877 resultados para Open adaptation. Self-adaptation. Components. OSGi
Resumo:
Infections by opportunistic fungi have traditionally been viewed as the gross result of a pathogenic automatism, which makes a weakened host more vulnerable to microbial insults. However, fungal sensing of a host's immune environment might render this process more elaborate than previously appreciated. Here we show that interleukin (IL)-17A binds fungal cells, thus tackling both sides of the host-pathogen interaction in experimental settings of host colonization and/or chronic infection. Global transcriptional profiling reveals that IL-17A induces artificial nutrient starvation conditions in Candida albicans, resulting in a downregulation of the target of rapamycin signalling pathway and in an increase in autophagic responses and intracellular cAMP. The augmented adhesion and filamentous growth, also observed with Aspergillus fumigatus, eventually translates into enhanced biofilm formation and resistance to local antifungal defenses. This might exemplify a mechanism whereby fungi have evolved a means of sensing host immunity to ensure their own persistence in an immunologically dynamic environment.
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The need of a better adaptation of crops to drought is an issue of increasing urgency. However, enhancing the tolerance of maize has, therefore, proved to be somewhat elusive in terms of plant breeding. In that context, proper phenotyping remains as one of the main factors limiting breeding advance. Topics covered by this review include the conceptual framework for identifying secondary traits associated with yield response to drought and how to measure these secondary traits in practice.
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The rate of food consumption is a major factor affecting success in scramble competition for a limited amount of easy-to-find food. Accordingly, several studies report positive genetic correlations between larval competitive ability and feeding rate in Drosophila; both become enhanced in populations evolving under larval crowding. Here, we report the experimental evolution of enhanced competitive ability in populations of D. melanogaster previously maintained for 84 generations at low density on an extremely poor larval food. In contrast to previous studies, greater competitive ability was not associated with the evolution of higher feeding rate; if anything, the correlation between the two traits across lines tended to be negative. Thus, enhanced competitive ability may be favored by nutritional stress even when competition is not intense, and competitive ability may be decoupled from the rate of food consumption.
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This work was conducted at the Universidade Estadual de Londrina (UEL), in Londrina, State of Paraná, Brazil, with the goal to study food-type soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merrill) genotypes performance for use in cultivation or crosses. A total of 104 genotypes were analyzed: 88 were food-type with large seeds, eight were food-type with small seeds, and eight-grain types adapted cultivars. The experimental plan was in randomized complete block design with four replications, and 12 traits of agronomic importance were considered. Genetic diversity was observed in the food-type germplasm. There were some genotypes with high yield adapted to a normal period of sowing. Soybean genetic improvement programs for direct human consumption in Brazil, either by means of Asiatic pure lines or by means of the incorporation of genes for late flowering in short-day conditions in this lines is highly viable.
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Light adaptation is crucial for coping with the varying levels of ambient light. Using high-density electroencephalography (EEG), we investigated how adaptation to light of different colors affects brain responsiveness. In a within-subject design, sixteen young participants were adapted first to dim white light and then to blue, green, red, or white bright light (one color per session in a randomized order). Immediately after both dim and bright light adaptation, we presented brief light pulses and recorded event-related potentials (ERPs). We analyzed ERP response strengths and brain topographies and determined the underlying sources using electrical source imaging. Between 150 and 261ms after stimulus onset, the global field power (GFP) was higher after dim than bright light adaptation. This effect was most pronounced with red light and localized in the frontal lobe, the fusiform gyrus, the occipital lobe and the cerebellum. After bright light adaptation, within the first 100ms after light onset, stronger responses were found than after dim light adaptation for all colors except for red light. Differences between conditions were localized in the frontal lobe, the cingulate gyrus, and the cerebellum. These results indicate that very short-term EEG brain responses are influenced by prior light adaptation and the spectral quality of the light stimulus. We show that the early EEG responses are differently affected by adaptation to different colors of light which may contribute to known differences in performance and reaction times in cognitive tests.
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Tumour cells proliferate much faster than normal cells; nearly all anticancer treatments are toxic to both cell types, limiting their efficacy. The altered metabolism resulting from cellular transformation and cancer progression supports cellular proliferation and survival, but leaves cancer cells dependent on a continuous supply of energy and nutrients. Hence, many metabolic enzymes have become targets for new cancer therapies. In addition to its well-described roles in cell-cycle progression and cancer, the cyclin/CDK-pRB-E2F1 pathway contributes to lipid synthesis, glucose production, insulin secretion, and glycolytic metabolism, with strong effects on overall metabolism. Notably, these cell-cycle regulators trigger the adaptive "metabolic switch" that underlies proliferation.
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The focus of physical activity promotion is moving from methods for increasing health enhancing physical activity on the individual level to higher level strategies including environmental and policy approaches. Scientific inquiry, traditionally related to individual-based strategies, requires adaptation and refinement when environmental and policy changes become more relevant. The objective of this study is to investigate the significance for behaviour and health of community-based environments that encourage physical activity. DESIGN AND SETTING The article presents data and results from a cross sectional comparative survey of the general population in six European countries (Belgium, Finland, Germany (East and West), Netherlands, Spain, Switzerland). Specifically, the relation between perceived community-based opportunities for physical activity, self reported physical activity, and self rated health status is investigated. PARTICIPANTS Representative samples of general populations (adults 18 years or older). Overall response rate: 53.5%. Sample sizes realised: Belgium: n=389; Finland: n=400; Germany (East): n = 913; Germany (West): n=489; Netherlands: n=366; Spain: n=380; Switzerland: n=406. MAIN RESULTS Analyses show that best opportunities are reported by people who are lightly to moderately physically active. People's self rated health is moderately, but significantly associated with both perceived opportunities, and physical activity itself. These predictors interact in that especially for women, the health impact of physical activity is more pronounced in case of good opportunities. CONCLUSIONS The paper shows the potential of opportunities within residential and community environments with regard to physical activity, both for behaviour and health. Opportunities may enable the population, especially women, to develop an active lifestyle, and thus improve their health. Future studies with objective indicators for physical activity related environments should test the findings that are based on perceptions.
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About 30 million people live above 2500 m in the Andean Mountains of South America. Among them are 5.5 million Aymaras, an ethnic group with its own language, living on the altiplano of Bolivia, Peru, and northern Chile at altitudes of up to 4400 m. In this high altitude region traces of human population go back for more than 2000 years with constant evolutionary pressure on its residents for genetic adaptation to high altitude. Aymaras as the assumed direct descendents of the ancient cultures living in this region were the focus of much research interest during the last decades and several distinctive adaptation patterns to life at high altitude have been described in this ethnic group. The aim of this article was to review the physiology and pathophysiology of circulatory adaptation and maladaptation to longtime altitude exposure in Aymaras and Caucasians.
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L'importance des proches et le rôle primordial des relations familiales pour l'adaptation et l'ajustement psychologique des individus sont largement reconnus. Cependant, peu d'études ont considéré que, dans la modernité avancée, les réseaux de proches ou familiaux sont diversifiés, caractérisés par des interdépendances complexes. La littérature sur les relations interpersonnelles et l'adaptation a négligé cette diversité et omis que les interdépendances structurales, de soutien mais aussi de conflit, pouvaient s'avérer importantes à considérer en regard de l'adaptation et de l'ajustement psychologique des individus. La présente thèse apporte des éléments de compréhension sur le lien entre les configurations de proches et l'adaptation individuelle dans le parcours de vie, en se centrant sur des individus en situation de vulnérabilité, que ce soit parce qu'ils font l'expérience d'une transition importante de leur parcours, ou en raison d'un manque de ressources psychologiques, cognitives et/ou sociales. Des résultats empiriques éclairent quatre grands axes de questionnement portant sur les ressources et le stress présents dans les interdépendances au sein des configurations familiales et de proches, sur leur association avec l'ajustement psychologique des individus, sur leur évolution au cours du temps, ainsi que sur la façon dont ces interdépendances sont façonnées par les trajectoires de vie. Les résultats mettent en évidence une diversité de configurations familiales ou de proches, qui donne lieu à des degrés inégaux de ressources, significativement associées à l'ajustement psychologique. Cependant, les interdépendances au sein des configurations ne constituent que rarement des ressources ou un facteur protecteur pour les individus en situation de vulnérabilité mais, au contraire, elles génèrent du stress supplémentaire. L'exploration longitudinale met en évidence une importante instabilité dans les configurations familiales et de proches des individus en situation de vulnérabilité qui compromet leur adaptation et leur ajustement psychologique.
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Lorsque le cinéaste Julian Schnabel propose, dix ans après la sortie du livre "Le scaphandre et le papillon" de Jean-Dominique Bauby (1997), une "adaptation" de cette autobiographie, il prend pour sujet sa création même, en plaçant au premier plan les éléments qui, dans le péritexte, thématisaient les conditions de l'écriture. Bauby a en effet écrit cette autobiographie alors qu'il souffrait de locked-in syndrome, étant entièrement paralysé à l'exception de son oeil gauche. C'est avec l'oeil qu'il écrivait, dictant chaque lettre d'un battement de cils tandis qu'une assistante récitait à voix haute un code alphabétique. L'acte d'écriture devenait ainsi une performance audiovisuelle, saisissable cinématographiquement. Or, cet article montre comment Schnabel complexifie ce dispositif en faisant "plonger" le spectateur dans l'univers intérieur de Bauby à l'aide de procédés filmiques (caméra subjective, voix over à la première personne, flashbacks, visions) qui permettent de transposer toute la poésie et la force du texte. Narrant au "je" la vie, la pensée et les sens qui vibrent derrière les battements d'"aile" de cet oeil-papillon, cette autobiographie traduit de fait un univers visionnaire que Bauby lui-même appelle son "cinéma personnel". Schnabel actualise cette métaphore avec son film qui repousse les limites de la focalisation interne et met en abyme les pouvoirs du cinéma.
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Restricted bioavailability of copper in certain environments can interfere with cellular respiration because copper is an essential cofactor of most terminal oxidases. The global response of the metabolically versatile bacterium and opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa to copper limitation was assessed under aerobic conditions. Expression of cioAB (encoding an alternative, copper-independent, cyanide-resistant ubiquinol oxidase) was upregulated, whereas numerous iron uptake functions (including the siderophores pyoverdine and pyochelin) were expressed at reduced levels, presumably reflecting a lower demand for iron by respiratory enzymes. Wild-type P. aeruginosa was able to grow aerobically in a defined glucose medium depleted of copper, whereas a cioAB mutant did not grow. Thus, P. aeruginosa relies on the CioAB enzyme to cope with severe copper deprivation. A quadruple cyo cco1 cco2 cox mutant, which was deleted for all known heme-copper terminal oxidases of P. aeruginosa, grew aerobically, albeit more slowly than did the wild type, indicating that the CioAB enzyme is capable of energy conservation. However, the expression of a cioA'-'lacZ fusion was less dependent on the copper status in the quadruple mutant than in the wild type, suggesting that copper availability might affect cioAB expression indirectly, via the function of the heme-copper oxidases.