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Kinds of Animal Species Selected AbstractsImproving in vitro Maturation of Oocytes in the Human Taking Lessons from Experiences in Animal SpeciesREPRODUCTION IN DOMESTIC ANIMALS, Issue 1 2001J Smitz One to three per cent of infertile women develop severe ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome after superovulation for assisted reproduction treatment (ART). This severe complication can be avoided when oocytes are obtained at an immature stage (germinal vesicle stage) out of small or medium-sized follicles. This hypothesis has been tested in several infertile women, but clinical pregnancies are disappointlingly low. This new approach in ART is still at an experimental phase and this treatment has still to be improved before routine clinical application. Experimental work in animals and humans suggest a beneficial effect in providing a short preliminary pretreatment with follicle-stimulating hormone to select for a developing cohort of follicles. The aspiration of oocyte cumulus complexes is carried out with a short needle applying reduced aspiration pressure. A crucial point is to provide the appropriate culture environment for the immature oocytes. An optimal cumulus-enclosed human oocyte culture system needs to be defined. The composition of the culture medium could be suggested by in vitro work carried out in animal models. As developmental competence is established during the latest phases of oocyte growth and is dependent on the storage of RNA, a prolonged in vitro maturation period (before inducing nuclear maturation) could provide the necessary transcriptional and translational changes. The conditions to achieve this improved cytoplasmic maturation by prolonging the in vitro culture remain to be defined. More objective noninvasive parameters for oocyte maturity are also needed to pursue research in this field. [source] Boys Will Be Boys; Cows Will Be Cows: Children's Essentialist Reasoning About Gender Categories and Animal SpeciesCHILD DEVELOPMENT, Issue 2 2009Marianne G. Taylor Two studies (N = 456) compared the development of concepts of animal species and human gender, using a switched-at-birth reasoning task. Younger children (5- and 6-year-olds) treated animal species and human gender as equivalent; they made similar levels of category-based inferences and endorsed similar explanations for development in these 2 domains. In contrast, 10-year-olds and adults treated gender and species concepts as distinct from one another. They viewed gender-linked behavioral properties as open to environmental influence and endorsed environment-based mechanisms to explain gender development. At all ages, children demonstrated differentiated reasoning about physical and behavioral properties, although this differentiation became more stable with age. The role of psychological essentialism in guiding conceptual development is discussed. [source] In Vivo Preclinical Anticoagulation Regimens After Implantation of Ventricular Assist DevicesARTIFICIAL ORGANS, Issue 7 2009Diyar Saeed Abstract Ventricular assist devices (VADs) have demonstrated successfully their ability to treat failing circulation of patients with end-stage heart failure. Among the main obstacles with these VADs is thromboembolic events that increase device-related morbidity and mortality. Prior to the clinical application of any newly developed VAD, the feasibility of the device is tested on animal models. Animal species have different hemostatic properties than human patients, and this factor creates a margin of error when comparing the occurrence of VAD-induced thrombosis in an animal versus a human. This detailed literature review provides a thorough documentation of various preclinical anticoagulation protocols used to date, including their outcomes and recommendations for future anticoagulation management strategies. In summary, the outcomes favor a sheep or pig model over other animal models, and discourage the application of a single anticoagulative agent to improve outcomes with any of the currently available devices. [source] Neurulation in the human embryo revisitedCONGENITAL ANOMALIES, Issue 2 2000Tomoko Nakatsu ABSTRACT It used to be widely accepted that neural tube closure in the human initiates at the level of the future neck and proceeds both cranially and caudally like zip fastener closing. This continuous closure model was recently challenged, and observation of human embryos at the neurulation stage revealed that the closure of the human neural tube initiates at multiple sites. Multi-site closure of the neural tube has been observed in many other animal species, but the initiation sites and the process of neural tube closure are variable among species. Therefore we should be careful when extrapolating the data of normal and abnormal neurulation in laboratory animals to the human. Recent studies in mouse genetics and developmental biology have shown that neural tube defects are quite heterogeneous both etiologically and pathogenetically. Gene mutations responsible for human neural tube defects are largely unknown, but molecular studies of human cases of neural tube defects and their comparison with the mouse genome data should provide a molecular basis for human neural tube defects. [source] Role of Corridors in Plant Dispersal: an Example with the Endangered Ranunculus nodif lorusCONSERVATION BIOLOGY, Issue 2 2003Florian Kirchner But the few experimental studies supporting the usefulness of corridors have all concerned animal species. We investigated the role of corridors in seed dispersal, studying population genetic and demographic structure in metapopulations of the rare, pond-dwelling, autogamous plant species Ranunculus nodiflorus L. in the Fontainebleau Forest ( France ). Differentiation on three polymorphic isozyme markers was strong among local populations ( ponds ) within metapopulations ( sites ) and moderate among metapopulations. Partial Mantel tests revealed that the connection of ponds through temporarily flooded natural corridors, facilitating seed migration, had a strong negative effect on genetic differentiation between local populations and that a pond was more likely to be colonized when connected by corridors to other occupied ponds. Thus, corridors are probably a key element of landscape structure for metapopulation dynamics in R. nodiflorus. From a conservation perspective, our results suggest that corridors could increase the chance of persistence of plant species living in fragmented habitats by promoting seed dispersal between habitat patches. Resumen: La propuesta de que la migración de organismos entre parches de hábitat puede ser incrementada por corredores ha sido muy discutida en biología de la conservación. Pero los pocos estudios experimentales que apoyan la utilidad de los corredores han sido enfocados hacia especies de animales. Investigamos el papel de los corredores en la dispersión de semillas, estudiando la genética poblacional y la estructura demográfica en metapoblaciones de la especie de planta rara, autógama, habitante de estanques Ranunculus nodiflorus L. en el bosque Fontainebleau ( Francia ). La diferenciación de tres isozimas polimórficas marcadoras fue fuerte entre las poblaciones locales ( estanques ) dentro de metapoblaciones ( sitios ) y fue moderada entre metapoblaciones. Las pruebas parciales de Mantel revelaron que la conexión de estanques a través de corredores naturales inundados facilitando la migración de semillas, tuvo un efecto negativo fuerte en la diferenciación genética entre poblaciones locales y que un estanque fue más probable de ser colonizado cuando se conectaba por corredores con otros estanques ocupados. Por lo tanto, los corredores probablemente son un factor clave de la estructura del paisaje para dinámicas metapoblacionales en R. nodiflorus. Desde una perspectiva de conservación, nuestros resultados sugieren que los corredores podrían incrementar la probabilidad de persistencia de especies de plantas que viven en hábitats fragmentados al promover la dispersión de semillas entre parches de hábitats. [source] Localization of estrogen receptor-, and -,mRNA in brain areas controlling sexual behavior in Japanese quailDEVELOPMENTAL NEUROBIOLOGY, Issue 2 2006Krister Halldin Abstract Two estrogen receptors (ERs), denoted ER, and ER,, have been identified in humans and various animal species, including the Japanese quail. Estrogens play a key role in sexual differentiation and in activation of sexual behavior in Japanese quail. The distribution of ER, in the brain of male and female adult quail has previously been studied using immunohistochemistry, whereas in situ hybridization has been employed to study the distribution of ER, mRNA in males only. In this article, we used in situ hybridization to study the distribution of mRNAs for both ER, and ER, in brain areas controlling sexual behavior of Japanese quail. Our results show that both ER, mRNA and ER, mRNA are localized in areas important for sexual behavior, such as the preoptic area and associated limbic areas, in both males and females. Moreover, we found differences in distribution of mRNA for the two receptors in these areas. The results of this article support previously reported data and provide novel data on localization of ER mRNAs in adult quail brain of both sexes. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Neurobiol, 2005 [source] Six-month-old infants use analog magnitudes to represent durationDEVELOPMENTAL SCIENCE, Issue 5 2006Kristy VanMarle While many studies have investigated duration discrimination in human adults and in nonhuman animals, few have investigated this ability in infants. Here, we report findings that 6-month-old infants are able to discriminate brief durations, and, as with other animal species, their discrimination function is characterized by Weber's Law: proportionate difference rather than absolute difference between stimuli determined successful discrimination. Importantly, paralleling results found with nonhuman animals, the Weber function that we found for infants' discrimination of time is the same as that found for their discrimination of number. Infants discriminated durations of an audiovisual event differing by a 1:2 ratio, but not those differing by a 2:3 ratio, over a range of durations. This suggests that (a) in human as in nonhuman animals, the same mental mechanism may underlie the ability to measure duration as to represent number, and (b) we may share this mental mechanism with other animal species. [source] From genomes to morphology: a view from amphioxusACTA ZOOLOGICA, Issue 1 2010Peter W. H. Holland Abstract Holland, P.W.H. 2010. From genomes to morphology: a view from amphioxus. ,Acta Zoologica (Stockholm) 91: 81,86 As complete genome sequences are determined from an ever-increasing number of animal species, new opportunities are arising for comparative biology. For zoologists interested in the evolution of shape and form, however, there is a problem. The link between genome sequence and morphology is not direct and is obfuscated by complex and evolving genetic pathways, even when conserved regulatory genes are considered. Nonetheless, a large-scale comparison of genome sequences between extant chordates reveals an intriguing parallel between genotypic and phenotypic evolution. Tunicates have highly altered genomes, with loss of ancestral genes and shuffled genetic arrangements, while vertebrate genomes are also derived through gene loss and genome duplication. The recently sequenced amphioxus genome, in contrast, reveals much greater stasis on the cephalochordate lineage, in parallel to a less derived body plan. The opportunities and challenges for relating genome evolution to morphological evolution are discussed. [source] Climate, climate change and range boundariesDIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS, Issue 3 2010Chris D. Thomas Abstract Aim, A major issue in ecology, biogeography, conservation biology and invasion biology is the extent to which climate, and hence climate change, contributes to the positions of species' range boundaries. Thirty years of rapid climate warming provides an excellent opportunity to test the hypothesis that climate acts as a major constraint on range boundaries, treating anthropogenic climate change as a large-scale experiment. Location, UK and global data, and literature. Methods, This article analyses the frequencies with which species have responded to climate change by shifting their range boundaries. It does not consider abundance or other changes. Results, For the majority of species, boundaries shifted in a direction that is concordant with being a response to climate change; 84% of all species have expanded in a polewards direction as the climate has warmed (for the best data available), which represents an excess of 68% of species after taking account of the fact that some species may shift in this direction for non-climatic reasons. Other data sets also show an excess of animal range boundaries expanding in the expected direction. Main conclusions, Climate is likely to contribute to the majority of terrestrial and freshwater range boundaries. This generalization excludes species that are endemic to specific islands, lakes, rivers and geological outcrops, although these local endemics are not immune from the effects of climate change. The observed shifts associated with recent climate change are likely to have been brought about through both direct and indirect (changes to species' interactions) effects of climate; indirect effects are discussed in relation to laboratory experiments and invasive species. Recent observations of range boundary shifts are consistent with the hypothesis that climate contributes to, but is not the sole determinant of, the position of the range boundaries of the majority of terrestrial animal species. [source] Design of an Ultrasound Contrast Agent for Myocardial PerfusionECHOCARDIOGRAPHY, Issue 2000Michel Schneider Ph.D. Myocardial contrast echography (MCE) has been a major research objective in cardiovascular ultrasound for almost two decades. The design of a contrast agent fulfilling the needs of MCE requires taking into consideration a number of points: a basic decision has to be made whether a deposit agent or a free-flowing agent would be more appropriate and whether an agent active at low/medium mechanical index (MI) is preferable to an agent active only at high MI; only a small percentage of the cardiac output enters the coronary microcirculation, which means that highly sensitive bubble detection methods, such as harmonic imaging or pulse inversion, are needed; the low velocity of blood in the microcirculation that leads to extensive bubble destruction during imaging means that intermittent imaging and/or an agent active at low MI is (are) required; the duration of the contrast effect must be sufficient to allow a complete examination and is affected by the rate of contrast administration; the performance of the contrast agent should not be equipment-dependent. The ultimate goal in MCE is to be able to quantify blood flow in the various segments to determine if adequate oxygenation is achieved. Ultrasound-mediated bubble destruction followed by the measurement of bubble replenishment kinetics opens new perspectives for quantification. SonoVue is a free-flowing ultrasound contrast agent made of sulphur hexafluoride microbubbles stabilized by a highly elastic phospholipid monolayer. SonoVue is able to produce myocardial opacification at a wide range of acoustic pressures and in particular at Mis as low as 0.1. Its performance is not equipment-dependent. Good results for myocardial opacification have been observed in all animal species tested (dogs, minipigs, rabbits), using continuous as well as intermittent imaging. Trials are in progress to demonstrate the clinical utility of SonoVue for rest and stress perfusion studies, in particular for the diagnosis of CAD, the detection of myocardial infarction, the assessment of the success of interventions and myocardial viability, and the detection of hibernating myocardium. [source] Foraging animals create fertile patches in an Australian desert shrublandECOGRAPHY, Issue 5 2009Alex I. James Fertile patches are created and maintained by a combination of physical and biologically-mediated processes including soil disturbance by animals. We examined the creation of fertile patches by 4 vertebrates, the greater bilby Macrotis lagotis, burrowing bettong Bettongia lesueur, European rabbit Oryctolagus cuniculus, and Gould's sand goanna Varanus gouldii within dunes, ecotones, and swales in a dunefield in arid South Australia. These animals all create pits when foraging for subterranean food resources. We hypothesized that 1) the effect of pits on litter capture would vary among landscapes and animal species, 2) larger pits would trap more litter and seed, 3) pits would contain more viable seed than the surrounding matrix, and 4) the effect of pits on soil chemistry would vary among animal species, and be greater in landscapes with more finely textured soils. We found that litter was restricted almost exclusively to the pits, and was greater in pits with larger openings. Litter capture was greater in ecotones and dunes than in swales. A total of 1307 seedlings from 46 genera germinated from litter samples taken from the pits, but no seedlings emerged from samples taken from soil surrounding the pits. Foraging pits contained significantly higher levels of total C and N than surrounding soil, and total C and N concentrations were greatest in swales and lowest in dunes. Pits contained ca 55% more mineralisable N that surface soils, and pits constructed by bilbies and bettongs contained half the concentration of mineralisable N as those of rabbits and goannas. Concentrations of mineral N and mineralisable N were also greatest in the swales. Our results demonstrate the importance of animal-created pits as nutrient sinks and sites for seedling establishment, and suggest that changes in the composition of arid zone vertebrates may have resulted in profound changes to nutrient and soil dynamics in arid Australia. [source] Gamete production and sexual size dimorphism in an insect (Orchesella cincta) with indeterminate growthECOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 2 2002G. Ernsting Abstract 1. The relationship of growth and body size with reproductive effort in animal species has been studied much less for males than for females. This imbalance applies to Orchesella cincta (L.) (Collembola), an insect with indeterminate growth, in which egg production is related positively to body size and negatively to growth. 2. To allow a comparison of the reproductive effort of male and female O. cincta, development and growth in immature stages of both sexes, and growth and spermatophore production for adult males were studied. 3. Embryonic development time and hatchling size did not differ between prospective males and females, but from hatching on the trajectories diverged, with males growing more slowly and maturing earlier and at a much smaller body size than females. 4. Neither the number of spermatophores deposited in the first adult instar (= inter-moult period) nor the total number of spermatophores deposited during seven instars was related to body size or growth. 5. Differences in growth rate between instars with and without spermatophore deposition indicated that the physiology of spermatophore production inhibits growth, which, however, was compensated for during the next instar. 6. The difference in the relationship of gamete production with body size and growth between males and females explains the divergence of their size at maturity. [source] Total population density during the first year of life as a major determinant of lifetime body-length trajectory in marble troutECOLOGY OF FRESHWATER FISH, Issue 4 2008S. Vincenzi Abstract,,, The conditions experienced early in life can strongly influence life-history trajectories in a variety of animal species. Here, we use data from four isolated populations of the endangered stream-dwelling salmonid marble trout (Salmo marmoratus Cuvier 1817) living in the Soca and Idrijca river basins (Slovenia) to explore the influence of the total density experienced during and after the first year of life by marble trout year-classes on body length of marble trout through the lifetime. Analyses were performed by pooling together the stream-specific datasets to cover a wider range of densities. Mean body length of marble trout year-classes through the lifetime (from age 1+ to 5+) was negatively related to total density of marble trout during the first year of life. The relationship between density during the first growth period and body length through the lifetime was well described by negative power curves. Total population density after the first year of life was not correlated with body length, thus suggesting that body growth trajectories are heavily determined early in life. Given size-dependent sexual maturity and egg production in marble trout, the relationship between density early in life and lifetime individual growth may have strong implications in terms of population dynamics and regulation of population size. [source] Reproductive strategies in small populations: using Atlantic salmon as a case studyECOLOGY OF FRESHWATER FISH, Issue 4 2007F. Juanes Abstract,,, Wild salmonid populations with only a few breeding adults may not exhibit a significant reduction in genetic variability compared with larger populations. Such an observation suggests that effective population sizes are larger than population size estimates based on direct adult counts and/or the mating strategy maximises outbreeding, contributing to increased heterozygosity. In the case of wild Atlantic salmon Salmo salar populations, stratification by age classes and sexes on the spawning grounds avoids inbreeding and increases genetic variability. We studied the breeding composition of four Spanish salmon populations. Over a 7-year period we concluded that the probability of within-cohort mating is very low: females generally reproduce after two sea-winters whereas males reproduce mostly as one sea-winter (grilse) and/or mature parr. Considering different levels of contribution of mature parr to spawning derived from field surveys, we developed a simple model for estimating effective population sizes and found that they doubled with 65% parr contribution expected for rivers at this latitude (43°N), and ranged from 100,800 individuals. The effect of between-cohort mating was modelled considering different ranges of differences in allele frequencies between cohorts and resulted in 28,50% increases in heterozygosity when considering a 65% parr contribution. The complex mating strategy of Atlantic salmon contributes to explain the high levels of genetic variability found for small populations of this species. This model can probably be extended to other animal species with mating strategies involving different cohorts. [source] Environmental determinants correlated to Vibrio harveyi -mediated death of marine gastropodsENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 1 2010Youhei Fukui Summary Vibrio harveyi is an emerging pathogen that causes mass mortality in a wide variety of marine animal species; however, it is still unclear which environmental determinants correlate V. harveyi dynamics and the bacterium-mediated death of marine animal life. We conducted a correlation analysis over a 5-year period (2003,2007) analysing the following data: V. harveyi abundance, marine animal mortality and environmental variables (seawater temperature, salinity, pH, chlorophyll a, rainfall and total viable bacterial counts). The samples were collected from a coastal area in northern Japan, where deaths of a marine gastropod species (Haliotis discus hannai) have been reported. Our analysis revealed significant positive correlations between average seawater temperature and average V. harveyi abundance (R = 0.955; P < 0.05), and between average seawater temperature and V. harveyi -mediated abalone death (R = 0.931; P < 0.05). Based on the regression model, n°C rise in seawater temperature gave rise to a 21n -fold increase in the risk of mortality caused by V. harveyi infection. This is the first report providing evidence of the strong positive correlation between seawater temperature and V. harveyi -mediated death of marine species. [source] A physiologically based pharmacokinetic model for endosulfan in the male Sprague-Dawley ratsENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY, Issue 5 2006Melissa P. L. Chan Abstract Endosulfan, an organochlorine (OC) insecticide belonging to the cyclodiene group, is one of the most commonly used pesticides to control pests in vegetables, cotton, and fruits. To date, no physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model has been located for endosulfan in animal species and humans. The estimation by a mathematical model is essential since information on humans can scarcely be obtained experimentally. The PBPK model was constructed based on the pharmacokinetic data of our experiment following single oral administration of 14C-Endosulfan to male Sprague-Dawley rats. The model was parameterized by using reference physiological parameter values and partition coefficients that were determined in the experiment and optimized by manual adjustment until the best visual fit of the simulations with the experimental data were observed. The model was verified by simulating the disposition of 14C-Endosulfan in vivo after single and multiple oral dosages and comparing simulated results with experimental results. The model was further verified by using experimental data retrieved from the literature. The present model could reasonably predict target tissue dosimetries in rats. Simulation with three-time repeated administration of 14C-Endosulfan and experimental data retrieved from the literature by the constructed model fitted fairly well with the experimental results; thus suggesting that the newly developed PBPK model was developed. Sensitivity analyses were used to determine those input parameters with the greatest influence on endosulfan tissue concentrations. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Environ Toxicol 21: 464,478, 2006. [source] Detection and analysis of Borna disease virus in Chinese patients with neurological disordersEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY, Issue 3 2009Q. Li Background and purpose:, Borna disease virus (BDV) is a neurotropic RNA virus that is known to cause neurological disturbances in various animal species, potentially even humans. However, the association between BDV infection and human neurological disorders remains unclear. Methods:, Between August 2005 and March 2006, 65 patients with neurological disorders were enrolled into our study. The presence of BDV p24 RNA from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) was investigated by using nested reverse transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR) assay. Results:, Borna disease virus p24 RNA was detected from PBMCs in six patients with viral encephalitis by using nested RT-PCR assay. However, BDV p24 RNA was not detected in patients with multiple sclerosis or peripheral nerve diseases. Conclusion:, There might be possible associations between BDV infection and human viral encephalitis. [source] Trace eyeblink conditioning in decerebrate guinea pigsEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 7 2003Sadaharu Kotani Abstract We investigated the trace eyeblink conditioning in decerebrate guinea pigs to elucidate the possible role of the cerebellum and brainstem in this hippocampus-dependent task. A 350-ms tone conditioned stimulus was paired with a 100-ms periorbital shock unconditioned stimulus with a trace interval of either 0, 100, 250 or 500 ms. Decerebrate animals readily acquired the conditioned response with a trace interval of 0 or 100 ms. Even in the paradigm with a 500-ms trace interval, which is known to depend critically on the hippocampus in all animal species examined, the decerebrate guinea pigs acquired the conditioned response, which had adaptive timing as well as in the other paradigms with a shorter trace interval. However, it took many more trials to learn in the 500-ms trace paradigm than in the shorter trace interval paradigms, and the conditioned response expression was unstable from trial to trial. When decerebrate animals were conditioned step by step with a trace interval of 100, 250 and 500 ms, sequentially, they easily acquired the adaptive conditioned response to a 500-ms trace interval. However, the frequency of conditioned responses decreased after the trace interval was shifted from 250 ms to 500 ms, which was not observed after the shift from 100 ms to 250 ms. These results suggest that the cerebellum and brainstem could maintain the ,trace' of the conditioned stimulus and associate it with the unconditioned stimulus even in the 500-ms trace paradigm, but that the forebrain might be required for facilitating and stabilizing the association. [source] Genomic structure and expression analysis of the RNase , family ortholog gene in the insect Ceratitis capitataFEBS JOURNAL, Issue 24 2008Theodoros N. Rampias Cc RNase is the founding member of the recently identified RNase , family, which is represented by a single ortholog in a wide range of animal taxonomic groups. Although the precise biological role of this protein is still unknown, it has been shown that the recombinant proteins isolated so far from the insect Ceratitis capitata and from human exhibit ribonucleolytic activity. In this work, we report the genomic organization and molecular evolution of the RNase , gene from various animal species, as well as expression analysis of the ortholog gene in C. capitata. The high degree of amino acid sequence similarity, in combination with the fact that exon sizes and intronic positions are extremely conserved among RNase , orthologs in 15 diverse genomes from sea anemone to human, imply a very significant biological function for this enzyme. In C. capitata, two forms of RNase , mRNA (0.9 and 1.5 kb) with various lengths of 3, UTR were identified as alternative products of a single gene, resulting from the use of different polyadenylation signals. Both transcripts are expressed in all insect tissues and developmental stages. Sequence analysis of the extended region of the longer transcript revealed the existence of three mRNA instability motifs (AUUUA) and five poly(U) tracts, whose functional importance in RNase , mRNA decay remains to be explored. [source] Apoptosis-inhibiting activities of BIR family proteins in Xenopus egg extractsFEBS JOURNAL, Issue 9 2005Yuichi Tsuchiya In many animal species including Xenopus, ovulated eggs possess an intrinsic apoptotic execution system. This program is inhibited for a limited time by some maternal apoptosis inhibitors, although their molecular properties remain uncharacterized. Baculovirus IAP repeat (BIR) family proteins contain evolutionarily conserved BIR domains and play important roles in apoptosis suppression, and are therefore good candidates as maternal apoptosis inhibitors. We identified four maternal BIR family proteins in Xenopus eggs and, using the biochemical advantages of egg extracts, examined their physiological functions. These molecules included two survivin-related proteins, xEIAP/XLX, and a possible ortholog of XIAP named xXIAP. The addition of recombinant xXIAP greatly delayed apoptotic execution, whereas the immunodepletion of endogenous xXIAP significantly accelerated the onset of apoptosis. In contrast, xEIAP/XLX was a poor apoptosis inhibitor, and neither of the survivin orthologs showed anti-apoptotic activity in our assay. Both xEIAP/XLX and xXIAP were degraded by activated caspases, and also by a novel proteolytic system that required the presence of C-terminal RING finger domain but was insensitive to proteasome inhibition. Our data suggest that the regulation of endogenous xXIAP concentration is important for the survival of Xenopus eggs. [source] Women's traditional fishery and alternative aquatic resource livelihood strategies in the Southern Cameroonian RainforestFISHERIES MANAGEMENT & ECOLOGY, Issue 3 2010R. E. BRUMMETT Abstract, To inform the development of alternative livelihoods, the women's traditional alok fishery in the Campo-Ma'an National Park and buffer zone of southern Cameroon were studied over 15 months. Participatory rural appraisal was used to characterise livelihood strategies among 45 households. Thirty-three cultured crops, nine farmed animal species and 65 non-timber forest products, including 31 bushmeat species are cultivated in, or harvested from, the forest. Transport is a major impediment to commercial trade of all local products. In 16 alok fishing events, average weight of fish harvested was 5.14 kg per 280 m of stream distributed among an average of 23 fishers for a return of 220 g person,1 or 40 g fish h,1 over 5 h of work. Fish and crustacean standing stock was 25 g per linear metre or 167 t when extrapolated to the zone. Implications for rainforest livelihoods in light of the Millennium Development Goals are discussed. [source] Geographical variation in the size of body organs in seabirdsFUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, Issue 3 2000G. M. Hilton Abstract 1.,The size of body organs shows adaptive temporal variation in many animal species. The variation in the size of body organs was examined to see if it is also a component of local adaptation to geographical variation in ecological conditions. 2.,Major body organs were measured in five species of Icelandic seabirds, sampled from two areas where birds experience slightly different ecological conditions. Between-area differences in ecological conditions were consistent among the study species, allowing tests of the generality of ecological effects on organ size. 3.,All major body organs showed geographical size variation. Livers and kidneys were larger in locations where daily energy expenditure was expected to be higher; small intestines were heavier where food was of lower energy density; stomachs were heavier where food was less digestible; heart and flight muscle were larger where flight costs were greater. 4.,It is concluded that adaptive variation in organ size may be an important means by which animals optimize exploitation of their local environment, and may be a proximate factor in intraspecific life-history and metabolic variations between geographically separate populations. [source] Evidences of the gender-related differences in cardiac repolarization and the underlying mechanisms in different animal species and humanFUNDAMENTAL & CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY, Issue 1 2006Jianhua Cheng Abstract Clinical and experimental studies have shown that gender differences exist in cardiac repolarization in various animal species and human, as is evidenced by significantly longer QT, JT intervals and action potential duration in females than in males due to a reduced repolarization reserve in females. The latter is shown by the relatively greater increase in ventricular repolarization and higher incidence of torsades de pointes (TdP) in preparations from females by drugs blocking repolarizing K+ currents. These results can be modulated by gonadectomy, suggesting that gonadal steroids are important determinants of gender difference in repolarization. In human subjects, QT and JT intervals are longer in women, whereas QT dispersion and Tp-e interval (the interval from the peak to the end of T wave) are longer in men. At slow heart rates greater prolongation in QT and increase in transmural repolarization heterogeneity (i.e. increase in Tp-e) may predispose to TdP tachycardias in women. In healthy postmenopausal women, hormone replacement therapy with estrogen alone usually produced a prolongation of QT interval, while estrogen plus progesterone had no significant effects on QT interval but reduced QT dispersion. Along with these, there are still conflicting data reported. Further work is needed before the elucidation of the basis of gender differences in ventricular repolarization. [source] Neural circuit-dependent odor adaptation in C. elegans is regulated by the Ras-MAPK pathwayGENES TO CELLS, Issue 6 2005Takaaki Hirotsu The molecular machinery that mediates odor adaptation in the olfactory neurons is well documented in various animal species. However, types of adaptation that depend on neural circuits are mostly unexplored. We report here that the Ras-MAPK pathway is essential for such a type of odor adaptation, called early adaptation, in C. elegans. Early adaptation requires a pair of AIY interneurons, which receive synaptic inputs from olfactory neurons. Mutants of the Ras-MAPK pathway show defects in early adaptation. Continued exposure to an odorant causes activation of MAP kinase not only in the olfactory neurons, but also in the AIY interneurons. While activity of the Ras-MAPK pathway in the olfactory neurons is important for odor perception, its activity in the AIY interneurons is important for odor adaptation. Our results thus reveal a dual role of the Ras-MAPK pathway in sensory processing in the nervous system of C. elegans. [source] Pharmacological interventions in aging and age-associated disordersGERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY INTERNATIONAL, Issue 2 2007Kenichi Kitani In the present study, past attempts using different pharmaceuticals and chemicals which were reported to prolong lifespans of animals are critically reviewed. Despite a large number of trials in animals and humans, the validity of supplementation of antioxidant vitamins such as vitamins A, E and C for improving human health remains unresolved at present. A recent approach using antioxidant mimetics called the EUK series which, despite an initial enthusiastically reported success in prolonging the lifespan of nematodes, remains again unsettled because of the failure in reproducing the initial success by follow-up studies. ,-Phenyl- tert -butylnitrone and related nitrones were initially introduced as radical scavengers. Some of these (e.g. disodium 2,4-disulfophenyl-N- tert -butylnitrone) are at phase 3 clinical trials as an agent to treat cerebral stroke. This effect, however, appears at least in part to be related to signal transduction which makes these agents effective against cerebral stroke even when they are administered later than its onset. (,)Deprenyl is a monoamine oxidase-B inhibitor and has some neuroprotective and anti-apoptotic effects. The drug has also been shown to prolong the lifespans of at least four different animal species. The drug upregulates superoxide dismutase and catalase activities in selective brain regions of dopaminergic nature. These effects on antioxidant enzyme activities are suspected to be causally related to its effect on lifespans of animals. Future trials using these and other drugs are expected to open new doors for interventions in aging and age-associated disorders in humans. [source] Habitat shifts of endangered species under altered climate conditions: importance of biotic interactionsGLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, Issue 11 2008KRISTINE L. PRESTON Abstract Predicting changes in potential habitat for endangered species as a result of global warming requires considering more than future climate conditions; it is also necessary to evaluate biotic associations. Most distribution models predicting species responses to climate change include climate variables and occasionally topographic and edaphic parameters, rarely are biotic interactions included. Here, we incorporate biotic interactions into niche models to predict suitable habitat for species under altered climates. We constructed and evaluated niche models for an endangered butterfly and a threatened bird species, both are habitat specialists restricted to semiarid shrublands of southern California. To incorporate their dependency on shrubs, we first developed climate-based niche models for shrubland vegetation and individual shrub species. We also developed models for the butterfly's larval host plants. Outputs from these models were included in the environmental variable dataset used to create butterfly and bird niche models. For both animal species, abiotic,biotic models outperformed the climate-only model, with climate-only models over-predicting suitable habitat under current climate conditions. We used the climate-only and abiotic,biotic models to calculate amounts of suitable habitat under altered climates and to evaluate species' sensitivities to climate change. We varied temperature (+0.6, +1.7, and +2.8 °C) and precipitation (50%, 90%, 100%, 110%, and 150%) relative to current climate averages and within ranges predicted by global climate change models. Suitable habitat for each species was reduced at all levels of temperature increase. Both species were sensitive to precipitation changes, particularly increases. Under altered climates, including biotic variables reduced habitat by 68,100% relative to the climate-only model. To design reserve systems conserving sensitive species under global warming, it is important to consider biotic interactions, particularly for habitat specialists and species with strong dependencies on other species. [source] Influences of species, latitudes and methodologies on estimates of phenological response to global warmingGLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, Issue 9 2007CAMILLE PARMESANArticle first published online: 14 AUG 200 Abstract New analyses are presented addressing the global impacts of recent climate change on phenology of plant and animal species. A meta-analysis spanning 203 species was conducted on published datasets from the northern hemisphere. Phenological response was examined with respect to two factors: distribution of species across latitudes and taxonomic affiliation or functional grouping of target species. Amphibians had a significantly stronger shift toward earlier breeding than all other taxonomic/functional groups, advancing more than twice as fast as trees, birds and butterflies. In turn, butterfly emergence or migratory arrival showed three times stronger advancement than the first flowering of herbs, perhaps portending increasing asynchrony in insect,plant interactions. Response was significantly stronger at higher latitudes where warming has been stronger, but latitude explained < 4% of the variation. Despite expectation, latitude was not yet an important predictor of climate change impacts on phenology. The only two previously published estimates of the magnitude of global response are quite different: 2.3 and 5.1 days decade,1 advancement. The scientific community has assumed this difference to be real and has attempted to explain it in terms of biologically relevant phenomena: specifically, differences in distribution of data across latitudes, taxa or time periods. Here, these and other possibilities are explored. All analyses indicate that the difference in estimated response is primarily due to differences between the studies in criteria for incorporating data. It is a clear and automatic consequence of the exclusion by one study of data on ,stable' (nonresponsive) species. Once this is accounted for, the two studies support each other, generating similar conclusions despite analyzing substantially nonoverlapping datasets. Analyses here on a new expanded dataset estimate an overall spring advancement across the northern hemisphere of 2.8 days decade,1. This is the first quantitative analysis showing that data-sampling methodologies significantly impact global (synthetic) estimates of magnitude of global warming response. [source] European phenological response to climate change matches the warming patternGLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, Issue 10 2006ANNETTE MENZEL Abstract Global climate change impacts can already be tracked in many physical and biological systems; in particular, terrestrial ecosystems provide a consistent picture of observed changes. One of the preferred indicators is phenology, the science of natural recurring events, as their recorded dates provide a high-temporal resolution of ongoing changes. Thus, numerous analyses have demonstrated an earlier onset of spring events for mid and higher latitudes and a lengthening of the growing season. However, published single-site or single-species studies are particularly open to suspicion of being biased towards predominantly reporting climate change-induced impacts. No comprehensive study or meta-analysis has so far examined the possible lack of evidence for changes or shifts at sites where no temperature change is observed. We used an enormous systematic phenological network data set of more than 125 000 observational series of 542 plant and 19 animal species in 21 European countries (1971,2000). Our results showed that 78% of all leafing, flowering and fruiting records advanced (30% significantly) and only 3% were significantly delayed, whereas the signal of leaf colouring/fall is ambiguous. We conclude that previously published results of phenological changes were not biased by reporting or publication predisposition: the average advance of spring/summer was 2.5 days decade,1 in Europe. Our analysis of 254 mean national time series undoubtedly demonstrates that species' phenology is responsive to temperature of the preceding months (mean advance of spring/summer by 2.5 days°C,1, delay of leaf colouring and fall by 1.0 day°C,1). The pattern of observed change in spring efficiently matches measured national warming across 19 European countries (correlation coefficient r=,0.69, P<0.001). [source] Expression of CD8, identifies a distinct subset of effector memory CD4+ T lymphocytesIMMUNOLOGY, Issue 2 2006Iole Macchia Summary Circulating CD4+ CD8+ T lymphocytes have been described in the peripheral blood of humans and several animal species. However, the origin and functional properties of these cells remain poorly understood. In the present study, we evaluated the frequency, phenotype and function of peripheral CD4+ CD8+ T cells in rhesus macaques. Two distinct populations of CD4+ CD8+ T cells were identified: the dominant one was CD4hi CD8lo and expressed the CD8,, homodimer, while the minor population was CD4lo CD8hi and expressed the CD8,, heterodimer. The majority of CD4hi CD8,lo T cells exhibited an activated effector/memory phenotype (CCR5lo CD7, CD28, HLA-DR+) and expressed relatively high levels of granzyme B. Intracellular cytokine staining assays demonstrated that the frequency of cytomegalovirus-specific T cells was enriched five-fold in CD4hi CD8,lo T cells compared to single-positive CD4+ T cells, whereas no consistent enrichment was observed for simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV)-specific T cells. Cross-sectional studies of SIV-infected animals demonstrated that the frequency of CD4hi CD8,lo T cells was lower in wild-type SIV-infected animals compared to uninfected controls, although prospective studies of SIV-infected animals demonstrated depletion of CD4hi CD8,lo lymphocytes only in a subset of animals. Taken together, these data suggest that CD4+ T cells expressing CD8, represent an effector/memory subset of CD4+ T cells and that this cell population can be depleted during the course of SIV infection. [source] Identification of a novel gene, Mblk-1, that encodes a putative transcription factor expressed preferentially in the large-type Kenyon cells of the honeybee brainINSECT MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, Issue 5 2001Hideaki Takeuchi Abstract Mushroom bodies (MBs) are considered to be involved in higher-order sensory processing in the insect brain. To identify the genes involved in the intrinsic function of the honeybee MBs, we searched for genes preferentially expressed therein, using the differential display method. Here we report a novel gene encoding a putative transcription factor (Mblk-1) expressed preferentially in one of two types of intrinsic MB neurones, the large-type Kenyon cells, which makes Mblk-1 a candidate gene involved in the advanced behaviours of honeybees. A putative DNA binding motif of Mblk-1 had significant sequence homology with those encoded by genes from various animal species, suggesting that the functions of these proteins in neural cells are conserved among the animal kingdom. [source] |