3 resultados para Populations-conditions

em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Two Amerindian populations from the Peruvian Amazon (Yanesha) and from rural lowlands of the Argentinean Gran Chaco (Wichi) were analyzed. They represent two case study of the South American genetic variability. The Yanesha represent a model of population isolated for long-time in the Amazon rainforest, characterized by environmental and altitudinal stratifications. The Wichi represent a model of population living in an area recently colonized by European populations (the Criollos are the population of the admixed descendents), whose aim is to depict the native ancestral gene pool and the degree of admixture, in relation to the very high prevalence of Chagas disease. The methods used for the genotyping are common, concerning the Y chromosome markers (male lineage) and the mitochondrial markers (maternal lineage). The determination of the phylogeographic diagnostic polymorphisms was carried out by the classical techniques of PCR, restriction enzymes, sequencing and specific mini-sequencing. New method for the detection of the protozoa Trypanosoma cruzi was developed by means of the nested PCR. The main results show patterns of genetic stratification in Yanesha forest communities, referable to different migrations at different times, estimated by Bayesian analyses. In particular Yanesha were considered as a population of transition between the Amazon basin and the Andean Cordillera, evaluating the potential migration routes and the separation of clusters of community in relation to different genetic bio-ancestry. As the Wichi, the gene pool analyzed appears clearly differentiated by the admixed sympatric Criollos, due to strict social practices (deeply analyzed with the support of cultural anthropological tools) that have preserved the native identity at a diachronic level. A pattern of distribution of the seropositivity in relation to the different phylogenetic lineages (the adaptation in evolutionary terms) does not appear, neither Amerindian nor European, but in relation to environmental and living conditions of the two distinct subpopulations.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The presence of multiple stellar populations in globular clusters (GCs) is now well accepted, however, very little is known regarding their origin. In this Thesis, I study how multiple populations formed and evolved by means of customized 3D numerical simulations, in light of the most recent data from spectroscopic and photometric observations of Local and high-redshift Universe. Numerical simulations are the perfect tool to interpret these data: hydrodynamic simulations are suited to study the early phases of GCs formation, to follow in great detail the gas behavior, while N-body codes permit tracing the stellar component. First, we study the formation of second-generation stars in a rotating massive GC. We assume that second-generation stars are formed out of asymptotic giant branch stars (AGBs) ejecta, diluted by external pristine gas. We find that, for low pristine gas density, stars mainly formed out of AGBs ejecta rotate faster than stars formed out of more diluted gas, in qualitative agreement with current observations. Then, assuming a similar setup, we explored whether Type Ia supernovae affect the second- generation star formation and their chemical composition. We show that the evolution depends on the density of the infalling gas, but, in general, an iron spread is developed, which may explain the spread observed in some massive GCs. Finally, we focused on the long-term evolution of a GC, composed of two populations and orbiting the Milky Way disk. We have derived that, for an extended first population and a low-mass second one, the cluster loses almost 98 percent of its initial first population mass and the GC mass can be as much as 20 times less after a Hubble time. Under these conditions, the derived fraction of second-population stars reproduces the observed value, which is one of the strongest constraints of GC mass loss.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

This PhD project aimed to (i) investigate the effects of three nutritional strategies (supplementation of a synbiotic, a muramidase, or arginine) on growth performance, gut health, and metabolism of broilers fed without antibiotics under thermoneutral and heat stress conditions and to (ii) explore the impacts of heat stress on hypothalamic regulation of feed intake in three broiler lines from diverse stages of genetic selection and in the red jungle fowl, the ancestor of domestic chickens. Synbiotic improved feed efficiency and footpad health, increased Firmicutes and reduced Bacteroidetes in the ceca of birds kept in thermoneutral conditions, while did not mitigate the impacts of heat stress on growth performance. Under optimal thermal conditions, muramidase increased final body weight and reduced cumulative feed intake and feed conversion ratio in a dose-dependent way. The highest dose reduced the risk of footpad lesions, cecal alpha diversity, the Firmicutes to Bacteroidetes ratio, and butyrate producers, increased Bacteroidaceae and Lactobacillaceae, plasmatic levels of bioenergetic metabolites, and reduced the levels of pro-oxidant metabolites. The same dose, however, failed to reduce the effects of heat stress on growth performance. Arginine supplementation improved growth rate, final body weight, and feed efficiency, increased plasmatic levels of arginine and creatine and hepatic levels of creatine and essential amino acids, reduced alpha diversity, Firmicutes, and Proteobacteria (especially Escherichia coli), and increased Bacteroidetes and Lactobacillus salivarius in the ceca of thermoneutral birds. No arginine-mediated attenuation of heat stress was found. Heat stress altered protein metabolism and caused the accumulation of antioxidant and protective molecules in oxidative stress-sensitive tissues. Arginine supplementation, however, may have partially counterbalanced the effects of heat stress on energy homeostasis. Stable gene expression of (an)orexigenic neuropeptides was found in the four chicken populations studied, but responses to hypoxia and heat stress appeared to be related to feed intake regulation.