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Mechanosensing proteins have mainly been investigated in 2D culture platforms, while understanding their regulation in 3D enviroments is critical for tissue engineering. Among mechanosensing proteins, the actin cytoskeleton plays a key role in human mesenchymal stromal cells (hMSCs) activity, but its regulation in 3D tissue engineered scaffolds remains poorly studied. Here, we show that human mesenchymal stromal cells (hMSCs) cultured on 3D electrospun scaffolds made of a stiff material do not form actin stress fibers, contrary to hMSCs on 2D films of the same material. On 3D electrospun and additive manufactured scaffolds, hMSCs also displayed fewer focal adhesions, lower lamin A and C expression and less YAP1 nuclear localization and myosin light chain phosphorylation. Together, this strongly suggests that dimensionality prevents the build-up of cellular tension, even on stiff materials. Knock down of either lamin A and C or zyxin resulted in fewer stress fibers in the cell center. Zyxin knock down reduced lamin A and C expression, but not vice versa, showing that this signal chain starts from the outside of the cell. Lineage commitment was not affected by the lack of these important osteogenic proteins in 3D, as all cells committed to osteogenesis in bi-potential medium. Our study demonstrates that dimensionality changes the actin cytoskeleton through lamin A and C and zyxin, and highlights the difference in the regulation of lineage commitment in 3D enviroments. Together, these results can have important implications for future scaffold design for both stiff- and soft tissue engineering constructs. More than 30% of patients with epilepsy progress to drug-resistant epilepsy, leading to a significant increase in morbidity and mortality of epilepsy. The limitation of epileptic drug to reach the epileptogenic focus is the critical reason, and the blood-brain barrier (BBB) plays a crucial role. Here, we successfully constructed a hepatitis B core (HBc) protein nanocage (NC) with the insertion of brain target TGN peptide for facilitating epileptic drug phenytoin delivery to the brain. Our results demonstrated that this nanocage can specifically and efficiently target the brain tissue by 2.4 fold and increase the antiepileptic efficiency of phenytoin about 100 fold in pilocarpine induced models of epilepsy. Bay 11-7085 purchase Both in vivo mice and in vitro human neural three-dimensional cortical organoids demonstrated high penetration ability. These functions are achieved through the facilitation of brain target peptide TGN rather than disruption of brain blood barrier. In summary, we presented an efficient antiepileptic drug delivery nanocage for the treatment of refractory epilepsy. Moreover, this therapeutic modulation also provides promising strategy for other intractable neurological disease. Efficient lead removal from metal-containing wastewater, such as acid mine drainage (AMD), is an important step in environmental purification and secondary resources recovery. In this paper, a novel approach by mechanochemically activating CaCO3 through simply wet ball milling in metal-containing solution was developed, where selective Pb2+ precipitation in the form of PbCO3 was achieved based on its reaction with the CO32- from the activated CaCO3. By such milling operation, the removal efficiency of Pb2+ from aqueous solution could reach over 99%, while more than 99% Zn2+ (as well as Mn, Ni and Cd) was remaining in the solutions, demonstrating the feasibility and high effectiveness of precipitating Pb2+ and serving the purpose of recovering other metals without Pb impurity. The solubility differences between Pb carbonate and other carbonates of Zn, Mn, Ni or Cd were understood to be the main pathway and using CaCO3 would offer an easy operation and environmental friendly process to purify the metals-containing wastewater by precipitating Pb, compared with the difficulties when using alkaline neutralization to treat them. In addition, basic zinc carbonate (a zinc-containing ore waste) as an alternative precipitant to CaCO3 in the separation process was also confirmed to increase the zinc recovery in the solution while maintaining high Pb2+ removal efficiency. Rapid expansion of nanotechnology and indiscriminate discharge of metal oxide nanoparticles (NPs) into the environment pose a serious hazard to the ecological receptors including plants. To better understand the role of miRNAs in ZnO-NPs stress adaptation, two small RNA libraries were prepared from control and ZnO-NPs (800 ppm, less then 50 nm particle size) stressed maize leaves. Meager performance of ZnO-NPs treated seedlings was associated with elevated tissue zinc accumulation, enhanced ROS generation, loss of root cell viability, increased foliar MDA content, decrease in chlorophyll and carotenoids contents. Deep sequencing identified 3 (2 known and 1 novel) up- and 77 (73 known and 4 novel) down-regulated miRNAs from ZnO-NPs challenged leaves. GO analysis reveals that potential targets of ZnO-NPs responsive miRNAs regulate diverse biological processes viz. plant growth and development (miR159f-3p, zma_18), ROS homeostasis (miR156b, miR166l), heavy metal transport and detoxification (miR444a, miR167c-3p), photosynthesis (miR171b) etc. Up-regulation of SCARECROW 6 in ZnO-NPs treated leaves might be responsible for suppression of chlorophyll biosynthesis leading to yellowing of leaves. miR156b.1 mediated up-regulation of CALLOSE SYNTHASE also does not give much protection against ZnO-NPs treatment. Taken together, the findings shed light on the miRNA-guided stress regulatory networks involved in plant adaptive responses to ZnO-NPs stress. Norfloxacin is employed as in veterinary and human medicine against gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria. Due to the ineffective treatment at the wastewater treatment plants it becomes an emergent pollutant. Electro-oxidation appears as an alternative to its effective mineralization. This work compares Norfloxacin electro-oxidation on different anodic materials two ceramic electrodes (both based on SnO2 + Sb2O3 with and without CuO, named as CuO and BCE, respectively) and a boron doped diamond (BDD). First, the anodes were characterized by cyclic voltammetry, revealing that NOR direct oxidation occurred at 1.30 V vs. Ag/AgCl. The higher the scan rate the higher both the current density and the anodic potential of the peak. This behavior was analyzed using the Randles-Sevcik equation to calculate the Norfloxacin diffusion coefficient in aqueous media, giving a value of D = 7.80 × 10-6 cm2 s-1 at 25 °C), which is close to the predicted value obtained using the Wilke-Chang correlation. The electrolysis experiments showed that both NOR and TOC decay increased with the applied current density, presenting a pseudo-first order kinetic. All the anodes tested achieved more than 90% NOR degradation at each current density. The CuO is not a good alternative to BCE because although it acts as a catalyst during the first use, it is lost from the anode surface in the subsequent uses. According to their oxidizing power, the anodes employed are ordered as follows BDD > BCE > CuO. Sequential soil washing and electrochemical advanced oxidation processes (EAOPs) were applied for the remediation of synthetic soil contaminated with diesel. The surfactant Tween 80 was used to enhance the extraction of diesel from synthetic soil, and diesel extraction efficiency was improved with the increase of Tween 80 concentration. Under conditions of 180 min washing time, 10 g synthetic soil with 100 mL surfactant solution and two times of soil washing, about 75.2%, 80.0% and 87.9% of diesel was extracted from synthetic soil with 5.0, 7.5 and 10.0 g L-1 Tween 80. The degradation of diesel in soil washing effluent was carried out by two EAOPs, electro-oxidation (EO) and electro-Fenton (EF) using boron-doped diamond (BDD) anode and carbon felt cathode cell. After 360 min EO treatment, 72.7-83.0% of diesel was removed from the effluent after soil washing with 5.0-10.0 g L-1 Tween 80 while higher removal efficiencies (77.7-87.2%) were attained with EF process. Parallel factor analysis (PARAFAC) of excitation emission matrix (EEM) fluorescence spectroscopy was conducted to analysis the transformation of fluorescent components in diesel during the treatment by two EAOPs. Carbon-based materials including multiwall carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) have been recently implicated in a number of reports dealing with their potential use in agriculture, leading to contradictory findings. In this study, MWCNTs were successfully functionalized with carboxylic acid groups (MWCNTs-COOH) in order to increase water dispersion. Hydroponically cultured sweet basil (Ocimum basilicum L.) seedlings were subjected to four concentrations (0, 25, 50 and 100 mg L-1) of MWCNTs-COOH under three salt stress levels (0, 50 and 100 mM NaCl). An array of agronomic, physiological, analytical and biochemical parameters were evaluated in an attempt to examine the potential use of MWCNTs in plants under optimal and abiotic stress conditions. Application of MWCNTs-COOH at optimum concentration (50 mg L-1) could ameliorate the negative effects of salinity stress by increasing chlorophyll and carotenoids content and inducing non-enzymatic (i.e. phenolic content) and enzymatic antioxidant components (i.e. ascorbate peroxidase (APX), catalase (CAT) and guaiacol peroxidase (GP) activity). Furthermore, MWCNTs-COOH treatments under optimal conditions induced plant growth, while a significant increase (P ≤ 0.01) was recorded in essential oil content and compound profile. On the other hand, biochemical and epifluorescence microscopy evidence suggested that high dosage (100 mg L-1) of MWCNTs-COOH leads to toxicity effects in plant tissue. Overall, the positive response of plants to low concentrations of MWCNTs-COOH under control and abiotic stress conditions renders them as potential novel plant growth promoting and stress protecting agents, opening up new perspectives for their use in agriculture. This study highlights the trace metal and metalloid (TMM) accumulation in Rosmarinus officinalis L. and its chemical responses when exposed to high levels of contamination. R. officinalis individuals growing along a gradient of mixed TMM soil pollution, resulting from past industrial activities, were analysed. Several plant secondary metabolites, known to be involved in plant tolerance to TMM or as a plant health indicator, were investigated. The levels of thiol compounds and phytochelatin precursors (cysteine and glutathione) in the shoots were measured in the laboratory, while a portable non-destructive instrument was used to determine the level of phenolic compounds and chlorophylls directly on site. The level of Pb, As, Sb and Zn contaminations within the soil and plants was also determined. The results highlighted a decrease of TMM translocation with increases of soil contamination. The concentration of TMM in the shoots followed the Mitscherlich equation and reached a plateau at 0.41, 7.9, 0.37, 51.3 mg kg-1 for As, Pb, Sb and Zn, respectively. In the shoots, the levels of thiols and phenols were correlated to concentrations of TMM. Glutathione seems to be the main thiol compounds involved in the tolerance to As, Pb and Sb. Phenols indices, using non-destructive measurements, may be considered as an easy way to establish a proxy to estimate the TMM contamination level of the R. officinalis shoots. The study highlights metabolic processes that contribute to the high potential of R. officinalis for phytostabilisation of TMM in contaminated areas in the Mediterranean.
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