5 resultados para Calcium-oxalate Monohydrate
em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
The Mediterranean Sea is expected to react faster to global change compared to the ocean and is already showing more pronounced warming and acidification rates. A study performed along the Italian western coast showed that porosity of the skeleton increases with temperature in the zooxanthellate (i.e. symbiotic with unicellular algae named zooxanthellae) solitary scleractinian Balanophyllia europaea while it does not vary with temperature in the solitary non-zooxanthellate Leptopsammia pruvoti. These results were confirmed by another study that indicated that the increase in porosity was accompanied by an increase of the fraction of the largest pores in the pore-space, perhaps due to an inhibition of the photosynthetic process at elevated temperatures, causing an attenuation of calcification. B. europaea, L. pruvoti and the colonial non-zooxanthellate Astroides calycularis, transplanted along a natural pH gradient, showed that high temperature exacerbated the negative effect of lowered pH on their mortality rates. The growth of the zooxanthellate species did not react to reduced pH, while the growth of the two non-zooxanthellate species was negatively affected. Reduced abundance of naturally occurring B. europaea, a mollusk, a calcifying and a non-calcifying macroalgae were observed along the gradient while no variation was seen in the abundance of a calcifying green alga. With decreasing pH, the mineralogy of the coral and mollusk did not change, while the two calcifying algae decreased the content of aragonite in favor of the less soluble calcium sulphates and whewellite (calcium oxalate), possibly as a mechanism of phenotypic plasticity. Increased values of porosity and macroporosity with CO2 were observed in B. europaea specimens, indicating reduces the resistance of its skeletons to mechanical stresses with increasing acidity. These findings, added to the negative effect of temperature on various biological parameters, generate concern on the sensitivity of this zooxanthellate species to the envisaged global climate change scenarios.
Resumo:
Many potential diltiazem related L-VDCC blockers were developed using a multidisciplinary approach. This current study was to investigate and compare diltiazem with to the newly developed compounds by mouse Langendorff-perfused heart, Ca2+-transient and on recombinant L-VDCC. Twenty particular compounds were selected by the ligand-based virtual screening procedure (LBVS). From these compounds, five of them (5b, M2, M7, M8 and P1) showed a potent and selective inotropic activity on guinea-pig left atria driven 1 Hz. Further assays displayed an interesting negative inotropic effect of M2, M8, P1 and M7 on guinea pig isolated left papillary muscle driven at 1 Hz, a relevant vasorelaxant activity of 5b, M2, M7, M8 and P1 on K+-depolarized guinea-pig ileum longitudinal smooth muscle and a significant inhibition of contraction of 5b, M2, M8 and P1 on carbachol stimulated ileum longitudinal smooth muscle. Wild-type human heart and rabbit lung α1 subunits were expressed (combined with the regulatory α2δ and β3 subunits) in Xenopus Leavis oocytes using a two-electrode voltage clamp technique. Diltiazem is a benzothiazepine Ca2+ channel blocker used clinically for its antihypertensive and antiarrhythmic effects. Previous radioligand binding assays revealed a complex interaction with the benzothiazepine binding site for M2, M7 and M8. (Carosati E. et al. J. Med Chem. 2006, 49; 5206). In agreement with this findings, the relative order of increased rates of contraction and relaxation at lower concentrations s(≤10-6M) in unpaced hearts was M7>M2>M8>P1. Similar increases in Ca2+ transient were observed in cardiomyocytes. Diltiazem showed negative inotropic effects whereas 5b had no significant effect. Diltiazem blocks Ca2+current in a use-dependent manner and facilitates the channel by accelerating the inactivation and decelerating the recovery from inactivation. In contrast to diltiazem, the new analogs had no pronounced use-dependence. Application of 100 μM M8, M2 showed ~ 10% tonic block; in addition, M8, M2 and P1 shifted the steady state inactivation in hyperpolarized direction and the current inactivation time was significantly decreased compared with control (219.6 ± 11.5 ms, 226 ± 14.5 vs. 269 ± 12.9 vs. 199.28 ± 8.19 ms). Contrary to diltiazem, the recovery from the block by M8 and M2 was comparable to control. Only P1 showed a significantly decrease of the time for the recovery from inactivation. All of the compounds displayed the same sensitivity on the Ca2+ channel rabbit lung α1 except P1. Taken together, these findings suggest that M8, M2 and P1 might directly decrease the binding affinity or allow rapid dissociation from the benzothiazepine binding site.