1,103 research outputs found
Associative olfactory learning in the desert locust, Schistocerca gregaria
SUMMARY
Locusts can learn associations between olfactory stimuli and food rewards, and use the acquired memories to choose between foods according to their nutrient requirements. They are a model system for both the study of olfactory coding and insect nutritional regulation. Previous studies have used operant paradigms for conditioning freely moving locusts, restricting the study of the neural mechanisms underlying the acquisition of olfactory memories, which requires restrained preparations for electrophysiological recordings. Here we present two complementary paradigms for the classical conditioning of olfactory memories in restrained desert locusts (Schistocerca gregaria). These paradigms allow precise experimental control over the parameters influencing learning. The first paradigm is based on classical (Pavlovian) appetitive conditioning. We show that opening of the maxillary palps can be used as a measure of memory acquisition. Maxillary palp opening in response to odour presentation is significantly higher in locusts trained with paired presentation of an odour and a food reward than in locusts trained either with unpaired presentation of food and odour or the odour alone. The memory formed by this conditioning paradigm lasts for at least 24 h. In the second paradigm, we show that classical conditioning of an odour memory in restrained locusts influences their decisions in a subsequent operant task. When locusts that have been trained to associate an odour with a food reward are placed in a Y-maze, they choose the arm containing that odour significantly more often than naïve locusts. A single conditioning trial is sufficient to induce a significant bias for that odour for up to 4 h. Multiple- and block-trial training induce a significant bias that lasts at least 24 h. Thus, locusts are capable of forming appetitive olfactory memories in classical conditioning paradigms and can use these memories to modify their decisions.</jats:p
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Regeneration and Experimental Orthotopic Transplantation of a Bioengineered Kidney
Over 100,000 individuals in the United States currently await kidney transplantation, while 400,000 individuals live with end-stage kidney disease requiring hemodialysis. The creation of a transplantable graft to permanently replace kidney function would address donor organ shortage and the morbidity associated with immunosuppression. Such a bioengineered graft must have the kidney’s architecture and function, and permit perfusion, filtration, secretion, absorption, and drainage of urine. We decellularized rat, porcine, and human kidneys by detergent perfusion, yielding acellular scaffolds with vascular, cortical and medullary architecture, collecting system and ureters. To regenerate functional tissue, we seeded rat kidney scaffolds with epithelial and endothelial cells, then perfused these cell-seeded constructs in a whole organ bioreactor. The resulting grafts produced rudimentary urine in vitro when perfused via their intrinsic vascular bed. When transplanted in orthotopic position in rat, the grafts were perfused by the recipient’s circulation, and produced urine via the ureteral conduit in vivo
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Malpighamoeba infection compromises fluid secretion and P-glycoprotein detoxification in Malpighian tubules
Malpighian tubules, analogous to vertebrate nephrons, play a key role in insect osmoregulation and detoxification. Tubules can become infected with a protozoan, Malpighamoeba, which damages their epithelial cells, potentially compromising their function. Here we used a modified Ramsay assay to quantify the impact of Malpighamoeba infection on fluid secretion and P-glycoprotein-dependent detoxification by desert locust Malpighian tubules. Infected tubules have a greater surface area and a higher fluid secretion rate than uninfected tubules. Infection also impairs P-glycoprotein-dependent detoxification by reducing the net rhodamine extrusion per surface area. However, due to the increased surface area and fluid secretion rate, infected tubules have similar total net extrusion per tubule to uninfected tubules. Increased fluid secretion rate of infected tubules likely exposes locusts to greater water stress and increased energy costs. Coupled with reduced efficiency of P-glycoprotein detoxification per surface area, Malpighamoeba infection is likely to reduce insect survival in natural environments
Environmental adaptation, phenotypic plasticity, and associative learning in insects: the desert locust as a case study
The ability to learn and store information should be adapted to the environment in which animals operate to confer a selective advantage. Yet the relationship between learning, memory, and the environment is poorly understood, and further complicated by phenotypic plasticity caused by the very environment in which learning and memory need to operate. Many insect species show polyphenism, an extreme form of phenotypic plasticity, allowing them to occupy distinct environments by producing two or more alternative phenotypes. Yet how the learning and memories capabilities of these alternative phenotypes are adapted to their specific environments remains unknown for most polyphenic insect species. The desert locust can exist as one of two extreme phenotypes or phases, solitarious and gregarious. Recent studies of associative food–odor learning in this locust have shown that aversive but not appetitive learning differs between phases. Furthermore, switching from the solitarious to the gregarious phase (gregarization) prevents locusts acquiring new learned aversions, enabling them to convert an aversive memory formed in the solitarious phase to an appetitive one in the gregarious phase. This conversion provides a neuroecological mechanism that matches key changes in the behavioral environments of the two phases. These findings emphasize the importance of understanding the neural mechanisms that generate ecologically relevant behaviors and the interactions between different forms of behavioral plasticity
The Near Earth Object Scout Spacecraft: A Low-Cost Approach to In-Situ Characterization of the NEO Population
No abstract availabl
The Grizzly, April 4, 2000
Future Changes in Store for UC • Phi Beta Kappa Speaker Set to Arrive on April 6th • International Round Table Important for Student Input • Mail Boxes, Etc. the Place for all Your Copying Needs • Valedictorian and Salutatorian Announced • Letters to the Editor: Debate Disappointment; Bringing Culture to the Grizzly • Design Versus Darwinism, a New Twist on an Old Debate • Problems With Housing? Maybe it\u27s Something in the Air • Music Review: Jimmy Thackery and the Drivers • Softball Improves to 16-4 • UC Baseball Begins Defense of CC Title • Rocky Start for Ursinus Tennis • UC Lax: Prepared to Take the Challenge • Wrestling with the Books: A Full Pin • CC Honors • UC Tumblers Top Off Season at NCAA Championships • Ursinus Track Tackles Widener • Sports Profile: Matt Wiatrakhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1464/thumbnail.jp
Conference of Microelectronics Research 2001
https://scholarworks.rit.edu/meec_archive/1010/thumbnail.jp
The Near Earth Object (NEO) Scout Spacecraft: A Low-cost Approach to In-situ Characterization of the NEO Population
This paper describes a microsatellite spacecraft with supporting mission profile and architecture, designed to enable preliminary in-situ characterization of a significant number of Near Earth Objects (NEOs) at reasonably low cost. The spacecraft will be referred to as the NEO-Scout. NEO-Scout spacecraft are to be placed in Geosynchronous Equatorial Orbit (GEO), cis-lunar space, or on earth escape trajectories as secondary payloads on launch vehicles headed for GEO or beyond, and will begin their mission after deployment from the launcher. A distinguishing key feature of the NEO-Scout system is to design the spacecraft and mission timeline so as to enable rendezvous with and landing on the target NEO during NEO close approach (<0.3 AU) to the Earth-Moon system using low-thrust/high-impulse propulsion systems. Mission durations are on the order 100 to 400 days. Mission feasibility and preliminary design analysis are presented, along with detailed trajectory calculations
Extreme genetic fragility of the HIV-1 capsid
Genetic robustness, or fragility, is defined as the ability, or lack thereof, of a biological entity to maintain function in the face of mutations. Viruses that replicate via RNA intermediates exhibit high mutation rates, and robustness should be particularly advantageous to them. The capsid (CA) domain of the HIV-1 Gag protein is under strong pressure to conserve functional roles in viral assembly, maturation, uncoating, and nuclear import. However, CA is also under strong immunological pressure to diversify. Therefore, it would be particularly advantageous for CA to evolve genetic robustness. To measure the genetic robustness of HIV-1 CA, we generated a library of single amino acid substitution mutants, encompassing almost half the residues in CA. Strikingly, we found HIV-1 CA to be the most genetically fragile protein that has been analyzed using such an approach, with 70% of mutations yielding replication-defective viruses. Although CA participates in several steps in HIV-1 replication, analysis of conditionally (temperature sensitive) and constitutively non-viable mutants revealed that the biological basis for its genetic fragility was primarily the need to coordinate the accurate and efficient assembly of mature virions. All mutations that exist in naturally occurring HIV-1 subtype B populations at a frequency >3%, and were also present in the mutant library, had fitness levels that were >40% of WT. However, a substantial fraction of mutations with high fitness did not occur in natural populations, suggesting another form of selection pressure limiting variation in vivo. Additionally, known protective CTL epitopes occurred preferentially in domains of the HIV-1 CA that were even more genetically fragile than HIV-1 CA as a whole. The extreme genetic fragility of HIV-1 CA may be one reason why cell-mediated immune responses to Gag correlate with better prognosis in HIV-1 infection, and suggests that CA is a good target for therapy and vaccination strategies
Where do stars explode in the ISM? -- The distribution of dense gas around massive stars and supernova remnants in M33
Star formation in galaxies is regulated by turbulence, outflows, gas heating
and cloud dispersal -- processes which depend sensitively on the properties of
the interstellar medium (ISM) into which supernovae (SNe) explode.
Unfortunately, direct measurements of ISM environments around SNe remain
scarce, as SNe are rare and often distant. Here we demonstrate a new approach:
mapping the ISM around the massive stars that are soon to explode. This
provides a much larger census of explosion sites than possible with only SNe,
and allows comparison with sensitive, high-resolution maps of the atomic and
molecular gas from the Jansky VLA and ALMA. In the well-resolved Local Group
spiral M33, we specifically observe the environments of red supergiants (RSGs,
progenitors of Type II SNe), Wolf-Rayet stars (WRs, tracing stars 30
M, and possibly future stripped-envelope SNe), and supernova remnants
(SNRs, locations where SNe have exploded). We find that massive stars evolve
not only in dense, molecular-dominated gas (with younger stars in denser gas),
but also a substantial fraction (45\% of WRs; higher for RSGs) evolve in
lower-density, atomic-gas-dominated, inter-cloud media. We show that these
measurements are consistent with expectations from different stellar-age tracer
maps, and can be useful for validating SN feedback models in numerical
simulations of galaxies. Along with the discovery of a 20-pc diameter molecular
gas cavity around a WR, these findings re-emphasize the importance of
pre-SN/correlated-SN feedback evacuating the dense gas around massive stars
before explosion, and the need for high-resolution (down to pc-scale) surveys
of the multi-phase ISM in nearby galaxies.Comment: 34 pages, 14 figures. Submitted to ApJ. Comments welcome! The density
distributions will be made publicly available after journal acceptance of
manuscript. Please feel free to contact us in the meantime if you would like
to use the
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