved. Methods Seventy-three patients with CRSwNP took oral…

medicine.drug_classImmunologyAnti-Inflammatory AgentsDrug ResistanceDown-Regulationdigestive systemNasal PolypsReceptors GlucocorticoidGlucocorticoid receptorDownregulation and upregulationAdrenal Cortex HormonesmedicineHumansImmunology and AllergyNasal polypsSinusitisskin and connective tissue diseasesneoplasmsDexamethasoneMUC1Rhinitisbusiness.industryMucin-1Toll-Like ReceptorsMucinmedicine.diseasebiological factorsdigestive system diseasesNasal MucosaGene Expression RegulationChronic DiseaseImmunologyImmunohistochemistryCorticosteroidbusinessSignal Transductionmedicine.drugJournal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology
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