Persistence assessments on eight mid‐season and ten late cultivars of perennial ryegrass were made at the end of the second, third and fourth years after sowing. Botanical analyses were carried out on the herbage from plots cut in the fourth year and these results related lo the different persistence assessments. It was found that persistence assessments carried out at the end of the second year enabled predictions to be made about botanical composition of cuitivars in the fourth year. Little extra precision was gained by delaying assessment until the third or fourth years as the ranking order of cultivars with respect to persistence remained largely unchanged. All persistence assessments were positively correlated with yields of sown cultivars and negatively correlated with yields of unsown herbage species in the fourth year. However, only low correlation coefficients were obtained between persistence assessments and the total yield of sown cultivar and unsown species in the fourth year, due to yield substitution between these two components. In swards sown as monocultures low persistence in a cultivar is considered to be a lack of perenniality and tiller regeneration rather than poor competitive ability against volunteer species though in mixed swards competitive ability per se will have considerable influence upon the changes in botanical composition under different managements. Persistence and yield capacity are seen, however, as distinct characteristics of a cuitivar and long‐term yield potential is a joint function of these characteristics.
Botanical analyses were carried out on the herbage from plots of twelve early cultivars of perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne) cut in their fourth year and the results related to visual persistence assessments carried out on the cultivars at the end of the second and third harvest years. Persistence assessments were found to be highly and positively correlated with the yields of sown cultivars (r=+0.96***,r=+0.99***) and to be highly and negatively correlated with the yields of unsown herbage species (r =+0.98***, r =−094***). The plots of the less persistent cultivars were invaded by unsown grass species and docks which contributed in varying degrees to total DM yield, reducing the correlation of total yield with persistence. Assessments of botanical composition of swards made at the end of the second year provided reliable predictions of the relative persistence of the cultivars. The results of the investigations indicated that assessment of persistence, as well as yield potential, is fundamentally important in cultivar evaluation.
Epidermal growth factor (EGF) and its homologue, transforming growth factor alpha (TGF alpha), are mitogenic, angiogenic and tumour-promoting polypeptides. Much effort has therefore been directed towards the development of EGF/TGF alpha antagonists as a potential cancer therapy. Initial reports that some EGF/TGF alpha synthetic fragments possess EGF-receptor binding activity have not been confirmed in subsequent studies. We have found, however, that the murine EGF B-loop sequence: Ac-[(S-acetamidomethyl)-Cys20,31]-EGF-(20-31)-NH2 [(mEGF-(20-31)] produces biological effects consistent with the parent molecule in bovine, murine, chick and human, but not rat, model systems. In parallel experiments, both mEGF and mEGF-(20-31) elicit migratory, cytoprotective, growth-stimulatory, growth-inhibitory and angiogenic responses. The reverse B-loop sequence, mEGF-(31-20), is also mitogenic and angiogenic. The C-loop sequence, mEGF-(33-42), has no mitogenic or angiogenic activity when applied alone, does not block the mitogenic effect of mEGF, but does block the angiogenic effect of mEGF. It has not been established that the EGF receptor is the target for these fragments, but the results suggest that the residual biological activities of EGF fragments merit further investigation.
The response of the early extraembryonic vasculature to epidermal growth factor (EGF) was studied. Millipore filter discs containing 10ng-1 microgram of EGF were placed onto the advancing edge of the area vasculosa of 3-day chick embryos, and the effect examined macroscopically and histologically 24 hours after disc application. The capillary density at the site of application increased significantly, and the effect was seen to be dose-dependent; a similar but more marked response was observed in the vessel cross-sectional area per unit length. This change in vascularity was accompanied by tortuous folding of the mesoderm and endoderm (which normally lie parallel to the ectoderm in a trilaminar arrangement) into the yolk substance: this may indicate precocious development of all three layers (ectoderm, mesoderm and ectoderm) of the membrane, and the proliferative effects of EGF may not be confined to the vascular endothelium.
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