In vitro and in vivo studies described the myokine IL‐15 and its receptor IL‐15Rα as anabolic/anti‐atrophy agents, however, the protein expression of IL‐15Rα has not been measured in human skeletal ...muscle and data regarding IL‐15 expression remain inconclusive. The purpose of the study was to determine serum and skeletal muscle IL‐15 and IL‐15Rα responses to resistance exercise session and to analyze their association with myofibrillar protein synthesis (MPS). Fourteen participants performed a bilateral leg resistance exercise composed of four sets of leg press and four sets of knee extension at 75% 1RM to task failure. Muscle biopsies were obtained at rest, 0, 4 and 24 hours post‐exercise and blood samples at rest, mid‐exercise, 0, 0.3, 1, 2, 4 and 24 hours post‐exercise. Serum IL‐15 was increased by ~5.3‐fold immediately post‐exercise, while serum IL‐15Rα decreased ~75% over 1 hour post‐exercise (P<.001). Skeletal muscle IL‐15Rα mRNA and protein expression were increased at 4 hours post‐exercise by ~2‐fold (P<.001) and ~1.3‐fold above rest (P=.020), respectively. At 24 hours post‐exercise, IL‐15 (P=.003) and IL‐15Rα mRNAs increased by ~2‐fold (P=.002). Myofibrillar fractional synthetic rate between 0‐4 hours was associated with IL‐15Rα mRNA at rest (r=.662, P=.019), 4 hours (r=.612, P=.029), and 24 hours post‐exercise (r=.627, P=.029). Finally, the muscle IL‐15Rα protein up‐regulation was related to Leg press 1RM (r=.688, P=.003) and total weight lifted (r=.628, P=.009). In conclusion, IL‐15/IL‐15Rα signaling pathway is activated in skeletal muscle in response to a session of resistance exercise.
The meaning of riverine landscapes to society has evolved to serve our ever-changing needs, from harvesting and transporting resources to arenas for outdoor recreation and contemplation. From the ...18th century, rivers have been important resources for industry and hydroelectric power. The objective of this study is to explore and describe the rhythms of everyday use of a river environment using multiple quantitative and qualitative methods, and to identify subjective, multiple and often competing relations. We use Lefebvre's concept of rhythmanalysis and Ingold's contextual approach as a tool for bridging scientific and methodological disciplines. Our results show a wide breadth in everyday activities and a dynamic relation between people and the river on multiple time scales. The use of the river environment appears orderly and predictable, but the wide spectrum of everyday users on different spatiotemporal scales is diverse and forms multiple rhythms at each locality. The partial lockdown in Norway in response to Covid-19 and the subsequent shifts in people's daily routines changed the rhythm of daily and weekly use patterns, and demonstrates how rhythms can change rapidly in the face of large-scale, societal agitation. We argue that rhythmanalysis is a useful analytical tool in interdisciplinary approaches to better understand the use and valuations of landscapes.
•Approaches rural river everydayness through interdisciplinary rhythmanalysis.•Portrays the polyrhythms of nature and society.•Provides an example of empirical way to explore river environment complexity.•Managing landscape by an understanding of its polyrhythms, preventing arrhythmia.•Describe the contextual and dynamic relation between people and nature.
•Modeling of 3D polycrystalline structure by multiphase-field method was introduced.•Model of austenitic stainless steel (ASS) was fed into an image-based FEM simulation.•3D FEM simulations were ...validated with the laser Doppler vibrometer measurements.•Applicability of transversely isotropic modeling to ASS was investigated.•Ultrasonic attenuation due to multiple scattering by metal grains were evaluated.
When modeling ultrasonic wave propagation in metals, it is important to introduce mesoscopic crystalline structures because the anisotropy of the crystal structure and the heterogeneity of grains disturb ultrasonic waves. In this paper, a three-dimensional (3D) polycrystalline structure generated by multiphase-field modeling was introduced to ultrasonic simulation for nondestructive testing. 3D finite-element simulations of ultrasonic waves were validated and compared with visualization results obtained from laser Doppler vibrometer measurements. The simulation results and measurements showed good agreement with respect to the velocity and front shape of the pressure wave, as well as multiple scattering due to grains. This paper discussed the applicability of a transversely isotropic approach to ultrasonic wave propagation in a polycrystalline metal with columnar structures.
Context Current knowledge on gonadal function in congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) is mostly limited to single-center/country studies enrolling small patient numbers. Overall data indicate that ...gonadal function can be compromised in men with CAH. Objective To determine gonadal function in men with CAH within the European ‘dsd-LIFE’ cohort. Design Cross-sectional clinical outcome study, including retrospective data from medical records. Methods Fourteen academic hospitals included 121 men with CAH aged 16–68 years. Main outcome measures were serum hormone concentrations, semen parameters and imaging data of the testes. Results At the time of assessment, 14/69 patients had a serum testosterone concentration below the reference range; 7 of those were hypogonadotropic, 6 normogonadotropic and 1 hypergonadotropic. In contrast, among the patients with normal serum testosterone (55/69), 4 were hypogonadotropic, 44 normogonadotropic and 7 hypergonadotropic. The association of decreased testosterone with reduced gonadotropin concentrations (odds ratio (OR) = 12.8 (2.9–57.3)) was weaker than the association between serum androstenedione/testosterone ratio ≥1 and reduced gonadotropin concentrations (OR = 39.3 (2.1–732.4)). Evaluation of sperm quality revealed decreased sperm concentrations (15/39), motility (13/37) and abnormal morphology (4/28). Testicular adrenal rest tumor (TART)s were present in 39/80 patients, with a higher prevalence in patients with the most severe genotype (14/18) and in patients with increased current 17-hydroxyprogesterone 20/35) or androstenedione (12/18) serum concentrations. Forty-three children were fathered by 26/113 patients. Conclusions Men with CAH have a high risk of developing hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal disturbances and spermatogenic abnormalities. Regular assessment of endocrine gonadal function and imaging for TART development are recommended, in addition to measures for fertility protection.
Summary
Background Basal cell carcinoma (BCC) of the skin is the most common human cancer. The genetic alterations underlying BCC development are only partly understood.
Objectives To investigate ...further the molecular genetics of sporadic BCCs, we performed mutation analyses of 10 skin cancer‐associated genes in 42 tumours.
Methods Single‐strand conformational polymorphism analysis followed by DNA sequencing was used to screen for mutations in the sonic hedgehog pathway genes PTCH, SMOH, SUFUH and GLI1, in the TP53 tumour suppressor gene, and in the proto‐oncogenes NRAS, KRAS, HRAS, BRAF and CTNNB1. Microsatellite markers flanking the PTCH, SUFUH and TP53 loci at 9q22, 10q24 and 17p13, respectively, were studied for loss of heterozygosity (LOH).
Results PTCH mutations were found in 28 of 42 tumours (67%). Microsatellite analysis revealed LOH on 9q22 in 20 of 38 tumours investigated (53%), including 14 tumours with and six tumours without PTCH mutations. SMOH mutations were identified in four of the 42 BCCs (10%) while two tumours demonstrated mutations in SUFUH, including one missense mutation and one silent mutation. None of the BCCs showed LOH at markers flanking the SUFUH locus. Seventeen BCCs (40%) carried TP53 mutations, with only three tumours showing evidence of biallelic TP53 inactivation. TP53 mutations were present in BCCs with and without mutations in PTCH, SMOH or SUFUH. Interestingly, 72% of the TP53 alterations were presumably ultraviolet (UV)‐induced transition mutations. In contrast, only 40% of the PTCH and SMOH alterations corresponded to UV signature mutations. No mutations were identified in GLI1, NRAS, KRAS, HRAS, BRAF or CTNNB1.
Conclusions Our data confirm the importance of PTCH, SMOH and TP53 mutations in the pathogenesis of sporadic BCCs. SUFUH alterations are restricted to individual cases while the other investigated genes do not appear to be important targets for mutations in BCCs.
PurposeThis study was designed to compare and contrast quantitative data of the human corneal sub-basal nerve plexus (SBP) evaluated by two different methods: in vivo confocal microscopy (IVCM), and ...immunohistochemical staining of ex vivo donor corneas.MethodsSeven parameters of the SBP in large-scale IVCM mosaicking images from healthy subjects were compared with the identical parameters in ex vivo donor corneas stained by β-III-tubulin immunohistochemistry. Corneal nerve fiber length (CNFL), corneal nerve fiber density (CNFD), corneal nerve branch density (CNBD), average weighted corneal nerve fiber tortuosity (CNFTo), corneal nerve connection points (CNCP), average corneal nerve single-fiber length (CNSFL), and average weighted corneal nerve fiber thickness (CNFTh) were calculated using a dedicated, published algorithm and compared.ResultsOur experiments showed significantly higher values for CNFL (50.2 vs 21.4 mm/mm
), CNFD (1358.8 vs 277.3 nerve fibers/mm
), CNBD (847.6 vs 163.5 branches/mm
), CNFTo (0.095 vs 0.081 μm
), and CNCP (49.4 vs 21.6 connections/mm
) in histologically staining specimens compared with IVCM images. In contrast, CNSFL values were higher in IVCM images than in histological specimens (32.1 vs 74.1 μm). No significant difference was observed in CNFTh (2.22 vs 2.20 μm) between the two groups.ConclusionsThe results of this study have shown that IVCM has an inherently lower resolution compared with ex vivo immunohistochemical staining of the corneal SBP and that this limitation leads to a systematic underestimation of several SBP parameters. Despite this shortcoming, IVCM is a vital clinical tool for in vivo characterization, quantitative clinical imaging, and evaluation of the human corneal SBP.
Aims
This study was performed in a well‐established in vitro model to investigate whether the application of a glyphosate‐containing herbicide might affect the bacterial communities and some ...biochemical parameters in a cow's rumen.
Methods and Results
The test item was applied in two concentrations (high and low) for 5 days. In a second trial, fermentation vessels were inoculated with Clostridium sporogenes before the high dose was applied. Effluents were analysed by biochemical, microbiological and genetic methods. A marginal increase in short‐chain fatty acid production and a reduction in NH3‐N were observed. There were minor and rather equivocal changes in the composition of ruminal bacteria but no indications of a shift towards a more frequent abundance of pathogenic Clostridia species. Clostridium sporogenes counts declined consistently.
Conclusions
No adverse effects of the herbicide on ruminal metabolism or composition of the bacterial communities could be detected. In particular, there was no evidence of a suspected stimulation of Clostridia growth.
Significance and Impact of the Study
Antibiotic activity of glyphosate resulting in microbial imbalances has been postulated. In this exploratory study, however, intraruminal application of concentrations reflecting potential exposure of dairy cows or beef cattle did not exhibit significant effects on bacterial communities in a complex in vitro system. The low number of replicates (n = 3/dose) may leave some uncertainty.
Flow in the great arteries (aorta, pulmonary artery) is normally laminar with a parabolic velocity profile. Eccentric flow jets are linked to various diseases like aneurysms. Cardiac 4D PC‐MRI data ...provide spatio‐temporally resolved blood flow information for the whole cardiac cycle. In this work, we establish a time‐dependent visualization and quantification of flow jets. For this purpose, equidistant measuring planes are automatically placed along the vessel's centerline. The flow jet position and region with highest velocities are extracted for every plane in each time step. This is done during pre‐processing and without user‐defined parameters. We visualize the main flow jet as geometric tube. High‐velocity areas are depicted as a net around this tube. Both geometries are time‐dependent and can be animated. Quantitative values are provided during cross‐sectional measuring plane‐based evaluation. Moreover, we offer a plot visualization as summary of flow jet characteristics for the selected plane. Our physiologically plausible results are in accordance with medical findings. Our clinical collaborators appreciate the possibility to view the flow jet in the whole vessel at once, which normally requires repeated pathline filtering due to varying velocities along the vessel course. The overview plots are considered as valuable for documentation purposes.
The effect of 2 different blends of essential oils on Clostridium perfringens (Cp) in the intestine and feces of broiler chickens was tested in 6 field trials for each blend. One hundred parts per ...million of the blends were mixed in a commercial corn-based diet throughout the entire growing period for experimental flocks. Samples from the jejunum, cecum, cloaca, and feces were taken on d 14, 21, and 30 from experimental and control flocks and tested quantitatively for Cp via blood agar plate, litmus milk medium, and ELISA. Blend A reduced (P is less than or equal to 0.05) the average Cp concentration in the feces on all sampling days, in the jejunum and cecum on d 14 and 21, and in the cloaca on d 14. Blend B effected a significant reduction of Cp concentration in the jejunum on d 14 and 30 and in the cloaca on d 14. The percentages of specimens from the control group that tested positive for Cp were 83.3% for feces, 88.0% for jejunum and cloaca, and 82.6% for cecum. Specimens from the feces and 3 sections of the intestine were Cp positive in groups treated with blend A (60.8, 64.6, 47.9, and 70.8%) and with blend B (65.9, 63.6, 63.6, and 72.7%). Our results indicate that specific blends of essential oil components can control Cp colonization and proliferation in the gut of broilers and therefore may be of help to prevent problems with Cp and necrotic enteritis.