Institution
Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro
Education•Seropédica, Brazil•
About: Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro is a education organization based out in Seropédica, Brazil. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Species richness. The organization has 6405 authors who have published 9852 publications receiving 105911 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The detection of A. phagocytophilum in dogs from Brazil demonstrates that the canine granulocytic anaplasmosis agent is present in regions in which dogs could be a source of infection for tick vectors.
Abstract: Anaplasma phagocytophilum was detected in dogs from Brazil in the municipalities of Seropedica and Itaguai, Rio de Janeiro state, by real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using SYBR Green to detect the amplification. Of 253 samples, 18 (7.11%) were positive, with a threshold cycle (Ct) ranging from 31 to 35 cycles. The PCR product from a positive sample was cloned and sequenced. The sequence obtained demonstrated 100% identity with other A. phagocytophilum sequences published in the GenBank database. The analytical sensitivity of RT-PCR using SYBR Green system was able to detect 3 plasmid copies when defined numbers of plasmid copies containing 122 base pairs from the msp2 gene were used. The assay was considered specific when DNA from bacteria (Anaplasma platys, Anaplasma marginale, Ehrlichia canis, Neorickettsia risticii, Rickettsia rickettsii) closely related to A. phagocytophilum was placed in the reaction. These results demonstrate that the canine granulocytic anaplasmosis agent is present in regions in which dogs could be a source of infection for tick vectors. The current study reports the detection of A. phagocytophilum, a zoonotic agent responsible for Human granulocytic anaplasmosis, in Brazilian dogs.
47 citations
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TL;DR: In conclusion, supplementation with olive oil, but not fish oil, improves cutaneous wound healing in chronically stressed mice.
Abstract: Supplementation with olive and fish oils reverses the effects of stress on behavioral activities and adrenal activation. However, previous studies have not shown whether supplementation with olive and fish oil could inhibit the effects of stress on cutaneous wound healing. Thus, this study investigated the effects of supplementation with fish or olive oil on cutaneous healing in stressed mice. Mice were subjected to rotational stress and treated with olive or fish oil daily until euthanasia. An excisional lesion was created on each mouse, and 14 days later, the lesions were analyzed. In addition, murine skin fibroblasts were exposed to elevated epinephrine levels plus olive oil, and fibroblast activity was evaluated. In the in vivo studies, administration of olive oil, but not fish oil, inhibited stress-induced reduction in wound contraction, reepithelialization, hydroxyproline levels, and blood vessel density. Stress-induced increases in vascular endothelial growth factor expression and the numbers of macrophages and neutrophils were reversed only by olive oil. Both oils reversed stress-induced increase in catecholamine levels and oxidative damage. In in vitro studies, olive oil treatment reversed the reduction in fibroblast migration and collagen deposition and the increase in lipid peroxidation induced by epinephrine. In conclusion, supplementation with olive oil, but not fish oil, improves cutaneous wound healing in chronically stressed mice.
47 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors used a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) and SCUBA divers to survey benthic features at 11 sites on the Fernando de Noronha Archipelago (FNA).
47 citations
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TL;DR: The polymer carriers described here allowed for the long-term survival of the five different bacterial strains tested, and their application as part of an inoculant on sugarcane cuttings was at least as effective in terms of bacterial colonization and the promotion of plant growth as that of the bacterial mixture without carriers.
Abstract: Studies have been conducted to evaluate maintenance of cell viability and stability, as well as to select cheap carriers to extend the shelf life of plant beneficial bacterial inoculants for agricultural crops. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the shelf life and the colonization efficiency of novel liquid and gel-based inoculant formulations for sugarcane. The different inoculant formulations were all composed of a mixture of five strains of diazotrophic bacteria (Gluconacetobacter diazotrophicus, Herbaspirillum seropedicae, H. rubrisubalbicans, Azospirillum amazonense and Burkholderia tropica), which are recognized as sugarcane growth promoters. Different inoculant formulations containing as carrier the polymers carboxymethylcellulose (CMC) and corn starch (60/40 ratio) at five different concentrations (named PIC, for Polymeric Inoculant Carrier) were supplemented, or not, with 2 % MgO, an interfacial stabilizing agent. Bacterial survival in the different formulations during storage was evaluated under controlled conditions, and two experiments with mini-cuttings of sugarcane variety RB72454 were carried out under greenhouse conditions. Laboratory tests showed that in the formulation composed of 0.8 g of the polymeric mixture per 100 g of the final product (PIC 0.8), survival of G. diazotrophicus and A. amazonense was around 109 CFU∙mL−1 after 120 days of storage, regardless of the supplementation with MgO. The other formulation (2.2 g of polymeric mixture, PIC 2.2) presented survival levels of 108 CFU∙mL−1 for up to 60 days of storage for all the individual strains. In the greenhouse, sugarcane seedlings showed a positive growth response 50 days after inoculation when inoculated with the mixture of five bacteria, with and without PIC 2.2. The polymer carriers described here allowed for the long-term survival of the five different bacterial strains tested. In addition, short-term experiments in the greenhouse showed that their application as part of an inoculant on sugarcane cuttings was at least as effective in terms of bacterial colonization and the promotion of plant growth as that of the bacterial mixture without carriers.
47 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the thoracic aorta and its proximal branches were dissected and lengthened in order to evidence origin and proximal ramifications of the celiac artery.
Abstract: Rabbits have been used as an experimental model in many diseases and for the study of toxicology, pharmacology and surgery in many universities. However, some aspects of their macro anatomy need a more detailed description, especially the abdominal and pelvic arterial vascular system, which has a huge variability in distribution and trajectory. Thirty cadaveric adult New Zealand rabbits, 13 male and 17 female, with an average weight and rostrum-sacral length of 2.5 kg and 40cm, respectively, were used. The thoracic aorta was cannulated and the vascular system was filled with stained latex S-65. The celiac artery and its proximal branches were dissected and lengthened in order to evidence origin and proximal ramifications. The celiac artery emerged between the 12th and 13th thoracic vertebra in 11 (36.7%) rabbits; at the level of the 13th thoracic vertebra in 6 (20%) rabbits; between the 13th thoracic vertebra and the 1st lumbar vertebra in 12 (40%) rabbits; and at the level of the 1st lumbar vertebra in only one (3.3%) rabbit. The mean length of the celiac artery was 0.5cm. The celiac artery first branch was the lienal artery, the second branch was the left gastric artery and the hepatic artery arose from the left gastric artery in all the dissected rabbits. No relation was observed between the celiac artery length and the rostrum-sacral length in rabbits. The number of left gastric and lienal artery branches and the distribution of celiac artery origin are not gender dependent.
47 citations
Authors
Showing all 6461 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Johan Six | 107 | 447 | 49016 |
Sandra Amato | 100 | 1206 | 50094 |
Robert Poulin | 94 | 653 | 34633 |
C. Potterat | 90 | 751 | 37732 |
O.J. Ginther | 87 | 517 | 27914 |
David Murphy | 81 | 549 | 40441 |
Benedetta Mennucci | 75 | 349 | 48307 |
D. Galli | 68 | 541 | 19570 |
Erica Polycarpo | 51 | 286 | 13615 |
J. Peter W. Young | 51 | 117 | 9839 |
Miriam Dupas Hubinger | 47 | 203 | 8227 |
Albert Bursche | 47 | 213 | 9595 |
M. Gandelman | 46 | 128 | 11022 |
Jose Lopes | 42 | 139 | 9214 |
Murilo Rangel | 38 | 80 | 6038 |