Browsing by Issue Date, starting with "2020-12"
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- Bioproducts from forest biomass II. Bioactive compounds from the steam-distillation by-products of Cupressus lusitanica Mill. and Cistus ladanifer L. wastesPublication . Tavares, Claudia S.; Martins, Alice; G, Miguel; Carvalheiro, Florbela; Duarte, Luis C.; Gameiro, Jose A.; Cristina Figueiredo, A.; Roseiro, Luisa B.Obtaining essential oils and hydrolates from underutilized biomass is an economic and sustainable way for production of these high added-value bioproducts. However, this process still generates large amounts of residues as the by-products obtained during distillation, which can be a concern for the environment, but also adequate substrates for other applications. Considering this fact, the waste distilled by-products remaining after steam distillation of underutilized biomass from Cupressus lusitanica and Cistus ladanifer, were evaluated as a natural source of other high value products with biological activities, namely, phenolic compounds. Thus, the remaining extracted solid residues (ESRs) were characterized and subject to further treatments by ultrasound-assisted extraction (UAE) with ethanol and 70 % acetone, in order to prepare phenolic-rich extracts thereof: ESRs (EtOH) and ESRs(70 % Ace). Together with the distiller condensation waters (DCWs), these extracts were characterized for their phenolic content (total phenols, tannins and flavonoids). Their antioxidant activity was also evaluated by different methodologies. the phenolic profile of DCWs, ESRs(EtOH) and ESRs(70 % Ace) from both waste species was obtained by capillary zone electrophoresis (CZE) and phenolic compounds were tentatively identified. Results obtained for C. lusitanica biomass are here disclosed for the first time. Generally, all samples revealed to be rich in phenolic compounds, being C. ladanifer biomass the one with higher phenolic content. DCWs presented values of 140 mgGAE/g for C. lusitanica and 210 mg GAE/g for C. ladanifer, from which ca. 60 % were tannins. Extracts obtained with 70 % acetone were the ones with the highest results, except for the antioxidant activity by xanthine oxidase and superoxide inhibition, which was higher in DCWs. Catechins were the major compounds found for both species, but gallocatechins and gallic acid were only identified in C. ladanifer. Hydroxycinnamic acid derivatives and salicylic acid were also identified in C. ladanifer, partly justifying the anti-inflammatory effect referred for this species.
- Tecnologia e formação para promover a produção ornamentalPublication . Costa, J. Miguel; Ferreira, Maria Elvira; Reis, MárioO sector da horticultura ornamental é bastante diverso e abrangente, incluindo não apenas a produção de flores e plantas ornamentais, de interior e exterior.
- Different sensitivity to heatwaves across the life cycle of fish reflects phenotypic adaptation to environmental nichePublication . Madeira, Diana; Madeira, Carolina; Costa, Pedro M.; Vinagre, Catarina; Portner, Hans-Otto; Diniz, Mario S.Predicting responses of marine organisms to global change requires eco-physiological assessments across the complex life cycles of species. Here, we experimentally tested the vulnerability of a demersal temperate fish (Sparus aurata) to long-lasting heatwaves, on larval , juvenile and adult life-stages. Fish were exposed to simulated coastal (18 degrees C), estuarine (24 degrees C) summer temperatures, and heatwave conditions (30 degrees C) and their physiological responses were assessed based on cellular stress response biomarkers (heat shock protein 70 kDa, ubiquitin, antioxidant enzymes, lipid peroxidation) and phenotypic measures (histopathology, condition and mortality). Life-stage vulnerability can be ranked as larvae > adults > juveniles, based on mortality , tissue pathology and the capacity to employ cellular stress responses, reflecting the different environmental niches of each life stage. While larvae lacked acclimation capacity, which resulted in damage to tissues and elevated mortality, juveniles coped well with elevated temperature. the rapid induction of cytoprotective proteins maintained the integrity of vital organs in juveniles, suggesting adaptive phenotypic plasticity in coastal and estuarine waters. Adults displayed lower plasticity to heatwaves as they transition to deeper habitats for maturation, showing tissue damage in brain, liver and muscle. Life cycle closure of sea breams in coastal habitats will therefore be determined by larval and adult stages.
- Intestinal response to ocean acidification in the European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax)Publication . Alves, Alexandra; Gregorio, Silvia F.; Ruiz-Jarabo, Ignacio; Fuentes, Juanthe intestine of marine fishes contributes to the ocean carbon cycle producing carbonate aggregates as part of the osmoregulatory process. Therefore, this study aimed to evaluate physiological adjustments of European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) intestine to a higher pCO(2) environment likely in the near future (similar to 1700 mu atm). At the whole-body level, hypercapnia for 5 weeks resulted in fish having a significantly diminished specific growth rate, condition factor and hepatosomatic index. An increase in plasma osmolality and HCO3- concentration was detected, paralleled by decreased metabolites concentrations. In the intestine, high seawater pCO(2) was without effect on ouabain-sensitive ATPase activities, while Bafilomycin A1-sensitive ATPase activity significantly decreased in the anterior intestine. Anterior and mid intestine were mounted in Ussing chambers in order to measure bioelectrical parameters and bicarbonate secretion by pH-Stat ex-vivo. Hypercapnia induced a 2.3 and 2.8-fold increase in bicarbonate secretion rates in the anterior and mid intestine, respectively. In the intestinal fluid, HCO3- concentration increased 2.2-fold, and carbonate precipitates showed a 4.4-fold increase in response to hypercapnia, paralleled by a > 3-fold increase of drinking and a > 2-fold increase of intestinal volume at any given time. At the molecular level, hypercapnia elicited higher intestinal mRNA expression levels for atp6v1b (V-ATPase B subunit), slc4a4, slc26a3, and slc26a6, both in the anterior and mid intestine. As a whole, our results show that the intestine of sea bass responds to high seawater pCO(2), a response that comes at a cost at the whole-body level with an impact in the fish specific growth rate, condition factor, and hepatosomatic index.
- Cytotoxic responses of the anticancer drug cyclophosphamide in the mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis and comparative sensitivity with human cells linesPublication . Fernandes, Elna; Fonseca, Tainá; Carriço, Tania; Mestre, Nélia; Tavares, Alvaro; Bebianno, Mariathe rise of cancer cases worldwide led to an increase in production and consumption of anticancer drugs, that ultimately end up in the marine environment and are accumulated in aquatic organisms. Cyclophosphamide (CP) is a cytotoxic alkylating agent frequently prescribed in cancer treatments. This study assess ecotoxicological effects of CP on mussels Mytilus galloprovincialis, through in vivo and ex vivo approaches and compares the sensitivity of mussel haemocytes with well-established human cell lines (RPE and HeLa). Mussels were exposed in vivo to CP (1000 ng L-1) and several biomarkers analysed in gills and digestive glands namely neurotoxicity (AChE activity), oxidative stress (GPx activity), biotransformation (GST activity), lipid peroxidation (LPO) and apoptosis (caspase activity), whereas genotoxicity was determined in mussels' haemocytes. Cytotoxicity was also assessed in haemocytes (in vivo and ex vivo) and human cell lines (in vitro) exposed to a range of CP concentrations (50, 100, 250, 500 and 1000 ng L-1) over 24 h, via neutral red assay. In in vivo exposure, detoxification of CP did not efficiently occur in the gills while in digestive glands GPx and GST activities were induced, jointly with a decrease in lipid peroxidation, indicating a potential outcome of the protective antioxidant mechanisms, whereas no apoptosis was noted. Moreover, cytotoxicity and DNA damage were detected in haemocytes. the ex vivo exposure haemocytes to CP caused cytotoxicity (from 100 ng L-1), whereas no effects occurred in human cell lines. This suggests that, at relevant environmental concentrations, CP cause subtle and irreversible impacts on M. galloprovincialis. (C) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
- Levulinic acid: a novel sustainable solvent for lignin dissolutionPublication . Melro, Elodie; Filipe, Alexandra; Valente, Artur J. M.; Antunes, Filipe E.; Romano, Anabela; Norgren, Magnus; Medronho, BrunoLignin is a natural, renewable resource with potential to be used in biomaterials. Due to its complex structure, its efficient dissolution is still challenging, which hinders its applicability at large scale. This challenge become harder considering the current need of sustainable and environmentally friendly solvents. To the best of our knowledge, this work reports for the first time the dissolution of kraft lignin in levulinic acid, a "green" solvent, and compares its efficiency with common carboxylic acids and sulfuric acid. It has been found that levulinic acid has a high capacity to dissolve kraft lignin at room temperature (40 wt% solubility), and it efficiency is not compromised when diluting the acid with water (up to 40 wt% water content). the Kamlet-Taft pi* parameter of the different acidic solvents was estimated and found to correlate well with their solubility performance. Lignins previously dissolved in levulinic and formic acids were selected to be regenerated and minor differences were found in thermal stability and morphological structure, when compared to native kraft lignin. However, an increase in the content of the carbonyl groups in the regenerated lignin material was observed. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
- Linking the karst record to atmospheric, precipitation, and vegetation dynamics in PortugalPublication . Thatcher, Diana L.; Wanamaker, Alan D.; Denniston, Rhawn F.; Ummenhofer, Caroline C.; Regala, Frederico T.; Jorge, Nuno; Haws, Jonathan; Chormann, Alaina; Gillikin, David P.Cave deposits can be valuable sources of paleoclimate data, especially when atmospheric circulation patterns, precipitation variability, vegetation changes, and the chemical evolution of waters moving through the karst environment can be mechanistically linked to speleothem proxies. In particular, an evaluation of the factors that control the isotopic composition of precipitation and the evolution of rainwater during migration from the land surface to the cave are needed to robustly develop speleothems as hydroclimate-sensitive proxies. One area in which precipitation and atmospheric variability are closely linked is western Iberia, where rainfall is strongly influenced by the Azores High, part of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) dipole. Therefore, in order to better characterize the factors that influence the isotopic composition of precipitation in Portugal and to evaluate the potential of using stalagmites from this region as hydroclimate (and NAO-sensitive) proxies, we investigated Global Network of Isotopes in Precipitation (GNIP) data from ten mainland Portugal sites spanning multiple decades. In addition, we use more than one hydrologic year of precipitation amount and isotope data from Buraca Gloriosa (BG), a cave in western Portugal, the site of on-going speleothem analyses, as well as six years of environmental monitoring from BG. We present an integrated analysis of rainfall and vegetation through the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) following extremely wet and dry winters. Summer vegetation density, related to the amount of precipitation in the preceding winter wet season, as well as prior calcite precipitation (PCP), would largely control the stable carbon isotopic signature (delta C-13) in stalagmites at BG. Cool season recharge is likely the dominant factor for the oxygen isotopic composition (delta O-18) of water percolating through the cave system, while amount effects exert the primary control on precipitation delta O-18 values. Based on HYSPLIT modeling, moisture sources overwhelmingly originate from the Atlantic Ocean as opposed to the Mediterranean or elsewhere
- NineTeen Complex-subunit Salsa is required for efficient splicing of a subset of introns and dorsal-ventral patterningPublication . Rathore, Om; Silva, Rui D.; Ascensao-Ferreira, Mariana; Matos, Ricardo; Carvalho, Celia; Marques, Bruno; Tiago, Margarida N.; Prudencio, Pedro; Andrade, Raquel P.; Roignant, Jean-Yves; Barbosa-Morais, Nuno; Martinho, Rui GoncaloThe NineTeen Complex (NTC), also known as pre-mRNA-processing factor 19 (Prp19) complex, regulates distinct spliceosome conformational changes necessary for splicing. During Drosophila midblastula transition, splicing is particularly sensitive to mutations in NTC-subunit Fandango, which suggests differential requirements of NTC during development. We show that NTC-subunit Salsa, the Drosophila ortholog of human RNA helicase Aquarius, is rate-limiting for splicing of a subset of small first introns during oogenesis, including the first intron of gurken. Germline depletion of Salsa and splice site mutations within gurken first intron impair both adult female fertility and oocyte dorsal-ventral patterning, due to an abnormal expression of Gurken. Supporting causality, the fertility and dorsal-ventral patterning defects observed after Salsa depletion could be suppressed by the expression of a gurken construct without its first intron. Altogether, our results suggest that one of the key rate-limiting functions of Salsa during oogenesis is to ensure the correct expression and efficient splicing of the first intron of gurken mRNA. Retention of gurken first intron compromises the function of this gene most likely because it undermines the correct structure and function of the transcript 5'UTR.
- Influence of cultivation salinity in the nutritional composition, antioxidant capacity and microbial quality of Salicornia ramosissima commercially produced in soilless systemsPublication . Lima, Alexandre R.; Castaneda-Loaiza, Viana; Salazar, Miguel; Nunes, Carla; Quintas, Celia; Gama, Florinda; Pestana, Maribela; Correia, Pedro J.; Santos, Tamara; Varela, João; Barreira, Luísathe consumption of halophytes as healthy gourmet food has increased considerably in the past few years. However, knowledge on the nutritional profile of domesticated halophytes is scarce and little is known on which cultivation conditions can produce plants with the best nutritional and functional properties. In this context, Salicornia ramosissima J. Woods was cultivated in six different salt concentrations, ranging from 35 to 465 mM of NaCl. Both the nutritional profile, the antioxidant capacity, and microbial quality of the produced plants were evaluated including minerals and vitamins. Salt has a marked effect on growth, which decreases for salinities higher than 110 mM. Nonetheless, plants cultivated with intermediate levels of salinity (110 and 200 mM) revealed better antioxidant status with higher amounts of phenolic compounds. Overall, results from this paper indicated that soilless culture systems using low-intermediate salinities produces S. ramosissima plants fit for commercialization and human consumption.
- Exploring foredune growth capacity in a coarse sandy beachPublication . Costas, Susana; Bon de Sousa, Luísa; Kombiadou, Katerina; Ferreira, Oscar; Plomaritis, Theocharis A.Dunes are key elements of coastal landscapes in almost every latitude. They host high levels of biodiversity and provide important benefits to society; e.g. protection against floods and erosion, or recreation. Coastal dune growth is constrained by intrinsic factors, which are critical when managing dune systems or choosing coastal dune restoration as an alternative green solution for coastal protection. Here, the evolution of a beach-dune system, characterized by a reflective coarse sandy beach and low dunes, is explored to identify the favourable and optimal conditions for dune growth in these settings. Dune growth capacity is evaluated by analysing the topographical changes observed along a coastal dune over two different temporal scales (interannual and event scale) and comparing the observations with theoretical approximations of sediment transport potentials. Observations and predictions over interannual scale document that (1) temporal variability in external conditions (wind regime) and spatial variability of estimated wind fetch length, alone, fail to explain alongshore dune growth patterns and (2) optimal conditions for dune growth occur when storms (strong winds) impact the study area, jointly with low runup levels, at zones of shoreline progradation and absence of direct human influence. Conversely, lowest values of dune accumulation are associated with areas where shoreline retreat was documented. Observations from event timescales suggest that sediment transport potential can be reached over zones with no significant signs of beach erosion, if runup levels remain low and the event duration is shorter than the time scale of sand surface depletion within the upper beach.