111 research outputs found

    Self-folding nano- and micropatterned hydrogel tissue engineering scaffolds by single step photolithographic process

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    Current progress in tissue engineering is focused on the creation of environments in which cultures of relevant cells can adhere, grow and form functional tissue. We propose a method for controlled chemical and topographical cues through surface patterning of self-folding hydrogel films. This provides a conversion of 2D patterning techniques into a viable method of manufacturing a 3D scaffold. While similar bilayers have previously been demonstrated, here we present a faster and high throughput process for fabricating self-folding hydrogel devices incorporating controllable surface nanotopographies by serial hot embossing of sacrificial layers and photolithography

    Banner News

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    https://openspace.dmacc.edu/banner_news/1066/thumbnail.jp

    Coral Gardens Reef, Belize: A Refugium in the Face of Caribbean-Wide \u3ci\u3eAcropora\u3c/i\u3e Spp. Coral Decline

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    Caribbean Acropora spp. corals have undergone a decline in cover since the second half of the twentieth century. Loss of these architecturally complex and fast-growing corals has resulted in significant, cascading changes to the character, diversity, and available eco spaces of Caribbean reefs. Few thriving Acropora spp. populations exist today in the Caribbean and western North Atlantic seas, and our limited ability to access data from reefs assessed via long-term monitoring efforts means that reef scientists are challenged to determine resilience and longevity of existing Acropora spp. reefs. Here we used multiple dating methods to measure reef longevity and determine whether Coral Gardens Reef, Belize, is a refuge for Acropora cervicornis against the backdrop of wider Caribbean decline. We used a new genetic-aging technique to identify sample sites, and radiocarbon and high-precision uranium-thorium (U-Th) dating techniques to test whether one of the largest populations of extant A. cervicornis in the western Caribbean is newly established after the 1980s, or represents a longer-lived, stable population. We did so with respect for ethical sampling of a threatened species. Our data show corals ranging in age from 1910 (14C) or 1915 (230Th) to at least November 2019. While we cannot exclude the possibility of short gaps in the residence of A. cervicornis earlier in the record, the data show consistent and sustained living coral throughout the 1980s and up to at least 2019. We suggest that Coral Gardens has served as a refuge for A. cervicornis and that identifying other, similar sites may be critical to efforts to grow, preserve, conserve, and seed besieged Caribbean reefs

    The Effect of Particulate Matter on Cardiovascular Health

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    There is an abundance of evidence that suggests exposure to air pollution, specifically particulate matter (PM), increases one's risk of developing cardiovascular disease. Levels of PM are continuing to increase due to multiple factors such as societal reliance on fossil fuel, global warming, drought, and wildfires; thus, making PM exposure a growing health concern. This review will begin with a definition of particulate matter and how the Air Quality Index can be utilized to understand PM levels. There are several pathophysiological mechanisms by which PM contributes to the development of cardiovascular disease: increasing systemic inflammation, oxidative stress, plaque formation, fibrinogen levels, and platelet counts. Through these mechanisms, PM increases one's risk of developing cardiovascular disease-specifically atherosclerosis, hyperlipidemia, hypertension, stroke, and myocardial infarction. Although further research is needed, clinicians should consider PM as an important risk factor that increases the risk of developing cardiovascular disease. Further, federal regulation and intervention is necessary to combat this global health issue. Currently, using the air quality index (AQI) forecast is a simple tool that individuals can use to assess and limit exposure to harmful; particulate matter

    Coral Gardens Reef, Belize: A refugium in the face of Caribbean-wide Acropora spp. coral decline.

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    Caribbean Acropora spp. corals have undergone a decline in cover since the second half of the twentieth century. Loss of these architecturally complex and fast-growing corals has resulted in significant, cascading changes to the character, diversity, and available eco-spaces of Caribbean reefs. Few thriving Acropora spp. populations exist today in the Caribbean and western North Atlantic seas, and our limited ability to access data from reefs assessed via long-term monitoring efforts means that reef scientists are challenged to determine resilience and longevity of existing Acropora spp. reefs. Here we used multiple dating methods to measure reef longevity and determine whether Coral Gardens Reef, Belize, is a refuge for Acropora cervicornis against the backdrop of wider Caribbean decline. We used a new genetic-aging technique to identify sample sites, and radiocarbon and high-precision uranium-thorium (U-Th) dating techniques to test whether one of the largest populations of extant A. cervicornis in the western Caribbean is newly established after the 1980s, or represents a longer-lived, stable population. We did so with respect for ethical sampling of a threatened species. Our data show corals ranging in age from 1910 (14C) or 1915 (230Th) to at least November 2019. While we cannot exclude the possibility of short gaps in the residence of A. cervicornis earlier in the record, the data show consistent and sustained living coral throughout the 1980s and up to at least 2019. We suggest that Coral Gardens has served as a refuge for A. cervicornis and that identifying other, similar sites may be critical to efforts to grow, preserve, conserve, and seed besieged Caribbean reefs
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