4 resultados para Infection by inhalation
em Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
Resumo:
The environmental impact of systems managing large (kg) tritium amount represents a public scrutiny issue for the next coming fusion facilities as ITER and DEMO. Furthermore, potentially new dose limits imposed by international regulations (ICRP) shall impact next coming devices designs and the overall costs of fusion technology deployment. Refined environmental tritium dose impact assessment schemes are then overwhelming. Detailed assessments can be procured from the knowledge of the real boundary conditions of the primary tritium discharge phase into atmosphere (low levels) and into soils. Lagrangian dispersion models using real-time meteorological and topographic data provide a strong refinement. Advance simulation tools are being developed in this sense. The tool integrates a numerical model output records from European Centre for Medium range Weather Forecast (ECMWF) with a lagrangian atmospheric dispersion model (FLEXPART). The composite model ECMWF/FLEXTRA results can be coupled with tritium dose secondary phase pathway assessment tools. Nominal tritium discharge operational reference and selected incidental ITER-like plant systems tritium form source terms have been assumed. The realtime daily data and mesh-refined records together with lagrangian dispersion model approach provide accurate results for doses to population by inhalation or ingestion in the secondary phase
Resumo:
In a previous work, deduced amino acid sequences from twenty wheat peroxidase genes were assigned to seven groups designated as TaPrx108 to TaPrx114. Some of these apoplastic peroxidases have previously shown to play different roles in the plant defense responses to infection by the cereal cyst nematode Heterodera avenae. In the present study, PCR marker analysis using Sears’s aneuploid wheat lines cv. ‘Chinese Spring’ was used to locate four genes encoding peroxidase isozymes. The TaPrx111-A, TaPrx112-D and TaPrx113-F genes were located on the short arm of chromosome 2B and the TaPrx109-C on the long arm of chromosome 1B. These results would agree with the synteny between wheat and rice chromosomes previously established in other studies.
Resumo:
Grain-induced asthma is a frequent occupational allergic disease mainly caused by inhalation of cereal flour or powder. The main professions affected are bakers, confectioners, pastry factory workers, millers, farmers, and cereal handlers. This disorder is usually due to an IgE-mediated allergic response to inhalation of cereal flour proteins. The major causative allergens of grain-related asthma are proteins derived from wheat, rye and barley flour, although baking additives, such as fungal α-amylase are also important. This review deals with the current diagnosis and treatment of grain-induced asthma, emphasizing the role of cereal allergens as molecular tools to enhance diagnosis and management of this disorder. Asthma-like symptoms caused by endotoxin exposure among grain workers are beyond the scope of this review. Progress is being made in the characterization of grain and bakery allergens, particularly cereal-derived allergens, as well as in the standardization of allergy tests. Salt-soluble proteins (albumins plus globulins), particularly members of the α-amylase/trypsin inhibitor family, thioredoxins, peroxidase, lipid transfer protein and other soluble enzymes show the strongest IgE reactivities in wheat flour. In addition, prolamins (not extractable by salt solutions) have also been claimed as potential allergens. However, the large variability of IgE-binding patterns of cereal proteins among patients with grain-induced asthma, together with the great differences in the concentrations of potential allergens observed in commercial cereal extracts used for diagnosis, highlight the necessity to standardize and improve the diagnostic tools. Removal from exposure to the offending agents is the cornerstone of the management of grain-induced asthma. The availability of purified allergens should be very helpful for a more refined diagnosis, and new immunomodulatory treatments, including allergen immunotherapy and biological drugs, should aid in the management of patients with this disorder.
Resumo:
Los virus de plantas pueden causar enfermedades severas que conllevan serias pérdidas económicas a nivel mundial. Además, en la naturaleza son comunes las infecciones simultáneas con distintos virus que conducen a la exacerbación de los síntomas de enfermedad, fenómeno al que se conoce como sinergismo viral. Una de las sintomatologías más severas causadas por los virus en plantas susceptibles es la necrosis sistémica (NS), que incluso puede conducir a la muerte del huésped. Este fenotipo ha sido comparado en ocasiones con la respuesta de resistencia de tipo HR, permitiendo establecer una serie de paralelismos entre ambos tipos de respuesta que sugieren que la NS producida en interacciones compatibles sería el resultado de una respuesta hipersensible sistémica (SHR). Sin embargo, los mecanismos moleculares implicados en el desarrollo de la NS, su relación con procesos de defensa antiviral o su relevancia biológica aún no son bien entendidos, al igual que tampoco han sido estudiados los cambios producidos en la planta a escala genómica en infecciones múltiples que muestran sinergismo en patología. En esta tesis doctoral se han empleado distintas aproximaciones de análisis de expresión génica, junto con otras técnicas genéticas y bioquímicas, en el sistema modelo de Nicotiana benthamiana para estudiar la NS producida por la infección sinérgica entre el Virus X de la patata (PVX) y diversos potyvirus. Se han comparado los cambios producidos en el huésped a nivel genómico y fisiológico entre la infección doble con PVX y el Virus Y de la patata (PVY), y las infecciones simples con PVX o PVY. Además, los cambios transcriptómicos y hormonales asociados a la infección con la quimera viral PVX/HC‐Pro, que reproduce los síntomas del sinergismo entre PVX‐potyvirus, se han comparado con aquellos producidos por otros dos tipos de muerte celular, la PCD ligada a una interacción incompatible y la PCD producida por la disfunción del proteasoma. Por último, técnicas de genética reversa han permitido conocer la implicación de factores del huésped, como las oxilipinas, en el desarrollo de la NS asociada al sinergismo entre PVXpotyvirus. Los resultados revelan que, respecto a las infecciones con solo uno de los virus, la infección doble con PVX‐PVY produce en el huésped diferencias cualitativas además de cuantitativas en el perfil transcriptómico relacionado con el metabolismo primario. Otros cambios en la expresión génica, que reflejan la activación de mecanismos de defensa, correlacionan con un fuerte estrés oxidativo en las plantas doblemente infectadas que no se detecta en las infecciones simples. Además, medidas en la acumulación de determinados miRNAs implicados en diversos procesos celulares muestran como la infección doble altera de manera diferencial tanto la acumulación de estos miRNAs como su funcionalidad, lo cual podría estar relacionado con los cambios en el transcriptoma, así como con la sintomatología de la infección. La comparación a nivel transcriptómico y hormonal entre la NS producida por PVX/HC‐Pro y la interacción incompatible del Virus del mosaico del tabaco en plantas que expresan el gen N de resistencia (SHR), muestra que la respuesta en la interacción compatible es similar a la que se produce durante la SHR, si bien se presenta de manera retardada en el tiempo. Sin embargo, los perfiles de expresión de genes de defensa y de respuesta a hormonas, así como la acumulación relativa de ácido salicílico (SA), ácido jasmonico (JA) y ácido abscísico, en la interacción compatible son más semejantes a la respuesta PCD producida por la disfunción del proteasoma que a la interacción incompatible. Estos datos sugieren una contribución de la interferencia sobre la funcionalidad del proteasoma en el incremento de la patogenicidad, observado en el sinergismo PVX‐potyvirus. Por último, los resultados obtenidos al disminuir la expresión de 9‐LOX, α‐DOX1 y COI1, relacionados con la síntesis o con la señalización de oxilipinas, y mediante la aplicación exógena de JA y SA, muestran la implicación del metabolismo de las oxilipinas en el desarrollo de la NS producida por la infección sinérgica entre PVXpotyvirus en N. benthamiana. Además, estos resultados indican que la PCD asociada a esta infección, al igual que ocurre en interacciones incompatibles, no contiene necesariamente la acumulación viral, lo cual indica que necrosis e inhibición de la multiplicación viral son procesos independientes. ABSTRACT Plant viruses cause severe diseases that lead to serious economic losses worldwide. Moreover, simultaneous infections with several viruses are common in nature leading to exacerbation of the disease symptoms. This phenomenon is known as viral synergism. Systemic necrosis (SN) is one of the most severe symptoms caused by plant viruses in susceptible plants, even leading to death of the host. This phenotype has been compared with the hypersensitive response (HR) displayed by resistant plants, and some parallelisms have been found between both responses, which suggest that SN induced by compatible interactions could be the result of a systemic hypersensitive response (SHR). However, the molecular mechanisms involved in the development of SN, its relationship with antiviral defence processes and its biological relevance are still unknown. Furthermore, the changes produced in plants by mixed infections that cause synergistic pathological effects have not been studied in a genome‐wide scale. In this doctoral thesis different approaches have been used to analyse gene expression, together with other genetic and biochemical techniques, in the model plant Nicotiana benthamiana, in order to study the SN produced by the synergistic infection of Potato virus X (PVX) with several potyviruses. Genomic and physiological changes produced in the host by double infection with PVX and Potato virus Y (PVY), and by single infection with PVX or PVY have been compared. In addition, transcriptional and hormonal changes associated with infection by the chimeric virus PVX/HC‐Pro, which produces synergistic symptoms similar to those caused by PVX‐potyvirus, have been compared with those produced by other types of cell death. These types of cell death are: PCD associated with an incompatible interaction, and PCD produced by proteasome disruption. Finally, reverse genetic techniques have revealed the involvement of host factors, such as oxylipins, in the development of SN associated with PVX‐potyvirus synergism. The results revealed that compared with single infections, double infection with PVX‐PVY produced qualitative and quantitative differences in the transcriptome profile, mainly related to primary metabolism. Other changes in gene expression, which reflected the activation of defence mechanisms, correlated with a severe oxidative stress in doubly infected plants that was undetected in single infections. Additionally, accumulation levels of several miRNAs involved in different cellular processes were measured, and the results showed that double infection not only produced the greatest variations in miRNA accumulation levels but also in miRNA functionality. These variations could be related with transcriptomic changes and the symptomatology of the infection. Transcriptome and hormone level comparisons between SN induced by PVX/HCPro and the incompatible interaction produced by Tobacco mosaic virus in plants expressing the N resistance gene (SHR), showed some similarities between both responses, even though the compatible interaction appeared retarded in time. Nevertheless, the expression profiles of both defence‐related genes and hormoneresponsive genes, as well as the relative accumulation of salicylic acid (SA), jasmonic acid (JA) and abscisic acid in the compatible interaction are more similar to the PCD response produced by proteasome disruption. These data suggest that interference with proteasome functionality contributes to the increase in pathogenicity associated with PVX‐potyvirus synergism. Finally, the results obtained by reducing the expression of 9‐LOX, α‐DOX1 and COI1, related with synthesis or signalling of oxylipins, and by applying exogenously JA and SA, revealed that oxylipin metabolism is involved in the development of SN induced by PVX‐potyvirus synergistic infections in N. benthamiana. Moreover, these results also indicated that PVX‐potyvirus associated PCD does not necessarily restrict viral accumulation, as is also the case in incompatible interactions. This indicates that both necrosis and inhibition of viral multiplication are independent processes.