88 research outputs found
Reliance on pumped mother’s milk has an environmental impact
peer-reviewedBreastfeeding is an environmentally friendly process; however when feeding relies on
pumped mother’s milk, the environmental picture changes. Waste plastics and heavy metals raise
concerns regarding resource efficiency, waste treatment, and detrimental effects on health. Reliance
on pumped milk rather than breastfeeding may also effect obesity and family size, which in turn
have further environmental impacts. Information on pump equipment rarely includes environmental
information and may focus on marketing the product for maximum profit. In order for parents,
health workers, and health policy makers to make informed decisions about the reliance on pumped
mother’s milk, they need information on the broad and far reaching environmental aspects. There was
no published research found that examined the environmental impact of using pumped mother’s
milk. A project is ongoing to examine this issue
Embedding education for sustainable development in healthcare: opportunities for long range environmental impact mitigation from the maternity service to the home
Paper presented at Global Cleaner Production & Sustainable Consumption Conference, http://www.cleanerproductionconference.com/Significant environmental degradation and pollution effects can be attributed to healthcare.
Improving the environmental performance of both hospital facilities and wider healthcare
services requires healthcare professionals to respond to both challenging and changing
environments. It is increasingly evident that regulation is unlikely to succeed in greening
healthcare, due, in part, to differences across nations and speed at which new products and
processes are developed. Within maternity services, infant feeding actions contribute to
resource inefficiency, liquid, solid and electronic wastes such as single use bottles, composite
material teats and collars, and breast-pumps. Given that the importance of breastfeeding is well
established it should not be assumed that breastfeeding does not incur environmental impacts,
as the use of breast-pumps and sterilising equipment has increased over time. The birth of a
child, a significant life event, provides opportunities to influence long term behaviour and
choices with respect to wider environmental considerations when raising children. Correlations
between information provided by healthcare professionals and infant feeding actions among
parents reveals the potential extension of this key relationship to drive change. The visibility of
environmental initiatives and best practice within maternity services may serve as living
laboratories for families to witness and adopt environmentally beneficial measures.
Environmental education resources, for new parents and healthcare staff, have potential to
deliver both wide and far reaching impacts. This paper identifies opportunities for
environmental education within maternity services, assesses delivery modes using case
studies, and evaluates potential impacts for both health and environmental sustainability
Backcasting to identify food waste prevention and mitigation opportunities for infant feeding in the maternity services
peer-reviewedFood waste in hospitals is of major concern for two reasons: first, healthcare needs to move toward preventative and demand led models for sustainability and second, food system sustainability needs to seek preventative measures such as diet adaptation and waste prevention. The impact of breast-milk substitute use on health services is well established in literature in terms of healthcare implications, cost and resourcing, however as a food demand and waste management issue little has been published to date.
This paper presents the use of a desk based backcasting method to analyse food waste prevention, mitigation and management options within the Irish Maternity Service. Best practice in healthcare provision and waste management regulations are used to frame solutions.
Strategic problem orientation revealed that 61% of the volume of ready to use breast-milk substitutes purchased by maternity services remains unconsumed and ends up as waste. Thirteen viable strategies to prevent and manage this waste were identified.
Significant opportunities exist to prevent waste and also decrease food demand leading to both positive health and environmental outcomes. Backcasting methods display great promise in delivering food waste management strategies in healthcare settings, especially where evidenced best practice policies exist to inform solution forming processes.
In terms of food waste prevention and management, difficulties arise in distinguishing between demand reduction, waste prevention and waste reduction measures under the current Waste Management Hierarchy definitions. Ultimately demand reduction at source requires prioritisation, a strategy which is complimentary to health policy on infant feeding
Methamphetamine Induces Dopamine D1 Receptor-Dependent Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress-Related Molecular Events in the Rat Striatum
Methamphetamine (METH) is an illicit toxic psychostimulant which is widely abused. Its toxic effects depend on the release of excessive levels of dopamine (DA) that activates striatal DA receptors. Inhibition of DA-mediated neurotransmission by the DA D1 receptor antagonist, SCH23390, protects against METH-induced neuronal apoptosis. The initial purpose of the present study was to investigate, using microarray analyses, the influence of SCH23390 on transcriptional responses in the rat striatum caused by a single METH injection at 2 and 4 hours after drug administration. We identified 545 out of a total of 22,227 genes as METH-responsive. These include genes which are involved in apoptotic pathways, endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, and in transcription regulation, among others. Of these, a total of 172 genes showed SCH23390-induced inhibition of METH-mediated changes. Among these SCH23390-responsive genes were several genes that are regulated during ER stress, namely ATF3, HSP27, Hmox1, HSP40, and CHOP/Gadd153. The secondary goal of the study was to investigate the role of DA D1 receptor stimulation on the expression of genes that participate in ER stress-mediated molecular events. We thus used quantitative PCR to confirm changes in the METH-responsive ER genes identified by the microarray analyses. We also measured the expression of these genes and of ATF4, ATF6, BiP/GRP78, and of GADD34 over a more extended time course. SCH23390 attenuated or blocked METH-induced increases in the expression of the majority of these genes. Western blot analysis revealed METH-induced increases in the expression of the antioxidant protein, Hmox1, which lasted for about 24 hours after the METH injection. Additionally, METH caused DA D1 receptor-dependent transit of the Hmox1 regulator protein, Nrf2, from cytosolic into nuclear fractions where the protein exerts its regulatory functions. When taken together, these findings indicate that SCH23390 can provide protection against neuronal apoptosis by inhibiting METH-mediated DA D1 receptor-mediated ER stress in the rat striatum. Our data also suggest that METH-induced toxicity might be a useful model to dissect molecular mechanisms involved in ER stress-dependent events in the rodent brain
Physiological responses of selected African sorghum landraces to progressive water stress and re-watering
Sorghumis particularly drought tolerant compared with other cereal crops and is favoured for subsistence farming
in water scarce regions of the world. This study was conducted to identify South African sorghum landraces
with superior drought tolerance compared with a drought-tolerant breeding line (P898012). Seedlings of 14
South African sorghumlandrace accessions were initially screened for drought tolerance by assessing percentage
leaf water content (LWC) during progressive water deficit. Four landraces (designated LR5, LR6, LR35, and LR36)
recorded higher LWC than P898012. These were subsequently evaluated with P898012 during the reproductive
growth stage, for their physiological responses to mild (4 days) and severe (6 days)water stress treatments and a
moderate re-watered treatment on day 7. Plant height, soil moisture, and LWC were measured during harvests.
Chlorophyll, carotenoid, and proline contents were quantified. All five genotypes maintained LWC above 80%
during mild and severe stress treatments. For LR35 and LR36, LWC were recorded within 8% less in comparison
to their well-watered controls following the moderate re-watered treatment. Significantly higher chlorophyll
and carotenoid contents were recorded for both LR6 and LR35 in comparison to P898012 during severe stress.
When LWC was reduced in LR36 (to 73.68%) and LR35 (to 73.51%), their proline content significantly increased
by 14- and 16-fold, respectively. In this study,we have identified four previously uncharacterised sorghum genotypes
exhibiting drought tolerance and described their physiological responses during water deficit and moderate
re-watering. Aside from their application to breeding, these landraces are valuable resources to elucidate
genetic mechanisms that enable drought tolerance in South African sorghum.Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) - Biosciences, Pretoria and the Gauteng Department of Agriculture and Rural Development (GDARD), South Africa. Ms Natrisha Devnarain was awarded a Professional Development Programme (PDP) PhD Scholarship from DST-NRF to work on this project.http://www.elsevier.com/locate/sajb2017-03-31hb201
Linear mitochondrial DNA is rapidly degraded by components of the replication machinery.
Emerging gene therapy approaches that aim to eliminate pathogenic mutations of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) rely on efficient degradation of linearized mtDNA, but the enzymatic machinery performing this task is presently unknown. Here, we show that, in cellular models of restriction endonuclease-induced mtDNA double-strand breaks, linear mtDNA is eliminated within hours by exonucleolytic activities. Inactivation of the mitochondrial 5'-3'exonuclease MGME1, elimination of the 3'-5'exonuclease activity of the mitochondrial DNA polymerase POLG by introducing the p.D274A mutation, or knockdown of the mitochondrial DNA helicase TWNK leads to severe impediment of mtDNA degradation. We do not observe similar effects when inactivating other known mitochondrial nucleases (EXOG, APEX2, ENDOG, FEN1, DNA2, MRE11, or RBBP8). Our data suggest that rapid degradation of linearized mtDNA is performed by the same machinery that is responsible for mtDNA replication, thus proposing novel roles for the participating enzymes POLG, TWNK, and MGME1
Cadherin-11 localizes to focal adhesions and promotes cell-substrate adhesion
Cadherin receptors have a well-established role in cell–cell adhesion, cell polarization and differentiation. However, some cadherins also promote cell and tissue movement during embryonic development and tumour progression. In particular, cadherin-11 is upregulated during tumour and inflammatory cell invasion, but the mechanisms underlying cadherin-11 stimulated cell migration are still incompletely understood. Here, we show that cadherin-11 localizes to focal adhesions and promotes adhesion to fibronectin in Xenopus neural crest, a highly migratory embryonic cell population. Transfected cadherin-11 also localizes to focal adhesions in different mammalian cell lines, while endogenous cadherin-11 shows focal adhesion localization in primary human fibroblasts. In focal adhesions, cadherin-11 co-localizes with β1-integrin and paxillin and physically interacts with the fibronectin-binding proteoglycan syndecan-4. Adhesion to fibronectin mediated by cadherin-11/syndecan-4 complexes requires both the extracellular domain of syndecan-4, and the transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains of cadherin-11. These results reveal an unexpected role of a classical cadherin in cell–matrix adhesion during cell migration
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METHAMPHETAMINE PRECONDITIONING CAUSES DIFFERENTIAL CHANGES IN STRIATAL TRANSCRIPTIONAL RESPONSES TO LARGE DOSES OF THE DRUG
Methamphetamine (METH) is a toxic drug of abuse, which can cause significant decreases in the levels of monoamines in various brain regions. However, animals treated with progressively increasing doses of METH over several weeks are protected against the toxic effects of the drug. In the present study, we tested the possibility that this pattern of METH injections might be associated with transcriptional changes in the rat striatum, an area of the brain which is known to be very sensitive to METH toxicity and which is protected by METH preconditioning. We found that the presence and absence of preconditioning followed by injection of large doses of METH caused differential expression in different sets of striatal genes. Quantitative PCR confirmed METH-induced changes in some genes of interest. These include small heat shock 27 kD proteins 1 and 2 (HspB1 and HspB2), brain derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), and heme oxygenase-1 (Hmox-1). Our observations are consistent with previous studies which have reported that ischemic or pharmacological preconditioning can cause reprogramming of gene expression after lethal ischemic insults. These studies add to the growing literature on the effects of preconditioning on the brain transcriptome
CD8 Cells of Patients with Diffuse Cutaneous Leishmaniasis Display Functional Exhaustion: The Latter Is Reversed, In Vitro, by TLR2 Agonists
Leishmania mexicana (Lm) causes localized (LCL) and diffuse (DCL) cutaneous leishmaniasis. DCL patients have a poor cellular immune response leading to chronicity. It has been proposed that CD8 T lymphocytes (CD8) play a crucial role in infection clearance, although the role of CD8 cytotoxicity in disease control has not been elucidated. Lesions of DCL patients have been shown to harbor low numbers of CD8, as compared to patients with LCL, and leishmanicidal treatment restores CD8 numbers. The marked response of CD8 towards Leishmania parasites led us to analyze possible functional differences between CD8 from patients with LCL and DCL. We compared IFNγ production, antigen-specific proliferation, and cytotoxicity of CD8 purified from PBMC against autologous macrophages (MO) infected with Leishmania mexicana (MOi). Additionally, we analyzed tissue biopsies from both groups of patients for evidence of cytotoxicity associated with apoptotic cells in the lesions. We found that CD8 cell of DCL patients exhibited low cytotoxicity, low antigen-specific proliferation and low IFNγ production when stimulated with MOi, as compared to LCL patients. Additionally, DCL patients had significantly less TUNEL+ cells in their lesions. These characteristics are similar to cellular “exhaustion” described in chronic infections. We intended to restore the functional capacity of CD8 cells of DCL patients by preincubating them with TLR2 agonists: Lm lipophosphoglycan (LPG) or Pam3Cys. Cytotoxicity against MOi, antigen-specific proliferation and IFNγ production were restored with both stimuli, whereas PD-1 (a molecule associated with cellular exhaustion) expression, was reduced. Our work suggests that CD8 response is associated with control of Lm infection in LCL patients and that chronic infection in DCL patients leads to a state of CD8 functional exhaustion, which could facilitate disease spread. This is the first report that shows the presence of functionally exhausted CD8 T lymphocytes in DCL patients and, additionally, that pre-stimulation with TLR2 ligands can restore the effector mechanisms of CD8 T lymphocytes from DCL patients against Leishmania mexicana-infected macrophages
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