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Age-dependent Effect (age-dependent + effect)
Selected AbstractsAge-dependent effect of prenatal stress on hippocampal cell proliferation in female ratsEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 3 2009Muriel Koehl Abstract Stressors occurring during pregnancy can alter the developmental trajectory of offspring and lead to, among other deleterious effects, cognitive deficits and hyperactivity of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis. A recent feature of the prenatal stress (PS) model is its reported influence on structural plasticity in hippocampal formation, which sustains both cognitive functions and stress responsiveness. Indeed, we and others have previously reported that males exposed to stress in utero are characterized by a decrease in hippocampal cell proliferation, and consequently neurogenesis, from adolescence to senescence. Recent studies in females submitted to PS have reported conflicting results, ranging from no effect to a decrease in cell proliferation. We hypothesized that changes in cell proliferation in PS female rats are age dependent. To address this issue, we examined the impact of PS on hippocampal cell proliferation in juvenile, young, middle-aged and old females. As hypothesized, we found an age-dependent effect of PS in female rats as cell proliferation was significantly decreased only when animals reached senescence, a time when adrenal gland weight also increased. These data suggest that the deleterious effects of PS on hippocampal cell proliferation in females are either specific to senescence or masked during adulthood by protective factors. [source] Age-related plasma reference ranges for two heparin-binding proteins , vitronectin and platelet factor 4INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LABORATORY HEMATOLOGY, Issue 6 2009F. NEWALL Summary This study was conducted to establish age-related reference ranges for two heparin-binding proteins , vitronectin and platelet factor 4 (PF4) , and to determine if the quantitative values of these proteins may contribute to the reported age-dependent effect of unfractionated heparin (UFH). Plasma samples were obtained from healthy children aged between 1 month and 16 years and from healthy adult volunteers. Two commercial kits were used to measure plasma vitronectin and PF4 levels. Results were reported as mean and boundaries including 95% of the population. Plasma vitronectin levels for children aged 1,5 years were significantly higher compared with adults. Plasma PF4 levels for infants <1 year of age were significantly lower compared with adults. The differences between reference values for both proteins in all other age-groups were not statistically significant. This study for the first time has established age-related reference ranges for vitronectin and PF4. In establishing these ranges, the quantitative values of these proteins do not appear to be the major contributory cause for the age-dependent variation in UFH effect. Future studies are required to evaluate the possible impact of age-dependent differences in binding between heparin-binding proteins and UFH. [source] Contact calls of common marmosets (Callithrix jacchus): influence of age of caller on antiphonal calling and other vocal responsesAMERICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY, Issue 2 2009H.-C. Chen Abstract Marmosets, as do many other primates, live in forest environments, are group living and constantly at risk of predation. Retaining contact with one another is therefore a matter of survival. We ask here whether their contact calls (phee and twitter vocalizations) are in some way ordered acoustically by sex or age and whether the calls of older marmosets elicit different responses than those of younger marmosets. In our study, marmosets (2,14 years) were visually isolated from conspecifics and the vocal responses to each isolated caller by other marmosets in the colony were recorded. Vocal responses to phee calls largely consisted of phee calls and, less commonly, twitter calls. No differences between the responses to calls by males and females were apparent. However, we found a strong positive and significant correlation between the caller's age and the percentage of its phee calls receiving a phee response, and a significant negative correlation between the caller's age and the percentage of its phee calls receiving a twitter response. The older the marmoset, the more antiphonal calling occurred. Two-syllable phee calls were emitted more often by older marmosets (10,14 years) than by younger ones (2,6 years). Hence, we have found age-dependent differences in phee-call production and a consistent change in the response received across the adult life-span. This age-dependent effect was independent of kinship relations. This is the first evidence that marmosets distinguish age by vocal parameters alone and make social decisions based on age. Am. J. Primatol. 71:165,170, 2009. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Logistic Regression Models for Polymorphic and Antagonistic Pleiotropic Gene Action on Human Aging and LongevityANNALS OF HUMAN GENETICS, Issue 6 2003Qihua Tan Summary In this paper, we apply logistic regression models to measure genetic association with human survival for highly polymorphic and pleiotropic genes. By modelling genotype frequency as a function of age, we introduce a logistic regression model with polytomous responses to handle the polymorphic situation. Genotype and allele-based parameterization can be used to investigate the modes of gene action and to reduce the number of parameters, so that the power is increased while the amount of multiple testing minimized. A binomial logistic regression model with fractional polynomials is used to capture the age-dependent or antagonistic pleiotropic effects. The models are applied to HFE genotype data to assess the effects on human longevity by different alleles and to detect if an age-dependent effect exists. Application has shown that these methods can serve as useful tools in searching for important gene variations that contribute to human aging and longevity. [source] |