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[
Food Chem,
2016]
Potential nutraceutical properties of hydrophilic antioxidants in fruits of tomato landraces collected in Andean valleys were characterised. Antioxidant metabolites were measured by HPLC-DAD-MS/MS in mature fruits and their biological activities were assessed by in vitro and in vivo methods. In vitro antioxidant capacities were established by TEAC and FRAP methods. For in vivo biological activities we used a procedure based on Caenorhabditis elegans subjected to thermal stress. In addition, Saccharomyces cerevisiae was also used as a rapid screening system to evaluate tomato antioxidant capacity. All tomato accessions displayed significant differences regarding metabolic composition, biological activity and antioxidant capacity. Metabolite composition was associated with geographical origin and fruit size. Antioxidant activities showed significant association with phenolic compounds, such as caffeoylquinic acids, ferulic acid-O-hexosides and rutin. Combination of in vitro and in vivo methods applied here allowed evaluation of the variability in nutraceutical properties of tomato landraces, which could be applied to other fruits or food products.
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[
Data Brief,
2016]
Data provide information about a tomato collection composed of accessions from the Andean Valley, commercial accessions and wild species. Antioxidant metabolites were measured in mature fruits of this collection, and their biological activities were assessed by both in vitro and in vivo methods. In this work, the parameters used to identify and quantify polyphenols compounds in tomato fruit by liquid chromatography coupled to diode array detector and quadrupole time of flight mass spectrometer are described. Moreover, data supporting a procedure to characterize the properties of tomato fruits to revert death by thermal stress in Caenorhabditis elegans are explained in detail. Lastly, principal component analysis and hierarchical cluster analysis of metabolites composition, antioxidant activities (in vivo and in vitro), tomato traits and geographical origin of the tomatoes collection are shown. The data presented here are related to the research article entitled "Hydrophilic antioxidants from Andean Tomato Landraces assessed by their bioactivities in vitro and in vivo" [1].
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[
Trop Med Parasitol,
1991]
The objective of this multidisciplinary clinical investigation was to test whether amocarzine was absorbed effectively and safely in patients of two races and either sex infected with Onchocerca volvulus while living in the holoendemic area of Esmeraldas Province, Ecuador. The prerequisite for a systemic onchocercacidal effect is the regular absorption of orally administered amocarzine. Single dosing after overnight fasting proved to produce irregular absorption of amocarzine, although some microfilaricidal effect was achieved. A pilot study with repeated low dose and postprandial administration of amocarzine showed a regular and predictable absorption with acceptable tolerability and a microfilaricidal effect lasting up to one year post-therapy. Since amocarzine and its major N-oxide metabolite are coloured agents, urine colorimetry was used to assess the urinary excretion of the N-oxide qualitatively. For the postprandial drug regimens plasma concentrations of amocarzine and its metabolite were determined at two selected time points in patients of two races and either sex; the results showed no major differences. Excision of onchocercal nodules was performed four months post-therapy. The pooled results of the histologic analysis of 100 patients with the same drug regimen read under blinded condition showed that 65% of the adult female worms were dead, 20% necrobiotic and 15% alive. The male worms were fewer and mainly necrobiotic. Control worm populations in Esmeraldas without chemotherapy showed that on the average 81.5% were alive and 18.5% dead. Amocarzine was also microfilaricidal producing a reduction of skin dwelling microfilariae to about 10% of the initial value within the first week after start of therapy and lasting for half a year at a 20% level. The reduction of ocular microfilarial was slower and reached 35-40% after one year. The general tolerability was acceptable to good. Reversible dermal reactions were usually mild and peaked as a rash in 57% of the patients on day 6. No prohibitive ocular intolerance was observed. Mild and reversible dizziness peaked on day 4 in 74% of patients. A positive reversible Romberg sign was found in 12 patients on day 4. Amocarzine, the first oral micro- and macrofilaricidal agent administered as a low dose repeat regimen (3 mg/kg twice daily and postprandial for three consecutive days) can be recommended for oral onchocercacidal therapy in adult patients. Clinical trials in juveniles should be encouraged.
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Pennington PR, Heistad RM, Nyarko JNK, Barnes JR, Bolanos MAC, Parsons MP, Knudsen KJ, De Carvalho CE, Leary SC, Mousseau DD, Buttigieg J, Maley JM, Quartey MO
[
Sci Rep,
2021]
The pool of -Amyloid (A) length variants detected in preclinical and clinical Alzheimer disease (AD) samples suggests a diversity of roles for A peptides. We examined how a naturally occurring variant, e.g. A(1-38), interacts with the AD-related variant, A(1-42), and the predominant physiological variant, A(1-40). Atomic force microscopy, Thioflavin T fluorescence, circular dichroism, dynamic light scattering, and surface plasmon resonance reveal that A(1-38) interacts differently with A(1-40) and A(1-42) and, in general, A(1-38) interferes with the conversion of A(1-42) to a -sheet-rich aggregate. Functionally, A(1-38) reverses the negative impact of A(1-42) on long-term potentiation in acute hippocampal slices and on membrane conductance in primary neurons, and mitigates an A(1-42) phenotype in Caenorhabditis elegans. A(1-38) also reverses any loss of MTT conversion induced by A(1-40) and A(1-42) in HT-22 hippocampal neurons and APOE 4-positive human fibroblasts, although the combination of A(1-38) and A(1-42) inhibits MTT conversion in APOE 4-negative fibroblasts. A greater ratio of soluble A(1-42)/A(1-38) [and A(1-42)/A(1-40)] in autopsied brain extracts correlates with an earlier age-at-death in males (but not females) with a diagnosis of AD. These results suggest that A(1-38) is capable of physically counteracting, potentially in a sex-dependent manner, the neuropathological effects of the AD-relevant A(1-42).
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[
Front Pharmacol,
2020]
Oligomeric assembly of Amyloid- (A) is the main toxic species that contribute to early cognitive impairment in Alzheimer's patients. Therefore, drugs that reduce the formation of A oligomers could halt the disease progression. In this study, by using transgenic <i>Caenorhabditis elegans</i> model of Alzheimer's disease, we investigated the effects of frondoside A, a well-known sea cucumber <i>Cucumaria frondosa</i> saponin with anti-cancer activity, on A aggregation and proteotoxicity. The results showed that frondoside A at a low concentration of 1 M significantly delayed the worm paralysis caused by A aggregation as compared with control group. In addition, the number of A plaque deposits in transgenic worm tissues was significantly decreased. Frondoside A was more effective in these activities than ginsenoside-Rg3, a comparable ginseng saponin. Immunoblot analysis revealed that the level of small oligomers as well as various high molecular weights of A species in the transgenic <i>C. elegans</i> were significantly reduced upon treatment with frondoside A, whereas the level of A monomers was not altered. This suggested that frondoside A may primarily reduce the level of small oligomeric forms, the most toxic species of A. Frondoside A also protected the worms from oxidative stress and rescued chemotaxis dysfunction in a transgenic strain whose neurons express A. Taken together, these data suggested that low dose of frondoside A could protect against A-induced toxicity by primarily suppressing the formation of A oligomers. Thus, the molecular mechanism of how frondoside A exerts its anti-A aggregation should be studied and elucidated in the future.
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[
Naturwissenschaften,
2004]
Animals respond to signals and cues in their environment. The difference between a signal (e.g. a pheromone) and a cue (e.g. a waste product) is that the information content of a signal is subject to natural selection, whereas that of a cue is not. The model free-living nematode Caenorhabditis elegans forms an alternative developmental morph (the dauer larva) in response to a so-called 'dauer pheromone', produced by all worms. We suggest that the production of 'dauer pheromone' has no fitness advantage for an individual worm and therefore we propose that 'dauer pheromone' is not a signal, but a cue. Thus, it should not be called a pheromone.
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[
J Antibiot (Tokyo),
1990]
Cochlioquinone A, isolated from the fungus Helminthosporium sativum, was found to have nematocidal activity. Cochlioquinone A is a competitive inhibitor of specific [3H]ivermectin binding suggesting that cochlioquinone A and ivermectin interact with the same membrane receptor.
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[
J Lab Autom,
2016]
Microfluidic devices offer new technical possibilities for a precise manipulation of Caenorhabditis elegans due to the comparable length scale. C. elegans is a small, free-living nematode worm that is a popular model system for genetic, genomic, and high-throughput experimental studies of animal development and neurobiology. In this paper, we demonstrate a microfluidic system in polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) for dispensing of a single C. elegans worm into a 96-well plate. It consists of two PDMS layers, a flow and a control layer. Using five microfluidic pneumatic valves in the control layer, a single worm is trapped upon optical detection with a pair of optical fibers integrated perpendicular to the constriction channel and then dispensed into a microplate well with a dispensing tip attached to a robotic handling system. Due to its simple design and facile fabrication, we expect that our microfluidic chip can be expanded to a multiplexed dispensation system of C. elegans worms for high-throughput drug screening.
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[
Curr Biol,
2017]
The
pha-1 gene of Caenorhabditis elegans was originally heralded as a master regulator of organ differentiation. A new study suggests instead that
pha-1 actually serves no role in development and instead is a component of a selfish genetic element.
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[
Curr Biol,
2020]
How protein homeostasis is maintained in the extracellular space remains poorly studied. A recent study employed a Caenorhabditis elegans model to carry out a systematic analysis of the extracellular proteostasis network and uncovered its role in combating a pathogenic attack.