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A large scale non-invasive genetic project: wolf population (Canis lupus) in Emilia Romagna regionSantini, Alberto <1973> 18 April 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Role of NAADP-mediated calcium signalling in encephalitogenic T cells in EAE, an animal model for Multiple SclerosisCordiglieri, Chiara <1979> 03 April 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Metodologia geostatistica per l’individuazione delle aree a rischio radon e analisi della relazione con la geologia del territorioSalvi, Francesco <1976> 30 June 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Radar and optical remote sensing techniques for earthquake damage mappingChini, Marco <1973> 09 June 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Numerical simulations of magma chamber dynamics at Campi Flegrei, and associated seismicity, deformation and gravity changesVassalli, Melissa <1977> 27 June 2008 (has links)
Understanding the complex relationships between quantities measured
by volcanic monitoring network and shallow magma processes is a crucial
headway for the comprehension of volcanic processes and a more realistic
evaluation of the associated hazard. This question is very relevant at Campi
Flegrei, a volcanic quiescent caldera immediately north-west of Napoli (Italy).
The system activity shows a high fumarole release and periodic ground slow
movement (bradyseism) with high seismicity. This activity, with the high
people density and the presence of military and industrial buildings, makes
Campi Flegrei one of the areas with higher volcanic hazard in the world.
In such a context my thesis has been focused on magma dynamics due
to the refilling of shallow magma chambers, and on the geophysical signals
detectable by seismic, deformative and gravimetric monitoring networks that
are associated with this phenomenologies. Indeed, the refilling of magma
chambers is a process frequently occurring just before a volcanic eruption;
therefore, the faculty of identifying this dynamics by means of recorded signal
analysis is important to evaluate the short term volcanic hazard.
The space-time evolution of dynamics due to injection of new magma
in the magma chamber has been studied performing numerical simulations
with, and implementing additional features in, the code GALES (Longo et al.,
2006), recently developed and still on the upgrade at the Istituto Nazionale di
Geofisica e Vulcanologia in Pisa (Italy). GALES is a finite element code based
on a physico-mathematical two dimensional, transient model able to treat
fluids as multiphase homogeneous mixtures, compressible to incompressible.
The fundamental equations of mass, momentum and energy balance
are discretised both in time and space using the Galerkin Least-Squares and
discontinuity-capturing stabilisation technique. The physical properties of
the mixture are computed as a function of local conditions of magma composition,
pressure and temperature.The model features enable to study a broad
range of phenomenologies characterizing pre and sin-eruptive magma dynamics
in a wide domain from the volcanic crater to deep magma feeding
zones.
The study of displacement field associated with the simulated fluid dynamics
has been carried out with a numerical code developed by the Geophysical
group at the University College Dublin (O’Brien and Bean, 2004b),
with whom we started a very profitable collaboration. In this code, the seismic
wave propagation in heterogeneous media with free surface (e.g. the
Earth’s surface) is simulated using a discrete elastic lattice where particle interactions
are controlled by the Hooke’s law. This method allows to consider
medium heterogeneities and complex topography.
The initial and boundary conditions for the simulations have been defined
within a coordinate project (INGV-DPC 2004-06 V3_2 “Research on active
volcanoes, precursors, scenarios, hazard and risk - Campi Flegrei”), to which
this thesis contributes, and many researchers experienced on Campi Flegrei
in volcanological, seismic, petrological, geochemical fields, etc. collaborate.
Numerical simulations of magma and rock dynamis have been coupled as
described in the thesis.
The first part of the thesis consists of a parametric study aimed at understanding
the eect of the presence in magma of carbon dioxide in magma in
the convection dynamics. Indeed, the presence of this volatile was relevant
in many Campi Flegrei eruptions, including some eruptions commonly considered
as reference for a future activity of this volcano. A set of simulations
considering an elliptical magma chamber, compositionally uniform, refilled
from below by a magma with volatile content equal or dierent from that
of the resident magma has been performed. To do this, a multicomponent
non-ideal magma saturation model (Papale et al., 2006) that considers the
simultaneous presence of CO2 and H2O, has been implemented in GALES.
Results show that the presence of CO2 in the incoming magma increases its
buoyancy force promoting convection ad mixing. The simulated dynamics
produce pressure transients with frequency and amplitude in the sensitivity
range of modern geophysical monitoring networks such as the one installed
at Campi Flegrei .
In the second part, simulations more related with the Campi Flegrei volcanic
system have been performed. The simulated system has been defined
on the basis of conditions consistent with the bulk of knowledge of Campi
Flegrei and in particular of the Agnano-Monte Spina eruption (4100 B.P.),
commonly considered as reference for a future high intensity eruption in this
area. The magmatic system has been modelled as a long dyke refilling a small shallow magma chamber; magmas with trachytic and phonolitic composition
and variable volatile content of H2O and CO2 have been considered. The
simulations have been carried out changing the condition of magma injection,
the system configuration (magma chamber geometry, dyke size) and the resident
and refilling magma composition and volatile content, in order to study
the influence of these factors on the simulated dynamics. Simulation results
allow to follow each step of the gas-rich magma ascent in the denser magma,
highlighting the details of magma convection and mixing. In particular, the
presence of more CO2 in the deep magma results in more ecient and faster
dynamics. Through this simulations the variation of the gravimetric field has
been determined.
Afterward, the space-time distribution of stress resulting from numerical
simulations have been used as boundary conditions for the simulations of
the displacement field imposed by the magmatic dynamics on rocks. The
properties of the simulated domain (rock density, P and S wave velocities)
have been based on data from literature on active and passive tomographic
experiments, obtained through a collaboration with A. Zollo at the Dept. of
Physics of the Federici II Univeristy in Napoli. The elasto-dynamics simulations
allow to determine the variations of the space-time distribution of
deformation and the seismic signal associated with the studied magmatic dynamics.
In particular, results show that these dynamics induce deformations
similar to those measured at Campi Flegrei and seismic signals with energies
concentrated on the typical frequency bands observed in volcanic areas.
The present work shows that an approach based on the solution of equations
describing the physics of processes within a magmatic fluid and the
surrounding rock system is able to recognise and describe the relationships
between geophysical signals detectable on the surface and deep magma dynamics.
Therefore, the results suggest that the combined study of geophysical
data and informations from numerical simulations can allow in a near future
a more ecient evaluation of the short term volcanic hazard.
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Caratterizzazione genetico-funzionale del carcinoma mammario. Valutazione dell’espressione di NIS (Natrium/Iodide Symporter)Farnedi, Anna <1973> 03 June 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Mechanisms of cell senescence: p21 and DNA damage response in aging and longevity / Meccanismi di senescenza cellulare: p21 e risposta ai danni al DNA nell'invecchiamento e longevitàGravina, Silvia <1979> 03 June 2008 (has links)
Theory of aging postulates that aging is a remodeling process where the body of survivors progressively adapts to internal and external damaging agents they are exposed to during several decades. Thus , stress response and adaptation mechanisms play a fundamental role in the aging process where the capability of adaptating effects, certainly, also is related the lifespan of each individual. A key gene linking aging to stress response is indeed p21, an induction of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor which triggers cell growth arrest associated with senescence and damage response and notably is involved in the up-regulation of multiple genes that have been associated with senescence or implicated in age-related . This PhD thesis project that has been performed in collaboration with the Roninson Lab at Ordway Research Institute in Albany, NY had two main aims: -the testing the hypothesis that p21 polymorphisms are involved in longevity
-Evaluating age-associated differences in gene expression and transcriptional response to p21 and DNA damage In the first project, trough PCR-sequencing and Sequenom strategies, we we found out that there are about 30 polymorphic variants in the p21 gene. In addition, we found an haplotpype located in -5kb region of the p21 promoter whose frequency is ~ 2 fold higher in centenarians than in the general population (Large-scale analysis of haplotype frequencies is currently in progress). Functional studies I carried out on the promoter highilighted that the ―centenarian‖ haplotype doesn’t affect the basal p21 promoter activity or its response to p53.
However, there are many other possible physiological conditions in which the centenarian allele of the p21 promoter may potentially show a different response (IL6, IFN,progesterone, vitamin E, Vitamin D etc). In the second part, project #2, trough Microarrays we seeked to evaluate the differences in gene expression between centenarians, elderly, young in dermal fibroblast cultures and their response to p21 and DNA damage. Microarray analysis of gene expression in dermal fibroblast cultures of individuals of different ages yielded a tentative "centenarian signature". A subset of genes that were up- or downregulated in centenarians showed the same response to ectopic expression of p21, yielding a putative "p21-centenarian" signature. Trough RQ-PCR (as well Microarrays studies whose analysis is in progress) we tested the DNA damage response of the p21-centenarian signature genes showing a correlation stress/aging in additional sets of young and old samples treated with p21-inducing drug doxorubicin thus finding for a subset of of them , a response to stress age-related.
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Activation of innate immunity by human vaccine adjuvants at injection siteMosca, Flaviana <1978> 16 April 2009 (has links)
No description available.
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Identification of surface protein complexes of Streptococcus pyogenes through protein microarray technologyBove, Elia <1978> 16 April 2009 (has links)
A systematic characterization of the composition and structure of the bacterial cell-surface proteome and its complexes can provide an invaluable tool for its comprehensive understanding. The knowledge of protein complexes composition and structure could offer new, more effective targets for a more specific and consequently effective immune response against a complex instead of a single protein. Large-scale protein-protein interaction screens are the first step towards the identification of complexes and their attribution to specific pathways. Currently, several methods exist for identifying protein interactions and protein microarrays provide the most appealing alternative to existing techniques for a high throughput screening of protein-protein interactions in vitro under reasonably straightforward conditions. In this study approximately 100 proteins of Group A Streptococcus (GAS) predicted to be secreted or surface exposed by genomic and proteomic approaches were purified in a His-tagged form and used to generate protein microarrays on nitrocellulose-coated slides. To identify protein-protein interactions each purified protein was then labeled with biotin, hybridized to the microarray and interactions were detected with Cy3-labelled streptavidin. Only reciprocal interactions, i. e. binding of the same two interactors irrespective of which of the two partners is in solid-phase or in solution, were taken as bona fide protein-protein interactions. Using this approach, we have identified 20 interactors of one of the potent toxins secreted by GAS and known as superantigens. Several of these interactors belong to the molecular chaperone or protein folding catalyst families and presumably are involved in the secretion and folding of the superantigen. In addition, a very interesting interaction was found between the superantigen and the substrate binding subunit of a well characterized ABC transporter. This finding opens a new perspective on the current understanding of how superantigens are modified by the bacterial cell in order to become major players in causing disease.
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Caratterizzazione di linee cellulari da pazienti con sarcomi delle parti molliChiechi, Antonella <1979> 15 June 2009 (has links)
No description available.
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