871 results on '"Caracappa, A"'
Search Results
852. Investigation of synovial fluid lubricants and inflammatory cytokines in the horse: a comparison of recombinant equine interleukin 1 beta-induced synovitis and joint lavage models.
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Watkins, Amanda, Fasanello, Diana, Stefanovski, Darko, Schurer, Sydney, Caracappa, Katherine, D'Agostino, Albert, Costello, Emily, Freer, Heather, Rollins, Alicia, Read, Claire, Su, Jin, Colville, Marshall, Paszek, Matthew, Wagner, Bettina, and Reesink, Heidi
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SYNOVIAL fluid , *LEUKOCYTE count , *SYNOVITIS , *IRRIGATION (Medicine) , *SYNOVIAL membranes , *MECONIUM aspiration syndrome - Abstract
Background: Lameness is a debilitating condition in equine athletes that leads to more performance limitation and loss of use than any other medical condition. There are a limited number of non-terminal experimental models that can be used to study early inflammatory and synovial fluid biophysical changes that occur in the equine joint. Here, we compare the well-established carpal IL-1β-induced synovitis model to a tarsal intra-articular lavage model, focusing on serial changes in synovial fluid inflammatory cytokines/chemokines and the synovial fluid lubricating molecules lubricin/proteoglycan 4 and hyaluronic acid. The objectives of this study were to evaluate clinical signs; synovial membrane and synovial fluid inflammation; and synovial fluid lubricants and biophysical properties in response to carpal IL-1β synovitis and tarsal intra-articular lavage. Results: Hyaluronic acid (HA) concentrations, especially high molecular weight HA, and synovial fluid viscosity decreased after both synovitis and lavage interventions. Synovial fluid lubricin concentrations increased 17–20-fold for both synovitis and lavage models, with similar changes in both affected and contralateral joints, suggesting that repeated arthrocentesis alone resulted in elevated synovial fluid lubricin concentrations. Synovitis resulted in a more severe inflammatory response based on clinical signs (temperature, heart rate, respiratory rate, lameness and joint effusion) and clinicopathological and biochemical parameters (white blood cell count, total protein, prostaglandin E2, sulfated glycosaminoglycans, tumor necrosis factor-α and CC chemokine ligands − 2, − 3, − 5 and − 11) as compared to lavage. Conclusions: Synovial fluid lubricin increased in response to IL-1β synovitis and joint lavage but also as a result of repeated arthrocentesis. Frequent repeated arthrocentesis is associated with inflammatory changes, including increased sulfated glycosaminoglycan concentrations and decreased hyaluronic acid concentrations. Synovitis results in more significant inflammatory changes than joint lavage. Our data suggests that synovial fluid lubricin, TNF-α, CCL2, CCL3, CCL5, CCL11 and sGAG may be useful biomarkers for synovitis and post-lavage joint inflammation. Caution should be exercised when performing repeated arthrocentesis clinically or in experimental studies due to the inflammatory response and loss of HA and synovial fluid viscosity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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853. Identification of trypanosomatids and blood feeding preferences of phlebotomine sand fly species common in Sicily, Southern Italy.
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Abbate, Jessica Maria, Maia, Carla, Pereira, André, Arfuso, Francesca, Gaglio, Gabriella, Rizzo, Maria, Caracappa, Giulia, Marino, Gabriele, Pollmeier, Matthias, Giannetto, Salvatore, and Brianti, Emanuele
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SAND flies , *SPECIES , *LEISHMANIA donovani , *BLOOD , *PHLEBOTOMUS , *FELIDAE , *DONKEYS - Abstract
In this study, the presence of Leishmania DNA and blood feeding sources in phlebotomine sand fly species commonly present in Sicily were investigated. A total of 1,866 female sand flies including 176 blood fed specimens were sampled over two seasons in five selected sites in Sicily (southern Italy). Sergentomyia minuta (n = 1,264) and Phlebotomus perniciousus (n = 594) were the most abundant species at all the sites, while three other species from the genus Phlebotomus (i.e., P. sergenti n = 4, P. perfiliewi n = 3 and P. neglectus n = 1) were only sporadically captured. Twenty-eight out of the 1,866 (1.5%) sand flies tested positive for Leishmania spp. Leishmania tarentolae DNA was identified in 26 specimens of S. minuta, while the DNA of Leishmania donovani complex was detected in a single specimen each of S. minuta and P. perniciosus. Interestingly, seven S. minuta specimens (0.4%) tested positive for reptilian Trypanosoma sp. Blood sources were successfully identified in 108 out of 176 blood fed females. Twenty-seven out of 82 blood sources identified in fed females of P. perniciosus were represented by blood of wild rabbit, S. minuta mainly fed on humans (16/25), while the sole P. sergenti fed specimen took a blood meal on rat. Other vertebrate hosts including horse, goat, pig, dog, chicken, cow, cat and donkey were recognized as blood sources for P. perniciosus and S. minuta, and, surprisingly, no reptilian blood was identified in blood-fed S. minuta specimens. Results of this study agree with the well-known role of P. perniciosus as vector of L. infantum in the western Mediterranean; also, vector feeding preferences herein described support the hypothesis on the involvement of lagomorphs as sylvatic reservoirs of Leishmania. The detection of L. donovani complex in S. minuta, together with the anthropophilic feeding-behaviour herein observed, warrants further research to clarify the capacity of this species in the transmission of pathogens to humans and other animals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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854. Experimental measurements of isothermal reactivity coefficient and temperature-dependent reactivity changes with associated uncertainty evaluations.
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Dupont, Mathieu N., Eklund, Matthew D., Caracappa, Peter F., and Ji, Wei
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SCATTERING (Physics) , *DOPPLER broadening , *UNCERTAINTY , *DOPPLER effect , *TEMPERATURE effect , *NUCLEAR fuels - Abstract
The low power Reactor Critical Facility (RCF) at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute has recently been utilized to design and perform low-power temperature dependent experiments. The experiments include determination of isothermal excess reactivity and reactivity coefficient at different temperatures and measurements of time-dependent reactivity change with system temperature change. The above-mentioned experiments have produced significant quantities of data, and numerous post-processing steps are needed in order to make the data useful for computational model validation. One important step toward providing the data as an accurate and high-fidelity experiment benchmark for modern code validation is to develop in-depth experimental uncertainty quantification. In this paper, we analyze in particular two types of reactor physics experiments driven by the change in system temperature within a small temperature range. Uncertainty quantification includes separately derived experimental errors for both independent (temperature) and dependent (reactivity) variables, and an iterative weighted least squares approach is used to combine them into the equivalent uncertainty in reactivity. The results of the experiments show the negative effects of the system temperature on reactor reactivity due to combined effects of the Doppler broadening in the fuel, the S(α,β) thermal scattering physics and the decrease in water density. The low uncertainty values obtained for the reactor isothermal excess reactivity (<0.10 cents), the isothermal reactivity coefficient (<0.01 cents/ ° C), and the time-dependent reactivity change with system temperature increase (<0.16 cents) show that these experiments can be reliably used as benchmarks for code validation. The iterative method adapted in this work for combining temperature and reactivity uncertainties can be used to analyze similar temperature-dependent reactivity benchmark experiments. • Temperature feedback effects in the RPI Reactor Critical Facility are studied. • Experiments are designed to validate reactor physics simulations. • An iterative method for experimental uncertainty quantification is implemented. • Isothermal reactivity coefficient uncertainty is derived. • Experiments provide valuable data for temperature-dependent model validation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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855. Identification of phlebotomine sand flies through MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry and in-house reference database.
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Arfuso, Francesca, Gaglio, Gabriella, Abbate, Jessica Maria, Caracappa, Giulia, Lupia, Angelo, Napoli, Ettore, Giarratana, Filippo, Latrofa, Maria Stefania, Giannetto, Salvatore, Otranto, Domenico, and Brianti, Emanuele
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SAND flies , *MASS spectrometry , *PROTEIN spectra , *PHLEBOTOMUS , *FISH breeding , *ANIMAL diseases - Abstract
Graphical abstract Highlights • Field-caught phlebotomine sand flies were identified by MALDI-TOF MS. • The MALDI-TOF MS power is connected with the protein mass spectra database quality. • Protein mass spectra database for S. minuta and P. perniciosus were generated. • Findings confirmed MALDI-TOF MS usefulness for phlebotomine species identification. Abstract Phlebotomine sand flies are vectors for many pathogens responsible for human and animal diseases worldwide. Their identification at species level is of importance in epidemiological studies and control programmes. MALDI-TOF MS has been increasingly investigated as an alternative approach to the conventional identification of arthropods species. To establish an in-house protein spectra database for a quick and reliable species identification of phlebotomine sand flies, 166 field-caught sand fly specimens, morphologically identified as Phlebotomus perniciosus (no = 56; 26 males and 30 females), Phlebotomus neglectus (no = 4 males), Phlebotomus sergenti (no = 6; 4 males and 2 females) and Sergentomyia minuta (no = 100; 45 males and 55 females), were subjected to MALDI-TOF MS analyses. Out of 166, 149 specimens (89.8%) produced consistent species-specific protein spectra. Good quality database for P. perniciosus and S. minuta were generated; no databases have yet constructed for P. neglectus and P. sergenti due to the low number of specimens examined. The identification of 80 sand flies (no = 20 P. perniciosus ; no = 60 S. minuta) were confirmed using the new generated SuperSpectra as validation test. The results reported support the use of MALDI-TOF MS for rapid, simple and reliable phlebotomine sand fly species identification suggesting its usefulness in accurate survey studies, ultimately improving biological and epidemiological knowledge on these important vectors of pathogens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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856. Performance Study of Monte Carlo Codes on Xeon Phi Coprocessors -- Testing MCNP 6.1 and Profiling ARCHER Geometry Module on the FS7ONNi Problem.
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Tianyu Liu, Noah Wolfe, Hui Lin, Kris Zieb, Wei Ji, Caracappa, Peter, Carothers, Christopher, and X. George Xu
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MONTE Carlo method , *COPROCESSORS , *SOLID geometry , *APPLICATION program interfaces , *SIMULTANEOUS multithreading processors - Abstract
This paper contains two parts revolving around Monte Carlo transport simulation on Intel Many Integrated Core coprocessors (MIC, also known as Xeon Phi). (1) MCNP 6.1 was recompiled into multithreading (OpenMP) and multiprocessing (MPI) forms respectively without modification to the source code. The new codes were tested on a 60-core 5110P MIC. The test case was FS7ONNi, a radiation shielding problem used in MCNP's verification and validation suite. It was observed that both codes became slower on the MIC than on a 6-core X5650 CPU, by a factor of -4 for the MPI code and, abnormally, -20 for the OpenMP code, and both exhibited limited capability of strong scaling. (2) We have recently added a Constructive Solid Geometry (CSG) module to our ARCHER code to provide better support for geometry modelling in radiation shielding simulation. The functions of this module are frequently called in the particle random walk process. To identify the performance bottleneck we developed a CSG proxy application and profiled the code using the geometry data from FS7ONNi. The profiling data showed that the code was primarily memory latency bound on the MIC. This study suggests that despite low initial porting effort, Monte Carlo codes do not naturally lend themselves to the MIC platform -- just like to the GPUs, and that the memory latency problem needs to be addressed in order to achieve decent performance gain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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857. Survey on the presence of non-dioxine-like PCBs (NDL-PCBs) in loggerhead turtles ( Caretta caretta) stranded in south Mediterranean coasts (Sicily, Southern Italy).
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Cammilleri, Gaetano, Calvaruso, Enza, Pantano, Licia, Cascio, Giovanni Lo, Randisi, Barbara, Macaluso, Andrea, Vazzana, Mirella, Caracappa, Giulia, Giangrosso, Giuseppe, Vella, Antonio, and Ferrantelli, Vincenzo
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TURTLE populations , *POLYCHLORINATED biphenyls & the environment , *GAS chromatography/Mass spectrometry (GC-MS) , *ENVIRONMENTAL toxicology , *ADIPOSE tissues - Abstract
A total of 71 loggerhead turtles ( Caretta caretta) stranded along the coasts of Sicily (Southern Italy) were examined for non-dioxine like polychlorinated biphenyl (NDL-PCB) levels in muscle and adipose tissue by a gas chromatography-mass spectrometry/mass spectrometry (GC-MS/MS) method. The results revealed 6 high-indicator congener (∑6PCBIND) levels in 45% of the loggerhead turtles examined, with mean values of 980.39 ± 2508.39 ng/g wet weight in adipose tissue and 102.53 ± 238.58 ng/g wet weight in muscle tissue. The hexachloro and heptachloro PCB congeners were the most abundant in both the sample types. The highest NDL-PCB levels were reached in an adipose tissue sample of a loggerhead turtle of 80 kg stranded along the coasts of Termini Imerese (14 183.85 ng/g wet wt). No significant correlation was found between modified Fulton's K values of the loggerhead turtles and PCB contents (S = 47 151, p > 0.05). Furthermore, no significant differences were found between sexes (W = 365, p > 0.05). The PCB levels found in the present study were much higher than those found in the literature. The present study is the first report on the existence of NDL-PCBs in loggerhead turtles stranded in Sicilian coasts confirming C. caretta as a valuable indicator of contaminant exposure in the marine environment because of their specific biological and ecological characteristics. Environ Toxicol Chem 2017;36:2997-3002. © 2017 SETAC [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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858. Analysis of spatial diffusion of ferric ions in PVA-GTA gel dosimeters through magnetic resonance imaging.
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Marrale, Maurizio, Collura, Giorgio, Gallo, Salvatore, Nici, Stefania, Tranchina, Luigi, Abbate, Boris Federico, Marineo, Sandra, Caracappa, Santo, and d’Errico, Francesco
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IRON ions , *DOSIMETERS , *DIFFUSION , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *AGAROSE - Abstract
This work focused on the analysis of the temporal diffusion of ferric ions through PVA-GTA gel dosimeters. PVA-GTA gel samples, partly exposed with 6 MV X-rays in order to create an initial steep gradient, were mapped using magnetic resonance imaging on a 7T MRI scanner for small animals. Multiple images of the gels were acquired over several hours after irradiation and were analyzed to quantitatively extract the signal profile. The spatial resolution achieved is 200 μm and this makes this technique particularly suitable for the analysis of steep gradients of ferric ion concentration. The results obtained with PVA-GTA gels were compared with those achieved with agarose gels, which is a standard dosimetric gel formulation. The analysis showed that the diffusion process is much slower (more than five times) for PVA-GTA gels than for agarose ones. Furthermore, it is noteworthy that the diffusion coefficient value obtained through MRI analysis is significantly consistent with that obtained in separate study Marini et al. (Submitted for publication) using a totally independent method such as spectrophotometry. This is a valuable result highlighting that the good dosimetric features of this gel matrix not only can be reproduced but also can be measured through independent experimental techniques based on different physical principles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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859. Evaluation of the conjunctival bacterial flora in 140 rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus) farmed in Sicily ISLAND.
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Pugliese, Michela, Spadola, Filippo, Morici, Manuel, Piazza, Antonino, Caracappa, Giulia, Persichetti, Maria Flaminia, and Lommi, Alessandra
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PASTEURELLA multocida , *STAPHYLOCOCCUS , *CLIMATE change , *HEALTH risk assessment , *EPIDEMIOLOGY - Abstract
Normal conjunctival flora of animal eyes comprises of both bacterial and fungal organisms. Bacterial and fungal species isolated from healthy conjunctiva appear to vary with geographic location, as well as is influenced by age, sex, housing, and climate. The aim of this work was to evaluate the bacterial flora of the conjunctiva of rabbits from intensive livestock farming in Sicily Island, comparing differences in the isolation of bacteria, and evaluating the potential zoonosis risk for humans related to the bacterial species isolated. 140 rabbits of California and New Zealand breeds were examined, while 280 eyes swab were obtained. Isolation techniques, biochemical and enzymatic tests were performed. Statistical analysis performed shown that the zoonotic risk is statistically not significant. A 4 % of Moraxella spp., 9 % of Staphylococcus spp., 5 % of Pasteurella multocida and 9 % of Staphylococcus aureus were isolated on eye swabs. In the examined area may be excluded a human-health risk related to isolated pathogens, both because of low percentage of isolations and for small number of involved farms. Further investigations are necessary to continuous monitor the related epidemiological risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
860. Nutraceutical effects of table green olives: a pilot study with Nocellara del Belice olives.
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Accardi, Giulia, Aiello, Anna, Gargano, Valeria, Gambino, Caterina Maria, Caracappa, Santo, Marineo, Sandra, Vesco, Gesualdo, Carru, Ciriaco, Zinellu, Angelo, Zarcone, Maurizio, Caruso, Calogero, and Candore, Giuseppina
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FUNCTIONAL foods , *OLIVE , *MEDITERRANEAN diet , *OXIDATIVE stress , *INFLAMMATION - Abstract
Background: The aim of this study was to analyse the nutraceutical properties of table green olives Nocellara del Belice, a traditional Mediterranean food. The Mediterranean Diet has as key elements olives and extra virgin olive oil, common to all Mediterranean countries. Olive oil is the main source of fat and can modulate oxidative stress and inflammation, whereas little is known about the role of olives. Moreover, emerging evidences underline the association between gut microbiota and food as the basis of many phenomena that affect health and delay or avoid the onset of some age-related chronic diseases. Methods: In order to show if table green olives have nutraceutical properties and/or probiotic effect, we performed a nutritional intervention, administering to 25 healthy subjects (mean age 38,3), 12 table green olives/day for 30 days. We carried out anthropometric, biochemical, oxidative stress and cytokines analyses at the beginning of the study and at the end. Moreover, we also collected fecal samples to investigate about the possible variation of concentration of Lactobacilli, after the olives consumption. Result: Our results showed a significant variation of one molecule related to oxidative stress, malondialdehyde, confirming that green olives could have an anti-oxidant effect. In addition, the level of interleukin-6 Nocellara del Belice decreased significantly, demonstrating how this food could be able to modulate the inflammatory response. Moreover, it is noteworthy the reduction of fat mass with an increase of muscle mass, suggesting a possible effect on long time assumption of table olives on body mass variation. No statistically significant differences were observed in the amount of, although a trend towards an increased concentration of them at the end of the intervention could be Lactobacilli related to the nutraceutical effects of olives. Conclusion: These preliminary results suggest a possible nutraceutical effect of daily consumption of green table olives Nocellara del Belice. To best of our knowledge, this is the first study performed to assess nutraceutical properties of this food. Of course, it is necessary to verify the data in a larger sample of individuals to confirm their role as nutraceuticals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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861. Alimentazione ed insulina-resistenza. In Salute e cultura alimentare globalizzata
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Silvio Buscemi, Buscemi, Silvio, Randazzo, Cristiana, Buscemi, S, Calamusa, G, Calantropo, M, Caracappa, S, Craxì, A, Craxì, L, De Lorenzo, A, Di Raimondo, D, Di Stefano, V, Farina, V, Finamore, E, Galvano, F, Marrone, G, Milazzo, S, Montalbano, L, Montes, S, Pantuso, G, Petta, S, Randazzo, C, Rosafio, G, Sciascia, A, Volo, G, and Silvio Buscemi
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Settore MED/09 - Medicina Interna ,Settore MED/49 - Scienze Tecniche Dietetiche Applicate ,insulina-resistenza, obesità, diabete, alimentazione, dieta ,Settore MED/13 - Endocrinologia - Abstract
NA
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- 2021
862. Dieta, cura e società multietnica. In: Salute e cultura alimentare globalizzata
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Elena Finamore, Leda Lo Mauro, Silvio Buscemi, Buscemi, Silvio, Randazzo, Cristiana, Buscemi, S, Calamusa, G, Calantropo, M, Caracappa, S, Craxì, A, Craxì, L, De Lorenzo, A, Di Raimondo, D, Di Stefano, V, Farina, V, Finamore, E, Galvano, F, Marrone, G, Milazzo, S, Montalbano, L, Montes, S, Pantuso, G, Petta, S, Randazzo, C, Rosafio, G, Sciascia, A, Volo, G, Elena Finamore, Leda Lo Mauro, and Silvio Buscemi
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dieta, salute, urbanizzazione, società multietnica ,Settore MED/49 - Scienze Tecniche Dietetiche Applicate - Abstract
NA
- Published
- 2021
863. Codominance of Lactobacillus plantarum and obligate heterofermentative lactic acid bacteria during sourdough fermentation.
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Ventimiglia, Giusi, Alfonzo, Antonio, Galluzzo, Paola, Corona, Onofrio, Francesca, Nicola, Caracappa, Santo, Moschetti, Giancarlo, and Settanni, Luca
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LACTOBACILLUS plantarum , *LACTIC acid fermentation , *FOOD fermentation , *COOKING with sourdough - Abstract
Fifteen sourdoughs produced in western Sicily (southern Italy) were analysed by classical methods for their chemico-physical characteristics and the levels of lactic acid bacteria (LAB). pH and total titratable acidity (TTA) were mostly in the range commonly reported for similar products produced in Italy, but the fermentation quotient (FQ) of the majority of samples was above 4.0, due to the low concentration of acetic acid estimated by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Specific counts of LAB showed levels higher than 10 8 CFU g −1 for many samples. The colonies representing various morphologies were isolated and, after the differentiation based on phenotypic characteristics, divided into 10 groups. The most numerous group was composed of facultative heterofermentative isolates, indicating a relevance of this bacterial group during fermentation. The genetic analysis by randomly amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD)-PCR, 16S rRNA gene sequencing and species-specific PCRs identified 33 strains as Lactobacillus plantarum , Lactobacillus curvatus and Lactobacillus graminis . Due to the consistent presence of L. plantarum , it was concluded that this species codominates with obligate heterofermentative LAB in sourdough production in this geographical area. In order to evaluate the performances at the basis of their fitness, the 29 L. plantarum strains were investigated for several technological traits. Twelve cultures showed good acidifying abilities in vitro and L. plantarum PON100148 produced the highest concentrations of organic acids. Eleven strains were positive for extracellular protease activity. Bacteriocin-like inhibitory substances (BLIS) production and antifungal activity was scored positive for several strains, included L. plantarum PON100148 which was selected as starter for experimental sourdough production. The characteristics of the sourdoughs and the resulting breads indicated that the best productions were obtained in presence of L. plantarum PON100148. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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864. Precision HD Polarimetry with the LEGS Crossed-Coil NMR Polarimeter
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Caracappa, Anthony [Physics Department, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, NY 11973 (United States)]
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- 2008
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865. Leishmaniasis diagnosis by PCR on lymph node aspirates and peripheral blood. Comparison with indirect immuno fuorescence method.
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Caracappa, S., Vitale, F., Reale, S., Maxia, L., Glorioso, N.S., L, and Vesco, G.
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- 1998
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866. NSLS-II beam loss control and monitoring system.
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Podobedov, B., Hu, Y., Hidaka, Y., Caracappa, A., Kosciuk, B., and Kramer, S.L.
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LOSS control , *RADIATION exposure , *RADIATION shielding - Abstract
One of the most challenging issues for accelerator operations is why and where the beam is lost. This is a major concern for radiation protection at facilities with a large user base, since uncontrolled beam losses could potentially result in unwanted radiation exposures to occupied areas. For NSLS-II the tunnel radiation shield wall has increased attenuation over two lattice cells after the injection region, to shield for the possibility of higher injection losses. This raised the concern over exceeding radiation exposure limits in lesser shielded regions, if similar losses occur in those regions. To address this issue a beam loss control system was designed to limit most beam losses to the more heavily shielded (injection) region. A beam loss monitor system was also designed to verify the fraction of the beam lost in that region and thereby ensure lower levels of exposure around the rest of the ring. The design of these beam loss control and monitoring systems and the NSLS-II operational experience is presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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867. Letters.
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Youmans, William, Austin, Alan, Thornburgh, Dick, Kosersky, Rena C., Caracappa, Michael, Linder, John, Mitchell, Malcolm, and Attanasio, Richard
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LETTERS to the editor - Abstract
This article presents letters to the editor regarding articles and book reviews published in previous issues. Letters were written in response to the following articles: "Truth and Duty," "Dream Boogie: The Triumph of Sam Cooke," and "Generation Rx." Letters were also written in response to reviews of the following books: "The Fair Tax Book," and "Flat Tax Revolution," and "Imperial Grunts."
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- 2005
868. Measurements of H-->D-->(gamma-->,pi) and implications for the convergence of the Gerasimov-Drell-Hern integral.
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Hoblit S, Sandorfi AM, Ardashev K, Bade C, Bartalini O, Blecher M, Caracappa A, D'Angelo A, d'Angelo A, Di Salvo R, Fantini A, Gibson C, Glückler H, Hicks K, Honig A, Kageya T, Khandaker M, Kistner OC, Kizilgul S, Kucuker S, Lehmann A, Lowry M, Lucas M, Mahon J, Miceli L, Moricciani D, Norum B, Pap M, Preedom B, Seyfarth H, Schaerf C, Ströher H, Thorn CE, Whisnant CS, Wang K, and Wei X
- Abstract
We report new measurements of inclusive pi production from frozen-spin HD for polarized photon beams covering the Delta(1232) resonance. These provide data simultaneously on both H and D with nearly complete angular distributions of the spin-difference cross sections entering the Gerasimov-Drell-Hearn (GDH) sum rule. Recent results from Mainz and Bonn exceed the GDH prediction for the proton by 22 microb, suggesting as yet unmeasured high-energy components. Our pi0 data reveal a different angular dependence than assumed in Mainz analyses and integrate to a value that is 18 microb lower, suggesting a more rapid convergence. Our results for deuterium are somewhat lower than published data, considerably more precise, and generally lower than available calculations.
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- 2009
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869. Measurement of gamma
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Adams GS, Baghaei H, Caracappa A, Clayton W, D'Angelo A, Hoblit S, Khandaker M, Kistner OC, Kobayashi T, Lindgren R, Miceli L, Ruth C, Sandorfi AM, Schaerf C, Sealock RM, Smith LC, Stoler P, Tedeschi DJ, Thorn CE, Thornton ST, Vaziri K, Whisnant CS, and Winhold EJ
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- 1995
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870. Exclusive photodisintegration of 3He with polarized photons.
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Tedeschi DJ, Adams GS, Audit G, Baghaei H, Caracappa A, Clayton WB, D'Angelo A, Duval MA, Giordano G, Hoblit S, Kistner OC, Laget JM, Lindgren R, Matone G, Miceli L, Mize WK, Moinester M, Ruth C, Sandorfi A, Schaerf C, Sealock RM, Smith LC, Stoler P, Teng PK, Thorn CE, Thornton ST, Vaziri K, Whisnant CS, and Winhold EJ
- Published
- 1994
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871. Measurement of the Xi 0--> Sigma 0 gamma branching ratio and asymmetry parameter.
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Teige S, Beretvas A, Caracappa A, Devlin T, Diehl HT, Krueger K, Thomson GB, Border P, Ho PM, Longo MJ, Duryea J, Grossman N, Heller K, Shupe M, and Thorne K
- Published
- 1989
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