56 resultados para Melaleuca
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Pós-graduação em Reabilitação Oral - FOAR
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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Pós-graduação em Aquicultura - FCAV
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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Natural products have been studied aiming to understand their biological properties. Thus, this study aimed to investigate the antimicrobial activity of twenty-seven essential oils (EOs) used in aromatherapy procedures, a natural therapy with great emphasis currently used against Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains. The agar dilution method was carried out and minimal inhibitory concentration against 50% and 90% of strains (MIC50% and MIC90% values) were reported. The S.aureus strains were highly susceptible with MIC90% from 0.21mg/mL to black pepper (Piper nigrum) and tea tree (Melaleuca alternifolia) to 26.52mg/mL with copaiba (Copaifera officinalis) EO. Cinnamon (Cinnamomum cassia) and clove (Syzygium aromaticum) EOs were effective against E.coli (2.0mg/mL) while the S.aromaticum EO was against P.aeruginosa (8.29mg/mL). Thus, the higher susceptibility of Gram-positive bacteria when compared with Gram-negative strains was found, and a large variability in the potential antibacterial has also been observed.
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A cárie dental é uma das doenças crônico-infecciosas mais comuns no mundo e é potencializada por fatores que favorecem a colonização da bactéria Streptococcus mutans na cavidade oral. O presente trabalho visa avaliar o potencial de sistemas nanoestruturados mucoadesivos para administração bucal do peptídeo sintético p1025, potencialmente ativo contra cárie dental. Este peptídeo, análogo aos fragmentos 1025-1044 da adesina celular de S. mutans mostrou-se, em estudos recentes, eficaz contra a adesão do patógeno na superfície do biofilme bacteriano. Acredita-se que, se incorporado em sistemas nanoestruturados mucoadesivos, sobretudo os sistemas líquido-cristalinos, sua ação possa ser modulada, pelo fato de que estes sistemas podem se aderir na mucosa bucal, de modo a proteger o peptídeo da degradação enzimática, além de prolongar o tempo de contato com a mucosa, diminuindo assim a frequência de administração. Os sistemas nanoestruturados de liberação controlada foram analisados estruturalmente através de microscopia de luz polarizada, determinação do comportamento reológico, TPA e bioadesão. Os resultados evidenciaram, através das análises de microscopia de luz polarizada, a presença de sistemas líquido-cristalinos de fase hexagonal e lamelar, além de domínios de microemulsões. As análises reológicas mostraram que ao adicionar dispersões poliméricas na fase aquosa do sistema, características como pseudoplasticidade e tixotropia são favorecidas, o que pode facilitar a aplicação do produto na mucosa bucal. O teste de biodesão mostrou que o emprego de dispersões poliméricas contribuiu para a adesão na mucosa bucal, sendo os melhores resultados obtidos com dispersão de Policarbofil® a 0,5 %.O teste microbiológico demonstrou a potencialização do efeito inibidor/redutor da carga microbiana com a utilização de óleo de melaleuca na fase oleosa do sistema. Os resultados obtidos sugerem que o ...
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Pós-graduação em Agronomia - FEIS
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Pós-graduação em Agronomia - FEIS
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In Australia, metal-contaminated sites, including those with elevated levels of copper (Cu), are frequently revegetated with endemic plants. Little is known about the responses of Australian plants to excess Cu. Acacia holosericea, Eucalyptus crebra, Eucalyptus camaldulensis, and Melaleuca leucadendra were grown in solution culture with six Cu treatments (0.1 to 40 mu M). While A. holosericea was the most tolerant to excess Cu, all of the species tested were sensitive to excess Cu when compared with exotic tree and agricultural species. The critical external concentrations for toxicity were < 0.7 mu M for all species tested. There was little differentiation between shoot-tissue Cu concentrations in normal versus treated plants, thus, the derivation of critical shoot concentrations was possible only for the most tolerant species, A. holosericea. Critical root Cu concentrations were approximately 210 mu g g(-1) (A. holosericea), 150 mu g g(-1) (E. crebra), 25 mu g g(-1) (E. camaldulensis), and 165 mu g g(-1) (M. leucadendra). These results provide the first comprehensive combination of growth responses, critical concentrations, and toxicity symptoms for three important Australian genera for use in the management of Cu-contaminated sites.
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It has been established that large numbers of certain trees can survive in the beds of rivers of northeastern Australia where a strongly seasonal distribution of precipitation causes extreme variations in flow on both a yearly and longer-term basis. In these rivers, minimal flow occurs throughout much of any year and for periods of up to several years, allowing the trees to become established and to adapt their form in order to facilitate their survival in environments that experience periodic inundation by fast-flowing, debris-laden water. Such trees (notably paperbark trees of the angiosperm genus Melaleuca) adopt a reclined to prostrate, downstream-trailing habit, have a multiple-stemmed form, modified crown with weeping foliage, development of thick, spongy bark, anchoring of roots into firm to lithified substrates beneath the channel floor, root regeneration, and develop in flow-parallel, linear groves. Individuals from within flow-parallel, linear groves are preserved in situ within the alluvial deposit of the river following burial and death. Four examples of in situ tree fossils within alluvial channel deposits in the Permian of eastern Australia demonstrate that specialised riverbed plant communities also existed at times in the geological past. These examples, from the Lower Permian Carmila Beds, Upper Permian Moranbah Coal Measures and Baralaba Coal Measures of central Queensland and the Upper Permian Newcastle Coal Measures of central New South Wales, show several of the characteristics of trees described from modern rivers in northeastern Australia, including preservation in closely-spaced groups. These properties, together with independent sedimentological evidence, suggest that the Permian trees were adapted to an environment affected by highly variable runoff, albeit in a more temperate climatic situation than the modem Australian examples. It is proposed that occurrences of fossil trees preserved in situ within alluvial channel deposits may be diagnostic of environments controlled by seasonal and longer-term variability in fluvial runoff, and hence may have value in interpreting aspects of palaeoclimate from ancient alluvial successions. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
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We developed a conceptual ecological model (CEM) for invasive species to help understand the role invasive exotics have in ecosystem ecology and their impacts on restoration activities. Our model, which can be applied to any invasive species, grew from the eco-regional conceptual models developed for Everglades restoration. These models identify ecological drivers, stressors, effects and attributes; we integrated the unique aspects of exotic species invasions and effects into this conceptual hierarchy. We used the model to help identify important aspects of invasion in the development of an invasive exotic plant ecological indicator, which is described a companion paper in this special issue journal. A key aspect of the CEM is that it is a general ecological model that can be tailored to specific cases and species, as the details of any invasion are unique to that invasive species. Our model encompasses the temporal and spatial changes that characterize invasion, identifying the general conditions that allow a species to become invasive in a de novo environment; it then enumerates the possible effects exotic species may have collectively and individually at varying scales and for different ecosystem properties, once a species becomes invasive. The model provides suites of characteristics and processes, as well as hypothesized causal relationships to consider when thinking about the effects or potential effects of an invasive exotic and how restoration efforts will affect these characteristics and processes. In order to illustrate how to use the model as a blueprint for applying a similar approach to other invasive species and ecosystems, we give two examples of using this conceptual model to evaluate the status of two south Florida invasive exotic plant species (melaleuca and Old World climbing fern) and consider potential impacts of these invasive species on restoration.