423 research outputs found

    Synergism between fungal enzymes and bacterial antibiotics may enhance biocontrol

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    The interactions between biocontrol fungi and bacteria may play a key role in the natural process of biocontrol, although the molecular mechanisms involved are still largely unknown. Synergism can occur when different agents are applied together, and cell wall degrading enzymes (CWDEs) produced by fungi can increase the efficacy of bacteria. Pseudomonas spp. produce membrane-disrupting lipodepsipeptides (LDPs) syringotoxins (SP) and syringomycins (SR). SR are considered responsible for the antimicrobial activity, and SP for the phytotoxicity. CWDEs of Trichoderma spp. synergistically increased the toxicity Of SP25-A or SRE purified from P. syringae against fungal pathogens. For instance, the fungal enzymes made Botrytis cinerea and other phytopathogenic fungi, normally resistant to SP25-A alone, more susceptible to this antibiotic. Pseudomonas produced CWDEs in culture conditions that allow the synthesis of the LDPs. Purified bacterial enzymes and metabolites were also synergistic against fungal pathogens, although this mixture was less powerful than the combination with the Trichoderma CWDEs. The positive interaction between LDPs and CWDEs may be part of the biocontrol mechanism in some Pseudomonas strains, and co-induction of different antifungal compounds in both biocontrol bacteria and fungi may occur

    Selective Exposure shapes the Facebook News Diet

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    The social brain hypothesis fixes to 150 the number of social relationships we are able to maintain. Similar cognitive constraints emerge in several aspects of our daily life, from our mobility up to the way we communicate, and might even affect the way we consume information online. Indeed, despite the unprecedented amount of information we can access online, our attention span still remains limited. Furthermore, recent studies showed the tendency of users to ignore dissenting information but to interact with information adhering to their point of view. In this paper, we quantitatively analyze users' attention economy in news consumption on social media by analyzing 14M users interacting with 583 news outlets (pages) on Facebook over a time span of 6 years. In particular, we explore how users distribute their activity across news pages and topics. We find that, independently of their activity, users show the tendency to follow a very limited number of pages. On the other hand, users tend to interact with almost all the topics presented by their favored pages. Finally, we introduce a taxonomy accounting for users behavior to distinguish between patterns of selective exposure and interest. Our findings suggest that segregation of users in echo chambers might be an emerging effect of users' activity on social media and that selective exposure -- i.e. the tendency of users to consume information interest coherent with their preferences -- could be a major driver in their consumption patterns.Comment: PLOS One Published: March 13, 202

    Open field study of some Zea mays hybrids, lipid compounds and fumonisins accumulation

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    Lipid molecules are increasingly recognized as signals exchanged by organisms interacting in pathogenic and/or symbiotic ways. Some classes of lipids actively determine the fate of the interactions. Host cuticle/cell wall/membrane components such as sphingolipids and oxylipins may contribute to determining the fate of host–pathogen interactions. In the present field study, we considered the relationship between specific sphingolipids and oxylipins of different hybrids of Zea mays and fumonisin by F. verticillioides, sampling ears at different growth stages from early dough to fully ripe. The amount of total and free fumonisin differed significantly between hybrids and increased significantly with maize ripening. Oxylipins and phytoceramides changed significantly within the hybrids and decreased with kernel maturation, starting from physiological maturity. Although the correlation between fumonisin accumulation and plant lipid profile is certain, the data collected so far cannot define a cause-effect relationship but open up new perspectives. Therefore, the question—“Does fumonisin alter plant lipidome or does plant lipidome modulate fumonisin accumulation?”—is still open

    Menadione-induced oxidative stress re-shapes the oxylipin profile of Aspergillus flavus and its lifestyle

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    Aspergillus flavus is an efficient producer of mycotoxins, particularly aflatoxin B1, probably the most hepatocarcinogenic naturally-occurring compound. Although the inducing agents of toxin synthesis are not unanimously identified, there is evidence that oxidative stress is one of the main actors in play. In our study, we use menadione, a quinone extensively implemented in studies on ROS response in animal cells, for causing stress to A. flavus. For uncovering the molecular determinants that drive A. flavus in challenging oxidative stress conditions, we have evaluated a wide spectrum of several different parameters, ranging from metabolic (ROS and oxylipin profile) to transcriptional analysis (RNA-seq). There emerges a scenario in which A. flavus activates several metabolic processes under oxidative stress conditions for limiting the ROS-associated detrimental effects, as well as for triggering adaptive and escape strategies

    Multiple roles and effects of a novel Trichoderma hydrophobin

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    Fungi belonging to the genus Trichoderma are among the most active and ecologically successful microbes found in natural environments, as they are able to use a variety of substrates and affect the growth of other microbes and virtually any plant species. We isolated and characterized a novel type II hydrophobin secreted by the biocontrol strain MK1 of Trichoderma longibrachiatum. The corresponding gene (Hytlo1) has a multiple role in the Trichoderma-plant-pathogen three-way interaction, while the purified protein displayed a direct antifungal as well as a MAMP and a plant growth promotion (PGP) activity. Leaf infiltration with the hydrophobin systemically increased resistance to pathogens and activated defence-related responses involving ROS, SOD, oxylipins, phytoalexins and PR-proteins formation or activity. The hydrophobin was found to enhance development of a variety of plants when applied at very low doses. It particularly stimulated root formation and growth, as demonstrated also by transient expression of the encoding gene in tobacco and tomato. Targeted knock-out of Hytlo1 significantly reduced both antagonistic and PGP effect of the WT strain. We conclude that this protein represents a clear example of a molecular factor developed by Trichoderma to establish a mutually beneficial interaction with the colonized plant

    Existence, energy identity and higher time regularity of solutions to a dynamic visco-elastic cohesive interface model

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    We study the dynamics of visco-elastic materials coupled by a common cohesive interface (or, equivalently, {two single domains separated by} a prescribed cohesive crack) in the anti-plane setting. We consider a general class of traction-separation laws featuring an activation threshold on the normal stress, softening and elastic unloading. In strong form, the evolution is described by a system of PDEs coupling momentum balance (in the bulk) with transmission and Karush-Kuhn-Tucker conditions (on the interface). We provide a detailed analysis of the system. We first prove existence of a weak solution, employing a time discrete approach and a regularization of the initial data. Then, we prove our main results: the energy identity and the existence of { solutions} with acceleration in L(0,T;L2)L^\infty (0,T; L^2)

    Suicide risk among adult subjects hospitalized in an acute psychiatric ward: 6-year retrospective investigation

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    Background The phenomenon of suicide risk (SR) represents a psychiatric, social and environmental emergency. The acute psychiatric ward as the Italian Service for Psychiatric Diagnosis and Care (SPDC) represents the place where SR is high due to the acute and serious conditions of people hospitalized. The objective of this study was to evalu ate the characteristics of subjects admitted to a SPDC over a 6-year period for SR represented by: suicidal ideation, attempted and failed suicide. Methods With a retrospective single-center observational design, we collected hospitalizations from 01/01/2017 to 31/12/2022 in the SPDC of AUSL-Modena for SR, analyzed the modality of SR and compared the demographic and clinical variables of subjects with SR with those hospitalized for other clinical reasons in the same period. Data were statistically analyzed. Results In the 6-year of study period, we collected 2,930 hospitalizations in the SPDC of AUSL- Modena and among them, 68% (n = 528) were carried out due to SR, which represented the second leading cause of hos pitalization (18%), in particular among females (Pearson Chi2 = 17.41, p < 0.001). Individuals with SR were more frequently voluntary admitted (Pearson Chi2 = 215.41, p < 0.001) for a shorter period (7.36 ± 8.16 vs 11.66 ± 15.93, t = 6.03, t-test, p < 0.001) and less frequently repeated the hospitalization during the study period for the same reason (Pearson Chi2 = 6.0, p = 0.014). The most frequent psychiatric disorders associated with SR were depressive, personality and adjustment disorders, which represented the most common factor associated with SR (68%), followed by family/ relationship problems (12%) and alcohol/substance abuse (8%). We highlighted three kinds of suicidal risk: suicidal ideation (40%), often associated with personality disorders and substance use disorders, drug ingestion (30%) con comitant with conflicting family relationships and use of violent means (30%) associated with depressive disorders (Pearson Chi2 = 42.83, p = 0.002). Conclusions Our study provides a real-world setting evaluation of subjects hospitalized for SR and, in accord ance with literature, suggests that suicidal behavior is the product of many clinical and social factors’ interaction, that occurred in a crucial moment of life in vulnerable individuals. The identification of subjects at SR represents the first step of preventive multi-professional interventions
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