•C:N ratio in forest floor, peat and mineral topsoil mainly depend on tree species.•Most important differences in C:N ratios are seen between deciduous and evergreen species.•Either soil type, ...ecoregion or humus type was the second most important explanatory factor.•There was no consistent relationship between modelled deposition and C:N ratios.
The C:N ratio is considered as an indicator of nitrate leaching in response to high atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition. However, the C:N ratio is influenced by a multitude of other site-related factors. This study aimed to unravel the factors determining C:N ratios of forest floor, mineral soil and peat top soils in more than 4000 plots of the ICP Forests large-scale monitoring network. The first objective was to quantify forest floor, mineral and peat soil C:N ratios across European forests. Secondly we determined the main factors explaining this C:N ratio using a boosted regression tree analysis (BRT), including fifteen site and environmental variables.
Ninety-five percent of the C:N ratios were between 16 and 44 in the forest floor, between 13 and 44 in the peat topsoil and between 10 and 32 in the mineral topsoil. Within the aerated forest floor and the mineral soil, the C:N ratios decreased with depth, while in the hydromorphic forest floor and the peats no clear trend with depth was observed.
Tree species was clearly the most important explanatory variable for the C:N ratio in both forest floors and topsoils, while it was soil type in the deeper mineral soil layers. The lowest C:N ratios both in the forest floor and the top mineral soil were found in black locust (Robinia pseudoacacia L.) and black alder (Alnus glutinosa L.) stands, both N fixing tree species. While in the forest floor the highest C:N ratios were found in evergreen species like pine, cork oak (Quercus suber L.) and eucalyptus, the pine species and Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.) Franco) showed the highest C:N ratios in the mineral soil. The second most important explanatory variable in the forest floor and mineral topsoil was the biogeographical zoning (ecoregion). In the peat topsoil and in the deeper mineral soil layers it was the humus type. Deposition and climatic variables were of minor importance at the European scale.
Further analysis for eight main forest tree species individually, showed that the influence of environmental variables on C:N ratios was tree species dependent. For Aleppo pine (Pinus halepensis Miller) and holm oak (Quercus ilex L.), both with a typical Mediterranean distribution, the relationship between N and S deposition and C:N ratio appeared to be positive. This study suggests that applying C:N ratios as a general indicator of the N status in forests at the European level, without explicitly accounting for tree species, is too simplistic and may result in misleading conclusions.
Background and purpose
Brain derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is suggested to play a neuroprotective role in multiple sclerosis (MS). However, the BDNF response to long‐term exercise in MS remains ...unknown. Our objective was to compare resting BDNF profiles of healthy controls (HCs) and persons with relapsing−remitting MS (RRMS) and to investigate the impact of a 24‐week exercise intervention on serum BDNF release in MS.
Methods
At baseline, blood BDNF levels were assessed in MS (n = 22, mean Expanded Disability Status Scale 2.6 ± 0.2, mean age 43 ± 2 years) and HCs (n = 19, mean age 47 ± 1 year). Next, persons with MS were randomized to an exercise intervention group (EX, n = 15) or a sedentary control group (SED, n = 7) completing a 24‐week randomized controlled trial. In persons with MS, muscle strength, exercise tolerance and body composition were assessed, as compliance measures, at baseline and after 24 weeks.
Results
At baseline, the BDNF concentration of persons with RRMS was 21% lower than HCs. Following 24 weeks of intervention, changes in BDNF concentrations differed significantly between EX and SED. In particular, within EX BDNF concentrations increased 13.9% ± 8.8%, whereas it decreased 10.5% ± 4.1% within SED. Furthermore, 24 weeks of exercise induced changes in the compliance measures between EX and SED. In addition, within EX muscle strength, exercise tolerance and lean tissue mass improved, whereas these remained stable within SED.
Conclusion
In conclusion, BDNF concentration of persons with RRMS was lower compared to HCs and increased after 24 weeks of exercise in persons with MS, compared to the non‐exercise MS control group.
In Europe an abundance of humus taxonomies exists starting with early approaches in the late 19th century. Frequently used in an international context, they do not cover all site conditions in the ...European area. Although having basic concepts and general lines, the European (and North American, Canadian) classification systems differ in important parameters used for the description and classification of humus forms. These discrepancies result in incongruities, so they require adjustments when exchanging partially compatible soil data, even between nearby countries. In 2003, 26 European specialists in humus forms met in Trento (Italy) and decided to formulate rules of classification based on morphogenetic descriptions and diagnostic horizons, adapted to European ecological conditions. Taking into account old and new European and North American systems of humus forms classification, six main references (Anmoor, Mull, Moder, Mor, Amphi and Tangel) were defined, each of them further divided into more detailed categories. This inventory assigned a strong discriminatory power to the action of soil animals. Both semiterrestrial (anoxic) and terrestrial (aerated) topsoils were classified. Descriptors of diagnostic horizons were conceived in accordance with recent international soil classifications. Assigning an ‘ecological value’ to each main humus form along a gradient from biologically active forms, degrading and incorporating all organic remains, to those characterized by the accumulation of poorly transformed organic matter, this European system of classification avoids a strong hierarchical structure and allows a flexible approach open to additional ecological contributions and renditions.
► European specialists conceive principles of a new classification of humus forms. ► Only morphological characters with evident functional effects were considered. ► Ten basic humus forms were circumscribed, available in a wide array of ecosystems. ► Environmental factors determine the structure of the classification tree.
Many studies have demonstrated the role of the adaptive immune system in the pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis (MS). Recent data suggest that dendritic cells (DCs), which are innate immune cells, ...also contribute to the pathogenesis of MS. In patients with MS, DCs are abundantly present in brain lesions, and display an altered phenotype and/or function as compared with this in healthy controls. DCs are thus in the position to pathologically influence the effector function of (auto-reactive) T and B cells. Interestingly, current first-line immunomodulating therapies for MS have been shown to restore DC phenotype and function, albeit in a non-specific manner. To date, clinical trials using agents specifically targeting DC function are ongoing. Moreover, several studies worldwide are currently investigating possible strategies to develop tolerogenic DCs. This review focuses on the phenotypic and functional alterations of conventional DCs and plasmacytoid DCs in patients with MS. Furthermore, we discuss how existing immunomodulating therapies for MS patients affect DC function and address future perspectives in the development of immunotherapies specifically targeting DCs.
Re-exposure to chickenpox may boost varicella-zoster virus (VZV) immunity in the elderly. This secondary immune response is hypothesized to confer protection against herpes zoster. We longitudinally ...sampled 36 adults over the course of one year after re-exposure to chickenpox. The resulting 183 samples and those of 14 controls were assessed for VZV-specific T-cell immunity and antibody titres. The percentages of VZV-specific CD4+ IL-2-producing T-cells were increased in re-exposed grandparents compared to control participants up to 9 months after re-exposure. Using a longitudinal mixture modelling approach, we found that 25% and 17% of re-exposed grandparents showed a boosting of VZV-specific CD4+ IL-2-producing T-cells and VZV-specific antibodies, respectively. The antibody boosting occurred exclusively in cytomegalovirus (CMV) IgG-positive participants. CMV IgG-positive participants also had higher VZV IE62-specific CD4+ IFN-γ-producing T-cell percentages and VZV-specific antibody titres. The protective effect of re-exposure to chickenpox is likely limited, as boosting only occurred in 17-25% of the VZV re-exposed grandparents and for less than one year.
Based on current literature, it is not clear if multiple sclerosis (MS) patients are at increased risk to develop impaired glucose tolerance (IGT). Eighty-one MS patients and 45 healthy controls (HC) ...performed an oral glucose tolerance test. IGT was defined as a fasting glucose concentration of 6.1–6.9 mmol/l and two-hour post-load glucose of 7.8–11.1 mmol/l. The prevalence of impaired fasting glucose concentrations (17% vs 2%) and IGT (11% vs 0%) was higher in MS patients than HC. Accordingly, the areas under the glucose and insulin curves were higher in MS patients. The current study demonstrates an elevated IGT-prevalence in MS.
In the study of air pollution effects on forest ecosystems, solid soil data such as cation exchange capacity, base saturation and other exchangeable cation fractions, soil texture, soil moisture, ...soil weathering rates, C/N ratio and other variables form an important information base for many air pollution impact models. This paper shows some of the possibilities and the limitations of the soil data that European countries collected on the systematic Level I and on the intensive and permanent Level II monitoring plots within the ICP Forests programme. The soil data date from a first inventory in the 1990s and from a second inventory more than 10 years later. Both surveys were conducted following a common manual on sampling and analysis of soil. An example of the changes in pH(CaCl2) and base saturation in the forest floor and mineral soil on more than 2000 plots till a depth of 80 cm between the two surveys is presented. In this period the pH(CaCl2) significantly increased in the very acid forest soils with pH(CaCl2) below 4.0 but further decreased in forest soils with pH(CaCl2) above 4.0. Following the trend in pH, the base saturation increased in soils with a very low buffering capacity (soils with a base saturation below 20% in the first inventory) and decreased in forest soils with reference base saturation values above 20%. There is both a decrease of soil pH and base saturation in the forest floor of the Arenosols and Podzols. In the Podzols this decreasing trend could not be established in the mineral soil, though this decreasing trend persisted in a number of mineral soil layers of the Arenosols. The only consistent increasing trend of pH and base saturation when stratifying according to the WRB reference soil groups was seen in the forest floor of the Luvisols and Cambisols.
Background & AimDendritic cells (DC) have the capacity to induce potent tumor antigen-specific T-cell immunity. We have completed vaccination in the adjuvant setting in 77 cancer patients (acute ...myeloid leukemia (AML, n=30), metastatic breast cancer (MBC, n=12), glioblastoma multiforme (GBM, n=13), malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM, n=10) and other solid tumors (n=12)) with autologous DC electroporated with mRNA encoding the nearly universal tumor-associated antigen Wilms’ tumor 1 protein (WT1).Methods, Results & ConclusionWT1-targeted DC vaccination was feasible and safe in all patients. The majority of the patients showed a positive delayed type hypersensitivity (DTH) response to the vaccine. Objective clinical responses were observed among all tumor types, including complete (CR) and/or molecular remissions or stable disease (SD) in the AML group, partial responses (PR) and SD in the GBM group and SD in the MBC and MPM groups.In AML patients in first CR, median overall survival (OS) calculated from time of diagnosis was 56.1 months (mo). Median OS from time of diagnosis of metastasis was 41.9 mo in MBC, 43.7 mo from diagnosis in GBM and 35.7 mo from start of therapy in MPM; this compares favorably to numbers reported in the literature, respectively 24.8 mo, 14.7 mo and 22 mo.In AML, long-term OS was correlated with WT1-specific polyfunctional CD8 + T-cells in the DTH reaction sites and long-term CR with polyepitope WT1-specific tetramer+ CD8+ T-lymphocytes. In solid tumors, PR or SD was correlated with interferon (IFN)-gamma+ and/or tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha+ WT1-specific CD4+ and/or CD8+ T-cells; increased OS in the GBM+MPM cohorts was correlated with IFN-gamma+ WT1-specific CD4+ T-lymphocytes. In conclusion, WT1-targeted DC vaccination is feasible, safe and immunogenic, and displays relevant anti-tumor activity in patients with hematological and solid malignancies. Most importantly, this treatment modality can confer a significant survival benefit to the patients.