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ACS Omega Jun 2024Pathogen infection represents the greatest challenge to agricultural crop production, resulting in significant economic loss. Conventional pesticides are used to control...
Pathogen infection represents the greatest challenge to agricultural crop production, resulting in significant economic loss. Conventional pesticides are used to control such infection but can result in antimicrobial resistance and detrimental effects on the plant, environment, and human health. Due to nitric oxide's (NO) endogenous roles in plant immune responses, treatment with exogenous NO represents an attractive nonpesticide approach for eradicating plant pathogens. In this work, the antimicrobial activity of small-molecule NO donors of varying NO-release kinetics was evaluated against and , two prevalent plant pathogens. Intermediate NO-release kinetics proved to be most effective at eradicating these pathogens in vitro. A selected NO donor (methyl tris diazeniumdiolate; MD3) was capable of treating both bacterial infection of plant leaves and fungal infection of tomato fruit without exerting toxicity to earthworms. Taken together, these results demonstrate the potential for utilizing NO as a broad-spectrum, environmentally safe pesticide and may guide development of other NO donors for such application.
PubMed: 38911785
DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.4c01454 -
ACS Omega Jun 2024As the depth of coal seam mining increases, coal and gas outburst prevention and control face unprecedented challenges. In recent years, freezing outburst prevention...
As the depth of coal seam mining increases, coal and gas outburst prevention and control face unprecedented challenges. In recent years, freezing outburst prevention technology has received attention and been applied in industry; this method mainly improves the strength of the coal body while reducing its energy storage. Research has shown that due to the influence of moisture content, frost heaving occurs in coal bodies during the cooling process, weakening the coal bodies' strength. Therefore, it is necessary to explore the effect of the moisture content on the coal body frost heave. This paper uses a research method that combines laboratory experiments, theoretical analysis, and numerical simulation to study the critical moisture content of frost heaving in gas-containing coal. The results showed that the coal sample can be divided into three stages during the cooling process: the cold shrinkage stage, frost heave stage, and stabilization stage. When the moisture content is greater than 7%, as the moisture content increases, the amount of ice increases accordingly, which causes an increase in the frost heave deformation of the coal sample and produces an obvious frost heave effect. Utilizing COMSOL simulation software, the deformation of gas-containing coal samples at different moisture levels is simulated. By combining the results with laboratory measurements, the critical moisture content for the frost heave in gas-containing coal is determined to be 6.6%.
PubMed: 38911778
DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.4c02612 -
ACS Omega Jun 2024(), a ubiquitous filamentous fungus, has demonstrated remarkable potential in the bioremediation of lead-contaminated environments. Its inherent tolerance and...
(), a ubiquitous filamentous fungus, has demonstrated remarkable potential in the bioremediation of lead-contaminated environments. Its inherent tolerance and bioaccumulation capacity for lead (Pb), coupled with its relatively rapid growth rate, make it an attractive candidate for bioremediation applications. This study aims to identify the proteomic changes in induced by Pb metal stress and unravel the roles of identified proteins in molecular mechanisms and cellular responses. Untargeted proteomic analysis was carried out using a two-dimensional difference in gel electrophoresis (2D-DIGE) coupled with matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF-MS). This study reported the identification of 43 statistically significant proteins (24 upregulated and 19 downregulated, ANOVA, ≤ 0.05; fold change ≥1.5) in as a consequence of Pb treatment. Proteins were grouped according to their function into 18 groups from which 13 proteins were related to metabolism, 11 were related to cellular process and signaling, and 19 proteins were related to information storage and processing. The current study is considered the first report about the proteomics study of under Pb stress conditions, where upregulated proteins could better explain the mechanism of tolerance and Pb toxicity removal. Our research has provided a thorough understanding of the molecular and cellular processes involved in fungal-metal interactions, paving the way for the development of innovative molecular markers for heavy metal myco-remediation. To the best of our knowledge, this study of provides valuable insights toward growing research in comprehending the metal-microbe interactions. This will facilitate development of novel molecular markers for metal bioremediation.
PubMed: 38911750
DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.4c02006 -
ACS Omega Jun 2024The modeling of ceramics with complex geometric structures currently depends on the handcrafted mode, with long cycles, high costs, and low efficiency; additive...
The modeling of ceramics with complex geometric structures currently depends on the handcrafted mode, with long cycles, high costs, and low efficiency; additive manufacturing (AM) technology can solve this problem well. Herein, the porcelain clay paste was successfully prepared for the direct ink writing (DIW) 3D printing process of ceramics with complex geometric structures, and the effects of sodium citrate (SC) content on the rheological properties and DIW 3D printability of the porcelain clay paste were investigated in detail. The SC has a vital role in the rheological behavior of porcelain clay paste. Adding SC increases the absolute zeta potential and decreases the viscosity of the paste, while a high SC content will lead to a low storage modulus of the paste. The porcelain clay paste with an SC content of 0.05% and a paste solid content of 75% possesses suitable rheological properties and a storage modulus for DIW 3D printing. The as-prepared porcelain clay paste has high DIW 3D printability at a pressure of 0.5 MPa, and a 3D-printed green body with a well-densified structure can be achieved. After being sintered, the 3D-printed ceramic exhibits high densification and mechanical properties. A green body with complex geometric structures is quickly and precisely modeled by the DIW 3D printing process with the resultant porcelain clay paste as the raw material. This work provides a practical approach to rapidly fabricating ceramics with complex geometrical structures.
PubMed: 38911716
DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.4c02543 -
ACS Energy Letters Jun 2024Silicon's potential as a lithium-ion battery (LIB) anode is hindered by the reactivity of the lithium silicide (Li Si) interface. This study introduces an innovative...
Silicon's potential as a lithium-ion battery (LIB) anode is hindered by the reactivity of the lithium silicide (Li Si) interface. This study introduces an innovative approach by alloying silicon with boron, creating boron/silicon (BSi) nanoparticles synthesized via plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition. These nanoparticles exhibit altered electronic structures as evidenced by optical, structural, and chemical analysis. Integrated into LIB anodes, BSi demonstrates outstanding cycle stability, surpassing 1000 lithiation and delithiation cycles with minimal capacity fade or impedance growth. Detailed electrochemical and microscopic characterization reveal very little SEI growth through 1000 cycles, which suggests that electrolyte degradation is virtually nonexistent. This unconventional strategy offers a promising avenue for high-performance LIB anodes with the potential for rapid scale-up, marking a significant advancement in silicon anode technology.
PubMed: 38911534
DOI: 10.1021/acsenergylett.4c00856 -
Journal of the Medical Library... Jan 2024With exponential growth in the publication of interprofessional education (IPE) research studies, it has become more difficult to find relevant literature and stay...
OBJECTIVE
With exponential growth in the publication of interprofessional education (IPE) research studies, it has become more difficult to find relevant literature and stay abreast of the latest research. To address this gap, we developed, evaluated, and validated search strategies for IPE studies in PubMed, to improve future access to and synthesis of IPE research. These search strategies, or search hedges, provide comprehensive, validated sets of search terms for IPE publications.
METHODS
The search strategies were created for PubMed using relative recall methodology. The research methods followed the guidance of previous search hedge and search filter validation studies in creating a gold standard set of relevant references using systematic reviews, having expert searchers identify and test search terms, and using relative recall calculations to validate the searches' performance against the gold standard set.
RESULTS
The three recommended search hedges for IPE studies presented had recall of 71.5%, 82.7%, and 95.1%; the first more focused for efficient literature searching, the last with high recall for comprehensive literature searching, and the remaining hedge as a middle ground between the other two options.
CONCLUSION
These validated search hedges can be used in PubMed to expedite finding relevant scholarships, staying up to date with IPE research, and conducting literature reviews and evidence syntheses.
Topics: PubMed; Humans; Information Storage and Retrieval; Interprofessional Education
PubMed: 38911530
DOI: 10.5195/jmla.2024.1742 -
Journal of the Medical Library... Jan 2024By defining search strategies and related database exports as code/scripts and data, librarians and information professionals can expand the mandate of research data...
BACKGROUND
By defining search strategies and related database exports as code/scripts and data, librarians and information professionals can expand the mandate of research data management (RDM) infrastructure to include this work. This new initiative aimed to create a space in McGill University's institutional data repository for our librarians to deposit and share their search strategies for knowledge syntheses (KS).
CASE PRESENTATION
The authors, a health sciences librarian and an RDM specialist, created a repository collection of librarian-authored knowledge synthesis (KS) searches in McGill University's Borealis Dataverse collection. We developed and hosted a half-day "Dataverse-a-thon" where we worked with a team of health sciences librarians to develop a standardized KS data management plan (DMP), search reporting documentation, Dataverse software training, and howto guidance for the repository.
CONCLUSION
In addition to better documentation and tracking of KS searches at our institution, the KS Dataverse collection enables sharing of searches among colleagues with discoverable metadata fields for searching within deposited searches. While the initial creation of the DMP and documentation took about six hours, the subsequent deposit of search strategies into the institutional data repository requires minimal effort (e.g., 5-10 minutes on average per deposit). The Dataverse collection also empowers librarians to retain intellectual ownership over search strategies as valuable stand-alone research outputs and raise the visibility of their labor. Overall, institutional data repositories provide specific benefits in facilitating compliance both with PRISMA-S guidance and with RDM best practices.
Topics: Humans; Information Storage and Retrieval; Information Dissemination; Data Management; Libraries, Medical; Librarians
PubMed: 38911529
DOI: 10.5195/jmla.2024.1791 -
Journal of the Medical Library... Jan 2024There is a need for additional comprehensive and validated filters to find relevant references more efficiently in the growing body of research on immigrant populations....
OBJECTIVE
There is a need for additional comprehensive and validated filters to find relevant references more efficiently in the growing body of research on immigrant populations. Our goal was to create reliable search filters that direct librarians and researchers to pertinent studies indexed in PubMed about health topics specific to immigrant populations.
METHODS
We applied a systematic and multi-step process that combined information from expert input, authoritative sources, automation, and manual review of sources. We established a focused scope and eligibility criteria, which we used to create the development and validation sets. We formed a term ranking system that resulted in the creation of two filters: an immigrant-specific and an immigrant-sensitive search filter.
RESULTS
When tested against the validation set, the specific filter sensitivity was 88.09%, specificity 97.26%, precision 97.88%, and the NNR 1.02. The sensitive filter sensitivity was 97.76%when tested against the development set. The sensitive filter had a sensitivity of 97.14%, specificity of 82.05%, precision of 88.59%, accuracy of 90.94%, and NNR [See Table 1] of 1.13 when tested against the validation set.
CONCLUSION
We accomplished our goal of developing PubMed search filters to help researchers retrieve studies about immigrants. The specific and sensitive PubMed search filters give information professionals and researchers options to maximize the specificity and precision or increase the sensitivity of their search for relevant studies in PubMed. Both search filters generated strong performance measurements and can be used as-is, to capture a subset of immigrant-related literature, or adapted and revised to fit the unique research needs of specific project teams (e.g. remove US-centric language, add location-specific terminology, or expand the search strategy to include terms for the topic/s being investigated in the immigrant population identified by the filter). There is also a potential for teams to employ the search filter development process described here for their own topics and use.
Topics: Emigrants and Immigrants; Humans; PubMed; Information Storage and Retrieval; Search Engine
PubMed: 38911528
DOI: 10.5195/jmla.2024.1716 -
Ecology and Evolution Jun 2024In internal fertilisers, the precise timing of ovulation with the arrival of sperm at the site of fertilisation is essential for fertilisation success. In birds, mating...
In internal fertilisers, the precise timing of ovulation with the arrival of sperm at the site of fertilisation is essential for fertilisation success. In birds, mating is often not synchronised with ovulation, but instead females utilise specialised sperm storage tubules (SSTs) in the reproductive tract, which can ensure sperm are always available for fertilisation at the time of ovulation, whilst simultaneously providing a mechanism of post-copulatory sexual selection. Despite the clear importance of SSTs for fertilisation success, we know little about the mechanisms involved in sperm acceptance, storage, and release. Furthermore, most research has been conducted on only a small number of species, based on which SSTs are usually assumed to look and function in the same way across all species. Here, we conduct a comparative exploration of SST morphology across 26 species of Galliformes. We show that SSTs, and the surrounding tissue, can vary significantly in morphology across species. We provide observational evidence that Galliformes exhibit at least 5 distinct categories of tubule types, including distinctive coiled and multi-branched tubules, and describe 2 additional features of the surrounding tissue. We suggest functional explanations for variation in tubule morphology and propose next steps for future research. Our findings indicate that SSTs are likely to be far more variable than has previously been assumed, with potentially important consequences for our understanding of sperm storage in birds and post-copulatory sexual selection in general.
PubMed: 38911493
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.11585 -
Integrative Medicine (Encinitas, Calif.) May 2024Plastic containers are a huge part of modern life. Perhaps their use is nowhere more significant than in the storage of foods. Stored food comes in contact with...
Plastic containers are a huge part of modern life. Perhaps their use is nowhere more significant than in the storage of foods. Stored food comes in contact with plastics, plasticizers, intentional additives, and inadvertent contaminants. Plastic food containers are asserted to be safe, and the resin used in their manufacture is assigned a number to help understand their recyclability. These containers are not totally inert and leach varying levels of metals and chemicals into the foods they store-especially if subjected to elevated temperatures. The safest containers appear to be those made from resins with the ID numbers 2, 4 (except food wraps), and 5. This editorial looks at the various types of plastics used in the manufacture of food containers, their typical contaminants, their toxicity, and the median amount of migration of contaminants into food.
PubMed: 38911449
DOI: No ID Found