7 resultados para LATITUDINAL GRADIENTS
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Poster presentado a 11th International Symposium on Microbial Ecology(ISME -11)celebrado en Viena del 20 al 25 de agosto de 2006
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En este estudio se han optimizado para su análisis mediante la técnica HRM los cebadores responsables de la amplificación de dos SNPs (rs199456 y rs199457), con los cuales es posible identificar los haplotipos H1 y H2 y los subhaplotipos H2' y H2D de la región 17q21.31 del cromosoma 17. Los genes que se encuentran en esta región, especialmente MAPT, están implicados en enfermedades neurodegenerativas como el Alzehimer, ciertas variantes de retraso mental y dificultades para el aprendizaje. El haplotipo H2 muestra una distribución muy característica, puesto que sólo aparece en poblaciones del continente europeo, especialmente en el sudoeste. Una vez optimizados los cebadores, se han utilizado para identificar los haplotipos de una serie de muestras de ADN de población del norte de Navarra. Con los datos disponibles en la bibliografía, se ha analizado la distribución en Europa de los diferentes haplotipos, encontrándose para H2 una clina latitudinal.
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Fundamentally, action potentials in the squid axon are consequence of the entrance of sodium ions during the depolarization of the rising phase of the spike mediated by the outflow of potassium ions during the hyperpolarization of the falling phase. Perfect metabolic efficiency with a minimum charge needed for the change in voltage during the action potential would confine sodium entry to the rising phase and potassium efflux to the falling phase. However, because sodium channels remain open to a significant extent during the falling phase, a certain overlap of inward and outward currents is observed. In this work we investigate the impact of ion overlap on the number of the adenosine triphosphate (ATP) molecules and energy cost required per action potential as a function of the temperature in a Hodgkin–Huxley model. Based on a recent approach to computing the energy cost of neuronal action potential generation not based on ion counting, we show that increased firing frequencies induced by higher temperatures imply more efficient use of sodium entry, and then a decrease in the metabolic energy cost required to restore the concentration gradients after an action potential. Also, we determine values of sodium conductance at which the hydrolysis efficiency presents a clear minimum.
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It has long been known that neurons in the brain are not physiologically homogeneous. In response to current stimulus, they can fire several distinct patterns of action potentials that are associated with different physiological classes ranging from regular-spiking cells, fast-spiking cells, intrinsically bursting cells, and low-threshold cells. In this work we show that the high degree of variability in firing characteristics of action potentials among these cells is accompanied with a significant variability in the energy demands required to restore the concentration gradients after an action potential. The values of the metabolic energy were calculated for a wide range of cell temperatures and stimulus intensities following two different approaches. The first one is based on the amount of Na+ load crossing the membrane during a single action potential, while the second one focuses on the electrochemical energy functions deduced from the dynamics of the computational neuron models. The results show that the thalamocortical relay neuron is the most energy-efficient cell consuming between 7 and 18 nJ/cm(2) for each spike generated, while both the regular and fast spiking cells from somatosensory cortex and the intrinsically-bursting cell from a cat visual cortex are the least energy-efficient, and can consume up to 100 nJ/cm(2) per spike. The lowest values of these energy demands were achieved at higher temperatures and high external stimuli.
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Este artículo forma parte de la investigación realizada en el marco de la tesis de licenciatura de su autora: "La red viaria romana en el norte de Burgos. Valles de Mena, Losa y Sotoscueva. Vía Pisoraca- Flauiobriga. Via Flauiobriga-Iuliobriga. Vías secundarias", leída en el Departamento de Estudios Clásicos de la Facultad de Filología, Geografía e Historia de la UPV/EHU el 9 de octubre de 1996.
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[ES] Las estructuras de las comunidades de agua dulce pueden variar bajo diferentes gradientes de origen natural y antropogénico. En nuestro trabajo testamos la relación entre variables geográficas ambientales y la diversidad, tanto taxonómica como funcional, de macroinvertebrados acuáticos, con la idea de poder definir patrones de distribución espacial a lo largo de los sistemas fluviales de la Península Ibérica. La altitud del punto de muestreo, el tamaño de la cuenca, los usos del suelo, la pluviometría y la geología de las cuencas aguas arriba de los puntos de muestreo fueron usadas como variables predictoras. Encontramos que el grado de cobertura urbana afectaba negativamente a la diversidad taxonómica, reduciendo así mismo la diversidad funcional. Sin embargo, nuestros resultados indicaron un efecto positivo en la diversidad bajo el efecto perturbador de las coberturas agrícolas. A su vez, encontramos una correlación entre la altitud y la cobertura de áreas urbanizadas y agrícolas en la cuenca. La geología de la cuenca tenía una mínima repercusión en las estructuras de las comunidades. En general, nuestros resultados sugieren que la diversidad de macroinvertebrados responde con mayor fuerza a las presiones antrópicas que a los gradientes naturales.
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Plant community ecologists use the null model approach to infer assembly processes from observed patterns of species co-occurrence. In about a third of published studies, the null hypothesis of random assembly cannot be rejected. When this occurs, plant ecologists interpret that the observed random pattern is not environmentally constrained - but probably generated by stochastic processes. The null model approach (using the C-score and the discrepancy index) was used to test for random assembly under two simulation algorithms. Logistic regression, distance-based redundancy analysis, and constrained ordination were used to test for environmental determinism (species segregation along environmental gradients or turnover and species aggregation). This article introduces an environmentally determined community of alpine hydrophytes that presents itself as randomly assembled. The pathway through which the random pattern arises in this community is suggested to be as follows: Two simultaneous environmental processes, one leading to species aggregation and the other leading to species segregation, concurrently generate the observed pattern, which results to be neither aggregated nor segregated - but random. A simulation study supports this suggestion. Although apparently simple, the null model approach seems to assume that a single ecological factor prevails or that if several factors decisively influence the community, then they all exert their influence in the same direction, generating either aggregation or segregation. As these assumptions are unlikely to hold in most cases and assembly processes cannot be inferred from random patterns, we would like to propose plant ecologists to investigate specifically the ecological processes responsible for observed random patterns, instead of trying to infer processes from patterns