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Highly Significant Reduction (highly + significant_reduction)
Selected AbstractsPhylogenetic Comparative Methods Strengthen Evidence for Reduced Genetic Diversity among Endangered TetrapodsCONSERVATION BIOLOGY, Issue 5 2010PATRICK A. FLIGHT evolución de la historia de vida; extinción; heterocigosidad de proteínas; regresión filogenética; tamaño poblacional efectivo Abstract:,The fitness of species with little genetic diversity is expected to be affected by inbreeding and an inability to respond to environmental change. Conservation theory suggests that endangered species will generally demonstrate lower genetic diversity than taxa that are not threatened. This hypothesis has been challenged because the time frame of anthropogenic extinction may be too fast to expect genetic factors to significantly contribute. I conducted a meta-analysis to examine how genetic diversity in 894 tetrapods correlates with extinction threat level. Because species are not evolutionarily independent, I used a phylogenetic regression framework to address this issue. Mean genetic diversity of tetrapods, as assessed by protein heterozygosity, was 29.7,31.5% lower on average in threatened species than in their nonthreatened relatives, a highly significant reduction. Within amphibians as diversity decreased extinction risk increased in phylogenetic models, but not in nonphylogenetic regressions. The effects of threatened status on diversity also remained significant after accounting for body size in mammals. These results support the hypothesis that genetic effects on population fitness are important in the extinction process. Resumen:,Se espera que la adaptabilidad de una especie con poca diversidad genética sea afectada por la endogamia y una incapacidad para responder a cambios ambientales. La teoría de la conservación sugiere que las especies en peligro generalmente muestran menor diversidad genética que taxa que no están amenazados. Esta hipótesis ha sido cuestionada porque el período de tiempo de la extinción antropogénica puede ser muy rápido para esperar que los factores genéticos contribuyan significativamente. Realice un meta-análisis para examinar cómo se correlaciona la diversidad genética de 894 tetrápodos con el nivel de amenaza de extinción. Debido a que las especies no son independientes evolutivamente, utilice un marco de regresión filogenética para abordar este tema. La media de la diversidad genética de tetrápodos, medida como la heterocigosidad de proteínas, fue 29.7,31.5% menor en las especies amenazadas que en sus parientes no amenazados, una reducción altamente significativa. En anfibios, a medida que disminuía la diversidad el riesgo de extinción incrementaba en los modelos filogenéticos, pero no en las regresiones no filogenéticas. El efecto del estatus de amenaza sobre la biodiversidad también permaneció significativo después de considerar el tamaño corporal de mamíferos. Estos resultados dan soporte a la hipótesis de que los efectos genéticos sobre la adaptabilidad de la población son importantes en el proceso de extinción. [source] Follow-up of an exercise-based treatment for children with reading difficultiesDYSLEXIA, Issue 2 2007David Reynolds Abstract This study reports the results of a long-term follow-up of an exercise-based approach to dyslexia-related disorders (Reynolds, Nicolson, & Hambly, Dyslexia, 2003; 9(1): 48,71). In the initial study, children at risk of dyslexia were identified in 3 years of a junior school. One half then undertook a 6 month, home-based exercise programme. Evaluation after 6 months indicated that the exercise group improved significantly more than the controls on a range of cognitive and motor skills. Critics had suggested that the improvement might be attributable to artifactual issues including Hawthorne effects; an initial literacy imbalance between the groups; and inclusion of non-dyslexic participants. The present study evaluated the issue of whether the gains were maintained over the following 18 months, and whether they were in some sense artifactual as postulated by critics of the original study. Comparison of (age-adjusted) initial and follow-up performance indicated significant gains in motor skill, speech/language fluency, phonology, and working memory. Both dyslexic and non-dyslexic low achieving children benefited. There was also a highly significant reduction in the incidence of symptoms of inattention. Interestingly there were no significant changes in speeded tests of reading and spelling, but there was a significant improvement in (age-adjusted) reading (NFER). It is concluded that the gains were indeed long-lasting, and that the alternative hypotheses based on potential artifacts were untenable, and that the exercise treatment therefore achieved its applied purpose. Further research is needed to determine the underlying reasons for the benefits. Possible (and potentially synergistic) explanations include: improved cerebellar function (neural level); improved learning ability and/or attentional ability (cognitive level); improved self-esteem and self-efficacy (affective level); and improved parental/familial support (social level). Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Fas ligand-induced murine pulmonary inflammation is reduced by a stable decoy receptor 3 analogueIMMUNOLOGY, Issue 2 2003Mark A. Wortinger Summary Fas ligand (FasL)-induced lung inflammation has recently been suggested to play an important role in the pathogenesis of acute respiratory disease syndrome (ARDS). In order to further explore this connection, we established a FasL-induced murine model of pulmonary inflammation. Instillation of recombinant FasL (rFasL) into the lung induced neutrophil infiltration and increased pulmonary permeability, as evidenced by increased total protein in the airspace; both occur in patients with ARDS. These effects were accompanied with a rapid induction of proinflammatory mediators: cytokine granulocyte,macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) and the chemokines macrophage inflammatory protein-2 (MIP-2) and KC. Pretreatment with a FasL antagonist, a decoy receptor 3 analogue (DcR3 analogue), reduced neutrophil infiltration into the airspace and resulted in a highly significant reduction in the levels of GM-CSF, MIP-2 and KC in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid. We postulate that rFasL may be responsible for induction of proinflammatory chemokines and cytokines in the lung, which in turn attract neutrophil infiltration into the airspace. This proinflammatory process and the associated pulmonary permeability may, in part, explain the association of FasL with severe pulmonary inflammation, such as ARDS, and shed new light on FasL and its role in lung injury. [source] Early detection of resistance to tebufenozide in field populations of Cydia pomonella L.: methods and mechanismsJOURNAL OF APPLIED ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 7 2007C. Ioriatti Abstract:, Four populations of codling moth Cydia pomonella L. were collected as overwintering larvae from apple orchards with different pesticide pressure (S. Michele, Roncafort, Revò and Vervò) in the Trento province (northern Italy). Mortality rate caused by a predetermined discriminating concentration of tebufenozide topically applied on overwintering larvae was evaluated. Neonate F1 progeny of the same populations were assayed for susceptibility to tebufenozide by feeding them on thinning apples treated with an appropriate discriminating dose of the insecticide. The activities of the main enzyme systems involved in the detoxification of insecticides were also evaluated in each population and related to their susceptibility to tebufenozide. The topical test detected a significant loss in susceptibility to tebufenozide in two populations, S. Michele and Roncafort, while all the overwintering larvae collected in the orchards of Revò and Vervò died when treated topically with the discriminating concentration. The apple-dipping test performed on the neonate larvae showed a highly significant reduction in the susceptibility of the two populations of S. Michele and Roncafort. A less significant reduction in mortality rate was found in the Revò population; however, no statistical difference was found between the Vervò population and the susceptible reference. None of the four field populations significantly differed from the susceptible strain for Glutathione- S -transferase and esterase activity. A significantly higher frequency of individuals of the S. Michele and Roncafort populations exhibited a higher mixed function oxidase activity than the susceptible strain. The small resistance ratio values found for the two populations together with the low frequency of individuals exibiting enhanced enzymatic activity, reveals that the selection process was still at the early stage. Because of its efficiency in early detection of resistance to tebufenozide, topical application on diapausing larvae can thus be considered an appropriate, simple and robust tool for implementing resistance monitoring programmes for tebufenozide. [source] REDUCING INCIDENTAL MORTALITY OF FRANCISCANA DOLPHIN PONTOPORIA BLAINVILLEI WITH ACOUSTIC WARNING DEVICES ATTACHED TO FISHING NETSMARINE MAMMAL SCIENCE, Issue 4 2002P. Bordino Abstract We conducted a double blind experiment in an artisanal gillnet fishery in Argentina to determine the effectiveness of acoustic deterrents (pingers) at reducing bycatch of the Franciscana dolphin (Pontoporia blainvillei). The fishery was conducted by small inflatable and fiberglass vessels operating between 0.5 and 7 krn from the coast. Each vessel carried an independent observer who was rotated from vessel to vessel throughout the course of the experiment. Information on the number of dolphins captured, geographic position, depth, configuration of fishing gear, soak time, biomass of fish caught, and sea lion predation in a string/net producing any damage was recorded. Equivalent numbers of active and silent pingers were used during the experiment. A total of 45 dolphins were caught in the silent nets, and seven were caught in the active pinger nets, demonstrating a highly significant reduction in bycatch for this species. However, sea-lions (Otaria flavescens) damaged the fish in active pinger nets significantly more than silent nets, and the damage increased over the course of the experiment. Although pingers show promise as a management tool for this species, pinniped depredation suggests that higher pinger frequencies will be needed to avoid a "dinner bell" effect. [source] Chemical and morphological alterations of spines within the hippocampus and entorhinal cortex precede the onset of Alzheimer's disease pathology in double knock-in miceTHE JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY, Issue 4 2007Chiye Aoki Abstract Mice with knock-in of two mutations that affect beta amyloid processing and levels (2xKI) exhibit impaired spatial memory by 9,12 months of age, together with synaptic plasticity dysfunction in the hippocampus. The goal of this study was to identify changes in the molecular and structural characteristics of synapses that precede and thus could exert constraints upon cellular mechanisms underlying synaptic plasticity. Drebrin A is one protein reported to modulate spine sizes and trafficking of proteins to and from excitatory synapses. Thus, we examined levels of drebrin A within postsynaptic spines in the hippocampus and entorhinal cortex. Our electron microscopic immunocytochemical analyses reveal that, by 6 months, the proportion of hippocampal spines containing drebrin A is reduced and this change is accompanied by an increase in the mean size of spines and decreased density of spines. In the entorhinal cortex of 2xKI brains, we detected no decrement in the proportion of spines labeled for drebrin A and no significant change in spine density at 6 months, but rather a highly significant reduction in the level of drebrin A immunoreactivity within each spine. These changes are unlike those observed for the somatosensory cortex of 2xKI mice, in which synapse density and drebrin A immunoreactivity levels remain unchanged at 6 months and older. These results indicate that brains of 2xKI mice, like those of humans, exhibit regional differences of vulnerability, with the hippocampus exhibiting the first signatures of structural changes that, in turn, may underlie the emergent inability to update spatial memory in later months. J. Comp. Neurol. 505:352,362, 2007. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] The Effects of Smoking on Short-Term Quality of Life Outcomes in Sinus Surgery,THE LARYNGOSCOPE, Issue 12 2007Subinoy Das MD Abstract Objective: The purpose of this study was to prospectively compare the short-term benefit of endoscopic sinus surgery for smokers and nonsmokers using a disease specific, clinically validated, quality of life outcomes measure, the Sinonasal Outcomes Test-20 (SNOT-20). Study Design: Prospective clinical trial. Methods: A total of 235 patients were prospectively enrolled at a single tertiary academic center. Preoperative SNOT-20 scores and comprehensive demographic data were obtained. All patients underwent endoscopic sinus surgery under the supervision of the senior author. Preoperative SNOT-20 scores were compared to short-term postoperative SNOT-20 scores. Results: Short-term postoperative results were available for 221 patients for comparison. Preoperative SNOT-20 scores in 49 smokers (mean: 27.8) and 172 nonsmokers (mean: 26.2) were statistically similar. Both smokers and nonsmokers achieved a highly significant reduction in SNOT-20 scores at short-term follow-up evaluations. (P < .0005) Smokers achieved a greater reduction in SNOT-20 scores (mean difference: 22.1) at short-term follow-up compared to nonsmokers (mean difference: 16.1). This result was statistically significant (P < .044). Conclusions: This study confirms that smokers and nonsmokers achieve a highly significant short-term benefit from endoscopic sinus surgery using a clinically-validated symptom severity scale in a prospective study. Interestingly, smokers achieved a greater short-term benefit than nonsmokers did. This study calls into question the notion that current smokers are poorer candidates for endoscopic sinus surgery. Further prospective studies to confirm these results and provide long-term analysis should be performed. [source] Expression of RPE65, a putative receptor for plasma retinol-binding protein, in nonmelanocytic skin tumoursBRITISH JOURNAL OF DERMATOLOGY, Issue 4 2005G. Hinterhuber Summary Background, In a recent report we described RPE65, a protein originally characterized in retinal pigment epithelium, to be expressed in normal human epidermis. RPE65 is suspected to be involved in cellular uptake of retinol which is transported in the bloodstream complexed with plasma retinol-binding protein. Objectives, To evaluate protein and mRNA expression of RPE65 in actinic keratosis (AK), squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) and basal cell carcinoma (BCC) compared with normal skin. Methods, RPE65 mRNA expression in skin tumours relative to normal skin of the respective donor was studied by real-time polymerase chain reaction in AK (n = 15), invasive SCC (n = 30) and BCC (n = 18). A peptide-specific anti-RPE65 antibody was used for immunohistochemical staining of formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded tissue sections of the respective tumours. Results, RPE65 mRNA expression was reduced in AK. A highly significant reduction of RPE65 mRNA was observed in invasive SCC relative to normal skin of the respective donors. Immunohistochemistry revealed a continuous staining of basal and suprabasal keratinocytes in normal human epidermis. RPE65 in AK shown by immunohistochemical staining was reduced and quite irregular, whereas invasive SCC revealed no staining of tumour cells with the anti-RPE65 antibody. RPE65 mRNA values were elevated, whereas immunohistochemical staining for RPE65 protein was heterogeneous in BCC. Conclusions, These results suggest progressive downregulation of RPE65 from AK to invasive SCC. [source] INVESTIGATION OF THE MICROCIRCULATION AND THE STATE OF OXIDATIVE STRESS IN THE RAT AFTER SCORPION ENVENOMATIONCLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL PHARMACOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 4 2007Z Sahnoun SUMMARY 1Severe cases of scorpion envenomation (SE) generally show both respiratory and cardiocirculatory dysfunction. However, the pathophysiology of SE remains controversial. In the present study, we tried to explain the pathophysiology of the haemodynamic perturbations and cardiac failure in rats poisoned by the venom of Buthus occitanus tunetanus through a histomorphometric study of myocardial and muscular skeletal microcirculation and analysis of the oxidative stress state in order to evaluate the implication of the inflammatory process in the pathogenesis of SE. 2Experiments were performed on 96 rats divided into 16 groups (n = 6 in each group). Two groups were used to determine the optimum conditions of venom administration and times when to measure haemodynamic parameters. The B. occitanus tunetanus venom was administered at a dose of 800 µg/kg and tissues were removed 5 and 20 min after envenomation. Six groups were used for histomorphometric study: two control groups, two poisoned groups an two melatonin-pretreated and poisoned groups. The histomorphometric study was performed on isolated hearts and skeletal muscles. The final eight groups of rats (two control groups, two envenomated groups, two control groups pretreated with melatonin and two groups pretreated and envenomated) were used to investigate the state of tissue oxidative stress during SE and to evaluate the anti-oxidant effect of melatonin on rats poisoned with B. occitanus tunetanus venom. This study was based on the determination of tissue malondialdehyde in isolated organs as an indicator of thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances (TBARS). Melatonin was injected at a dose of 5 mg/kg, i.v., 15 min before the administration of serum or venom. Data were compared using analysis of variance and Tukey's test for multiple pair-wise comparisons. 3Five minutes after venom injection, a significant reduction in the mean relative volume of venules and arterioles in the heart and skeletal muscles of poisoned rats was noted. Twenty minutes after venom injection, these volumes were significantly increased in the heart and skeletal muscles of poisoned rats. Pretreatment of envenomated rats with melatonin resulted in a significant decrease in the mean relative volume of the venules and arterioles in the heart and skeletal muscles 5 and 20 min after venom injection compared with untreated envenomated rats. Investigation of the oxidative stress state showed a highly significant increase in TBARS in poisoned rats compared with control groups 5 and 20 min after venom injection. Melatonin pretreatment of rats poisoned with B. occitanus tunetanus venom resulted in an important and highly significant reduction of TBARS compared with untreated envenomated rats. 4It appears from the results of the present study that administration of B. occitanus tunetanus venom engendered an excessive myocardial and skeletal muscular vasoconstriction attributed to massive catecholamine release followed by arteriolar and venular vasodilatation. This venous stasis at the muscular microcirculation could be due to myocardiac failure. However, the concomitant presence of arteriolar vasodilatation suggests an inflammatory process in the pathophysiology of SE. This process was suggested by the genesis of a state of oxidative stress in relation to the important lipoperoxidation, which was inhibited by administration of the anti-oxidant melatonin. Thus, melatonin pretreatment seemed to accentuate the first phase of vascular reactivity in envenomed rats and inhibit the second vasodilator phase observed 20 min after administration of the venom. [source] |