Institution
University of Trás-os-Montes and Alto Douro
Education•Vila Real, Portugal•
About: University of Trás-os-Montes and Alto Douro is a education organization based out in Vila Real, Portugal. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 2858 authors who have published 7146 publications receiving 138394 citations. The organization is also known as: University of Tras-os-Montes and Alto Douro & UTAD.
Topics: Population, Context (language use), Wine, Antibiotic resistance, Cancer
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, an ionic liquid (IL) was incorporated into host polymer matrixes in concentrations ranging from 10 to 40% to evaluate the bending response of the IL/PVDF-TrFE composites.
50 citations
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TL;DR: This paper critically reviews the health benefits evidenced by distinct phenolic compounds found in olive oils, thus contributing to clarify the relationship between their chemical structures and biological functions, further supporting their interest as essential ingredients of wholesome foods.
Abstract: Olive oil displays remarkable organoleptic and nutritional features, which turn it into a foodstuff appreciated by consumers, and a basic component of the Mediterranean diet. Indeed, the noticed benefits of including olive oil in the diet have been assigned to the presence of diverse bioactive compounds with different molecular structures. These compounds confer a wide range of biological properties to this food matrix, including the prevention of distinct human diseases as well as the modulation of their severity. The most relevant bioactive compounds present in olive oil correspond to benzoic and cinnamic acids, phenolic alcohols and secoiridoids, and also flavonoids. Over the last decades, several studies, devoted to gaining a further insight into the relative contribution of the separate groups and individual compounds for their biological activities, have been conducted, providing relevant information on structure-activity relationships. Therefore, this paper critically reviews the health benefits evidenced by distinct phenolic compounds found in olive oils, thus contributing to clarify the relationship between their chemical structures and biological functions, further supporting their interest as essential ingredients of wholesome foods.
50 citations
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TL;DR: The typology of causal networks in EIA as well as in other academic and professional fields is reviewed, their contribution to EIA is verifies against the principles and requirements of the process, and alternative scenarios for their future in Eia are discussed.
50 citations
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TL;DR: The genomic resources of Castanea genus are extended providing potential tools to assist the ongoing and future chestnut breeding programs, suggesting the presence of common P. cinnamomi defense mechanisms across species.
Abstract: The Japanese chestnut (Castanea crenata) carries resistance to Phytophthora cinnamomi, the destructive and widespread oomycete causing ink disease. The European chestnut (Castanea sativa), carrying little to no disease resistance, is currently threatened by the presence of the oomycete pathogen in forests, orchards and nurseries. Determining the genetic basis of P. cinnamomi resistance, for further selection of molecular markers and candidate genes, is a prominent issue for implementation of marker assisted selection in the breeding programs for resistance. In this study, the first interspecific genetic linkage map of C. sativa x C. crenata allowed the detection of QTLs for P. cinnamomi resistance. The genetic map was constructed using two independent, control-cross mapping populations. Chestnut populations were genotyped using 452 microsatellite and single nucleotide polymorphism molecular markers derived from the available chestnut transcriptomes. The consensus genetic map spans 498,9 cM and contains 217 markers mapped with an average interval of 2.3 cM. For QTL analyses, the progression rate of P. cinnamomi lesions in excised shoots inoculated was used as the phenotypic metric. Using non-parametric and composite interval mapping approaches, two QTLs were identified for ink disease resistance, distributed in two linkage groups: E and K. The presence of QTLs located in linkage group E regarding P. cinnamomi resistance is consistent with a previous preliminary study developed in American x Chinese chestnut populations, suggesting the presence of common P. cinnamomi defense mechanisms across species. Results presented here extend the genomic resources of Castanea genus providing potential tools to assist the ongoing and future chestnut breeding programs.
50 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a 13-member ensemble of regional climate model simulations (A1B scenario for 2041-2070) was used to analyze the spatial-temporal distributions of temperatures in Portugal.
50 citations
Authors
Showing all 2911 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
José A. Teixeira | 101 | 1414 | 47329 |
João Rocha | 93 | 1521 | 49472 |
Alcino J. Silva | 90 | 252 | 33508 |
Luís D. Carlos | 75 | 544 | 22063 |
Mikel Izquierdo | 71 | ||
Eliana B. Souto | 66 | 447 | 15706 |
Patrícia Valentão | 66 | 353 | 14645 |
Paul A. Kroon | 63 | 207 | 14502 |
J. A. Tenreiro Machado | 59 | 636 | 16757 |
Manuel A. Coimbra | 58 | 328 | 11108 |
João A. C. Santos | 56 | 305 | 10054 |
Adélio Mendes | 55 | 460 | 12913 |
Younes Messaddeq | 55 | 621 | 12792 |
José Alberto Pereira | 55 | 418 | 12191 |
Manuel Simões | 54 | 440 | 14380 |