Tropical forests house over half of Earth's biodiversity and are an important influence on the climate system. These forests are experiencing escalating human influence, altering their health and the ...provision of important ecosystem functions and services. Impacts started with hunting and millennia-old megafaunal extinctions (phase I), continuing via low-intensity shifting cultivation (phase II), to today's global integration, dominated by intensive permanent agriculture, industrial logging, and attendant fires and fragmentation (phase III). Such ongoing pressures, together with an intensification of global environmental change, may severely degrade forests in the future (phase IV, global simplification) unless new "development without destruction" pathways are established alongside climate change–resilient landscape designs.
To design robust protected area networks, accurately measure species losses, or understand the processes that maintain species diversity, conservation science must consider the organization of ...biodiversity in space. Central is beta-diversity – the component of regional diversity that accumulates from compositional differences between local species assemblages. We review how beta-diversity is impacted by human activities, including farming, selective logging, urbanization, species invasions, overhunting, and climate change. Beta-diversity increases, decreases, or remains unchanged by these impacts, depending on the balance of processes that cause species composition to become more different (biotic heterogenization) or more similar (biotic homogenization) between sites. While maintaining high beta-diversity is not always a desirable conservation outcome, understanding beta-diversity is essential for protecting regional diversity and can directly assist conservation planning.
Beta-diversity reveals the spatial scaling of diversity loss.
Beta-diversity illuminates mechanisms of regional diversity maintenance.
Human activities cause beta-diversity to increase, decrease, or remain unchanged.
Conservation significance of beta-diversity shift depends on local diversity dynamics.
Wildlife trade is a multibillion dollar industry that is driving species toward extinction. Of >31,500 terrestrial bird, mammal, amphibian, and squamate reptile species, ~18% (
= 5579) are traded ...globally. Trade is strongly phylogenetically conserved, and the hotspots of this trade are concentrated in the biologically diverse tropics. Using different assessment approaches, we predict that, owing to their phylogenetic replacement and trait similarity to currently traded species, future trade will affect up to 3196 additional species-totaling 8775 species at risk of extinction from trade. Our assessment underscores the need for a strategic plan to combat trade with policies that are proactive rather than reactive, which is especially important because species can quickly transition from being safe to being endangered as humans continue to harvest and trade across the tree of life.
Testosterone and cortisol figure prominently in the research literature having to do with human competition. In this review, we track the history of this literature, concentrating particularly on ...major theoretical and empirical contributions, and provide commentary on what we see as important unresolved issues. In men and women, athletic competition is typically associated with an increase in testosterone (T) and cortisol (C). Hormone changes in response to non-athletic competition are less predictable. Person (e.g., power motivation, mood, aggressiveness, social anxiety, sex, and baseline levels of T and C) and context (e.g., whether a competition is won or lost, the closeness of the competition, whether the outcome is perceived as being influenced by ability vs. chance, provocations) factors can influence hormone responses to competition. From early on, studies pointed to a positive relationship between T and dominance motivation/status striving. Recent research, however, suggests that this relationship only holds for individuals with low levels of C – this is the core idea of the dual-hormone hypothesis, and it is certain that the broadest applications of the hypothesis have not yet been realized. Individuals differ with respect to the extent to which they embrace competition, but the hormonal correlates of competitiveness remain largely unexplored. Although rapid increases in both T and C associated with competition are likely adaptive, we still know very little about the psychological benefits of these hormonal changes. Administration studies have and will continue to contribute to this inquiry. We close with a discussion of what, we think, are important methodological and mechanistic issues for future research.
•A review of the history and research surrounding the testosterone and cortisol response to social competition in humans•Theoretical and empirical contributions from studies of athletic and non-athletic/laboratory competition are included•Person and context factors that impact the hormonal response to competition are considered•Methodological and mechanistic issues within the literature are discussed
Secreted proteins in the bone marrow microenvironment play critical roles in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Through an ex vivo functional screen of 94 cytokines, we identified that the ...pro-inflammatory cytokine interleukin-1 (IL-1) elicited profound expansion of myeloid progenitors in ∼67% of AML patients while suppressing the growth of normal progenitors. Levels of IL-1β and IL-1 receptors were increased in AML patients, and silencing of the IL-1 receptor led to significant suppression of clonogenicity and in vivo disease progression. IL-1 promoted AML cell growth by enhancing p38MAPK phosphorylation and promoting secretion of various other growth factors and inflammatory cytokines. Treatment with p38MAPK inhibitors reversed these effects and recovered normal CD34+ cells from IL-1-mediated growth suppression. These results highlight the importance of ex vivo functional screening to identify common and actionable extrinsic pathways in genetically heterogeneous malignancies and provide impetus for clinical development of IL-1/IL1R1/p38MAPK pathway-targeted therapies in AML.
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•IL-1β signaling has paradoxical growth effects on AML and normal progenitors•AML patients are dependent on IL-1 signaling regardless of mutation status•Targeting the IL-1 receptor inhibits AML cell growth and disease progression in vivo•Blocking IL-1 via p38MAPK suppresses AML growth and enhances normal hematopoiesis
Carey et al. show that most AML patients are dependent on IL-1 and suggest that an IL-1-rich environment promotes the expansion of AML progenitors while suppressing normal progenitors by differently influencing cell proliferation, survival, and differentiation. AML patients with aberrant IL-1 signaling may benefit from therapeutically targeting this pathway to enhance normal hematopoiesis while inhibiting AML.
Perinatal brain damage: The term infant Hagberg, Henrik; David Edwards, A; Groenendaal, Floris
Neurobiology of disease,
08/2016, Letnik:
92, Številka:
Pt A
Journal Article
Recenzirano
Odprti dostop
Abstract Perinatal brain injury at term is common and often manifests with neonatal encephalopathy including seizures. The most common aetiologies are hypoxic–ischaemic encephalopathy, intracranial ...haemorrhage and neonatal stroke. Besides clinical and biochemical assessment the diagnostic evaluation rely mostly on EEG and neuroimaging including cranial ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging. The mechanisms underlying hypoxic–ischaemic brain injury are only partly understood but include excitotoxicity, mitochondrial perturbation, necrosis/apoptosis and inflammation. Neuroprotective treatment of newborns suffering from hypoxic–ischaemic encephalopathy with hypothermia has proven effective and has been introduced as a clinical routine. Ongoing studies are exploring various add-on therapies including erythropoietin, xenon, topiramate, melatonin and stem cells.
Summary
In the last decade, the revolution in sequencing technologies has deeply impacted crop genotyping practice. New methods allowing rapid, high‐throughput genotyping of entire crop populations ...have proliferated and opened the door to wider use of molecular tools in plant breeding. These new genotyping‐by‐sequencing (GBS) methods include over a dozen reduced‐representation sequencing (RRS) approaches and at least four whole‐genome resequencing (WGR) approaches. The diversity of methods available, each often producing different types of data at different cost, can make selection of the best‐suited method seem a daunting task. We review the most common genotyping methods used today and compare their suitability for linkage mapping, genomewide association studies (GWAS), marker‐assisted and genomic selection and genome assembly and improvement in crops with various genome sizes and complexity. Furthermore, we give an outline of bioinformatics tools for analysis of genotyping data. WGR is well suited to genotyping biparental cross populations with complex, small‐ to moderate‐sized genomes and provides the lowest cost per marker data point. RRS approaches differ in their suitability for various tasks, but demonstrate similar costs per marker data point. These approaches are generally better suited for de novo applications and more cost‐effective when genotyping populations with large genomes or high heterozygosity. We expect that although RRS approaches will remain the most cost‐effective for some time, WGR will become more widespread for crop genotyping as sequencing costs continue to decrease.
This follow-up study of children who were enrolled in a randomized trial of hypothermia for perinatal asphyxial encephalopathy showed that at the age of 6 to 7 years, the hypothermia group had a ...higher rate of survival with an IQ score of 85 or more than the control group.
Perinatal asphyxial encephalopathy is associated with a high risk of death or early neurodevelopmental impairment. Among survivors, cerebral palsy, functional disability, and cognitive impairment often develop later in childhood. The cost of this condition to patients, their families, and society is high.
In several randomized, controlled trials involving infants with clear evidence of asphyxial encephalopathy, moderate hypothermia (33 to 34°C) for 72 hours, initiated within 6 hours after delivery, has been shown to reduce the risk of death or disability at 18 to 24 months of age and to increase the rate of survival free of disability.
1
The observation that . . .
With the rapid increase in the global population and the impact of climate change on agriculture, there is a need for crops with higher yields and greater tolerance to abiotic stress. However, ...traditional crop improvement via genetic recombination or random mutagenesis is a laborious process and cannot keep pace with increasing crop demand. Genome editing technologies such as clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat (CRISPR)/CRISPR-associated protein (CRISPR/Cas) allow targeted modification of almost any crop genome sequence to generate novel variation and accelerate breeding efforts. We expect a gradual shift in crop improvement away from traditional breeding towards cycles of targeted genome editing. Crop improvement using genome editing is not constrained by limited existing variation or the requirement to select alleles over multiple breeding generations. However, current applications of crop genome editing are limited by the lack of complete reference genomes, the sparse knowledge of potential modification targets, and the unclear legal status of edited crops. We argue that overcoming technical and social barriers to the application of genome editing will allow this technology to produce a new generation of high-yielding, climate ready crops.
Gene discovery and government regulation are bottlenecks for the widespread adoption of genome-edited crops. We propose a culture of sharing and integrating crop data to accelerate the discovery and ...prioritization of candidate genes, as well as a strong engagement with governments and the public to address environmental and health concerns and to achieve appropriate regulatory standards.