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The vulnerable status of the Amazon manatee, , indicates the need to seek measures to guarantee its conservation. In this context, the cultivation of cells in vitro is a strategy that should at least guarantee the preservation of their genetic material. Thus, we established for the first time a primary culture of Amazonian manatee fibroblasts (TINsf) from a skin biopsy of a young male. Karyotypic analysis of the 3rd, 7th, and 12th passages confirmed the taxonomic identity of the species (2n = 56/NF = 92) and indicated that this culture presents genomic stability. Gene and protein expression of vimentin at the 13th passage show the predominant presence of fibroblasts in TINsf. To test the cell line's responsiveness to materials and demonstrate a possible application of this culture, it was exposed to andiroba seed oil (ASO), and its viability and proliferative capacity were evaluated. ASO demonstrated toxic effects at the highest concentrations and longest exposure times tested, reproducing results observed in human cultures, indicating the applicability of TINsf in toxicological and biotechnological studies. After cryopreservation, the TINsf line maintained its proliferative potential, indicating the establishment of a new culture available for future studies.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani14050686 | DOI Listing |
Antibiotics (Basel)
July 2025
Grupo de Pesquisa Química Aplicada à Tecnologia, Escola Superior de Tecnologia, Universidade do Estado do Amazonas, Manaus 69055-035, Brazil.
The emergence of antimicrobial resistance represents a critical global health threat, requiring the discovery of novel bioactive compounds. Fungi from Amazonian biodiversity are promising sources of secondary metabolites with potential antimicrobial activity. This study aimed to investigate the production of antimicrobial compounds by two Amazonian fungal strains using the OSMAC (One Strain-Many Compounds) approach.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFR Soc Open Sci
August 2025
Division of Anthropology, American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY, USA.
Existing models of human growth provide limited insight into underlying mechanisms responsible for inter-individual and inter-population variation in children's growth trajectories. Building on general theories linking growth to metabolic rates, we develop a causal parametric model of height and weight growth incorporating a representation of human body allometry and a process-partitioned representation of ontogeny. This model permits separation of metabolic causes of growth variation, potentially influenced by nutrition and disease, from allometric factors, potentially under stronger genetic control.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Glob Health
August 2025
School of Public Health and Social Work, Florida International University, Miami, USA.
Mercury contamination remains a significant public health concern in the Amazon basin. This review synthesizes recent evidence on mercury exposure, health outcomes, and emerging co-exposures in the Amazon countries. Data were presented at the Annual Conference of Global Health in the Americas, organized by Florida International University in Cartagena, Colombia on September 15, 2023, at a virtual session of the Consortium of Universities for Global Health on November 29, 2023, and subsequently updated with further literature search.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Evol
July 2025
Centro de Energia Nuclear Na Agricultura Universidade de São Paulo Piracicaba Brazil.
Cacao (), the primary source for chocolate manufacturing, is native to the Upper Amazon basin. It was introduced into Mesoamerica by pre-Columbian societies and later spread globally following European colonization, becoming a commercially significant crop. Today, cacao populations exist along a continuum from wild to naturalized and cultivated forms across the Tropical Americas, complicating efforts to distinguish genuinely wild populations from those influenced by human activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMolecules
July 2025
Ethnographic Museum, House of Ecuadorian Culture, Avenida 6 de Diciembre 345, Quito 170136, Ecuador.
One of the medicinal plants used in Ecuador that has the best prospects for industrialization is guayusa ( Loes.). This review shows the potential of the species, analyzing the ethnobotanical aspects, ancestral uses, secondary metabolites, and research.
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