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Arsenic, lead, and other trace elements in soils contaminated with pesticide residues at the Hanford site (USA)

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY, Issue 2 2003
Jerry Yokel
Abstract The primary purpose of this study was to characterize arsenic (As) and lead (Pb) concentrations in former orchard soils contaminated with lead arsenate pesticides at the Hanford site in Washington state (USA). Surface samples (n = 31) were collected from former orchard soils (in cultivation during the pre-Hanford period) at five locations at the 100 Areas and at one location at the Old Hanford Townsite (OHT). Another set of samples (n = 17) was collected over a soil depth interval of 10,50 cm at the four locations with the highest As and Pb surface concentrations. All samples were analyzed for 22 trace elements (including As and Pb) with inductively coupled plasma,atomic emission spectrometry (ICP,AES). The mean, standard deviation, and range for As in the surface soils were 30, 61, and 2.9,270 mg/kg dry wt, respectively. The corresponding statistics for Pb were 220, 460, and 6.5,1900 mg/kg dry wt, respectively. As and Pb concentrations in the surface soils were positively and significantly correlated (r = 0.91, Bonferroni p < 0.05). Descriptive statistics and bivariate correlations were also computed for other trace elements. As and Pb mean concentrations in the surface soils each differed significantly (p < 0.05) among Hanford locations, with the highest concentrations at the 100-H and 100-F Areas. Although both As and Pb mean concentrations decreased with soil depth, regression and correlation coefficients only, for Pb significantly differed from zero (b = ,0.0372, r = ,0.805, Bonferroni p < 0.05). Compared with data in the literature As and Pb concentrations found in this study exceeded background levels but were typical of orchard soils. Furthermore, mean As and Pb soil concentrations were in the range of various toxicological benchmarks derived for protection of human and ecological receptors. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Environ Toxicol 18: 104,114, 2003 [source]


Generation and characterization of functional mutants in the translation initiation factor IF1 of Escherichia coli

FEBS JOURNAL, Issue 3 2004
Victor Croitoru
Three protein factors IF1, IF2 and IF3 are involved in the initiation of translation in prokaryotes. No clear function has been assigned to the smallest of these three factors, IF1. Therefore, to investigate the role of this protein in the initiation process in Escherichia coli we have mutated the corresponding gene infA. Because IF1 is essential for cell viability and no mutant selection has so far been described, the infA gene in a plasmid was mutated by site-directed mutagenesis in a strain with a chromosomal infA+ gene, followed by deletion of this infA+ gene. Using this approach, the six arginine residues of IF1 were altered to leucine or aspartate. Another set of plasmid-encoded IF1 mutants with a cold-sensitive phenotype was collected using localized random mutagenesis. All mutants with a mutated infA gene on a plasmid and a deletion of the chromosomal infA copy were viable, except for an R65D alteration. Differences in growth phenotypes of the mutants were observed in both minimal and rich media. Some of the mutated infA genes were successfully recombined into the chromosome thereby replacing the wild-type infA+ allele. Several of these recombinants showed reduced growth rate and a partial cold-sensitive phenotype. This paper presents a collection of IF1 mutants designed for in vivo and in vitro studies on the function of IF1. [source]


MaSK: A visualization tool for teaching and research in computational chemistry

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF QUANTUM CHEMISTRY, Issue 1 2009
Yevgeniy Podolyan
Abstract The number of researchers using computational chemistry tools is growing every year. There are multiple programs used for calculation of various molecular and electronic properties such as optimized geometry, energy, vibrational spectra, and so forth. Another set of programs is used for the visualization of these properties. However, such programs are either too complex for a beginner or too simple for an intermediate user for everyday use. Molecular Modeling and Simulation Kit (MaSK) is designed to fill this gap by presenting an easy-to-use intuitive interface to quantum chemical programs such as GAMESS and Gaussian with an array of advanced tools. The program can be used as a postprocessor to visualize calculated properties or as a preprocessor to prepare the input files for quantum chemical programs. In addition, some properties such as the surfaces of molecular orbitals, electron and spin densities, and molecular electrostatic potentials are actually calculated by MaSK. If MaSK is combined with PC GAMESS, the preparation of the input, running of the calculations, and the display of the results can all be done without leaving the program's interface. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Quantum Chem, 2009 [source]


Venous leg ulcers: patient concordance with compression therapy and its impact on healing and prevention of recurrence

INTERNATIONAL WOUND JOURNAL, Issue 5 2009
Christine Moffatt
ABSTRACT This study aimed to review available data on the reasons attributed to patient non concordance with compression therapy for the treatment of venous leg ulcers (VLUs), the frequency of non concordance and its effects on clinical outcomes. The biomedical literature was searched for publications on VLUs, compression therapy and concordance over the past 20 years. Physical, aesthetic and cosmetic factors, patient lack of education about VLUs, cost of therapy and issues with treatment by clinicians were all reported to influence concordance with compression therapy. The search identified 10 studies reporting patient concordance with compression stockings or bandages; while non concordance ranged from 2% to 42% of patients in three randomised controlled trials, it was generally higher in real-world studies, ranging from 9.7% to 80%. Another set of six studies indicated that the healing rate was half and the median time to complete healing was twice as long when patients were not concordant. Further, recurrence rates were 2,20 times greater when patients did not comply with the use of stockings following VLU healing. In conclusion, published biomedical literature has documented that non concordance with compression therapy negatively impacts the outcome of VLUs, highlighting the need to improve patient concordance to maximise therapeutic benefits. [source]


In vivo production of recombinant protein by a baculovirus vector inoculated perorally to the prefinal instar larvae of Bombyx mori L. (Lep., Bombycidae) aided by an optical brightener, Tinopal UNPA-GX

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 9 2002
T. Arakawa
Host larvae were fed a diet containing 0.3% (w/w) Tinopal on day 1 in the 4th instar and then fed a diet contaminated by budded particles of NPV (1.0 × 106 TCID50 U/larva) that was pathogenic to B. mori (BmNPV) on day 2 (inoculation schedule 1). Another set of host larvae was fed a diet containing BmNPV budded particles (2.5 × 106 TCID50 U/larva) together with 0.3% (w/w) Tinopal on day 1 in the 4th instar (inoculation schedule 2). Host larvae treated by both schedules died of viral infection. The operation of schedule 2 is simpler than that of schedule 1, although the former required higher doses of the virus for satisfactory infection. We inoculated a baculovirus vector carrying human serum albumin (HSA) gene into 4th instar B. mori larvae by schedule 1. Recombinant HSA was detected in the homogenate of host larvae 4 days after inoculation. The peroral inoculation of BmNPV budded particles aided by Tinopal may thus lead to industrial pharmaceutical production using a baculovirus vector for large numbers of insect hosts. [source]


Effects of nickel poisoning on expression pattern of the 72/73 and 94 kDa stress proteins in rat organs and in the COS-7, HepG2, and A549 cell lines

JOURNAL OF BIOCHEMICAL AND MOLECULAR TOXICOLOGY, Issue 1 2005
N. Hfaiedh
Abstract The present study deals with the effects of Ni on the expression level of three stress proteins, namely, the cytosolic HSP72 and HSP73, and the reticulum-associated GRP94. Experiments were carried out on "Wistar" female rats daily injected with 4 mg NiCl2 per kg body weight for 1, 3, 5, and 10 days. Another set of experiments were carried out using cell lines, derived from the monkey kidney (COS-7), and from human tumors of the lung (A549) and liver (HepG2). Cells were cultured for 4 days in the permanent presence of 100, 200, or 400 µM NiCl2. In control rats, stress proteins pattern was found to be tissue specific: two protein bands of 96 and 94 kDa were immunodetected with the anti-GRP94 antibody in kidney and liver extracts, whereas only the 96 kDa band was present in ovary extracts. HSP73 was present in kidney, liver, and ovary whereas HSP72 was only found in kidney. In kidney of nickel-treated animals, HSP73 and the 96 kDa proteins were overexpressed whereas HSP72 was strongly down regulated. No such effect was observed in liver or ovary. Similarly, in nickel-treated cell lines, HSP72 was downregulated and GRP94 (96 kDa protein) was overexpressed. HSP73 expression appeared moderately increased in A549 cells but decreased in COS-7 cells. Because long-term caloric restriction was reported to reduce free radical generation in cells, the effect of 1 month food restriction (50%) was tested in rats as a possible way to lower oxidative damages induced by Ni. No significant effect on HSP expression was observed. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biochem Mol Toxicol 19:12,18, 2005; Published online in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com). DOI 10.1002/jbt.20056 [source]


Nitrobenzene toxicity: QSAR correlations and mechanistic interpretations,

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ORGANIC CHEMISTRY, Issue 10 2003
Alan R. Katritzky
Abstract The overall five-parameter QSAR correlation [ in terms of log(IGC50,1)] based on CODESSA-PRO methodology for the aquatic toxicity of 97 substituted nitrobenzenes to the ciliate Tetrahymena pyriformis supports previous conclusions that hydrophobicity and electrophilic reactivity control nitrobenzene toxicity. Correcting for the ionization of acidic species (picric and nitrobenzoic acids) improves the results: . Consideration of the total set of 97 compounds suggests two mechanisms of toxic action. A subset containing 43 compounds favorably disposed to reversible reduction of nitro group with respect to the single occupied molecular orbital energy, ESOMO correlated well with just four theoretically derived descriptors: . Another set of 49 substances predisposed to aromatic nucleophilic substitution modeled well () with five descriptors. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Soil- and plant-based nitrogen-fertilizer recommendations in arable farming

JOURNAL OF PLANT NUTRITION AND SOIL SCIENCE, Issue 4 2005
Hans-Werner Olfs
Abstract Under- as well as overfertilization with nitrogen (N) will result in economic loss for the farmer due to reduced yields and quality of the products. Also from an ecological perspective, it is important that the grower makes the correct decision on how much and when to apply N for a certain crop to minimize impacts on the environment. To aggravate the situation, N is a substance that is present in many compartments in different forms (nitrate, ammonium, organic N, etc.) in the soil-plant environment and takes part in various processes (e.g., mineralization, immobilization, leaching, denitrification, etc.). Today, many N-recommendation systems are mainly based on yield expectation. However, yields are not stable from year to year for a given field. Also the processes that determine the N supply from other sources than fertilizer are not predictable at the start of the growing season. Different methodological approaches are reviewed that have been introduced to improve N-fertilizer recommendations for arable crops. Many soil-based methods have been developed to measure soil mineral N (SMN) that is available for plants at a given sampling date. Soil sampling at the start of the growing period and analyzing for the amount of NO -N (and NH -N) is a widespread approach in Europe and North America. Based on data from field calibrations, the SMN pool is filled up with fertilizer N to a recommended amount. Depending on pre-crop, use of organic manure, or soil characteristics, the recommendation might be modified (±10,50,kg N ha,1). Another set of soil methods has been established to estimate the amount of N that is mineralized from soil organic matter, plant residues, and/or organic manure. From the huge range of methods proposed so far, simple mild extraction procedures have gained most interest, but introduction into practical recommendation schemes has been rather limited. Plant-analytical procedures cover the whole range from quantitative laboratory analysis to semiquantitative "quick" tests carried out in the field. The main idea is that the plant itself is the best indicator for the N supply from any source within the growth period. In-field methods like the nitrate plant sap/petiole test and chlorophyll measurements with hand-held devices or via remote sensing are regarded as most promising, because with these methods an adequate adjustment of the N-fertilizer application strategy within the season is feasible. Prerequisite is a fertilization strategy that is based on several N applications and not on a one-go approach. Boden- und Pflanzenanalyse zur Stickstoff-Düngebedarfsprognose in Ackerkulturen Unter- und Überdüngung mit N führen zu deutlichen ökonomischen Verlusten für Landwirte, da sowohl der Ertrag als auch die Qualität der Erzeugnisse vermindert werden. Auch aus ökologischer Sicht ist die richtige Entscheidung des Anbauers über Höhe und Zeitpunkt der N-Düngung von Bedeutung, um die Auswirkungen auf die Umwelt so gering wie möglich zu halten. Erschwerend kommt hinzu, dass N in sehr vielen Umweltkompartimenten in verschiedenen Bindungsformen (Nitrat, Ammonium, organisch gebundener N) vorkommt und dass N in verschiedenste Umsetzungsprozesse involviert ist (Mineralisation, Immobilisation, Auswaschung, Denitrifikation). Auch heutzutage orientieren sich viele Systeme, die zur N-Düngebedarfsprognose eingesetzt werden, im Wesentlichen an der Ertragserwartung. Dabei ist jedoch zu bedenken, dass weder der Ertrag als von Jahr zu Jahr stabil angesehen werden kann, noch dass die Prozesse, die das bodenbürtige N-Angebot bestimmen, zu Beginn der Vegetationsperiode hinreichend gut vorausgesagt werden können. Daher werden im Folgenden verschiedene methodische Ansätze erläutert, die zur Verbesserung der N-Düngebedarfsprognose für Ackerkulturen geeignet erscheinen. Viele Bodenanalyse-Methoden zielen darauf ab, den mineralischen N-Vorrat des Bodens, der an einem bestimmten Beprobungstermin als pflanzenverfügbarer N vorliegt, zu erfassen. Die Bodenprobeentnahme zu Beginn der Vegetationsperiode und die Bestimmung der Menge an Nitrat (und Ammonium) ist ein in Europa und Nord-Amerika weitverbreiteter Ansatz. Anhand der Daten aus Kalibrierversuchen kann dann abgeleitet werden, wie viel Dünger-N zum Auffüllen des N-Vorrats eingesetzt werden soll. In Abhängigkeit von Vorfrucht, Einsatz von Wirtschaftsdüngern oder weiteren Bodeneigenschaften kann diese Empfehlung modifiziert werden (± 10 bis 50,kg N ha,1). Weitere Bodenuntersuchungsmethoden wurden entwickelt, um die Menge des während der Vegetationszeit aus der organischen Bodensubstanz, aus Ernteresten und/oder aus Wirtschaftsdüngern mineralisierten N zu bestimmen. Obwohl aus der Vielzahl der vorgeschlagenen Methoden einfache "milde" Extraktionsverfahren eine gewisse Bedeutung erlangt haben, werden diese in der Praxis bei der Ermittlung des N-Düngebedarfs als zusätzliche Information nur selten berücksichtigt. Verfahren der Pflanzenanalyse umfassen einen weiten Bereich von quantitativen Laboranalysen bis zu halbquantitativen Schnelltests, die direkt auf dem Acker eingesetzt werden können. Die wesentliche Idee beim Einsatz der Pflanzenanalyse ist die Vorstellung, dass die Pflanze an sich der beste Indikator ist, die N-Verfügbarkeit aus den verschiedenen Quellen gewissermaßen kumulativ innerhalb der Wachstumszeit anzuzeigen. Methoden, die auf dem Acker eingesetzt werden können, wie z.,B. der Nitrat-Pflanzensaft- (oder Blattstiel-)Test sowie die Chlorophyll-Messung mit Handgeräten oder berührungslose Messverfahren haben den klaren Vorteil, dass sie eine schnelle Anpassung der N-Düngestrategie während der Vegetation ermöglichen. Voraussetzung dazu ist allerdings, dass die N-Düngestrategie nicht auf einer Einmal-Applikation beruht, sondern dass die N-Düngermenge auf mehrere Teilgaben verteilt wird. [source]


Effects of component properties and orientation on corrugated container endurance

PACKAGING TECHNOLOGY AND SCIENCE, Issue 4 2010
Roman E. Popil
Abstract Experiments are performed to determine the impact of several physical properties on the creep behavior of three different sets of corrugated containers subjected to static loading and a cyclic humidity environment ranging from 50% to 80% relative humidity in a 24,h period. One sample set had basis weights of the fluted medium varied from 68 to 205,g/m2 while keeping the basis weight of the linerboard facings at 205,g/m2. This varied the out-of-plane shear rigidity of the single wall board by a factor of three. Another set of corrugated samples investigated effects of lateral or linear corrugating by rotation of either linerboards, fluted medium or both. This equalizes hygroexpansivity and affects lifetime. A third series of boxes had barrier coatings applied to their surfaces to determine the effect on lifetime. Creep and lifetime are determined to be inversely related and a multiple regression model for lifetime was sought based on the data set. Homogenization of the corrugated board properties through either increased medium basis weight or component rotation (lateral or linear corrugating) and application of barrier coating will in general, increase the endurance of edge loaded corrugated board in cyclic humidity. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Single-crystal EPR studies of a perchlorate-bridged dimeric copper(II) complex with 2-[(4-methyl-pyridin-2-ylimino)-methyl]-phenol

PHYSICA STATUS SOLIDI (B) BASIC SOLID STATE PHYSICS, Issue 10 2007
R. Srinivasan
Abstract A new dimeric perchlorate-bridged copper(II) complex with the Schiff's base ligand 2-[(4-methyl-pyridin-2-ylimino)-methyl]-phenol has been synthesized. The complex has been characterized using elemental analysis, ultraviolet,visible and infrared spectroscopy, conductivity, magnetic studies and EPR techniques. Single-crystal EPR studies indicate that zero-field splitting (D) is relatively small, and that the half-field transition is not observed due to its low intensity. An interesting observation in the frozen solution is that the low-field side of the zero-field splitting line splits into seven lines, due to interaction between the two copper ions. The magnetic susceptibility data indicate a weak ferromagnetic property and that the complex is a 1:2 electrolyte. Another set of EPR resonances corresponding to higher D and g values, compared to the system reported, are noticed, whose origin is not yet known. (© 2007 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim) [source]


Neuroeconomics: Using Neuroscience to Make Economic Predictions,

THE ECONOMIC JOURNAL, Issue 519 2007
Colin F. Camerer
Neuroeconomics seeks to ground economic theory in detailed neural mechanisms which are expressed mathematically and make behavioural predictions. One finding is that simple kinds of economising for life-and-death decisions (food, sex and danger) do occur in the brain as rational theories assume. Another set of findings appears to support the neural basis of constructs posited in behavioural economics, such as a preference for immediacy and nonlinear weighting of small and large probabilities. A third direction shows how understanding neural circuitry permits predictions and causal experiments which show state-dependence of revealed preference , except that states are biological and neural variables. [source]


Cage culture of the Pacific white shrimp Litopenaeus vannamei (Boone, 1931) at different stocking densities in a shallow eutrophic lake

AQUACULTURE RESEARCH, Issue 2 2009
Maria Lourdes A Cuvin-Aralar
Abstract Postlarvae of Litopenaeus vannamei were acclimated and stocked in lake-based cages at the following stocking densities: 10, 20, 30 and 40 shrimp m,2. Another set of shrimp was stocked in concrete tanks as reference samples at 30 shrimp m,2. Significant differences were observed among stocking densities throughout the 95-day culture. The final weight at harvest decreased with increasing stocking density: mean weights of 23.3, 15.8, 13.0, 10.9 and 14.6 g for the 10, 20, 30, 40 shrimp m,2 and reference tanks were observed respectively. There were no significant differences in survival throughout the culture period, ranging between 69% and 77%. Daily growth rates (range: 0.11,0.24 g day,1) and specific growth rates (range: 3.54,4.34%) also differed significantly among stocking densities, both increasing with decreasing stocking density. The feed conversion ratio in the cages did not differ among the stocking densities, ranging from 1.53 to 1.65. The relationship between stocking density and mean individual weight at harvest followed the equation y=81.06x,0.54 (R2=0.938) and that of stocking density and production (in g m,2) is y=58.01x,0.46 (R2=0.834). [source]


A pyrene-degrading consortium from deep-sea sediment of the West Pacific and its key member Cycloclasticus sp.

ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 8 2008

Summary A pyrene-degrading bacterial consortium was obtained from deep-sea sediments of the Pacific Ocean. The consortium degraded many kinds of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), including naphthalene, phenanthrene, pyrene, acenaphthene, fluorene, anthracene, fluoranthene, 2-methylnaphthalene and 2,6-dimethylnaphthalene, but it did not grow with chrysene and benzo[,]pyrene. With methods of plate cultivation and polymerase chain reaction,denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (PCR-DGGE), 72 bacteria belonging to 22 genera were detected from this consortium. Among the detected bacteria, the following genera frequently occurred: Flavobacterium, Cycloclasticus, Novosphingobium, Halomonas, Achromobacter, Roseovarius and Alcanivorax. The first two genera showed the strongest bands in denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) profiles and appeared in all PAH treatments. By now, only one isolate designated P1 was confirmed to be a pyrene degrader. It was identified to be Cycloclasticus spirillensus (100%). Although P1 can degrade pyrene independently, other bacteria, such as Novosphingobium sp. (Band 14), Halomonas sp. (Band 16) and an unidentified bacterium (Band 35), were involved in pyrene degradation in some way; they persist in the consortium in the test of dilution to extinction if only the consortium was motivated with pyrene. However, the secondary most important member Flavobacterium sp. evaded from the community at high dilutions. As a key member of the consortium, P1 distinguished itself by both cell morphology and carbon source range among the isolates of this genus. Based on intermediate analyses of pyrene degradation, P1 was supposed to take an upper pathway different from that previously reported. Together with the results of obtained genes from P1 homology with those responsible for naphthalene degradation, its degradation to pyrene is supposed to adopt another set of genes unique to presently detected. Summarily, an efficient pyrene-degrading consortium was obtained from the Pacific Ocean sediment, in which Cycloclasticus bacterium played a key role. This is the first report to exploit the diversity of pyrene-degrading bacteria in oceanic environments. [source]


IFN regulatory factor (IRF) 3/7-dependent and -independent gene induction by mammalian DNA that escapes degradation

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, Issue 11 2008
Yasutaka Okabe
Abstract DNase II in macrophages cleaves the DNA of engulfed apoptotic cells and of nuclei expelled from erythroid precursor cells. Macrophages in DNase II-deficient mice accumulate undigested DNA and constitutively produce IFN-, as well as TNF-,. The IFN-, causes severe anemia in the DNase II,/, embryos, which die prenatally. On the other hand, when the DNase II gene is inactivated postnatally, mice develop polyarthritis owing to the TNF-, produced by macrophages. Here, we showed that the IFN-, gene activation in DNase II,/, mice is dependent on IFN regulatory factor (IRF) 3 and 7. Accordingly, DNase II,/,IRF3,/,IRF7,/, mice do not suffer from anemia, but they still produce TNF-,, and age-dependently develop chronic polyarthritis. A microarray analysis of the gene expression in the fetal liver revealed a set of genes that is induced in DNase II,/, mice in an IRF3/IRF7-dependent manner, and another set that is induced independent of these factors. These results indicate that the mammalian chromosomal DNA that accumulates in macrophages due to inefficient degradation activates genes in both IRF3/IRF7-dependent and -independent manners. [source]


Substance induced plasticity in noradrenergic innervation of the paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 2 2003
Arthur S. P. Jansen
Abstract Single administration of the cytokine interleukin-1, (IL-1), or the psychostimulant amphetamine, enhanced adrenocorticotropin hormone and corticosterone responses to a stress challenge weeks later. This long-lasting hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA)-sensitization is paralleled by an increase in electrically evoked release of noradrenaline in the paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus (PVN). We hypothesized that these functional changes may be associated with morphological plasticity of noradrenergic projections to the PVN, a parameter that shows high reproducibility. Specific alterations in relative (nor)adrenergic innervation density were studied by using dopamine-,-hydroxylase (DBH) as a marker. An image analysis system was used to detect changes in the relative DBH innervation density of the PVN. Groups of adult male rats were given IL-1 (10 µg/kg i.p.), amphetamine (5 mg/kg i.p.), or saline. Three weeks later, IL-1 and amphetamine primed rats showed enhanced adrenocorticotropin hormone and corticosterone responses to an amphetamine challenge. In another set of experiments, the relative DBH innervation density was measured in different PVN subnuclei at four rostro-caudal levels. Single administration of either IL-1 or amphetamine causes three weeks later a selective decrease in relative DBH innervation density in those subnuclei of the PVN that contain high numbers of corticotrophin-releasing hormone (CRH) producing neurons: the dorsal parvocellular and medial parvocellular PVN. We conclude that (1) long-lasting sensitization induced by single exposure to IL-1 and amphetamine induces specific pattern of neuroplastic changes in (nor)adrenergic innervation in the PVN and (2) reduction of relative DBH innervation density in CRH-rich areas is associated with paradoxical increase of electrically evoked release of (nor)adrenaline. [source]


LEARNING ABILITY AND LONGEVITY: A SYMMETRICAL EVOLUTIONARY TRADE-OFF IN DROSOPHILA

EVOLUTION, Issue 6 2008
Joep M. S. Burger
Learning ability can be substantially improved by artificial selection in animals ranging from Drosophila to rats. Thus these species have not used their evolutionary potential with respect to learning ability, despite intuitively expected and experimentally demonstrated adaptive advantages of learning. This suggests that learning is costly, but this notion has rarely been tested. Here we report correlated responses of life-history traits to selection for improved learning in Drosophila melanogaster. Replicate populations selected for improved learning lived on average 15% shorter than the corresponding unselected control populations. They also showed a minor reduction in fecundity late in life and possibly a minor increase in dry adult mass. Selection for improved learning had no effect on egg-to-adult viability, development rate, or desiccation resistance. Because shortened longevity was the strongest correlated response to selection for improved learning, we also measured learning ability in another set of replicate populations that had been selected for extended longevity. In a classical olfactory conditioning assay, these long-lived flies showed an almost 40% reduction in learning ability early in life. This effect disappeared with age. Our results suggest a symmetrical evolutionary trade-off between learning ability and longevity in Drosophila. [source]


Leaf Quality of Some Tropical and Temperate Tree Species as Food Resource for Stream Shredders

INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF HYDROBIOLOGY, Issue 1 2010
Manuel A. S. Graça
Abstract We tested the hypotheses that (1) plant defenses against consumers increase in the tropics, and that these differences in quality are perceived by detritivores; and (2) microbial conditioning of leaf litter is important for the feeding ecology of shredders from both geographical regions. We compared quality parameters of 8 tree species from Portugal and 8 from Venezuela. The tropical leaves were tougher, but did not differ from temperate leaves in terms of N, C: N, and polyphenols. In multiple-choice experiments, shredders from Portugal (Sericostoma vittatum and Chaetopteryx lusitanica) and from Venezuela (Nectopsyche argentata and Phylloicus priapulus) discriminated among conditioned leaves, preferentially consuming softer leaves. In another set of experiments, all shredders preferentially fed on conditioned rather than unconditioned leaves, grew faster when fed conditioned than unconditioned leaves and fed more on temperate than tropical leaves. We conclude that leaf litter from the tropics is a low-quality resource compared to leaves in temperate systems, because of differences in toughness, and that tropical shredders benefit from microbial colonization, as previously demonstrated for temperate systems. We suggest that leaf toughness could be one explanation for the reported paucity of shredders in some tropical streams. (© 2010 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim) [source]


Chemoenzymatic Route to Both Enantiomers of a 1-Isopropyl-3a-methyloctahydroinden-4-one Derivative: A Synthetic Intermediate for Sesqui- and Diterpenoids

ADVANCED SYNTHESIS & CATALYSIS (PREVIOUSLY: JOURNAL FUER PRAKTISCHE CHEMIE), Issue 7-8 2005
Shigeo Fujieda
Abstract On the way to a chemoenzymatic synthesis of a key intermediate for sesquiterpenoids and diterpenoids, 2-methyl-2-(4-methyl-3-oxopentyl)-1,3-cyclohexanedione was reduced with the whole cells of yeast biocatalysts. Torulaspora delbrueckii NBRC10921 reduced a cyclic ketone of three carbonyl groups in an enantiofacially selective manner (re -face attack), but there was poor enantiotopic group selectivity between two carbonyl groups on the cyclohexane ring to yield a mixture of diastereomeric products. Candida floricola IAM13115 reduced mainly the pro -(R) carbonyl group. In contrast, the reduction proceeded in an enantiofacially poorly selective manner to give another set of diastereomeric products. In both cases, another carbonyl group on the side chain worked as a ,trapping arm' of the resulting secondary alcohol. The diastereomeric products were effectively separated as the ,syn' or ,cis' isomer exclusively exist in the intramolecular hemiacetal structure, while ,anti' or ,trans' isomer being an equilibrated mixture of cyclic hemiacetal and open-chain hydroxyketone (ca. 0.7,:,1). Starting separately from the enantiomerically enriched products as above, both enantiomers of the target compound, a key intermediate for terpenoids, were efficiently prepared via stereoselective ring closure under pinacol coupling reaction conditions. Furthermore, a daucane sesquiterpene intermediate, a hydroazulene derivative, was provided after one-carbon homologation of the six-membered ring. [source]


Comparison Insight Bone Measurements by Histomorphometry and ,CT,

JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, Issue 7 2005
Daniel Chappard MD
Abstract Morphometric analysis of 70 bone biopsies was done in parallel by ,CT and histomorphometry. ,CT provided higher results for trabecular thickness and separation because of the 3D shape of these anatomical objects. Introduction: Bone histomorphometry is used to explore the various metabolic bone diseases. The technique is done on microscopic 2D sections, and several methods have been proposed to extrapolate 2D measurements to the 3D dimension. X-ray ,CT is a recently developed imaging tool to appreciate 3D architecture. Recently the use of 2D histomorphometric measurements have been shown to provide discordant results compared with 3D values obtained directly. Material and Methods: Seventy human bone biopsies were removed from patients presenting with metabolic bone diseases. Complete bone biopsies were examined by ,CT. Bone volume (BV/TV), Tb.Th, and Tb.Sp were measured on the 3D models. Tb.Th and Tb.Sp were measured by a method based on the sphere algorithm. In addition, six images were resliced and transferred to an image analyzer: bone volume and trabecular characteristics were measured after thresholding of the images. Bone cores were embedded undecalcified; histological sections were prepared and measured by routine histomorphometric methods providing another set of values for bone volume and trabecular characteristics. Comparison between the different methods was done by using regression analysis, Bland-Altman, Passing-Bablock, and Mountain plots. Results: Correlations between all parameters were highly significant, but ,CT overestimated bone volume. The osteoid volume had no influence in this series. Overestimation may have been caused by a double threshold used in ,CT, giving trabecular boundaries less well defined than on histological sections. Correlations between Tb.Th and Tb.Sp values obtained by 3D or 2D measurements were lower, and 3D analysis always overestimated thickness by ,50%. These increases could be attributed to the 3D shape of the object because the number of nodes and the size of the marrow cavities were correlated with 3D values. Conclusion: In clinical practice, ,CT seems to be an interesting method providing reliable morphometric results in less time than conventional histomorphometry. The correlation coefficient is not sufficient to study the agreement between techniques in histomorphometry. The architectural descriptors are influenced by the algorithms used in 3D. [source]


Diffusion and spillover of new technology: a heterogeneous-agent model for cassava in West Africa

AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS, Issue 2 2006
Michael E. Johnson
Positive mathematical programming; Technology adoption; Technical change Abstract Understanding what determines the geographic spread of innovations can help guide the funding and implementation of research and extension programs. Our approach uses household survey data as model parameters, to simulate behavior across the entire surveyed population and avoid the aggregation bias associated with representative-farm models. Such a "heterogeneous agent" approach allows us to infer the distribution of a technology's impacts across one set of households, and predict the potential for spreading to another set that shares similar characteristics with respect to natural resource endowments and farming systems. We apply the technique to new cassava varieties in West Africa, finding a strongly poverty-alleviating impact, with substantial spillover potential from Nigeria to neighboring countries. [source]


Photoperiod,Testicular,Immune Interaction in a Seasonal Breeder Indian Palm Squirrel Funambulus pennanti During the Reproductively Inactive and Active Phases

JOURNAL OF NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY, Issue 1 2009
R. Ahmad
The differential effect of long (LD; 16 : 8 h light/dark), short (SD; 10 : 14 h light/dark) and natural day length (NDL; 12 : 12 h light/dark) during the reproductively inactive (RIP) and active (RAP) phases was assessed in relation to immunity and reproductive function of a tropical rodent Funambulus pennanti. They presented high immunity and low testicular activity during RIP and an opposite during RAP. SD increased spleen and thymus weight, leukocyte and lymphocyte counts, cell mediated immunity [i.e. blastogenic response in terms of percentage stimulation ratio of splenocytes and thymocytes (when challenged with concanavalin A)] and delayed type hypersensitivity to oxazolone. SD during RIP increased the above mentioned parameters and reduced testes weight compared to NDL groups. During RAP, LD reduced all the immunological parameters when compared with NDL and SD experiencing groups of RIP and RAP phases. The LD group reduced the immunological parameters compared to RAP, suggesting that LD had always an inhibitory effect on immune status being independent of reproductive phases. The intensity of the stimulatory effects of SD and inhibitory effects of LD during both reproductive phases was significantly different. We exposed another set of squirrels to the above photoperiodic schedule for prolonged period (30 weeks) during RAP. A clear testicular refractoriness followed by immunorefractoriness was observed in the group experiencing SD and LD for 30 weeks. The photorefractoriness presented by the testes was inversely related to the immunorefractoriness. The peripheral melatonin level of those squirrels reflected the photoperiodic signal perceived by squirrels for immunomodulation and gonadal function, suggesting that immune system and gonadal function might have coevolved. [source]


1,8-Cineole induces relaxation in rat and guinea-pig airway smooth muscle

JOURNAL OF PHARMACY AND PHARMACOLOGY: AN INTERNATI ONAL JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCE, Issue 3 2009
Nilberto Robson Falcão Nascimento
Abstract Objectives 1,8-Cineole is a monoterpene with anti-inflammatory, vascular and intestinal smooth muscle relaxant activity. We have evaluated the potential bronchodilatatory activity of this compound. Methods 1,8-Cineole was tested against carbachol, histamine, K+ 80 mM and ovalbumin-induced bronchial contractions in Wistar rat or guinea-pig tissues. Some of the guinea-pigs had been previously sensitized with an intramuscular injection of 5% (w/v) ovalbumin/saline solution. Control animals received 0.3 ml saline. In separate experimental groups the response to 1,8-cineole (1,30 mg/kg), phenoterol (0.05,5 mg/kg) or vehicle (0.3% Tween in saline) was studied. Key findings 1,8-Cineole decreased, in vivo, rat bronchial resistance with similar efficacy as phenoterol (66.7 ± 3.2% vs 72.1 ± 5.3%). On the other hand, the maximal relaxant response to 1,8-cineole in carbachol-precontracted rat tracheas was 85.5 ± 5.7% (IC50 = 408.9 (328,5196) ,g/ml) compared with 80.2 ± 4.8% (IC50 = 5.1 (4.3,6.1) ,g/ml) with phenoterol. The addition of 1,8-cineole to guinea-pig tracheal rings tonically contracted with K+ 80 mM induced a concentration-related relaxation. The maximal relaxation elicited by 1,8-cineole was 113.6 ± 11.7% (IC50 127.0 (115.9,139.2) ,g/ml) compared with 129.7 ± 14.6% (IC50 0.13 (0.12,0.14) ,g/ml) achieved after phenoterol administration. In addition, the incubation of tracheal rings with 1,8-cineole (100, 300 or 1000 ,g/ml), 15 min before inducing phasic contractions with K+ 80 mM, decreased the maximal amplitude of the contraction by 31.6 ± 4.6, 75.7 ± 2.7 and 92.2 ± 1.5%, respectively. In another set of experiments, neither the maximal response nor the IC50 for the 1,8-cineole-induced relaxation were different between normal and ovalbumin-sensitized tissues. Moreover, the relaxation of bronchial rings contracted after exposure to 1 ,g/ml ovalbumin occurred at a faster rate in rings pre-incubated with 1,8-cineole when compared with rings pre-incubated with vehicle only (Tween 0.3%). Therefore, in the first minute after the antigen challenge, the tracheal tissue relaxed after the peak contraction by 6.5, 21.4 (P < 0.05 vs control) and 66.9% (P < 0.05 vs control) in the presence of 100, 300 or 1000 ,g/ml 1,8-cineole, respectively. Conclusions 1,8-Cineole relaxed rat and guinea-pig (nonsensitized and ovalbumin-sensitized) airway smooth muscle by a nonspecific mechanism. [source]


Carisbamate, a Novel Antiepileptic Candidate Compound, Attenuates Alcohol Intake in Alcohol-Preferring Rats

ALCOHOLISM, Issue 8 2009
Amir H. Rezvani
Background:, Since 1994, when naltrexone (Revia®) was approved by the FDA for the treatment of alcoholism, only 2 other drugs (Campral® and Topamax®) have been approved for alcoholism treatment. However, various experimental drugs, including antiepileptic medications, have been tested in both animal models and in humans with some promising results. The purpose of this project was to study the effect of the novel neuromodulator carisbamate, which is in development for epilepsy treatment, on alcohol intake in selectively bred alcohol-preferring rats. Methods:, Male alcohol-preferring inbred P rats were allowed to freely drink water or alcohol (10%, v/v) using a 2-bottle choice procedure. After stable baselines for alcohol and water intakes were established, the acute effects of oral carisbamate (0, 10, 30, 45, 60, and 90 mg/kg) were assessed. Then, the chronic effect of the compound (60 mg/kg/day for 14 consecutive days) on alcohol intake was assessed in a separate group of male P rats. In another set of experiments, the effects of carisbamate and naltrexone on alcohol withdrawal-induced elevated drinking of alcohol, an index of craving, were compared. Rats were withdrawn from alcohol for 24 hours and were given vehicle, 20 mg/kg naltrexone or 60 mg/kg carisbamate 30 minutes before re-exposure to alcohol. Alcohol and water intake was measured 6 hours after alcohol re-exposure. To determine the effects of carisbamate on saccharin preference, rats were put on a 2-bottle choice of water versus a solution of 2% saccharin. Then, the effect of the highest dose of carisbamate (90 mg/kg) and naltrexone (20 mg/kg) and the vehicle on saccharin preference was determined. Results:, Our results showed that there was a selective dose-dependent reduction in alcohol intake and preference in the alcohol-preferring P rat after an acute oral administration of carisbamate. There were no significant effects on food or water intake. Chronic administration of carisbamate significantly reduced alcohol intake and preference initially, but partial tolerance developed after the 10th treatment. The degree of tolerance development was less than that observed for naltrexone. Acute administration of carisbamate was more effective than naltrexone in reducing enhanced alcohol intake after a period of alcohol deprivation. Compared with control vehicle neither carisbamate nor naltrexone had a significant effect on saccharin intake and preference. Conclusion:, The novel neuromodulator compound carisbamate has a favorable profile of effects on alcohol intake and related measures and should be considered for testing on human alcoholics. [source]


Inflammatory change of fatty liver induced by intraportal low-dose lipopolysaccharide infusion deteriorates pancreatic insulin secretion in fructose-induced insulin-resistant rats

LIVER INTERNATIONAL, Issue 8 2008
Po-Shiuan Hsieh
Abstract Background: This study tested whether subacute inflammatory change of fatty liver induced by portal endotoxaemia is detrimental to pancreatic insulin secretion in fructose-fed rats (FFRs) with fatty liver. Methods: Rats were randomly assigned into two groups with a regular or fructose-enriched diet for 8 weeks. Rats, after fructose feeding for 4 weeks, were further divided into three subgroups: on fructose diet alone, on fructose diet combined with intraportal saline or lipopolysaccharide (LPS) infusion (n=8 per group) for the next 4 weeks. In another set of experiments, the liver and pancreatic tissues were obtained for histological examination in these four groups. Pancreatic insulin secretion was evaluated by in vivo hyperglycaemic clamp study. Results: Fasting plasma insulin concentrations and homoeostasis model assessment-insulin resistance, an insulin resistance score, were significantly increased in FFRs but failed to change in rats with LPS treatment. The 4-week intraportal LPS infusion significantly increased circulating aspartate transaminase, alanine transaminase and C-reactive protein levels but did not alter endotoxin levels in FFRs. The increased white blood cell count was also noted in rats after intraportal LPS infusion for 2 and 4 weeks. The attenuated first-phase and second-phase insulin responses in FFRs shown in hyperglycaemic clamp were further deteriorated in those with intraportal LPS infusion. Increased histopathological scores of liver and pancreas shown in FFRs were further increased in those combined with portal endotoxaemia. Conclusion: This study demonstrates that the chronic subacute inflammatory change of fatty liver induced by mild portal endotoxaemia could deteriorate insulin secretion in a rodent model of metabolic syndrome and fatty liver. [source]


Mandibular fractures in short-finned pilot whales, Globicephala macrorhynchus

MARINE MAMMAL SCIENCE, Issue 1 2010
Mollie Sue Oremland
Abstract This study's objective was to investigate mandibular fractures in 50 short-finned pilot whales, Globicephala macrorhynchus, from two mass strandings. Based on current theories that this species is sexually dimorphic and polygynous, hypotheses were: (1) males should suffer more frequent or more substantial mandibular fractures than should females, and (2) fracture occurrence should increase with male reproductive maturity and potential correlates of maturity, such as age and length. Fractures were described and correlated with physical characteristics to infer possible explanations for injuries. Mandibular fractures were surprisingly common in males and females, being found in more than half of the animals examined (27/50, or 54% overall; 17/36 or 47% of females and 10/14 or 71% of males). Length was the only correlate of fracture presence; the proportion of animals showing evidence of fracture increased with length. These results offer some support to initial hypotheses, but there must be another set of consequences that contribute to mandibular fractures in females. A combination of intra- and interspecific interactions and life history characteristics may be responsible for fractures. Further research from a larger sample of this and other cetacean species are suggested to help elucidate both the causes and implications of mandibular fractures. [source]


Melanin Offers Protection Against Induction of Cyclobutane Pyrimidine Dimers and 6,4 Photoproducts by UVB in Cultured Human Melanocytes,

PHOTOCHEMISTRY & PHOTOBIOLOGY, Issue 3 2001
Nico P. M. Smit
ABSTRACT The goal of this investigation was to correlate the melanin content in human pigmentary cells with the generation of UVB-induced photoproducts and to examine the relationship between the melanin content and the removal of the photoproducts. Cultured melanocytes from light-skinned individuals synthesized less melanin and produced more cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers and 6,4 photoproducts upon UVB exposure than did melanocytes from black skin. Tyrosine-stimulated melanogenesis provided protection against DNA damage in both cell types. In another set of pigmented cell lines a ratio between eumelanin and pheomelanin was determined. The assessment of association between DNA damage induction and the quantity and quality of melanin revealed that eumelanin concentration correlated better with DNA protection than pheomelanin. Skin type,I and skin type,VI melanocytes, congenital nevus (CN)-derived cells and skin type,II melanocytes from a multiple-melanoma patient were grown in media with low or high l -tyrosine concentration. The cells were irradiated with 200 J/m2 UVB, and the levels of the photoproducts were determined immediately and after 6 and 24 h. Once again the induction of the photoproducts was mitigated by increased melanogenesis, and it was inversely correlated with the skin type. No significant differences were found for the removal of photoproducts in the cultures of skin types I and VI and CN cells. No indications of a delay in the removal of photoproducts in the melanocytes from the multiple-melanoma patient were found either. [source]


Simulation of the percolation of water into rigid polyurethane foams at applied hydraulic pressures

POLYMER ENGINEERING & SCIENCE, Issue 7 2006
Pravakar Mondal
The hydraulic resistance of polyurethane foams is studied by means of simulations of water penetration into model foams. The model foams of cubical shape are constructed by generating the centers of the cells randomly. The strength of the window separating two cells is assumed to be a function of the distance between the centers of the cells in one set of computations. In another set of computations the strengths of the windows are assigned randomly from a specified distribution. The foam is exposed to an elevated pressure at its boundaries and water penetrates into the foam by rupturing the windows with strengths lesser than the applied pressure. The variation of equilibrium volume fraction of the foam filled with water for increasing hydraulic pressures shows typical percolation behavior: there is a sharp increase in the volume filled beyond a threshold pressure. Simulations show that beyond a certain sample size there is no change in the percolation curve with sample size, and indicate that it is mainly the weaker windows that control the hydraulic resistance of the foam. The simulation results are compared with experimental data. POLYM. ENG. SCI. 46:970,983, 2006. © 2006 Society of Plastics Engineers [source]


Smad3 signalling plays an important role in keloid pathogenesis via epithelial,mesenchymal interactions

THE JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY, Issue 2 2005
TT Phan
Abstract Smad signalling plays important roles in developmental and cancer biology as well as in fibropathogenesis. Its role in keloid biology is not known. Epithelial,mesenchymal interactions, originally described in normal skin, have recently been established to play a significant role in keloid pathogenesis, and demonstrate the important influence of keratinocyte paracrine factor signalling on fibroblast behaviour. The present study investigated the role of downstream Smad cascade induction in this interaction. Normal fibroblasts (NF) and keloid fibroblasts (KF) were co-cultured in serum-free medium with normal keratinocytes (NK) or keloid keratinocytes (KK) for 5 days, after which fibroblast cell lysates were subjected to western blot and immunoprecipitation analysis to quantify the levels of Smad and Smad2/3/4 binding complex. In another set of experiments, wild-type (wt), Smad2-null (Smad2,/,) and Smad3-null (Smad3,/,) mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEF) were assayed for cell proliferation and collagen production after serum-free co-culture with KK or exposure to conditioned media collected from serum-free KK/KF co-culture. Compared to normal skin, keloids expressed high basal levels of TGF,R1 and TGF,R2, Smad2, 3 and 4 and phospho-Smad2. Upregulation of TGF,R1 and TGF,R2, Smad3 and p-Smad2 was observed in KF co-cultured with KK, together with enhanced Smad3 phosphorylation and Smad2/3/4 binding complex production. When MEF-wt, MEF-Smad2,/, or MEF-Smad3,/, were co-cultured with KK or exposed to KK/KF co-culture conditioned media, enhanced proliferation and collagen production were seen in MEF-wt and MEF-Smad2,/, but not in MEF-Smad3,/, cells. The activation of Smad signalling, importantly that of Smad3, appears to be one facet of the complex epithelial,mesenchymal interactions in keloid pathogenesis, resulting in active KF proliferation and collagen-ECM production in co-culture with KK. This finding suggests the suppression of Smad signalling as a novel approach in keloid therapy. Copyright © 2005 Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Interpolated twitches in fatiguing single mouse muscle fibres: implications for the assessment of central fatigue

THE JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 11 2008
Nicolas Place
An electrically evoked twitch during a maximal voluntary contraction (twitch interpolation) is frequently used to assess central fatigue. In this study we used intact single muscle fibres to determine if intramuscular mechanisms could affect the force increase with the twitch interpolation technique. Intact single fibres from flexor digitorum brevis of NMRI mice were dissected and mounted in a chamber equipped with a force transducer. Free myoplasmic [Ca2+] ([Ca2+]i) was measured with the fluorescent Ca2+ indicator indo-1. Seven fibres were fatigued with repeated 70 Hz tetani until 40% initial force with an interpolated pulse evoked every fifth tetanus. Results showed that the force generated by the interpolated twitch increased throughout fatigue, being 9 ± 1% of tetanic force at the start and 19 ± 1% at the end (P < 0.001). This was not due to a larger increase in [Ca2+]i induced by the interpolated twitch during fatigue but rather to the fact that the force,[Ca2+]i relationship is sigmoidal and fibres entered a steeper part of the relationship during fatigue. In another set of experiments, we observed that repeated tetani evoked at 150 Hz resulted in more rapid fatigue development than at 70 Hz and there was a decrease in force (,sag') during contractions, which was not observed at 70 Hz. In conclusion, the extent of central fatigue is difficult to assess and it may be overestimated when using the twitch interpolation technique. [source]


Extracting charge density distributions from diffraction data: a model study on urea

ACTA CRYSTALLOGRAPHICA SECTION B, Issue 1 2000
R. Y. De Vries
The quality of the extraction of electron density distributions by means of a multipole refinement method is investigated. Structure factors of the urea crystal have been obtained from an electron density distribution (EDD) resulting from a density function calculation with the CRYSTAL95 package. To account for the thermal motion of the atoms, the stockholder-partioned densities of the atoms have been convoluted with thermal smearing functions, which were obtained from a neutron diffraction experiment. A POP multipole refinement yielded a good fit, R = 0.6%. This disagreement factor is based on magnitudes only. Comparison with the original structure factors gave a disagreement of 0.8% owing to differences in magnitude and phase. The fitted EDD still showed all the characteristics of the interaction density. After random errors corresponding to the experimental situation were added to the structure factors, the refinement was repeated. The fit was R = 1.1%. This time the resulting interaction density was heavily deformed. Repetition with another set of random errors from the same distribution yielded a widely different interaction density distribution. The conclusion is that interaction densities cannot be obtained from X-ray diffraction data on non-centrosymmetric crystals. [source]