1,390 research outputs found

    Familiarity Breeds Contempt: Kangaroos Persistently Avoid Areas with Experimentally Deployed Dingo Scents

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    Background: Whether or not animals habituate to repeated exposure to predator scents may depend upon whether there are predators associated with the cues. Understanding the contexts of habituation is theoretically important and has profound implication for the application of predator-based herbivore deterrents. We repeatedly exposed a mixed mob of macropod marsupials to olfactory scents (urine, feces) from a sympatric predator (Canis lupus dingo), along with a control (water). If these predator cues were alarming, we expected that over time, some red kangaroos (Macropus rufous), western grey kangaroos (Macropus fuliginosus) and agile wallabies (Macropus agilis) would elect to not participate in cafeteria trials because the scents provided information about the riskiness of the area. Methodology/Principal Findings: We evaluated the effects of urine and feces independently and expected that urine would elicit a stronger reaction because it contains a broader class of infochemicals (pheromones, kairomones). Finally, we scored non-invasive indicators (flight and alarm stomps) to determine whether fear or altered palatability was responsible for the response. Repeated exposure reduced macropodid foraging on food associated with 40 ml of dingo urine, X = 986.75±3.97 g food remained as compared to the tap water control, X = 209.0±107.0 g (P0.5). Macropodids did not habituate to repeated exposure to predator scents, rather they avoided the entire experimental area after 10 days of trials (R2 = 83.8; P<0.001). Conclusions/Significance: Responses to urine and feces were indistinguishable; both elicited fear-based responses and deterred foraging. Despite repeated exposure to predator-related cues in the absence of a predator, macropodids persistently avoided an area of highly palatable food. Area avoidance is consistent with that observed from other species following repeated anti-predator conditioning, However, this is the first time this response has been experimentally observed among medium or large vertebrates 2 where a local response is observed spatially and an area effect is revealed over time

    Fucosylation inhibitor development for producing afucosylated antibodies

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    Please click Additional Files below to see the full abstract

    Pennsylvania Folklife Vol. 36, No. 3

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    • Die Farbarei: Bethlehem\u27s 18th Century Dye House • Daniel Sudermann, Schwenkfelder Hymn Writer • The Pernicious Effects of Witness upon Plain-Worldly Relations • Traditional Slovak Courtship and Wedding Customs • Aldes un Neies / Old & Newhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/pafolklifemag/1115/thumbnail.jp

    Sounds Scary? Lack of Habituation following the Presentation of Novel Sounds

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    Animals typically show less habituation to biologically meaningful sounds than to novel signals. We might therefore expect that acoustic deterrents should be based on natural sounds

    Pennsylvania Folklife Vol. 25, No. 3

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    • The Pennsylvania Germans and the American Revolution • The Blooming Grove Colony • The Salebill • The Schlegel Family and the Rosicrucian Movement • A Log Settler\u27s Fort/Home • Pennsylvania Dutch Studies at Ursinus College, 1976 • The Country Sale: Folk-Cultural Questionnaire No. 43https://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/pafolklifemag/1067/thumbnail.jp

    GFP-Fragment Reassembly Screens for the Functional Characterization of Variants of Uncertain Significance in Protein Interaction Domains of the BRCA1 and BRCA2 Genes

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    Genetic testing for BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes has led to the identification of many unique variants of uncertain significance (VUS). Multifactorial likelihood models that predict the odds ratio for VUS in favor or against cancer causality, have been developed, but their use is conditioned by the amount of necessary data, which are difficult to obtain if a variant is rare. As an alternative, variants mapping to the coding regions can be examined using in vitro functional assays. BRCA1 and BRCA2 proteins promote genome protection by interacting with different proteins. In this study, we assessed the functional effect of two sets of variants in BRCA genes by exploiting the green fluorescent protein (GFP)-reassembly in vitro assay, which was set-up to test the BRCA1/BARD1, BRCA1/UbcH5a, and BRCA2/DSS1 interactions. Based on the findings observed for the validation panels of previously classified variants, BRCA1/UbcH5a and BRCA2/DSS1 binding assays showed 100% sensitivity and specificity in identifying pathogenic and non-pathogenic variants. While the actual efficiency of these assays in assessing the clinical significance of BRCA VUS has to be verified using larger validation panels, our results suggest that the GFP-reassembly assay is a robust method to identify variants affecting normal protein functioning and contributes to the classification of VUS

    Towards demonstration of photonic payload for telecom satellites

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    To address the challenges of the Digital Agenda for Europe (DAE) and also to remain in line with the evolution of terrestrial communications in a globally connected world, a major increase in telecoms satellites capacity is required in the near future. With telecom satellites payloads based on traditional RF equipment, increase in capacity and flexibility has always translated into a more or less linear increase in equipment count, mass, power consumption and power dissipation. The main challenge of next generation of High Throughput Satellites (HTS) is therefore to provide a ten-fold-increased capacity with enhanced flexibility while maintaining the overall satellite within a "launchable" volume and mass envelope [1], [2], [3]. Photonic is a very promising technology to overcome the above challenges. The ability of Photonic to handle high data rates and high frequencies, as well as enabling reduced size, mass, immunity to EMI and ease of harness routing (by using fibre-optic cables) is critical in this scenario

    The History of Astrophysics in Antarctica

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    We examine the historical development of astrophysical science in Antarctica from the early 20th century until today. We find three temporally overlapping eras, each having a rather distinct beginning. These are the astrogeological era of meteorite discovery, the high energy era of particle detectors, and the photon astronomy era of microwave, sub--mm and infrared telescopes, sidelined by a few niche experiments at optical wavelengths. The favourable atmospheric and geophysical conditions are briefly examined, followed by an account of the major experiments and a summary of their results.Comment: 29 pages, 10 figures, 1 table Submitted to PASA in April 200

    Immunolocalization and temporal distribution of cytokine expression during the development of vein graft intimal hyperplasia in an experimental model

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    AbstractPurpose: Vein graft stenosis caused by intimal hyperplasia (IH) accounts for 30% to 50% of late bypass graft failures; however, the biochemical mediators of vein graft IH have been poorly defined. We attempted to evaluate the spatial and temporal distribution of five principal cytokines (interleukin-1 beta [IL-1β], platelet-derived growth factor AA [PDGF-AA], basic fibroblast growth factor [bFGF], interferon gamma [INFγ], and tumor necrosis factor alpha [TNF-α]) during the development of IH in a rat vein graft model.Methods: Rat epigastric vein interposition grafts in the femoral artery were harvested at 6 hours, 2 days, 1 week, 2 weeks, and 4 weeks after the grafting procedure and studied with immunohistochemical and standard histologic techniques. The cytokine expression in the endothelium and media/neointima was quantified as the percentage of immunopositive cells per high-power field.Results: Maximal hyperplasia occurred 2 weeks after the grafting procedure. Peak expression of IL-1β and bFGF occurred by 2 days. PDGF-AA expression paralleled the development of IH, peaking at 2 weeks and then declining. TNF-α expression increased at 1 week and remained elevated. INFγ was seen only in control grafts.Conclusions: The coordinated early release of IL-1β and bFGF and the down-regulation of INFγ seem to trigger an inflammatory response, thereby initiating IH. The process then is propagated by the release of PDGF-AA and TNF-α, with concomitant smooth muscle cell proliferation and production of extracellular matrix. It is likely that this complex milieu of local paracrine signaling is required to generate the hyperplastic response seen in failing vein grafts. (J Vasc Surg 1996;24:463-71.
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