Excess Production (excess + production)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


IL-1, IL-18, and IL-33 families of cytokines

IMMUNOLOGICAL REVIEWS, Issue 1 2008
William P. Arend
Summary: The interleukin-1 (IL-1), IL-18, and IL-33 families of cytokines are related by mechanism of origin, receptor structure, and signal transduction pathways utilized. All three cytokines are synthesized as precursor molecules and cleaved by the enzyme caspase-1 before or during release from the cell. The NALP-3 inflammasome is of crucial importance in generating active caspase-1. The IL-1 family contains two agonists, IL-1, and IL-1,, a specific inhibitor, IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1Ra), and two receptors, the biologically active type IL-1R and inactive type II IL-1R. Both IL-1RI and IL-33R utilize the same interacting accessory protein (IL-1RAcP). The balance between IL-1 and IL-1Ra is important in preventing disease in various organs, and excess production of IL-1 has been implicated in many human diseases. The IL-18 family also contains a specific inhibitor, the IL-18-binding protein (IL-18BP), which binds IL-18 in the fluid phase. The IL-18 receptor is similar to the IL-1 receptor complex, including a single ligand-binding chain and a different interacting accessory protein. IL-18 provides an important link between the innate and adaptive immune responses. Newly described IL-33 binds to the orphan IL-1 family receptor T1/ST2 and stimulates T-helper 2 responses as well as mast cells. [source]


Promoting the Development of Value-added Specialty Foods through University-based Food Venture Centers

JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE, Issue 3 2004
OLGA I. PADILLA-ZAKOURArticle first published online: 31 MAY 200
ABSTRACT: Food entrepreneurship is a vital part of the food industry that focuses on creating specialty foods from agricultural products. Many entrepreneurial businesses are farm-based to complement the fresh market with longer shelf-life value-added processed foods that utilize products not suited for the fresh market, and excess production that commonly ends up as farm waste/losses. In some cases, the agricultural production is solely dedicated to fulfill the specialty niche market targeted by the small processor. Food entrepreneurs need comprehensive assistance to become successful processors and marketers. As start-up ventures, their knowledge and economic resources are limited. Support from university-based food venture centers must include training, counseling, technical services, regulatory compliance assistance, technology transfer, and specialized referrals. The Northeast Center for Food Entrepreneurship, a joint effort of Cornell Univ. and the Univ. of Vermont, is a successful model that benefits from key partnerships to promote food ventures in rural and urban communities. For the last 3 years the center has provided assistance and training to more than 3500 individuals interested in food entrepreneurship, and assisted the development and marketing of over 1000 specialty products. Three examples of farm-based value-added enterprises are presented to highlight the center's accomplishments and economic impact. [source]


Joint Production with ,Restricted Free Disposal'

METROECONOMICA, Issue 1 2001
Christian Lager
A single production system with constant returns can produce any level and composition of demand by appropriate intensities of the cost-minimizing processes. Hence, in the long run, products can never be in excess supply and there exists a system of prices of production which is semipositive and independent of demand. These (and other) properties do not, in general, carry over to joint production systems where one or several processes produce two or more different products. The proportions in which products emerge will generally be different from those in which they are required for use. The usual approach to that problem is to apply the rule of ,free goods'. This assumption may be applied to goods which, if they are left where they are and as they are, cause neither costs nor benefits. But it cannot be applied to outworn machines, scrap, wastes or pollutants and is therefore not generally applicable. The present paper aims at finding conditions for the existence of cost-minimizing systems for cases where this crucial assumption either is completely absent or is substituted by the assumption of ,restricted free disposal', i.e. by the assumption that excess production is permitted up to a certain tolerated limit. It will be proved that the conditions for the existence of cost-minimizing systems with free disposal carry over to systems with restricted free disposal. [source]


Diameter of the Cochlear Nerve in Endolymphatic Hydrops: Implications for the Etiology of Hearing Loss in Ménière's Disease,

THE LARYNGOSCOPE, Issue 9 2005
Cliff A. Megerian MD
Abstract Objective/Hypothesis: Endolymphatic hydrops (ELH) is an important histopathological hallmark of Ménière's disease. Experimental data from human temporal bones as well as animal models of the disorder have generally failed to determine the mechanism by which ELH or related pathology causes hearing loss. Hair cell and spiral ganglion cell counts in both human and animal case studies have not, for the most part, shown severe enough deterioration to explain associated severe sensorineural hearing loss. However a limited number of detailed ultrastructural studies have demonstrated significant reductions in dendritic innervation densities, raising the possibility that neurotoxicity plays an important role in the pathology of Ménière's disease (MD) as well as experimental endolymphatic hydrops (ELH). This study tests the hypothesis that neurotoxicity is an important primary mediator of injury to the hydropic ear and is reflected in measurable deterioration of the cochlear nerve in the animal model of ELH. This study also explores the previously presented hypothesis that cochlear injury in ELH is mediated through the actions of nitric oxide (NO) by evaluating whether hearing loss or various measures of cochlear damage can be ameliorated by administration of an agent that limits excess production of NO. Study Design: Part one of the project involves the surgical induction of endolymphatic hydrops and correlation of long term hearing loss with histological parameters of ELH severity as well as cochlear nerve and eighth cranial nerve diameter measurements. In part two, aminoguanidine is administered orally to a separate set of hydropic animals in an attempt to limit cochlear injury presumably mediated by NO. Methods: Guinea pigs are subjected to surgical induction of unilateral endolymphatic hydrops after establishing baseline ABR thresholds at 2, 4, 8, 16, and 32 kHz. Threshold shifts are established prior to sacrifice at 4 to 6 months and temporal bones processed for light microscopy. Measurements of cochlear nerve and eighth cranial nerve maximal diameters as well as average maximal diameters are carried out and correlated to hearing loss and a semi-quantitative measure of hydrops severity. The identical experiments are carried out in animals treated with aminoguanidine, an inhibitor of inducible nitric oxide synthase. Results: The mean maximal diameter (n = 14) of the hydropic cochlear nerve was significantly reduced (432.14 ± 43.18 vs. 479.28 ± 49.22 microns, P = .0025) as compared to the control nerve. This was also seen in measures of the eighth cranial nerve (855.71 ± 108.82 vs. 929 ± 81.53 microns, P = 0.0003). Correlation studies failed to show correlation between hydrops severity and a cochlear nerve deterioration index (r = -0.0614, P = .8348). Similarly, hearing loss severity failed to correlate with cochlear nerve deterioration (r = 0.1300, P = .6577). There was a significant correlation between hearing loss and hydrops severity (r = 0.6148, P = .0193). Aminoguanidine treated animals (n = 5) also sustained nerve deterioration to the same degree as non-treated animals and there appeared to be no protective effect (at the dosage administered) against ELH related hearing loss, hydrops formation, or nerve deterioration. Conclusion: ELH results in significant deterioration of cochlear nerve and eighth cranial nerve maximal diameters in the guinea pig model. These findings are in accord with previous studies which detected ultrastructural evidence of dendritic damage and indicate that neural injury is of sufficient severity to result in light microscopic evidence of cochlear nerve and eighth cranial nerve deterioration. These data support the concept that the principle pathological insult in ELH is a form of neurotoxicity, especially in light of previous studies which indicate relative preservation of hair cells at similar points in time. The lack of correlation between the severity of hydrops and nerve deterioration suggests that nerve deterioration is independent of hydrops severity. [source]


Cell line-specific control of recombinant monoclonal antibody production by CHO cells,

BIOTECHNOLOGY & BIOENGINEERING, Issue 6 2010
Peter M. O'Callaghan
Abstract In this study we compare the cellular control of recombinant human IgG4 monoclonal antibody (Mab) synthesis in different CHO cell lines. Based on comprehensive empirical analyses of mRNA and polypeptide synthetic intermediates we constructed cell line-specific mathematical models of recombinant Mab manufacture in seven GS-CHO cell lines varying in specific production rate (qMab) over 350-fold. This comparative analysis revealed that control of qMab involved both genetic construct and cell line-specific factors. With respect to the former, all cell lines exhibited excess production of light chain (LC) mRNA and polypeptide relative to heavy chain (HC) mediated by more rapid LC transcription and enhanced LC mRNA stability. Downstream of this, cell lines differed markedly in their relative rates of recombinant mRNA translation, Mab assembly and secretion although HC mRNA abundance and the rate of HC translation generally exerted most control over qMab,the latter being directly proportional to qMab. This study shows that (i) cell lines capable of high qMab exceed a threshold functional competency in all synthetic processes, (ii) the majority of cells in parental and transfected cell populations are functionally limited and (iii) cell engineering strategies to increase Mab production should be cell line specific. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2010;106: 938,951. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source]