5 resultados para Cristaria plicata
em Scielo Saúde Pública - SP
Resumo:
In the ascidian Styela plicata, the oocytes are surrounded by two types of accessory cells named follicle cells and test cells. A heparin-like substance with an anticoagulant activity equivalent to 10% of mammalian heparin and about 5% as potent as the mammalian counterpart for the inhibition of thrombin by antithrombin was isolated from the oocyte test cells. In the present study, we compared the antithrombotic and hemorrhagic effects of sea squirt oocyte test cell heparin with those of porcine heparin in rat models of venous thrombosis and blood loss. Intravenous administration of the oocyte test cell heparin to Wistar rats (both sexes, weighing ~300 g, N = 4 in each group) at a dose of 5.0 mg/kg body weight, which produced a 1.8-fold increase in plasma activated partial thromboplastin time, inhibited thrombosis by 45 ± 13.5% (mean ± SD) without any bleeding effect. The same dose of porcine heparin inhibited thrombosis by 100 ± 1.4%, but produced a blood loss three times greater than that of the saline-treated control. However, 10-fold reduction of the dose of porcine heparin to 0.5 mg/kg body weight, which produced a 5-fold increase in plasma-activated partial thromboplastin time, inhibited thrombosis by 70 ± 13% without any bleeding effect. The antithrombotic properties of a new heparin isolated from test cells of the sea squirt S. plicata, reported here for the first time, indicate that, although sea squirt oocyte test cell heparin was a poor anticoagulant compared to porcine heparin, it had a significant antithrombotic effect without causing bleeding.
Resumo:
Simple and colonial ascidians were collected at different depths at Arraial do Cabo, Rio de Janeiro, between 2000 and 2003. The collection here presented includes representatives of the families Clavelinidae (Clavelina oblonga), Polycitoridae (Cystodytes dellechiajei), Polyclinidae (Polyclinum constellatum and Polyclinum molle sp. nov.), Holozoidae (Distaplia bermudensis), Ascidiidae (Ascidia sydneiensis and Phallusia nigra), Styelidae (Botrylloides giganteum, Botrylloides nigrum, Symplegma brakenhielmi, Symplegma rubra, Polyandrocarpa anguinea, Eusynstyela floridana, Eusynstyela tincta and Styela plicata), Pyuridae (Herdmania pallida and Microcosmus exasperatus). Didemnids were also collected in the area but were not considered here. Of the 17 species found, one (Polyclinum molle sp. nov.) is a new species in the family Polyclinidae and the others are all species with tropical distribution.
Resumo:
The objective of this work was to determine seasonal variation and vertical distribution of the soil rotifer assemblage in a climax beech forest in South Bohemia. During 2005, soil rotifer was investigated to the species level. Soil samples of 10 cm² and 10 cm in depth were divided into five layers, which were processed separately. Thirty one rotifer species were identified during the investigation. Dominant species significantly changed throughout the seasons. The most abundant species were Encentrum arvicola and Wierzejskiella vagneri among the monogononts, and Adineta steineri, Ceratotrocha cornigera, Habrotrocha filum, Habrotrocha ligula, Macrotrachela plicata, Mniobia tentans, Mniobia incrassata and Mniobia granulosa among the bdelloids. Mean Shannon diversity index varied from 1.99 to 2.63. Total rotifer abundance varied from 212±63 to 513±127 10³ individuals m-2 along the year, with the highest numbers found in May, and the lowest in July. The great part of the community was concentrated in the upper (fresh litter) and second (partially decomposed litter) layers and significantly decreased in the soil vertical profile on all sampling dates. The highest rotifer density of 43 individuals g-1 was found in the upper layer in May.
Resumo:
A ação de produtos naturais sobre fitopatógenos tem sido investigada visando-se avaliar sua eficácia no controle alternativo de doenças, principalmente na agricultura orgânica. O objetivo desse trabalho foi avaliar o efeito dos óleos essenciais de alecrim pimenta (Lippia sidoides) e capim citronela (Cymbopogonwinterianus) no controle de Meloidogyne incognita raça 2, em tomate (Solanumlycopersicum) e celósia (Celosia plicata). Para tanto, conduziu-se ensaio em esquema fatorial 6 x 2, com cinco repetições. O ensaio foi realizado em casa de vegetação do Setor de Fitossanidade do Departamento de Fitotecnia/CCA/UFC, no período de abril a junho de 2007. As mudas utilizadas neste ensaio foram transplantadas para vasos plástico contendo 2 kg de solo estéril, nos quais, 24 horas após o transplantio, foram inoculados com 4.000 ovos/J2 de M. incognita, raça 2, exceto as testemunhas negativas. Em 50% do número de vasos, aplicou-se, logo em seguida, 100 ml das soluções de cada óleo essencial em cada vaso na concentração de 2,5 ml L-1. Esperaram-se mais 48 horas para aplicação da mesma quantidade nos vasos restantes. Este volume corresponde a 60% da capacidade de campo desse substrato, que foi previamente calculada. A avaliação final do ensaio deu-se aos 45 dias após a inoculação. Analisou-se em relação ao nematoide: número de galhas (NG), número de ovos (NO), índice de massas de ovos (IMO), fator de reprodução (FR), redução no fator de reprodução (RFR). Quanto ao desenvolvimento das plantas mensurou-se: altura da planta, massa fresca e seca da parte aérea e massa fresca do sistema radicular. Verificou-se que a reprodução do nematoide, mostrou-se menos eficiente em tomate. Os óleos essenciais empregados reduziram a taxa reprodutiva do nematoide em 83 e 29%, em tomate e celósia, respectivamente. As épocas de aplicação dos óleos essenciais diferiram quanto à reprodução do nematoide, para número de galhas e fator de reprodução.
Resumo:
In Velloziaceae, the number of subsidiary cells has been used to characterize species and support groups. Nevertheless, the homology of the stomatal types have not been scrutinized. Stomatal ontogenesis of Vellozia epidendroides and V. plicata, assigned to have tetracytic stomata, and of V. glauca and Barbacenia riparia, assigned to have paracytic stomata, were investigated. In the four species studied, stomata followed perigenic development. Subsidiary cells arise from oblique divisions of neighbouring cells of the guard mother cell (GMC). These cells are elongated and parallel to the longer axis of the stoma. Polar cells show wide variation, following the shape and size of the epidermal cells in the vicinity. Hence, these cells cannot be called subsidiary cells. This wide variation is due to a much higher density of stomata in some regions of the leaf blade. This distribution of stomata forces the development of short polar cells, leading to an apparently tetracytic stomata. In regions of low concentration of stomata, higher spatial availability between the GMCs allows the elongation of polar cells, leading to evident paracytic stomata. Therefore, the four studied species are considered braquiparacytic, questioning the classification of stomata into tetracytic and paracytic in Velloziaceae.