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Showing papers by "Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences published in 2000"


Journal ArticleDOI
13 Oct 2000-Science
TL;DR: It is concluded that although natural processes can potentially slow the rate of increase in atmospheric CO2, there is no natural "savior" waiting to assimilate all the anthropogenically produced CO2 in the coming century.
Abstract: :Motivated by the rapid increase in atmospheric CO2 due to human activities since the Industrial Revolution, several international scientific research programs have analyzed the role of individual components of the Earth system in the global carbon cycle. Our knowledge of the carbon cycle within the oceans, terrestrial ecosystems, and the atmosphere is sufficiently extensive to permit us to conclude that although natural processes can potentially slow the rate of increase in atmospheric CO 2, there is no natural “savior” waiting to assimilate all the anthropogenically produced CO 2 in the coming century. Our knowledge is insufficient to describe the interactions between the components of the Earth system and the relationship between the carbon cycle and other biogeochemical and climatological processes. Overcoming this limitation requires a systems approach.

1,839 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that RAPD can be a sensitive method for detection of genetic structuring according to the isolation-by-distance model, but also means that sampling strategies, as applied in individual studies, can seriously influence the resulting estimates of between-population diversity.
Abstract: A compilation of studies using RAPD markers for evaluating population differentiation resulted in 78 estimates of AMOVA-derived Φ ST and 31 estimates of Nei's G ST , as well as in 41 estimates of Nei's within-population diversity. In outcrossing taxa, estimates of between-population diversity were closely correlated with maximum geographic distance between sampled populations. A corresponding association was not found in selfing taxa. These results suggest that RAPD can be a sensitive method for detection of genetic structuring according to the isolation-by-distance model. However, it also means that sampling strategies, as applied in individual studies, can seriously influence the resulting estimates of between-population diversity. Other sampling strategies, like number of plants per population and number of scored polymorphic markers, do not seem to impart any serious artefacts. As previously verified with allozyme data, RAPD markers showed that long-lived, outcrossing, late successional taxa retain most of their genetic variability within populations. By contrast, annual, selfing and/or early successional taxa allocate most of the genetic variability among populations. Estimates for between- and within-population diversity, respectively, proved to be negatively correlated, as previously reported for allozyme data. The only major discrepancy between allozymes and RAPD markers concerns geographic range; within-population diversity was strongly affected by distributional range of the investigated species in the allozyme data but not in the RAPD data. Moreover, RAPD-based values for between-population diversity increased with increasing distributional range whereas the opposite has been reported in a large allozyme data compilation. Contrary to allozymes, RAPD marker-derived within-population diversity is probably therefore not a very good predictor of total species genetic diversity.

832 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
19 May 2000-Science
TL;DR: It is shown that the dominant RN- mutation in purebred Hampshire pigs carries a nonconservative substitution (R200Q) in the PRKAG3 gene, which encodes a muscle-specific isoform of the regulatory gamma subunit of adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase (AMPK).
Abstract: A high proportion of purebred Hampshire pigs carries the dominant RN- mutation, which causes high glycogen content in skeletal muscle. The mutation has beneficial effects on meat content but detrimental effects on processing yield. Here, it is shown that the mutation is a nonconservative substitution (R200Q) in the PRKAG3 gene, which encodes a muscle-specific isoform of the regulatory gamma subunit of adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase (AMPK). Loss-of-function mutations in the homologous gene in yeast (SNF4) cause defects in glucose metabolism, including glycogen storage. Further analysis of the PRKAG3 signaling pathway may provide insights into muscle physiology as well as the pathogenesis of noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in humans, a metabolic disorder associated with impaired glycogen synthesis.

736 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The evolution of the glucosinolate-myrosinase system and its impact on the interaction between plants and insects are discussed, and data suggesting additional functions in the defense against pathogens and in sulfur metabolism are reviewed.
Abstract: Glucosinolates are a category of secondary products present primarily in species of the order Capparales. When tissue is damaged, for example by herbivory, glucosinolates are degraded in a reaction catalyzed by thioglucosidases, denoted myrosinases, also present in these species. Thereby, toxic compounds such as nitriles, isothiocyanates, epithionitriles and thiocyanates are released. The glucosinolate-myrosinase system is generally believed to be part of the plant's defense against insects, and possibly also against pathogens. In this review, the evolution of the system and its impact on the interaction between plants and insects are discussed. Further, data suggesting additional functions in the defense against pathogens and in sulfur metabolism are reviewed.

683 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Apr 2000-Genetics
TL;DR: Clear evidence was obtained for domestication to have occurred independently from wild boar subspecies in Europe and Asia, and the data indicated a hybrid origin of some major "European" pig breeds.
Abstract: The domestic pig originates from the Eurasian wild boar (Sus scrofa). We have sequenced mitochondrial DNA and nuclear genes from wild and domestic pigs from Asia and Europe. Clear evidence was obtained for domestication to have occurred independently from wild boar subspecies in Europe and Asia. The time since divergence of the ancestral forms was estimated at approximately 500,000 years, well before domestication approximately 9,000 years ago. Historical records indicate that Asian pigs were introduced into Europe during the 18th and early 19th centuries. We found molecular evidence for this introgression and the data indicated a hybrid origin of some major "European" pig breeds. The study is an advance in pig genetics and has important implications for the maintenance and utilization of genetic diversity in this livestock species.

633 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A fragment of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene of avian malaria was amplified from blood samples of 12 species of passerine birds from the genera Acrocephalus, Phylloscopus and Parus, finding two to four different parasite mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplotypes in four bird species.
Abstract: A fragment of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene of avian malaria (genera Haemoproteus and Plasmodium) was amplified from blood samples of 12 species of passerine birds from the genera Acrocephalus, Phylloscopus and Parus. By sequencing 478 nucleotides of the obtained fragments, we found 17 different mitochondrial haplotypes of Haemoproteus or Plasmodium among the 12 bird species investigated. Only one out of the 17 haplotypes was found in more than one host species, this exception being a haplotype detected in both blue tits (Parus caeruleus) and great tits (Parus major). The phylogenetic tree which was constructed grouped the sequences into two clades, most probably representing Haemoproteus and Plasmodium, respectively. We found two to four different parasite mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplotypes in four bird species. The phylogenetic tree obtained from the mtDNA of the parasites matched the phylogenetic tree of the bird hosts poorly. For example, the two tit species and the willow warbler (Phylloscopus trochilus) carried parasites differing by only 0.6% sequence divergence, suggesting that Haemoproteus shift both between species within the same genus and also between species in different families. Hence, host shifts seem to have occurred repeatedly in this parasite host system. We discuss this in terms of the possible evolutionary consequences for these bird species.

601 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The crude extract of fruits showed the highest inhibitory effect in both 2,2-azobis(2,4-dimethylvaleronitrile) (AMVN) and ascorbate-iron induced lipid peroxidations.
Abstract: Different fractions of sea buckthorn fruits were investigated for antioxidant activity and its relationship to different phytonutrients. Capacity to scavenge radicals of the crude extract, like the phenolic and ascorbate extracts, decreased significantly with increased maturation. The changes were strongly correlated with the content of total phenolics and ascorbic acid. Antioxidant capacity of the lipophilic extract increased significantly and corresponded to the increase in total carotenoids. The phenolic fractions made a major contribution to the total antioxidant capacity due to the high content of total phenolics. The lipophilic fractions were most effective if the comparison was based on the ratio between antioxidant capacity and content of antioxidants. The crude extract of fruits showed the highest inhibitory effect in both 2,2-azobis(2,4-dimethylvaleronitrile) (AMVN) and ascorbate-iron induced lipid peroxidations. The aqueous and ascorbate-free extracts showed higher inhibition in the AMVN assay, but lower inhibition in ascorbate-iron induced peroxidation, than the lipophilic extract.

592 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that overexpressing a key regulatory gene in the biosynthesis of the plant hormone gibberellin in hybrid aspen improves growth rate and biomass, and these transgenic trees have more numerous and longer xylem fibers than unmodified wild-type plants.
Abstract: In most tree-breeding programs worldwide, increasing the trees' growth rates and stem volumes and shortening their rotation times are important aims. Such trees would yield more biomass per unit area. Here we show that overexpressing a key regulatory gene in the biosynthesis of the plant hormone gibberellin (GA) in hybrid aspen (Populus tremula x P. tremuloides) improves growth rate and biomass. In addition, these transgenic trees have more numerous and longer xylem fibers than unmodified wild-type (wt) plants. Long fibers are desirable in the production of strong paper, but it has not as yet proved possible to influence this trait by traditional breeding techniques. We also show that GA has an antagonistic effect on root initiation, as the transgenic lines showed poorer rooting than the control plants when potted in soil. However, the negative effect on rooting efficiencies in the initial establishment of young plantlets in the growth chamber did not significantly affect root growth at later stages.

513 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jun 2000-Ecology
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify past fires in a northern Swedish boreal landscape using fire scars on Pinus sylvestris trees, the earliest dating back to the 1100s.
Abstract: The spatial display of fire over time on the landscape is ecologically important, and spatially explicit analyses offer a possibility of revealing anthropogenic influence on fire regimes. Nonetheless few such analyses have been attempted for longer time frames. We identified past fires in a northern Swedish boreal landscape using fire scars on Pinus sylvestris trees. Within a 19 × 32 km area, local fire chronologies were established at 203 points by cross-dating fire scars on 1133 wood samples, the earliest dating back to the 1100s. A total of 349 separate fires were identified to location and size. The estimated number of fires per unit area and time (after correcting for varying sample density over time) was relatively constant at 0.095 fires·(104 ha)−1·yr−1 from 1350 to 1650. It increased gradually thereafter, except for a low period in the early 1700s, peaked at 1.17 fires·(104 ha)−1·yr−1 in the mid-1800s, and then dropped dramatically after 1860. The proportion of the area burned per unit time also increased after 1650, in parallel with the increase in the number of fires (although much less strongly due to a counteracting trend in fire size), from an annual rate of 0.8% prior to 1650 to 2.8% in the mid-1800s. Prior to 1650, 90% of the total burned area was due to fires larger than 1000 ha, compared to 55% after 1650. This decrease in fire size with increasing number of fires may be an intrinsic property of the system: a negative feedback caused by lack of fuel in early succession. Fire intervals shorter than 15 yr were rare, and there was an increase in the hazard of burning during the first 3–5 decades after fire, suggesting an effect of fuel accumulation. Thus, the proportion of the area burned per unit time does not increase linearly with the number of fires in the landscape, because the probability that fires will stop at boundaries with recently burned areas increases over fires. The changes in the number of fires per unit time mirror changes in the cultural use of the land, i.e., the gradual expansion of permanent settlements in the area after the late 1600s. They are not explained by changes in climate records. This suggests that the increase in fire numbers from the second half of the 1600s represents an increase in anthropogenic fires. Before 1650, the number of fires detected per unit area and time was only marginally different from the present-day density of lightning ignitions in the region (∼ 0.1 fires·(104 ha)−1·yr−1), whereas during the mid 1800s it was 11.7 times higher. These results show that large alterations in the fire regime can occur without substantial changes in the proportion of area burned per unit time, as exemplified by the trend after 1650, when there were concurrent changes in the number of fires and in average fire size. Therefore, the number of fire events per unit area and time should be an important variable in the analysis of fire history and its underlying causes.

472 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the average volume of DW on managed productive forestland in Sweden was estimated to be 6.1 m 3 /ha, where the amount and structure of DW vary depending on geographical location, stand age, and forest type.

467 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
22 Jun 2000-Nature
TL;DR: The time between the spring thaw and the autumn freeze determines the amount of annual tree growth, mainly through temperature effects on carbon-dioxide uptake in spring and on nutrient availability and uptake during summer, rather than on cambial cell division.
Abstract: Understanding how the growth of trees at high latitudes in boreal forest is controlled is important for projections of global carbon sequestration and timber production in relation to climate change. Is stem growth of boreal forest trees constrained by the length of the growing season when stem cambial cells divide1, or by the length of the period when resources can be captured2? In both cases, the timing of the thaw in the spring is critical: neither cambial cell division nor uptake of nutrients and carbon dioxide can occur while the soil is frozen. Here we argue, on the basis of long-term observations made in northern Saskatchewan and Sweden, that the time between the spring thaw and the autumn freeze determines the amount of annual tree growth, mainly through temperature effects on carbon-dioxide uptake in spring and on nutrient availability and uptake during summer, rather than on cambial cell division.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Nov 2000-Lupus
TL;DR: The close relationship between disease activity in SLE patients and IFN-α serum levels suggests that activation of the type I IFN system might be of importance in the disease process.
Abstract: The objective was to investigate the relation between serum levels of interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha), the activity of an endogenous IFN-alpha inducing factor (SLE-IIF), clinical and immunological disease activity as well as serum levels of antiretroviral antibodies in SLE. Serum levels of IFN-alpha were measured in serial sera from 30 patients sampled at different stages of disease activity (SLEDAI score). The SLE-IIF activity was measured by its ability to induce IFN-alpha production in cultures of normal peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Both serum IFN-alpha and SLE-IIF increased markedly at flare in serially followed patients. The SLEDAI score, levels of anti-dsDNA antibodies and IL-10 correlated positively, and complement components Clq, C3 and leukocytes correlated inversely with serum concentrations of IFN-alpha. The extent of multiple organ involvement correlated with serum IFN-alpha. No relation between concentrations of retroviral peptide binding antibodies and IFN-alpha or SLE-IIF activity was found. The close relationship between disease activity in SLE patients and IFN-alpha serum levels suggests that activation of the type 1 IFN system might be of importance in the disease process.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The degree of compactness is defined as the dry bulk density of a soil as a percent of a reference bulk density obtained by a standardized uniaxial compression test on large samples at a stress of 200 kPa as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: The state of compactness is an important soil structure and quality attribute, and there is a need to find a parameter for its characterization that gives directly comparable values for all soils The use of some relative bulk density value for this purpose, particularly the degree of compactness (Hakansson, 1990), is discussed in this review The degree of compactness has been defined as the dry bulk density of a soil as a percent of a reference bulk density obtained by a standardized uniaxial compression test on large samples at a stress of 200 kPa The bulk density should be determined at standardized moisture conditions, to prevent problems caused by water content variations in swelling/shrinking soils The degree of compactness (D) makes results of soil compaction experiments more generally applicable Whereas the bulk density or porosity optimal for crop growth vary greatly between soils, the optimal D-value is virtually independent of soil composition Critical limits of penetration resistance (3 MPa) and air-filled porosity (10%, v/v) are similarly related to the D-value and matric water tension in most soils As the D-value increases above the optimal, the tension range offering non-limiting conditions becomes increasingly limited The D-value of the plough layer induced by a given number of passes by a certain vehicle is similar in all soils, provided the moisture conditions are comparable The degree of compactness facilitates modelling of soil and crop responses to machinery traffic Although this parameter was primarily introduced for use in annually disturbed soil layers, its use may be extended to undisturbed soil layers

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Glycine betaine is an osmoprotectant found in many organisms, including bacteria and higher plants as mentioned in this paper, and it can also be found in tobacco.
Abstract: Glycine betaine is an osmoprotectant found in many organisms, including bacteria and higher plants. The bacterium Escherichia coli produces glycine betaine by a two-step pathway where choline dehydrogenase (CDH), encoded by betA, oxidizes choline to betaine aldehyde which is further oxidized to glycine betaine by the same enzyme. The second step, conversion of betaine aldehyde into glycine betaine, can also be performed by the second enzyme in the pathway, betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase (BADH), encoded by betB. Transformation of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum), a species not accumulating glycine betaine, with the E. coli genes for glycine betaine biosynthesis, resulted in transgenic plants accumulating glycine betaine. Plants producing CDH were found to accumulate glycine betaine as did F1 progeny from crosses between CDH- and BADH-producing lines. Plants producing both CDH and BADH generally accumulated higher amounts of glycine betaine than plants producing CDH alone, as determined by 1H NMR analysis. Transgenic tobacco lines accumulating glycine betaine exhibited increased tolerance to salt stress as measured by biomass production of greenhouse-grown intact plants. Furthermore, experiments conducted with leaf discs from glycine betaine-accumulating plants indicated enhanced recovery from photoinhibition caused by high light and salt stress as well as improved tolerance to photoinhibition under low temperature conditions. In conclusion, introduction of glycine betaine production into tobacco is associated with increased stress tolerance probably partly due to improved protection of the photosynthetic apparatus.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Many macro- and micronutrient-dense wild species deserve greater attention but lack of adequate nutrient databases, whether by region or nation, limit educational efforts to improve diets in many Third World areas.
Abstract: The importance of edible wild plants may be traced to antiquity but systematic studies are recent. Anthropologists, botanists, ecologists, food scientists, geographers, nutritionists, physicians and sociologists have investigated cultural aspects and nutrient composition of edible species. Important contributions to the diet from edible wild plants are well documented and numerous studies reveal roles played by 'lesser-known' species when meeting macro- and micronutrient needs of groups at risk, whether infants and children, pregnant and/or lactating women, or the elderly. The literature is vast and scattered but information on the macro- and micronutrient content of wild plants and their importance to the human diet appear in five kinds of publications: cultural works by social scientists, descriptions and inventories by botanists, dietary assessment studies by nutritionists, intervention programmes managed by epidemiologists and physicians, and composition data generally conducted by food scientists and chemists. Many macro- and micronutrient-dense wild species deserve greater attention but lack of adequate nutrient databases, whether by region or nation, limit educational efforts to improve diets in many Third World areas. Limited and uneven compositional data generally reflect factors of cost and personal interest in key nutrients. Whilst edible wild plants are regularly deprecated by policy makers and considered to be the 'weeds of agriculture', it would be tragic if this led to loss of ability to identify and consume these important available species.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the importance of management practices and landscape structure on diversity of butterflies on 16 farms with organic or conventional management during 1997 and 1998 and found that the landscape structure was more important for butterfly diversity and species composition than the farming system in itself.
Abstract: To examine the importance of management practices and landscape structure on diversity of butterflies 16 farms with organic or conventional management were censused during 1997 and 1998. On each farm a transect route was walked during July and the beginning of August, six times in 1997 and five times in 1998. The farms were located in the central part of Sweden in two adjacent regions with the same pool of species. The organic and conventional farms were paired with help of the Bray-Curtis dissimilarity index according to land use to control for landscape structure on the farm level. On each farm calculations were made of large- and small-scale landscape heterogeneity with the help of GIS. A grid with a mesh size of 400 m was placed over each farm and the small-scale heterogeneity was calculated as the mean habitat diversity of four squares. The large-scale landscape heterogeneity described the landscape in which the farms were imbedded, and covered an area of 5x5 km. No differences in butterfly diversity, number of species or number of observations were noted between organic and conventional farms. Butterfly diversity was positively correlated with small-scale landscape heterogeneity while butterfly abundance was positively correlated with large-scale heterogeneity. Both large-scale and small-scale heterogeneity were important for the composition of species. The landscape structure seemed to be more important for butterfly diversity and species composition than the farming system in itself.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that ethylene and JA act in concert in this regulation of defense gene expression triggered by the pathogen or by plant cell wall-degrading enzymes secreted by the Pathogen.
Abstract: We have characterized the role of salicylic acid (SA)-independent defense signaling in Arabidopsis thaliana in response to the plant pathogen Erwinia carotovora subsp. carotovora. Use of pathway-specific target genes as well as signal mutants allowed us to elucidate the role and interactions of ethylene, jasmonic acid (JA), and SA signal pathways in this response. Gene expression studies suggest a central role for both ethylene and JA pathways in the regulation of defense gene expression triggered by the pathogen or by plant cell wall-degrading enzymes (CF) secreted by the pathogen. Our results suggest that ethylene and JA act in concert in this regulation. In addition, CF triggers another, strictly JA-mediated response inhibited by ethylene and SA. SA does not appear to have a major role in activating defense gene expression in response to CF. However, SA may have a dual role in controlling CF-induced gene expression, by enhancing the expression of genes synergistically induced by ethylene and JA and repressing genes induced by JA alone.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a mixture of hemicellulose and chitosan was extracted by an alkali extraction method, which was followed by hydrogen peroxide treatment, ultra-filtration and recovery by spray drying.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated rosehip extracts of 18 samples representing six taxa in the genus Rosa and found that the overall mean of antioxidants was 23.23% of carotenoids and 76.26% of phenolics.
Abstract: Rosehip extracts of 18 samples representing six taxa in the genus Rosa were evaluated for antioxidant activities by use of different test systems. The ferric-reducing antioxidant power (FRAP) and Trolox-equivalent antioxidant capacity (TEAC) of the crude extracts ranged from 983.4 to 2187.1 µmol FRAP g−1 dry matter and from 457.2 to 626.2 µmol TEAC g−1 dry matter. The high antioxidant capacity was related to high contents of phytonutrients. The overall mean of antioxidants was 23.23 mg g−1 total carotenoids and 76.26 mg g−1 total phenolics. The phenolic component made a major contribution to the total antioxidant activities in both assays (overall mean was 90.5% and 75.7%), whereas the ascorbate made a minor contribution (8.6% and 16.9%) and the lipophilic component made an even smaller one (0.9% and 7.3%). However, the lipophilic component was the most effective when the comparison was based on the ratio of antioxidant activity to content of antioxidants. The crude extracts exhibited 50.9% (46.6–60.3%) inhibitory effect against the lipid peroxidation induced by 2,2′-azobis(2,4-dimethylvaleronitrile) (AMVN) and 85.0% (80.1–90.2%) inhibition in 2,2′-azobis(2-amidinopropane)hydrochloride (AAPH) assay at a concentration of 250 µg ml −1. Ascorbate acted as an antioxidant in both peroxy radical-induced lipid peroxidations, but as a pro-oxidant in the metal ion-induced lipid peroxidation. The crude extracts showed a large inhibitory effect in the ferric ion-induced lipid peroxidation and caused 83.7% inhibition at a concentration of 25 µg ml −1 dried rosehip powder. © 2000 Society of Chemical Industry

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The similarity of invertebrate responses to plant diversity at the two study sites indicates that general patterns in abundance of different trophic groups can be detected across plant diversity gradients under different environmental conditions.
Abstract: We studied the effects of plant diversity on abundance of invertebrate herbivores, parasitoids and predators in two grassland communities (one in Switzerland and one in Sweden) in which plant species richness and functional diversity have been experimentally manipulated. Among herbivores, the abundance of only the most sessile and specialised groups (leafhoppers and wingless aphids) was affected by plant diversity. At both sites, numbers of leafhoppers in sweep net samples showed a linear, negative relationship with plant species number whereas numbers of wingless aphids in suction samples increased with the number of plant functional groups (grasses, legumes, and non-legume forbs) present in the plot. Activity of carabid beetles and spiders (as revealed by pitfall catches) and the total number of predators in pitfalls at the Swiss site decreased linearly with increases in the number of plant species and plant functional groups. Abundance of more specialised enemies, hymenopteran parasitoids, was not affected by the manipulations of plant diversity. Path analysis and analysis of covariance indicated that plant diversity effects on invertebrate abundance were mostly indirect and mediated by changes in plant biomass and cover. At both sites, plant species composition (i.e. the identity of plant species in a mixture) affected numbers of most of the examined groups of invertebrates and was, therefore, a more important determinant of invertebrate abundance in grasslands than plant species richness per se or the number of plant functional groups. The presence of legumes in a mixture was especially important and led to higher numbers of most invertebrate groups. The similarity of invertebrate responses to plant diversity at the two study sites indicates that general patterns in abundance of different trophic groups can be detected across plant diversity gradients under different environmental conditions.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the spatial variation of the soil microbial community within a mixed Norway spruce-birch stand, and to test if the spatial patterns of the microbial community are related to the position of trees, was explored.
Abstract: To explore the spatial variation of the soil microbial community within a mixed Norway spruce-birch stand, and to test if the spatial patterns of the microbial community are related to the position of trees, we sampled the forest floor at two spatial scales and used the phospholipid fatty acid (PLFA) patterns as indicators of the microbial community structure. Of the 32 most common PLFAs, 20 (62%) were clearly spatially autocorrelated, and the limit of spatial dependence (range) varied between 1 m and 11 m. The variation in the community structure was examined by subjecting the PLFAs to a principal component analysis. The first two principal components described variation structured at two different spatial scales. The range of the microbial community for the first component was 4.6 m, whereas for the second component it was only 1.5 m. The microbial community was influenced by the position of the trees. Spruce trees had a much stronger influence on PLFA patterns than birch trees, and the first principal component, as well as 12 PLFAs, was influenced by spruce trees. Several branched PLFAs, characteristic of Gram-positive bacteria, loaded negatively on the second principal component. These PLFAs represent a complex of associated microorganisms that aggregated in small patches away from birch trees. A comparison with a laboratory experiment suggests that although the tree species differ in their influence on soil moisture and ground vegetation, their influence on the microbial community were, to a large extent, connected to the quality of soil organic matter associated with the two trees. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved. (Less)

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated nitrogen dynamics and losses in household waste mixtures with different litter additives during composting, maturation and storage, and concluded that there is no obvious way to efficiently decrease nitrogen losses through addition of litter materials.

Journal ArticleDOI
15 Mar 2000-Blood
TL;DR: The results show that proteasome-mediated turnover of c-Myc is substantially impaired in Burkitt's lymphoma cells with mutated Thr58 or other mutations that abolish Thr58 phosphorylation, whereas endogenous or ectopically expressed wild type c- myc proteins turn over at normal rates in these cells.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study indicates that using genetic distances between breeds of farm animals in a classical taxonomic approach may not give clear resolution, but points to their usefulness in a prospective evaluation of diversity.
Abstract: A set of eleven pig breeds originating from six European countries, and including a small sample of wild pigs, was chosen for this study of genetic diversity. Diversity was evaluated on the basis of 18 microsatellite markers typed over a total of 483 DNA samples collected. Average breed heterozygosity varied from 0.35 to 0.60. Genotypic frequencies generally agreed with Hardy-Weinberg expectations, apart from the German Landrace and Schwabisch-Hallisches breeds, which showed significantly reduced heterozygosity. Breed differentiation was significant as shown by the high among-breed fixation index (overall FST = 0.27), and confirmed by the clustering based on the genetic distances between individuals, which grouped essentially all individuals in 11 clusters corresponding to the 11 breeds. The genetic distances between breeds were first used to construct phylogenetic trees. The trees indicated that a genetic drift model might explain the divergence of the two German breeds, but no reliable phylogeny could be inferred among the remaining breeds. The same distances were also used to measure the global diversity of the set of breeds considered, and to evaluate the marginal loss of diversity attached to each breed. In that respect, the French Basque breed appeared to be the most "unique" in the set considered. This study, which remains to be extended to a larger set of European breeds, indicates that using genetic distances between breeds of farm animals in a classical taxonomic approach may not give clear resolution, but points to their usefulness in a prospective evaluation of diversity.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A cDNA clone is isolated encoding a putative key enzyme of artemisinin biosynthesis, amorpha-4,11-diene synthase, which has a broad pH optimum between 7.5 and 9.0 and the Km values for farnesyl diphosphate, Mg2+, and Mn2+ are 0.9, 70, and 13 microM, respectively, at pH7.5.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated how pH and microbial activity influence fluxes and composition of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) in a laboratory leaching experiment with mor humus from a limed plot and an unlimed plot of Scots pine in northern Sweden.
Abstract: We investigated how pH and microbial activity influence fluxes and composition of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) in a laboratory leaching experiment with mor humus from a limed plot and an unlimed plot of Scots pine in northern Sweden. CaCO3 was applied at a rate of 5 t ha−1 23 yr before sampling. The limed (pH 5.4) and unlimed (pH 4.3) mor humus was incubated at +4°C and +15°C. The biological activity measured as CO2 evolution increased in the following order: unlimed +4°C

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is reported that targeted gene disruption of NDST-1 in the mouse results in a structural alteration of heparan sulfate in most basement membranes as revealed by immunohistochemical staining of fetal tissue sections using antibodies raised against heparin sulfate.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that PCD in PEM cells and embryo formation are closely interlinked processes, both stimulated upon withdrawal or partial depletion of auxins and cytokinins, and implicated in the transition from PEMs to somatic embryos and in correct embryonic pattern formation.
Abstract: In the animal life cycle, the earliest manifestations of programmed cell death (PCD) can already be seen during embryogenesis. The aim of this work was to determine if PCD is also involved in the elimination of certain cells during plant embryogenesis. We used a model system of Norway spruce somatic embryogenesis, which represents a multistep developmental pathway with two broad phases. The first phase is represented by proliferating proembryogenic masses (PEMs). The second phase encompasses development of somatic embryos, which arise from PEMs and proceed through the same sequence of stages as described for their zygotic counterparts. Here we demonstrate two successive waves of PCD, which are implicated in the transition from PEMs to somatic embryos and in correct embryonic pattern formation, respectively. The first wave of PCD is responsible for the degradation of PEMs when they give rise to somatic embryos. We show that PCD in PEM cells and embryo formation are closely interlinked processes, both stimulated upon withdrawal or partial depletion of auxins and cytokinins. The second wave of PCD eliminates terminally differentiated embryo-suspensor cells during early embryogeny. During the dismantling phase of PCD, PEM and embryo-suspensor cells exhibit progressive autolysis, resulting in the formation of a large central vacuole. Autolytic degradation of the cytoplasm is accompanied by lobing and budding-like segmentation of the nucleus. Nuclear DNA undergoes fragmentation into both large fragments of about 50 kb and multiples of approximately 180 bp. The tonoplast rupture is delayed until lysis of the cytoplasm and organelles, including the nucleus, is almost complete. The protoplasm then disappears, leaving a cellular corpse represented by only the cell wall. This pathway of cell dismantling suggests overlapping of apoptotic and autophagic types of PCD during somatic embryogenesis in Norway spruce.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Apr 2000-Ecology
TL;DR: It is shown that regressions of plots of excess 13C against excess 15N showed that a minimum of 19–23% of the glycine-derived N was taken up as intact amino acid; possible losses of labeled C atoms of glycine during its metabolism in the plants implies that these estimates are conservative.
Abstract: Uptake of glycine was studied in four plants commonly used in grasslands in northern Europe (Phleum pratense, Trifolium hybridum, T. pratense, and Ranunculus acris) and compared to uptake of ammonium and nitrate. The experiment was conducted in the field, but with plants transferred to pots with soil 8–10 d before the start of the experiment. Plant uptake of U-13C215N glycine, 15NH4+, and 15NO3− was studied by injecting dilute (1 mmol/L) solutions of respectively labeled N source into the pots and harvesting plants 21 h later. Measurements of 13C and 15N in roots showed that, in all plants, part of the glycine N was taken up in the form of intact amino acid. Hence, regressions of plots of excess 13C against excess 15N showed that a minimum of 19–23% of the glycine-derived N was taken up as intact amino acid; possible losses of labeled C atoms of glycine during its metabolism in the plants implies that these estimates are conservative. Uptake of the different N sources was similar in the two Trifolium spec...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a semi-natural grassland of wooded meadow type that had been grazed for centuries is described following the introduction of various management regimes: mowing each year, mowing every third year, burning, mechanical removal of woody plants, chemical treatment, continuous grazing and abandonment.
Abstract: . Vegetation changes in a semi-natural grassland of wooded meadow type that had been grazed for centuries are described following the introduction of various management regimes: mowing each year, mowing every third year, burning, mechanical removal of woody plants, chemical treatment of woody plants, continuous grazing and abandonment. The experiment was established in southern Sweden in 1972 and has been in progress for 15 years. In 1972, 1980 and 1986 the botanical composition in these plots was investigated in permanent subplots. The study clearly demonstrates that mowing or grazing is necessary to preserve community structure and that mowing is to be preferred in cases where maintaining species richness is of primary concern. Mowing every third year delayed vegetation change and prevented woody species from spreading. Therefore, periodic mowing might be an alternative way to preserve the flora. In contrast, yearly burning does not seem to be a viable management in this type of semi-natural grassland. To preserve the open landscape regeneration of woody plants has to be prevented. However, in plots where woody plants were removed the typical grassland flora declined. Abandonment resulted in closed forest.