987 resultados para Habitat Degradation


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One habitat management requirement forced by 21st century relative sea-level rise (RSLR), will be the need to re-comprehend the dimensions of long-term transgressive behaviour of coastal systems being forced by such RSLR. Fresh approaches to the conceptual modelling and subsequent implementation of new coastal and peri-marine habitats will be required. There is concern that existing approaches to forecasting coastal systems development (and by implication their associated scarce coastal habitats) over the next century depend on a certain premise of orderly spatial succession of habitats. This assumption is shown to be questionable given the possible future rates of RSLR, magnitude of shoreline retreat and the lack of coastal sediment to maintain the protective morphologies to low-energy coastal habitats. Of these issues, sediment deficiency is regarded as one of the major problem for future habitat development. Examples of contemporary behaviour of UK coasts show evidence of coastal sediment starvation resulting from relatively stable RSLR, anthropogenic sealing of coastal sources, and intercepted coastal sediment pathways, which together force segmentation of coastal systems. From these examples key principles are deduced which may prejudice the existence of future habitats: accelerated future sediment demand due to RSLR may not be met by supply and, if short- to medium-term hold-the-line policies predominate, long-term strategies for managed realignment and habitat enhancement may prove impossible goals. Methods of contemporary sediment husbandry may help sustain some habitats in place but otherwise, instead of integrated coastal organization, managers may need to consider coastal breakdown, segmentation and habitat reduction as the basis of 21st century coastal evolution and planning.

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CD33-related Siglecs (sialic acid-binding immunoglobulin-like lectins) 5–11 are inhibitory receptors that contain a membrane proximal ITIM (immunoreceptor tyrosine-based inhibitory motif) (I/V/L/)XYXX(L/V), which can recruit SHP-1/2. However, little is known about the regulation of these receptors. SOCS3 (suppressor of cytokine signaling 3) is up-regulated during inflammation and competes with SHP-1/2 for binding to ITIM-like motifs on various cytokine receptors resulting in inhibition of signaling. We show that SOCS3 binds the phosphorylated ITIM of Siglec 7 and targets it for proteasomal-mediated degradation, suggesting that Siglec 7 is a novel SOCS target. Following ligation, the ECS E3 ligase is recruited by SOCS3 to target Siglec 7 for proteasomal degradation, and SOCS3 expression is decreased concomitantly. In addition, we found that SOCS3 expression blocks Siglec 7-mediated inhibition of cytokine-induced proliferation. This is the first time that a SOCS target has been reported to degrade simultaneously with the SOCS protein and that inhibitory receptors have been shown to be degraded in this way. This may be a mechanism by which the inflammatory response is potentiated during infection.

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Freshwater populations of three-spined sticklebacks (Gasterosteus aculeatus) in northern Germany are found as distinct lake and river ecotypes. Adaptation to habitat-specific parasites might influence immune capabilities of stickleback ecotypes. Here, naive laboratory-bred sticklebacks from lake and river populations were exposed reciprocally to parasite environments in a lake and a river habitat. Sticklebacks exposed to lake conditions were infected with higher numbers of parasite species when compared with the river. River sticklebacks in the lake had higher parasite loads than lake sticklebacks in the same habitat. Respiratory burst, granulocyte counts and lymphocyte proliferation of head kidney leucocytes were increased in river sticklebacks exposed to lake when compared with river conditions. Although river sticklebacks exposed to lake conditions showed elevated activation of their immune system, parasites could not be diminished as effectively as by lake sticklebacks in their native habitat. River sticklebacks seem to have reduced their immune-competence potential due to lower parasite diversity in rivers

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We demonstrate that SLPI can inhibit lipopolysaccharide-induced NF-kappaB activation in monocytes by preventing degradation of the key regulatory protein IkappaBalpha which is inefficiently degraded by the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway due to a direct effect of SLPI on the activity of this pathway. I designed this project and carried out all of the experiments.

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Aminobacter lissarensis CC495 is an aerobic facultative methylotroph capable of growth on glucose, glycerol, pyruvate and methylamine as well as the methyl halides methyl chloride and methyl bromide. Previously, cells grown on methyl chloride have been shown to express two polypeptides with apparent molecular masses of 67 and 29 kDa. The 67 kDa protein was purified and identified as a halomethane:bisulfide/halide ion methyltransferase. This study describes a single gene cluster in A. lissarensis CC495 containing the methyl halide utilisation genes cmuB, cmuA, cmuC, orf 188, paaE and hutI The genes correspond to the same order and have a high similarity to a gene cluster found in Aminobacter ciceronei IMB-1 and Hyphomicrobium chloromethanicum strain CM2 indicating that genes encoding methyl halide degradation are highly conserved in these strains. (c) 2005 Federation of European Microbiological Societies. Published by Elsevier, B.V. All rights reserved.