Search results for "hormesis"

showing 10 items of 17 documents

Stress for invasion success? Temperature stress of preceding generations modifies the response to insecticide stress in an invasive pest insect

2012

Adaptation to stressful environments is one important factor influencing species invasion success. Tolerance to one stress may be complicated by exposure to other stressors experienced by the preceding generations. We studied whether parental temperature stress affects tolerance to insecticide in the invasive Colorado potato beetle Leptinotarsa decemlineata. Field-collected pyrethroid-resistant beetles were reared under either stressful (17°C) or favourable (23°C) insecticide-free environments for three generations. Then, larvae were exposed to pyrethroid insecticides in common garden conditions (23°C). Beetles were in general tolerant to stress. The parental temperature stress alone affect…

0106 biological sciencesIntegrated pest managementadaptive phenotypic plasticitycarry-overcross-generational effect010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesInvasive speciesinvasive speciesToxicology03 medical and health sciencespyrethroidsGeneticsLeptinotarsaEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesbiologystress toleranceStressorColorado potato beetleHormesisspecies rangeOriginal Articlesbiology.organism_classificationsub-lethal effects13. Climate actionta1181PEST analysisAdaptationGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesEvolutionary Applications
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Modulating Oxidant Levels to Promote Healthy Aging

2020

Significance: Free radicals although originally thought of as damaging molecules, inevitable side effects of the utilization of oxygen by cells, are now considered as signals that by modifying, among others, the thiol-disulfide balance regulate many cell processes from metabolism to cell cycle. Recent Advances: This review discusses the importance of the modulation of the oxidant levels through physiological strategies such as physical exercise or genetic manipulations such as the overexpression of antioxidant enzymes, in the promotion of healthy aging. Critical Issues: We have divided the review into five different sections. In the first two sections of the article "Oxidants are signals" a…

0301 basic medicineAgingAntioxidantPhysiologymedia_common.quotation_subjectmedicine.medical_treatment[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Clinical BiochemistryPhysical exerciseMitochondrionBiologyBiochemistryGene Expression Regulation EnzymologicHealthy Aging03 medical and health sciencesmedicineAnimalsHumansskeletal muscleMuscle SkeletalMolecular BiologyGeneral Environmental Sciencemedia_commonchemistry.chemical_classificationReactive oxygen species030102 biochemistry & molecular biologyexerciseHormesisLongevitySkeletal muscleCell BiologyOxidantshealth spanCell biologymitochondriaOxidative Stress030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryMitochondrial biogenesisglucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenaseGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesReactive Oxygen SpeciesOxidation-Reduction
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Role of Regular Physical Activity in Neuroprotection against Acute Ischemia

2020

One of the major obstacles that prevents an effective therapeutic intervention against ischemic stroke is the lack of neuroprotective agents able to reduce neuronal damage; this results in frequent evolution towards a long-term disability with limited alternatives available to aid in recovery. Nevertheless, various treatment options have shown clinical efficacy. Neurotrophins such as brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), widely produced throughout the brain, but also in distant tissues such as the muscle, have demonstrated regenerative properties with the potential to restore damaged neural tissue. Neurotrophins play a significant role in both protection and recovery of function followi…

0301 basic medicineAngiogenesismyokinesphysical activityReviewneurotrophinsAntioxidantsBrain Ischemialcsh:Chemistry0302 clinical medicineNeurotrophic factorsneuronal recoverylcsh:QH301-705.5SpectroscopybiologyGeneral MedicineNeuroprotectionComputer Science ApplicationsAcute DiseaseNeurotrophinmedicine.symptomNeurotrophinTraumatic brain injuryIschemiaInflammationNeuroprotectionCatalysisInorganic Chemistry03 medical and health sciencesHormesisMyokineMyokinemedicineischemic strokeAnimalsHumansPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryExerciseMolecular Biologybusiness.industryOrganic Chemistrymedicine.disease030104 developmental biologylcsh:Biology (General)lcsh:QD1-999inflammationbiology.proteinBrain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF)businessNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryInternational Journal of Molecular Sciences
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Exercise training as a drug to treat age associated frailty

2016

Exercise causes an increase in the production of free radicals [1]. As a result of a hormetic mechanism antioxidant enzymes are synthesised and the cells are protected against further oxidative stress. Thus, exercise can be considered as an antioxidant [2]. Age-associated frailty is a major medical and social concern as it can easily lead to dependency. In this review we describe that oxidative stress is associated with frailty and the mechanism by which exercise prevents age-associated frailty. We propose that individually tailored multicomponent exercise programmes are one of the best ways to prevent and to treat age-associated frailty.

0301 basic medicineDrugGerontologyAgingmedicine.medical_specialtyRos signallingFree Radicalsmedia_common.quotation_subjectmedicine.disease_causeBiochemistry03 medical and health sciencesPhysiology (medical)HumansMedicineIntensive care medicineExercisemedia_commonFrailtybusiness.industryMechanism (biology)TOR Serine-Threonine KinasesHormesisMitochondriaOxidative Stress030104 developmental biologybusinessOxidative stressFree Radical Biology and Medicine
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Increased survival of honeybees in the laboratory after simultaneous exposure to low doses of pesticides and bacteria

2018

Recent studies of honeybees and bumblebees have examined combinatory effects of different stressors, as insect pollinators are naturally exposed to multiple stressors. At the same time the potential influences of simultaneously occurring agricultural agents on insect pollinator health remain largely unknown. Due to different farming methods, and the drift of applied agents and manure, pollinators are most probably exposed to insecticides but also bacteria from organic fertilizers at the same time. We orally exposed honeybee workers to sub-lethal doses of the insecticide thiacloprid and two strains of the bacterium Enterococcus faecalis, which can occur in manure from farming animals. Our re…

0301 basic medicineInsecticidesmehiläisetPollinationPhysiologyThiazineslcsh:MedicineInsect010501 environmental sciencesPathology and Laboratory Medicine01 natural sciencesimmune responseCALORIC RESTRICTIONbakteeritToxicologyAPIS-MELLIFERA Lchemistry.chemical_compoundEatingNeonicotinoidsPollinatorMedicine and Health Scienceslcsh:SciencePollinationtarhamehiläinenbacteriaDIETARY RESTRICTIONmedia_common2. Zero hungerMultidisciplinarybiologyVirulenceEukaryotaAgricultureBeesThiaclopridBacterial PathogensInsectsBEE HYMENOPTERA APIDAEMedical Microbiologyimmuunivaste1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyRISK-ASSESSMENTPathogensHoney BeesAgrochemicalshenkiinjääminenResearch ArticlehoneybeesArthropodamedia_common.quotation_subjectImmunologyENTEROCOCCUS-FAECALISEnterococcus FaecalisMicrobiologysurvivalNEONICOTINOID INSECTICIDES03 medical and health sciencesHormesisStress PhysiologicalAnimalsFORAGING BEHAVIORLEARNING PERFORMANCESMicrobial Pathogens0105 earth and related environmental sciencesNutritionlcsh:RHormesisOrganismsFood ConsumptionBiology and Life Sciencestorjunta-aineetpesticidesPesticidebiology.organism_classificationManureInvertebratesHymenopteraDiet030104 developmental biologychemistryDROSOPHILA-MELANOGASTERta1181lcsh:QPest ControlPhysiological ProcessesBacteriaEnterococcus
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Reductive Stress: A New Concept in Alzheimer's Disease

2015

Reactive oxygen species play a physiological role in cell signaling and also a pathological role in diseases, when antioxidant defenses are overwhelmed causing oxidative stress. However, in this review we will focus on reductive stress that may be defined as a pathophysiological situation in which the cell becomes more reduced than in the normal, resting state. This may occur in hypoxia and also in several diseases in which a small but persistent generation of oxidants results in a hormetic overexpression of antioxidant enzymes that leads to a reduction in cell compartments. This is the case of Alzheimer's disease. Individuals at high risk of Alzheimer's (because they carry the ApoE4 allele…

0301 basic medicinePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyAntioxidantmedicine.medical_treatmentDiseaseBiologymedicine.disease_cause03 medical and health sciencesAlzheimer DiseasemedicineAnimalsHumanschemistry.chemical_classificationReactive oxygen speciesResting state fMRIHormesisHypoxia (medical)medicine.disease030104 developmental biologyNeurologychemistryImmunologyNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptomAlzheimer's diseaseOxidation-ReductionOxidative stress
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Theory about the Embryo Cryo‐Treatment

2017

Background To create hypothesis, which can give a logical explanation related to the benefits of freezing/thawing embryos. Cryopreservation is not only a technology used for storing embryos, but also a method of embryo treatment that can potentially improve the success rate in infertile couples. Methods From the analysis of multiple results in assisted reproductive technology, which have no satisfactory explanation to date, we found evidence to support a ‘therapeutic’ effect of the freezing/thawing of embryos on the process of recovery of the embryo and its subsequent implantation. Results Freezing/thawing is a way to activate the endogenous survival and repair responses in preimplantation …

0301 basic medicinemedicine.medical_treatmentembryoReview ArticleBiologycryopreservationCryopreservationAndrology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineEmbryo cryopreservationmedicineBlastocystReview Articlesembryo transferPregnancy030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicineAssisted reproductive technologyHormesisEmbryoCell Biologymedicine.diseaseEmbryo transfermitochondria030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structureReproductive Medicineembryonic structurespregnancyReproductive Medicine and Biology
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Healthy ageing and Mediterranean diet: A focus on hormetic phytochemicals

2021

Abstract Mediterranean diet (MedDiet) is rich in fruits and vegetables associated with longevity and a reduced risk of several age-related diseases. It is demonstrated that phytochemicals in these plant products enhance the positive effects of MedDiet by acting on the inflammatory state and reducing oxidative stress. Evidence support that these natural compounds act as hormetins, triggering one or more adaptive stress-response pathways at low doses. Activated stress-response pathways increase the expression of cytoprotective proteins and multiple genes that act as lifespan regulators, essential for the ageing process. In these ways, the hormetic response by phytochemicals such as resveratro…

AgingMediterranean dietmedia_common.quotation_subjectLongevityPhytochemicalsResveratrolBiologymedicine.disease_causeDiet MediterraneanHealthy Agingchemistry.chemical_compoundHormesisStress PhysiologicalMediterranean dietmedicineHumansFood sciencemedia_commonCellular stress-response pathwaysAgeing; Cellular stress-response pathways; Hormesis; Mediterranean diet; PhytochemicalsLow doseHormesisLongevityAgeingchemistryAgeingHealthy ageingOxidative stressDevelopmental Biology
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Mediterranean diet and healthy ageing: a Sicilian perspective.

2014

Traditional Mediterranean diet (MedDiet) is a common dietary pattern characterizing a lifestyle and culture proven to contribute to better health and quality of life in Mediterranean countries. By analyzing the diet of centenarians from the Sicani Mountains and eating habits of inhabitants of Palermo, it is reported that a close adherence to MedDiet is observed in the countryside, whereas in big towns this adherence is not so close. This has an effect on the rates of mortality at old age (and reciprocally longevity) that are lower in the countryside than in big towns. Concerning the health effects of the diet, the low content of animal protein and the low glycaemic index of the Sicilian Med…

AgingMediterranean dietmedia_common.quotation_subjectmedicine.medical_treatmentHealth StatusLongevityBiologyDiet Mediterraneanchemistry.chemical_compoundEnvironmental healthmedicineHumansFood scienceLife StyleSicilyPI3K/AKT/mTOR pathwaymedia_commonSettore MED/04 - Patologia GeneraleCholesterolInsulinLongevityHormesismediterranean dietFeeding Behaviorlanguage.human_languagechemistryAgeinglanguageGeriatrics and GerontologySicilianGerontology
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Reductive stress in pathophysiology

2017

Oxidative stress, as defined by Sies more than thirty years ago, has received much attention and has served as an important intellectual tool to understand the pathophysiology of many diseases and also of normal processes like ageing. However, recently the idea that the cells might suffer from reductive rather than oxidative stress and that such stress may be relevant in pathophysiology has gained momentum. Some time ago we defined reductive stress as a “as a pathophysiological situation in which the cell becomes more reduced than in the normal, resting state”. We postulated that reductive stress might be due, at least in part to a “small but persistent generation of oxidants that results i…

Myocardial ischaemiaAgeingPhysiology (medical)medicineHormesisAPOE4 AlleleDiseaseBiologymedicine.disease_causeBiochemistryNeurosciencePathophysiologyOxidative stressFree Radical Biology and Medicine
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