898 research outputs found
Nonadditive Genetic Effects in Animal Behavior
Heritabilities, commonly used to predict evolutionary potential, are notoriously low for behaviors. Apart from strong contributions of environmental variance in reducing heritabilities, the additive genetic components can be very low, especially when they are camouflaged by nonadditive genetic effects. We first report the heritabilities of courtship traits in founderâflush and control populations of the housefly (Musca domestica L.). We estimated the heritability of each male and female display through the regression of the courtships involving daughters and sons (with randomly selected mates) onto the âmidparentalâ courtship values of their parents. Overall, the average heritability was significantly higher for the parentâdaughter assays than for the parentâson assays. We attributed the low (even negative) heritabilities to genotypeâbyâenvironment interactions whereby the maleâs behavior is influenced by the âenvironmentâ of his mating partnerâs preferences for the display, generating epistasis through indirect genetic effects. Moreover, bottlenecked lines had up to 800% of the heritability of the controls, suggesting âconversionâ of additive genetic variance from nonadditive components. Second, we used lineâcross assays on separate populations that had been selected for divergence in mating behavior to identify dominance and epistasis through heterosis and outbreeding depression in courtship. Finally, our literature review confirms the prevalence of such low heritabilities (i.e., a conservative mean of 0.38) and nonadditive genetics in other behavioral repertoires (64% of the studies). We conclude that animal behavior is especially prone to the gamut of quantitative genetic complexities that can result in negative heritabilities, negative selection responses, inbreeding depression, conversion, heterosis, and outbreeding depression
Environmentally conscious consumption patterns in Hungarian households
This article provides a comprehensive review of the literature on the theoretical aspects of sustainable consumption. The conditions for consumersâ social responsibility and the formation of environmentally conscious behavior patterns will also be discussed, along with possible methods for motivating behavioral changes. The authors have completed a primary research study with the purpose of surveying environmentally conscious consumption patterns in Hungary. They also examined how the provision of appropriate information and the raising of awareness might encourage sustainable consumption. According to their findings, the respondentsâ knowledge on environmentally conscious behavior was rather limited, and reinforcement was needed in identifying appropriate activity alternatives. This paper provides a summary of the qualitative research phase which employed in-depth interviews, logging and focus groups. The consecutive application of these methods enabled the authors to keep track of the process and the consequences of raising awareness
NF-kB functions in synaptic signaling and behavior
Ca^(2+)-regulated gene transcription is essential to diverse physiological processes, including the adaptive plasticity associated with learning. We found that basal synaptic input activates the NF-kB transcription factor by a pathway requiring the Ca^(2+)/calmodulin-dependent kinase CaMKII and local submembranous Ca^(2+) elevation. The p65:p50 NF-kB form is selectively localized at synapses; p65-deficient mice have no detectable synaptic NF-kB. Activated NF-kB moves to the nucleus and could directly transmute synaptic signals into altered gene expression. Mice lacking p65 show a selective learning deficit in the spatial version of the radial arm maze. These observations suggest that long-term changes to adult neuronal function caused by synaptic stimulation can be regulated by NF-kB nuclear translocation and gene activation
Atmospheric stilling offsets the benefits from reduced nutrient loading in a large shallow lake
As part of a global phenomenon, a 30% decrease in average wind speed since 1996 in southern Estonia
together with more frequent easterly winds resulted in 47% decrease in bottom shear stress in the large
(270 km2), shallow (mean depth 2.8 m), and eutrophic Lake VÔrtsjÀrv. Following a peak in eutrophication pressure
in the 1970sâ80s, the concentrations of total nutrients were declining. Nonmetric Multidimensional Scaling
(NMDS) ordination of a 54-year phytoplankton community composition time-series (1964â2017) revealed
three distinct periods with breaking points coinciding with changes in wind and/or water level. Contrary to
expectations, we detected no decrease in optically active substances that could be related to wind stilling,
whereas phytoplankton biomass showed an increasing trend despite reduced nutrient levels. Here we show how
opening of the âlight niche,â caused by declining amount of suspended sediments, was capitalized and filled by
the light-limited phytoplankton community. We suggest that wind stilling is another global factor, complementary
to climate warming that counteracts eutrophication mitigation in lakes and may provide a challenge to
assessment of the lake ecological status.Main financial support for EMU: European Unionâs Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme Under the Marie SkĆodowska-Curie Action, Innovative Training Networks, European Joint Doctorates.Project name, acronym and grant number: Management of climatic extreme events in lakes and reservoirs for the protection of ecosystem services, MANTEL, grant agreement No 722518.Publication date and, if applicable, length of embargo period: Published as Early View on 07.10.2019, no embargo period.Main financial support for EMU: European Unionâs Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme Under the Marie SkĆodowska-Curie Action, Innovative Training Networks, European Joint Doctorate
Electronic sculpting of ligand-GPCR subtype selectivity:the case of angiotensin II
GPCR subtypes possess distinct functional
and pharmacological profiles,
and thus development of subtype-selective ligands has immense therapeutic
potential. This is especially the case for the angiotensin receptor
subtypes AT1R and AT2R, where a functional negative control has been
described and AT2R activation highlighted as an important cancer drug
target. We describe a strategy to fine-tune ligand selectivity for
the AT2R/AT1R subtypes through electronic control of ligand aromatic-prolyl
interactions. Through this strategy an AT2R high affinity (<i>K</i><sub>i</sub> = 3 nM) agonist analogue that exerted 18,000-fold
higher selectivity for AT2R versus AT1R was obtained. We show that
this compound is a negative regulator of AT1R signaling since it is
able to inhibit MCF-7 breast carcinoma cellular proliferation in the
low nanomolar range
Tennis Injuries Among German League Players: Investigating Patterns and Epidemiology of Acute and Chronic Injuries
Jonas Krueckel,1 Dominik Szymski,1 Julia Lenz,1 Julian Fluegel,2 Johannes Weber,1 Leonard Achenbach,3 Rainer Meffert,4 Volker Alt,1 Kai Fehske4,5 1Department of Trauma Surgery, University Medical Center Regensburg, Regensburg, Germany; 2Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Arcus Clinics Pforzheim, Pforzheim, Germany; 3Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Koenig Ludwig Haus Wuerzburg, Wuerzburg, Germany; 4Department of Trauma Surgery, University Hosptial Wuerzburg, Wuerzburg, Germany; 5Department of Orthopedic and Trauma Surgery, Johanniter Waldkrankenhaus Bonn, Bonn, GermanyCorrespondence: Kai Fehske, Department of Orthopedic and Trauma Surgery, Johanniter Waldkrankenhaus Bonn, WaldstraĂe 73, Bonn, 53177, Germany, Email [email protected] Jonas Krueckel, Department of Trauma Surgery, University Medical Center Regensburg, Regensburg, Germany, Email [email protected]: While injuries among elite tennis athletes are extensively documented, a notable research gap exists regarding tennis injuries among club-level players. This study examines tennis injuries in German league players, with a particular emphasis on the impact of racquet properties and court surfaces, distinguishing between chronic and acute injuries.Patients and Methods: Retrospectively analyzing data from 600 tennis players over a 1.5-year period, a standardized questionnaire covered anthropometrics, injury characteristics, equipment usage, and court surface conditions.Results: The study identified 1012 tennis-related injuries, averaging 1.7 per player. Acute injuries predominantly affected the lower extremity (56%), with ankle injuries being the most prevalent, and ligaments were the most commonly affected structures (36.4%). Chronic complaints (reported by 364 athletes) focused on the upper extremity (63.2%), primarily tendon injuries (56.8%). Racket properties exhibited no significant impact on chronic upper extremity injuries.Conclusion: This study highlights a high incidence of acute lower extremity injuries, especially ankle ligament injuries, among German league tennis players. It offers crucial insights for devising targeted injury prevention strategies applicable to amateur, semi-professional, and professional tennis players, despite finding no significant link between racquet material and chronic upper extremity injuries.Keywords: tennis, injury, epidemiology, court surface, racquet material, ankle, ligamen
Author correction : a global database for metacommunity ecology, integrating species, traits, environment and space
Correction to: Scientific Data https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-019-0344-7, published online 08 January 202
Author correction : a global database for metacommunity ecology, integrating species, traits, environment and space
Correction to: Scientific Data https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-019-0344-7, published online 08 January 202
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