2 resultados para Microchip Capillary-Electrophoresis

em Acceda, el repositorio institucional de la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. España


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[EN]The present work evaluates, on one hand, two anaesthetic agents to facilitate octopus handling concluding that a 1.5% of ethanol (96%) in sea water (22ºC) shows rapid anaesthetic-recovery time, indicating its suitability for this species. On the other hand, a protocol for implanting Octopus vulgaris with subcutaneous PIT tags is established and after 10 weeks a 94% retention was found with 100% survival. Retention rises to 98,6% when tagging animals weighing more than 500 g.

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[EN] Increased skeletal muscle capillary density would be a logical adaptive mechanism to chronic hypoxic exposure. However, animal studies have yielded conflicting results, and human studies are sparse. Neoformation of capillaries is dependent on endothelial growth factors such as vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), a known target gene for hypoxia inducible factor 1 (HIF-1). We hypothesised that prolonged exposure to high altitude increases muscle capillary density and that this can be explained by an enhanced HIF-1alpha expression inducing an increase in VEGF expression. We measured mRNA levels and capillary density in muscle biopsies from vastus lateralis obtained in sea level residents (SLR; N=8) before and after 2 and 8 weeks of exposure to 4100 m altitude and in Bolivian Aymara high-altitude natives exposed to approximately 4100 m altitude (HAN; N=7). The expression of HIF-1alpha or VEGF mRNA was not changed with prolonged hypoxic exposure in SLR, and both genes were similarly expressed in SLR and HAN. In SLR, whole body mass, mean muscle fibre area and capillary to muscle fibre ratio remained unchanged during acclimatization. The capillary to fibre ratio was lower in HAN than in SLR (2.4+/-0.1 vs 3.6+/-0.2; P<0.05). In conclusion, human muscle VEGF mRNA expression and capillary density are not significantly increased by 8 weeks of exposure to high altitude and are not increased in Aymara high-altitude natives compared with sea level residents.