847 research outputs found
La Civilización del Oxus
La Civilización del Oxus, también conocida como la Civilización de Bactria-Margiana, está centrada en el oasis de
Murghab, Turkmenistán, y datada entre el 2200-1700 AC. Descubierta por Victor Sarianidi en la década de 1970,
continua sus excavaciones en el poblado de +20 hectáreas de Gonur depe. La Civilización del Oxus tiene una
arquitectura única, una cultura material excepcionalmente rica, y contactos con Mesopotamia, el Valle del Indo y
la llanura iraní.The Oxus Civilization, also known as the Bactrian-Margina Civilization, is centere in the Murghab Oasis,
Turkmenistan, and dated to 2200-1700 BC. Discovered by Victor Sarianidi in the 1970s, he continues his excavations
on the +20 hectare site of Gonur depe. The Oxus Civilization has unique architecture, an exceptionally rich material
culture, and contacts with Mesopotamia, the Indus Valley and the Iranian Plateau
Aflatoxin in chili peppers in Nigeria: extent of contamination and control using atoxigenic aspergillus flavus genotypes as biocontrol agents
Open Access Journal; Published online: 22 July 2019Across sub-Saharan Africa, chili peppers are fundamental ingredients of many traditional dishes. However, chili peppers may contain unsafe aflatoxin concentrations produced by Aspergillus section Flavi fungi. Aflatoxin levels were determined in chili peppers from three states in Nigeria. A total of 70 samples were collected from farmers’ stores and local markets. Over 25% of the samples contained unsafe aflatoxin concentrations. The chili peppers were associated with both aflatoxin producers and atoxigenic Aspergillus flavus genotypes. E cacy of an atoxigenic biocontrol product, Aflasafe, registered in Nigeria for use on maize and groundnut, was tested for chili peppers grown in three states. Chili peppers treated with Aflasafe accumulated significantly less aflatoxins than nontreated chili peppers. The results suggest that Aflasafe is a valuable tool for the production of safe chili peppers. Use of Aflasafe in chili peppers could reduce human exposure to aflatoxins and increase chances to commercialize chili peppers in premium local and international markets. This is the first report of the e cacy of any atoxigenic biocontrol product for controlling aflatoxin in a spice crop
Two rapid assays for screening of patulin biodegradation
Artículo sobre distintos ensayos para comprobar la biodegradación de la patulinaThe mycotoxin patulin is produced by the blue
mould pathogen Penicillium expansum in rotting apples
during postharvest storage. Patulin is toxic to a wide range
of organisms, including humans, animals, fungi and bacteria.
Wash water from apple packing and processing
houses often harbours patulin and fungal spores, which can
contaminate the environment. Ubiquitous epiphytic yeasts,
such as Rhodosporidium kratochvilovae strain LS11 which
is a biocontrol agent of P. expansum in apples, have the
capacity to resist the toxicity of patulin and to biodegrade
it. Two non-toxic products are formed. One is desoxypatulinic
acid. The aim of the work was to develop rapid,
high-throughput bioassays for monitoring patulin degradation
in multiple samples. Escherichia coli was highly
sensitive to patulin, but insensitive to desoxypatulinic acid.
This was utilized to develop a detection test for patulin,
replacing time-consuming thin layer chromatography or
high-performance liquid chromatography. Two assays for patulin degradation were developed, one in liquid medium
and the other in semi-solid medium. Both assays allow the
contemporary screening of a large number of samples. The
liquid medium assay utilizes 96-well microtiter plates and
was optimized for using a minimum of patulin. The semisolid
medium assay has the added advantage of slowing
down the biodegradation, which allows the study and isolation
of transient degradation products. The two assays are
complementary and have several areas of utilization, from
screening a bank of microorganisms for biodegradation
ability to the study of biodegradation pathways
Conversion of the Mycotoxin Patulin to the Less Toxic Desoxypatulinic Acid by the Biocontrol Yeast Rhodosporidium kratochvilovae Strain LS11
Se describe en este artículo el descubrimiento de la degradación de la micotoxina patulina por una levaduraThe infection of stored apples by the fungus Penicillium expansum causes the contamination of fruits and fruit-derived
products with the mycotoxin patulin, which is a major issue in food safety. Fungal attack can be prevented by beneficial
microorganisms, so-called biocontrol agents. Previous time-course thin layer chromatography analyses showed that the aerobic
incubation of patulin with the biocontrol yeast Rhodosporidium kratochvilovae strain LS11 leads to the disappearance of the
mycotoxin spot and the parallel emergence of two new spots, one of which disappears over time. In this work, we analyzed the
biodegradation of patulin effected by LS11 through HPLC. The more stable of the two compounds was purified and characterized by
nuclear magnetic resonance as desoxypatulinic acid, whose formation was also quantitated in patulin degradation experiments. After
R. kratochvilovae LS11 had been incubated in the presence of 13C-labeled patulin, label was traced to desoxypatulinic acid, thus
proving that this compound derives from the metabolization of patulin by the yeast. Desoxypatulinic acid was much less toxic than
patulin to human lymphocytes and, in contrast to patulin, did not react in vitro with the thiol-bearing tripeptide glutathione. The
lower toxicity of desoxypatulinic acid is proposed to be a consequence of the hydrolysis of the lactone ring and the loss of functional
groups that react with thiol groups. The formation of desoxypatulinic acid from patulin represents a novel biodegradation pathway
that is also a detoxification process
Simultaneous detection of Fusarium culmorum and F. graminearum in plant material by duplex PCR with melting curve analysis
BACKGROUND: Fusarium head blight (FHB) is a disease of cereal crops, which has a severe impact on wheat and barley production worldwide. Apart from reducing the yield and impairing grain quality, FHB leads to contamination of grain with toxic secondary metabolites (mycotoxins), which pose a health risk to humans and livestock. The Fusarium species primarily involved in FHB are F. graminearum and F. culmorum. A key prerequisite for a reduction in the incidence of FHB is an understanding of its epidemiology. RESULTS: We describe a duplex-PCR-based method for the simultaneous detection of F. culmorum and F. graminearum in plant material. Species-specific PCR products are identified by melting curve analysis performed in a real-time thermocycler in the presence of the fluorescent dye SYBR Green I. In contrast to multiplex real-time PCR assays, the method does not use doubly labeled hybridization probes. CONCLUSION: PCR with product differentiation by melting curve analysis offers a cost-effective means of qualitative analysis for the presence of F. culmorum and F. graminearum in plant material. This method is particularly suitable for epidemiological studies involving a large number of samples
Is poverty in our genes? A critique of Ashraf and Galor, "The 'out of Africa' hypothesis, human genetic diversity, and comparative economic development," American Economic Review (Forthcoming)
Genetic relationship and diversity in a sesame (Sesamum indicum L.) germplasm collection using amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP)
BACKGROUND: Sesame is an important oil crop in tropical and subtropical areas. Despite its nutritional value and historic and cultural importance, the research on sesame has been scarce, particularly as far as its genetic diversity is concerned. The aims of the present study were to clarify genetic relationships among 32 sesame accessions from the Venezuelan Germplasm Collection, which represents genotypes from five diversity centres (India, Africa, China-Korea-Japan, Central Asia and Western Asia), and to determine the association between geographical origin and genetic diversity using amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP). RESULTS: Large genetic variability was found within the germplasm collection. A total of 457 AFLP markers were recorded, 93 % of them being polymorphic. The Jaccard similarity coefficient ranged from 0.38 to 0.85 between pairs of accessions. The UPGMA dendrogram grouped 25 of 32 accessions in two robust clusters, but it has not revealed any association between genotype and geographical origin. Indian, African and Chinese-Korean-Japanese accessions were distributed throughout the dendrogram. A similar pattern was obtained using principal coordinates analysis. Genetic diversity studies considering five groups of accessions according to the geographic origin detected that only 20 % of the total diversity was due to diversity among groups using Nei's coefficient of population differentiation. Similarly, only 5% of the total diversity was attributed to differences among groups by the analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA). This small but significant difference was explained by the fact that the Central Asia group had a lower genetic variation than the other diversity centres studied. CONCLUSION: We found that our sesame collection was genetically very variable and did not show an association between geographical origin and AFLP patterns. This result suggests that there was considerable gene flow among diversity centres. Future germplasm collection strategies should focus on sampling a large number of plants. Covering many diversity centres is less important because each centre represents a major part of the total diversity in sesame, Central Asia centre being the only exception. The same recommendation holds for the choice of parents for segregant populations used in breeding projects. The traditional assumption that selecting genotypes of different geographical origin will maximize the diversity available to a breeding project does not hold in sesame
Response of the parasitoid Aphelinus abdominalis (Dalman) to bacterial secondary symbionts (BSS) in Sitobion avenae (F.) with regard to host killing behavior
Relationship between metabolic and genomic diversity in sesame (Sesamum indicum L.)
Background: Diversity estimates in cultivated plants provide a rationale for
conservation strategies and support the selection of starting material for
breeding programs. Diversity measures applied to crops usually have been
limited to the assessment of genome polymorphism at the DNA level.
Occasionally, selected morphological features are recorded and the content of
key chemical constituents determined, but unbiased and comprehensive chemical
phenotypes have not been included systematically in diversity surveys. Our
objective in this study was to assess metabolic diversity in sesame by
nontargeted metabolic profiling and elucidate the relationship between
metabolic and genome diversity in this crop. Results: Ten sesame accessions
were selected that represent most of the genome diversity of sesame grown in
India, Western Asia, Sudan and Venezuela based on previous AFLP studies.
Ethanolic seed extracts were separated by HPLC, metabolites were ionized by
positive and negative electrospray and ions were detected with an ion trap mass
spectrometer in full-scan mode for m/z from 50 to 1000. Genome diversity was
determined by Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism (AFLP) using eight primer
pair combinations. The relationship between biodiversity at the genome and at
the metabolome levels was assessed by correlation analysis and multivariate
statistics. Conclusion: Patterns of diversity at the genomic and metabolic
levels differed, indicating that selection played a significant role in the
evolution of metabolic diversity in sesame. This result implies that when used
for the selection of genotypes in breeding and conservation, diversity
assessment based on neutral DNA markers should be complemented with metabolic
profiles. We hypothesize that this applies to all crops with a long history of
domestication that possess commercially relevant traits affected by chemical
phenotypes
- …
