physiology | Definition & Bodily Function | Britannica.com

Physiology, study of the functioning of living organisms, animal or plant, and of the functioning of their constituent tissues or cells.

The word physiology was first used by the Greeks around 600 bce to describe a philosophical inquiry into the nature of things. The use of the term with specific reference to vital activities of healthy humans, which began in the 16th century, also is applicable to many current aspects of physiology. In the 19th century, curiosity, medical necessity, and economic interest stimulated research concerning the physiology of all living organisms. Discoveries of unity of structure and functions common to all living things resulted in the development of the concept of general physiology, in which general principles and concepts applicable to all living things are sought. Since the mid-19th century, therefore, the word physiology has implied the utilization of experimental methods, as well as techniques and concepts of the physical sciences, to investigate causes and mechanisms of the activities of all living things.

The philosophical natural history that comprised the physiology of the Greeks has little in common with modern physiology. Many ideas important in the development of physiology, however, were formulated in the books of the Hippocratic school of medicine (before 350 bce), especially the humoral theory of diseasepresented by a philosopher, Nemesius, in the treatise De natura hominis (4th century ce; On the Nature of Man). Other contributions were made by Aristotle and Galen of Pergamum. Significant in the history of physiology was the teleology of Aristotle, who assumed that every part of the body is formed for a purpose and that function, therefore, can be deduced from structure. The work of Aristotle was the basis for Galens De usu partium corporis humani (On the Usefulness of the Parts of the Body) and a source for many early misconceptions in physiology. The tidal concept of blood flow, the humoral theory of disease, and Aristotles teleology, for example, led Galen into a basic misunderstanding of the movements of blood that was not corrected until English physician William Harveys work on blood circulation in the 17th century.

The publication in 1628 of Harveys Exercitatio Anatomica de Motu Cordis et Sanguinis in Animalibus (An Anatomical Dissertation upon the Movement of the Heart and Blood in Animals) usually is identified as the beginning of modern experimental physiology. Harveys study was based only on anatomical experiments; despite increased knowledge in physics and chemistry during the 17th century, physiology remained closely tied to anatomy and medicine. In 1747 in Berne, Switzerland, Albrecht von Haller, eminent as anatomist, physiologist, and botanist, published the first manual for physiology. Between 1757 and 1766 he published eight volumes entitled Elementa Physiologiae Corporis Humani (Elements of Human Physiology); all were in Latin and characterized his definition of physiology as anatomy in motion. At the end of the 18th century, Antoine Lavoisier wrote about the physiological problems of respiration and the production of heat by animals in a series of memoirs that still serve as a foundation for understanding these subjects.

Physiology as a distinct discipline utilizing chemical, physical, and anatomical methods began to develop in the 19th century. Claude Bernard in France; Johannes Mller, Justus von Liebig, and Carl Ludwig in Germany; and Sir Michael Foster in England may be numbered among the founders of physiology as it now is known. At the beginning of the 19th century, German physiology was under the influence of the romantic school of Naturphilosophie. In France, on the other hand, romantic elements were opposed by rational and skeptical viewpoints. Bernards teacher, Franois Magendie, the pioneer of experimental physiology, was one of the first men to perform experiments on living animals. Both Mller and Bernard, however, recognized that the results of observations and experiments must be incorporated into a body of scientific knowledge, and that the theories of natural philosophers must be tested by experimentation. Many important ideas in physiology were investigated experimentally by Bernard, who also wrote books on the subject. He recognized cells as functional units of life and developed the concept of blood and body fluids as the internal environment (milieu intrieur) in which cells carry out their activities. This concept of physiological regulation of the internal environment occupies an important position in physiology and medicine; Bernards work had a profound influence on succeeding generations of physiologists in France, Russia, Italy, England, and the United States.

Mllers interests were anatomical and zoological, whereas Bernards were chemical and medical, but both men sought a broad biological viewpoint in physiology rather than one limited to human functions. Although Mller did not perform many experiments, his textbook Handbuch der Physiologie des Menschen fr Vorlesungen (1837) and his personal influence determined the course of animal biology in Germany during the 19th century.

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It has been said that, if Mller provided the enthusiasm and Bernard the ideas for modern physiology, Carl Ludwig provided the methods. During his medical studies at the University of Marburg in Germany, Ludwig applied new ideas and methods of the physical sciences to physiology. In 1847 he invented the kymograph, a cylindrical drum used to record muscular motion, changes in blood pressure, and other physiological phenomena. He also made significant contributions to the physiology of circulation and urine secretion. His textbook of physiology, published in two volumes in 1852 and 1856, was the first to stress physical instead of anatomical orientation in physiology. In 1869 at Leipzig, Ludwig founded the Physiological Institute (neue physiologische Anstalt), which served as a model for research institutes in medical schools worldwide. The chemical approach to physiological problems, developed first in France by Lavoisier, was expanded in Germany by Justus von Liebig, whose books on Organic Chemistry and its Applications to Agriculture and Physiology (1840) and Animal Chemistry (1842) created new areas of study both in medical physiology and agriculture. German schools devoted to the study of physiological chemistry evolved from Liebigs laboratory at Giessen.

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The British tradition of physiology is distinct from that of the continental schools. In 1869 Sir Michael Foster became Professor of Practical Physiology at University College in London, where he taught the first laboratory course ever offered as a regular part of instruction in medicine. The pattern Foster established still is followed in medical schools in Great Britain and the United States. In 1870 Foster transferred his activities to Trinity College at Cambridge, England, and a postgraduate medical school emerged from his physiology laboratory there. Although Foster did not distinguish himself in research, his laboratory produced many of the leading physiologists of the late 19th century in Great Britain and the United States. In 1877 Foster wrote a major book (Textbook of Physiology), which passed through seven editions and was translated into German, Italian, and Russian. He also published Lectures on the History of Physiology (1901). In 1876, partly in response to increased opposition in England to experimentation with animals, Foster was instrumental in founding the Physiological Society, the first organization of professional physiologists. In 1878, again due largely to Fosters activities, the Journal of Physiology, which was the first journal devoted exclusively to the publication of research results in physiology, was initiated.

Fosters teaching methods in physiology and a new evolutionary approach to zoology were transferred to the United States in 1876 by Henry Newell Martin, a professor of biology at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland. The American tradition drew also on the continental schools. S. Weir Mitchell, who studied under Claude Bernard, and Henry P. Bowditch, who worked with Carl Ludwig, joined Martin to organize the American Physiological Society in 1887, and in 1898 the society sponsored publication of the American Journal of Physiology. In 1868 Eduard Pflger, professor at the Institute of Physiology at Bonn, founded the Archiv fr die gesammte Physiologie, which became the most important journal of physiology in Germany.

Physiological chemistry followed a course partly independent of physiology. Mller and Liebig provided a stronger relationship between physical and chemical approaches to physiology in Germany than prevailed elsewhere. Felix Hoppe-Seyler, who founded his Zeitschrift fr physiologische Chemie in 1877, gave identity to the chemical approach to physiology. The American tradition in physiological chemistry initially followed that in Germany; in England, however, it developed from a Cambridge laboratory founded in 1898 to complement the physical approach started earlier by Foster.

Physiology in the 20th century was a mature science; during a century of growth, physiology became the parent of a number of related disciplines, of which biochemistry, biophysics, general physiology, and molecular biology are the most vigorous examples. Physiology, however, retains an important position among the functional sciences that are closely related to the field of medicine. Although many research areas, especially in mammalian physiology, have been fully exploited from a classical-organ and organ-system point of view, comparative studies in physiology may be expected to continue. The solution of the major unsolved problems of physiology will require technical and expensive research by teams of specialized investigators. Unsolved problems include the unravelling of the ultimate bases of the phenomena of life. Research in physiology also is aimed at the integration of the varied activities of cells, tissues, and organs at the level of the intact organism. Both analytical and integrative approaches uncover new problems that also must be solved. In many instances, the solution is of practical value in medicine or helps to improve the understanding of both human beings and other animals.

The anatomical and medical origins of physiology still are reflected in university courses and textbooks that concentrate on functional organ systems of animals (e.g., frog, dog, cat, and rat). The trend in physiology, however, is to emphasize function rather than structure. Hence, comprehensive functional specializations such as nutrition, transport, metabolism, and information have replaced earlier structural studies of organ systems. This trend can be explained in part by the fact that the analysis of an organ system typically involves studies at the levels of cells and molecules, and functional emphasis accommodates such studies better than the organ-system approach.

Early in the 20th century the emphasis on cells as units of function resulted in a view that all physiology is essentially cell physiology and that all teaching therefore should pivot around the properties of cells. In later years successful analyses of cellular mechanisms involving synthesis, control, and inheritance led to similar emphasis at a new and more fundamental level, the molecules that constitute cells. The study of physiology now encompasses molecules, cells, organs, and many types of animals, including humans. The comparisons resulting from such studies not only strengthen human physiology but also generate new problems that extend into evolution and ecology. Much of the impetus for comparative physiology resulted from the economic or medical importance to humans of parasites, insects, and fishes.

Most of the physiology of microorganisms and plants developed independently of animal physiology. The concept of comparative biochemistry provided the foundations for a physiology of microorganisms that extended beyond the parasitic forms that are of medical importance and resulted in recognition of the fundamental roles of microorganisms in the biosphere. Botanists and agriculturists explore the physiology of higher plants, but fundamental differences in the modes of life of animals and plants leave little common ground above the molecular and cellular levels. In a little-known textbook, Claude Bernard stated that there is only one way to live, only one physiology of all living things. The goal of general physiology is to abstract this single physiology from the physiologies of all types of organisms. Although common or general features usually are found at the cellular and molecular levels of organization, multicellular structures also are studied. Processes that underlie cell function are emphasized in an approach based on analyses in terms of physical and chemical principles.

In the late 19th century the principle of conservation of energy was derived in part from observations that fermentation and muscle contraction are essentially problems in energetics. Biological energetics began with studies that established the basic equation of respiration as:Fuel + oxygen carbon dioxide + water + heat. It was realized that the heat produced in fermentation and the work performed during muscle contraction must originate in similar processes and that fuel in the equation above is a source of potential energy. Early in the 20th century, studies of animal calorimetry verified these concepts in humans and other animals. Calorimetry studies showed that the energy produced by the metabolism of foodstuffs in an animal equals that produced by the combustion of these foodstuffs outside the body. After these studies, measurement of the basal metabolic rate (BMR) was used in the diagnosis of certain diseases, and data relating the composition of foodstuffs to their value as sources of metabolic energy were obtained.

Early in the 20th century it was established that measurable amounts of the carbohydrate glycogen are converted to lactic acid in frog muscles contracting in the absence of oxygen. This observation and studies of alcoholic fermentation confirmed that the energy for fermentation or muscle contraction depends on a series of reactions now known as glycolysis. In order to show that the conversion of glycogen to lactic acid could provide the necessary energy for muscular contraction, extremely delicate measurements of the heat produced by contracting muscles were required. As a result of glycolysis studies, adenosine triphosphate (ATP) was recognized as an important molecule in cellular energy transfer and utilizatione.g., movement, generation of electricity, transport of materials across cell membranes, and production of light by cells. Soon it was discovered that a muscle protein called myosin acts as an enzyme (organic catalyst) by liberating the energy stored in ATP and that ATP in turn can modify the physical properties of myosin molecules. It was also shown that a muscle fibre has an elaborate and ordered structure, which is based on a precise arrangement of myosin and another muscle protein called actin.

Glycolysis is an anaerobic process (i.e., it does not require oxygen) and may represent one of the oldest mechanisms for cellular energy transfer, since the process could have evolved before there was free oxygen in Earths atmosphere. Most cells, however, derive their energy from a series of reactions involving oxygen and called the tricarboxylic acid cycle (Krebs cycle, or citric acid cycle). The enzymes for the cycle are part of the structure of a mitochondrion, which is an elaborate cellular component filled with membranes, generally shaped like a bean. In the course of the oxidation, three molecules of energy-rich ATP are generated for each oxygen atom used to form a molecule of water. The mitochondrion, therefore, is the cellular site of respiratory combustion first clearly demonstrated in whole animals by Lavoisier.

The ultimate source of foodstuffs used by animals is plants. Early 19th-century studies of photosynthesis were closely related to those of respiration and began with Joseph Priestleys demonstration that plants could restore the air used during respiration or combustion. The most important equations for living things therefore, are mutually inverse. In respiration:(CH2O)n + nO2 nCO2 + nH2O + heat. carbo-oxygen carbon water hydrate dioxide In photosynthesis:nCO2 + nH2O + light (CH2O)n + nO2.

In the 1930s, it was shown that photosynthesis involves splitting hydrogen from water and that the oxygen liberated in photosynthesis comes from water. During the light reactions, light energy is captured by a green pigment called chlorophyll and used to generate reactive hydrogen and ATP that are used during dark reactions in which carbohydrates and other cell constituents are synthesized.

The classical fields of organ-system physiology have a role subsidiary to that of cellular metabolism. Feeding and digestion, for example, become a means for the enzyme-catalyzed breakdown of organic compounds into relatively small molecules that can be transported readily; nutrition, therefore, is a way to supply animals with sufficient sources of energy and specific substances that they cannot synthesize. Comparative animal studies, which were of practical importance in the discovery of some vitamins, led also to the general observation that the specific nutrient requirements of animals are consequences of a slow evolutionary deterioration in which synthetic abilities are lost through changes or mutations in hereditary material.

Nutrition and digestion, however, also have been important in obtaining information at the cellular and molecular levels. It was through studies of digestion, for example, that the existence and nature of enzymes were first disclosed clearly. In addition, early recognition of similarities between digestion and fermentation foreshadowed knowledge of the important role of fermentation in cellular metabolism. Finally, the study of vitamin nutrition was closely integrated with that of cellular oxidation, in which certain vitamins play an essential catalytic role.

In intact organisms, the chemical activities of individual cells do not interfere with the functions of the organism. Much of the study of physiology is concerned with the ways by which cells obtain their nutrients and dispose of their waste products. Knowledge of the mechanism of protein synthesis and its connections with inheritance and cellular control mechanisms have initiated new inquiries into functions at all levels (i.e., cells, organs, and organisms).

Many important advances in surgery and medicine have been based on the physiology of circulation, which was first studied in 1628. The measurement of blood pressure, for example, was introduced on a practicable basis late in the 19th century and has become an important part of medical diagnosis. The physiology of circulation is concerned with the origin of blood pressure in the force of the heartbeat and the regulation of heart rate, blood pressure, and the flow of blood.

Variations in heart rate that led Aristotle to consider the heart as the seat of the emotions (an idea later proven incorrect) were among the phenomena whose explanation revealed the existence of the autonomic nervous system. More important to the circulatory system than variation in heart rate, however, is the ability of the heart to adjust the strength of its beat to meet certain demands of the body.

The peripheral control of blood pressure and blood flow depends upon a maze of interacting control mechanisms, the most significant of which are in direct control of the diameter of small arterial branches that enlarge or dilate in response to chemical products formed during metabolism. Increased metabolic activity of tissues such as muscles or the intestine, therefore, automatically induces increased blood flow through the dilated vessels. This action, which could result in a fall in blood pressure, is offset by central-reflex controls that constrict arterial branches not dilated as a result of local chemical effects. Certain regions of the skin and the intestines serve as reservoirs for blood that may be diverted to muscles or the brain if necessary. Peripheral control may break down if excessive demands are made upon it in hot weather (heatstroke), during vigorous exercise after meals (muscle cramp), and after extensive loss of blood or tissue damage (shock) or extreme emotion with consequent activation of the autonomic nervous system (emotional shock). A remarkable adaptation occurs in air-breathing vertebratesreptiles, birds, and mammalswhich dive for food or protection. During a dive, the flow of blood to all parts of the body except the brain and the heart is reduced substantially. The energy for muscle contraction is provided by the anaerobic process of glycolysis because the oxygen in the blood goes to the brain and heart, which cannot function without a constant supply of oxygen.

Comparative studies have disclosed two major patterns in circulatory systems. Among vertebrates and a few invertebratesnotably annelid worms and cephalopod mollusksthe blood flows entirely in closed channels or vessels, never coming into direct contact with cells and tissues; blood pressure and the velocity of flow are high and relatively constant, and the volume of blood is small. In many invertebratesespecially arthropods and mollusks other than cephalopodsthe blood flows for part of its course in large sinuses or lacunae and comes directly into contact with the tissues. Blood pressure and the velocity of flow are low and variable in these invertebrates, and the large volume of blood is comparable to the total volume of all body fluids in vertebrates.

Consideration of the blood as a transport system has centred especially on the transport of oxygen and carbon dioxide. The colour of blood changes as it passes through the lungs: venous blood is dark purple and arterial blood is bright red because of the properties of a blood pigment called hemoglobin. Knowledge of the complete structure of hemoglobin has enabled scientists to study fundamental questions of heredity at the molecular level. The development of blood banks and the techniques involved in blood transfusion depend on knowledge of the physical, chemical, and biological properties of blood. These properties include a remarkable diversity of hemoglobin, both among individuals and species and also within an individual during development. In many instances variations in protein composition better adapt a species to its circumstances.

Studies of membrane transport at the cellular level are an important part of general physiology. Although quantitative theories of diffusion and osmosis that developed around 1900 were applied to cell physiology, a number of phenomena (e.g., movement through membranes of certain ions and other compounds of biological importance) did not behave according to established physical principles. As a result of studies of osmotic and ionic regulation in freshwater animals, the concept of active transport was formulated. Crucial to the acceptance of this concept were studies with frog skin, which can transport sodium ions against chemical and electrical forces; the transport, specific for sodium ions, is dependent on a continuing input of metabolic energy. Efforts have been directed toward establishing a molecular mechanism that may involve an enzyme found in surface membranes of cells. This enzyme breaks down ATP and releases the energy in the molecule only if sodium and potassium ions are present.

The physiology of animals differs from that of plants in the rapid response of animals to stimuli. French mathematician and philosopher Ren Descartes, responsible for the concept of the reflex that dominated neurophysiology for most of its history, thought a sensory impulse was reflected from the brain to produce a reaction in muscles. Later studies of the effects of ions on nerves suggested that a nerve must be surrounded by a membrane and that a nerve impulse results from a change in the ability of the membrane to allow passage of potassium ions. When it was shown that nerves are made up of thousands of tiny fibres, which are processes that extend from cells located in the brain or spinal cord, the nerve impulse hypothesis was applied to individual nerve fibres rather than to whole nerves. Electronic technology provided the techniques and giant nerve fibres of squids provided the experimental material that enabled two Nobel prize winners for physiology, Alan Lloyd Hodgkin and Andrew Fielding Huxley, to extend this hypothesis into a theory of the excitation of nerve cells in which sodium ions and potassium ions play principal roles.

The reflex concept, however, was not dependent on understanding the molecular basis of excitation, conduction, and transmission. Early in the 20th century the role of interaction of nervous centres in controlling muscle contractions was established. The reflex now is conceived as a unit in which nerve impulses initiated in sensory neurons or nerve cells are conducted to a centre in the brain or spinal cord. In the centre, impulses initiated in motor neurons are conducted to muscles and induce a reflex response. Two processes can occur in the centre; one is associated with central excitatory states, the other with central inhibitory states. The net effect of any stimulus or group of stimuli, therefore, can be interpreted as an interaction of these opposing states in the centre.

After the demonstration that the effects of the vagus nerve in slowing the heart are mediated by a chemical substance, subsequently identified as acetylcholine, the concept of chemical transmission of nervous impulses was extended to the central nervous system. Typically, transmission of excitation from cell to cell is accomplished by the liberation of a chemical transmitter from a nerve ending.

The reflex concept gave rise to premature attempts to develop a psychology based on reflexes. These attempts (behaviourism) were advanced by Russian scientist Ivan Pavlovs discovery of conditioned responses. Originally known as conditioned reflexes, these responses have been found in most animals with central nervous systems. More complex than simple reflexes, their mechanism has not yet been established with certainty.

The analysis of sensory functions also extends to the cellular level. Sense organs are diverse in structure and sensitivity to specific stimuli. It may be that the common molecular basis for the differences in sensitivity is a change in permeability of a special region of the membrane surrounding a sensory cell. This change in permeability could allow a nerve fibre to become excited and initiate a nerve impulse. Neurophysiology has borrowed from, and contributed to, the information theory used in communications engineering. The function of sense organs is to gather information both from the environment and the organism. The central nervous system integrates this information and translates it into a program of response involving the entire organism. In addition, the brain can store information previously received (memory) and has the ability to initiate actions without obvious external stimulation (spontaneity). Some aspects of memory and integrative function have been modelled in electronic computers; in fact the development of computers was closely connected with the development of ideas about the functions of the central nervous system.

The analytical interpretation of central nervous function remains, however, a complex and difficult field, even though recent progress has brought closer together the study of behaviour in terms of nerve function and behavioral models. Considerable effort has been directed to the localization of brain function. Although specific centres for reception of sensory information and integration of motor programs are known, the integrative functions that tie them together, as well as the functions of memory, are not so well established.

The concept of internal regulations is attributed to Claude Bernard, who thought of blood as an internal environment in which cells function; according to Bernard, maintenance of the internal environment at a constant level was a major responsibility of all body functions. Bernard showed in studies of the formation and breakdown of glycogen in the liver that internal organs can secrete materials into the blood. Other investigators demonstrated such a secretion and used the word hormone to describe the substance. One classical study concerned control of the secretion of digestive fluids by the pancreas; an active substance secretin was purified, as have been a number of similar materials from the digestive tract. The field of endocrinology now is a major part of physiology.

The endocrine system complements the nervous system in control and coordination. Hormones, liberated into blood and other body fluids by endocrine glands and transported throughout the body, usually act either on specific target organs or on certain activities of many organs. Nervous coordination most often is concerned with rapid responses of short duration; endocrine coordination, however, usually is involved in slower responses of longer duration. Stationary-state regulation, or homeostasis, depends on the action of hormones at many points. The hormones insulin and glucagon, both formed in specialized endocrine tissue in the pancreas, control the level of sugar in blood. Vasopressin from the pituitary gland at the base of the brain and aldosterone from the adrenal glands near the kidneys control salt and water balance of the blood. Hormonal regulation, however, is not confined to homeostasis. The cyclic events of the female reproductive cycles in mammals, for example, are determined by a complex sequence of endocrine interactions involving hormones of the pituitary gland and the ovary.

The pervasive regulatory action of hormones is part of a large system of interactions to which the term feedback generally is applied. Hormones involved in homeostatic regulation, for example, influence their own secretion. The secretion of certain steroid hormones, which have a significant action on the conversion of amino acids to glycogen, is controlled by another hormone called the adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), which is formed in the anterior pituitary gland. In turn the secretion of ACTH is controlled by a releasing factor formed in the midbrain and liberated from the stalk of the pituitary gland. ACTH liberation normally is controlled by the concentration of steroids in the blood, so that an increase in steroid concentration inhibits ACTH secretion; this negative feedback, however, may be overcome in certain conditions of intense nervous stimulation.

A similar pattern of releasing factors, by which the nervous system interacts with the endocrine system, also is known for other anterior pituitary hormonese.g., those involved in the reproductive cycle and in responses of the thyroid gland to temperature changes. In addition, neurosecretory cellsnerve cells specialized for endocrine functionliberate hormones (e.g., vasopressin) that act directly on a specific target. Comparative studies show that neurosecretory cells are important in developmental and regulatory functions of most animals. Discrete endocrine glands, however, occur less frequently; in insects and crustaceans, cycles of growth, molting (shedding of the cuticle), and development are controlled by hormones. The identification of insect hormones may be useful in controlling pests through specific interference with processes of growth and development.

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physiology | Definition & Bodily Function | Britannica.com

Image: Astronaut Paolo Nespoli and the Mares human physiology … – Phys.Org

Credit: ESA/NASA

The newest crewmember on the International Space Station, ESA astronaut Paolo Nespoli, has hit the ground running. After arriving in the early hours of 29 July and taking the rest of the day off, Paolo and the crew were back to work by 30 July.

First up on Paolo's schedule is a human physiology experiment using the Mares machine. The Muscle Atrophy Research and Exercise System, housed in Europe's Columbus laboratory module, is a three-in-one muscle-measuring machine that monitors astronauts' muscles as they work out.

Muscle strength decreases during spaceflight and researchers need to know why in order to prepare for long missions and safe space tourism.

The measurements are part of the Sarcolab-3 experiment that is assessing how weightlessness affects the calf and ankle muscles, the parts of the leg that carry the load of the rest of the body.

"This is important, as establishing the mechanisms involved in space-related muscle deterioration will help us to devise optimised countermeasures," says Thu Jennifer Ngo-Anh, head of ESA's Human Research Office.

Sarcolab-3 is a unique experiment, involving scientists from NASA, ESA and the Russian Institute of Biomedical Problems an example of international cooperation benefitting scientific research.

Watch a timelapse video of Mares being assembled, an all-day task in itself.

Explore further: Video: Vita docking

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Image: Astronaut Paolo Nespoli and the Mares human physiology ... - Phys.Org

Gene editing stirs debate on ‘designer’ babies – The Straits Times

WASHINGTON CRISPR is a revolutionary gene-editing technique that allows scientists to insert, remove and correct DNA within a cell with pinpoint precision.

But gene editing is controversial because it involves altering the human genetic code. It also evokes a future where humans can order "designer" babies with specific features - blonde hair, athleticism, perhaps even intelligence. That, though, is some way off as scientists say we do not yet know how to genetically enhance such traits.

Yet, there is also the prospect of avoiding heritable, genetic diseases that can handicap or kill, meaning a chance to improve a human life.

For Professor Peter Braude, a reproductive health expert from King's College London, the study showed that "germ line genome editing has moved from future fantasy to the world of possibility". The debate about using it in practice "needs to run to catch up".

Professor Darren Griffin of the University of Kent, in Britain, said: "Perhaps the biggest question, and probably the one that will be debated the most, is whether we should be physically altering the genes of an IVF (lab- created) embryo at all.

"Equally, the debate on how morally acceptable it is not to act when we have the technology to prevent these life-threatening diseases must also come into play."

Currently, the only way to avoid heritable disease in assisted reproduction is to fertilise eggs in the lab, analyse the DNA of the resulting embryos, and eliminate those containing errors.

Much more research is needed before the method can be tested in clinical trials, now impermissible under US federal law. But if the technique is found to work safely with this and other mutations, it might help couples who could not otherwise have healthy children. Potentially, it could apply to any of more than 10,000 conditions caused by specific inherited mutations.

Researchers and experts said those might include breast and ovarian cancer, as well as diseases like Huntington's, Tay-Sachs, beta thalassemia, and even sickle cell anaemia, cystic fibrosis or some cases of early-onset Alzheimer's.

"You could certainly help families who have been blighted by a horrible genetic disease," said Dr Robin Lovell-Badge, a professor of genetics and embryology at the Francis Crick Institute in London, who was not involved in the study.

Concerns, though, remain.

A group of 11 organisations, including the American Society of Human Genetics and Britain's Wellcome Trust, on Wednesday issued a statement recommending against genome editing that culminates in human implantation and pregnancy, while supporting publicly funded research into its potential clinical applications.

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE, NYTIMES, REUTERS

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Gene editing stirs debate on 'designer' babies - The Straits Times

Testing the Strength and Durability of Spider Silk – AZoM

A global education facility, The University of Nottingham has campuses in Malaysia, China and the United Kingdom. A depth of expertise in the fields of Zoology, Anatomy, Physiology, Pharmacology, Microbiology, Genetics, Biochemistry and Molecular and Cell Biology can be found in the School of Life Sciences within the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences.

This wide range of expertise places the University of Nottingham at the forefront of Medical Science and Biological research. One particular project is involved in molecular genetic studies of spider silk and extensive knowledge of this topic has relevance in many fields from pure education to future engineering applications.

Working with colleagues across the University, including the Nanoscience and Nanotechnology Centre, the Spider Lab team had to test the physical properties of specific types of this natural protein.

However, the fiber test specimens are usually only a few tens of microns in width, even though the raw materials are generated by some of the largest members of the infra order for instance the Mexican red knee tarantula (Brachypelma smithi). Hence, in addition to the highest levels of accuracy, the solution demanded delicate yet secure gripping for valid research data.

Mexican Red Knee Tarantula with Silk Sample and Holder.

Lightweight Grips, Spring-loaded and Rubber-faced.

A computer-controlled test stand was delivered by Mecmesin, with an appropriately rated load cell and fixtures, selected to optimize resolution at the maximum expected tensile forces.

The test procedure is controlled by the emperor software

and the programming environment enables specific calculations to be carried out to systematically characterize the performance of the silk sample. Measurement of extension rate, average load over specific extension ranges, work performed, elongation and load at break are recorded.

Thus, this broad analysis provides a better understanding about the variability amongst silks (and between strands of the same silk type). The library files make sure that the same extension test is repeated several times for the same fiber, or bundles of fibers which replicates the natural ecological use of the material.

By bonding the fiber or fibers to a card frame, which is cut in two before the test, the test sample is secured. The precision specification is completed by lightweight grips - spring-loaded clamping for the upper and rubber-faced jaws in the lower.

The Mecmesin machine is a great piece of kit it has allowed us to move forward with our research in a very productive way, and we are grateful for the excellent technical support that has come with it.

Dr. Sara Goodacre, Assistant Professor, Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, The University of Nottingham

This information has been sourced, reviewed and adapted from materials provided by Mecmesin Limited.

For more information on this source, please visit Mecmesin Limited.

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Testing the Strength and Durability of Spider Silk - AZoM

Neuroscientist Receives Grant to Advance Understanding of Brain Structure – UT News | The University of Texas at Austin

Figure: Image from an electron micrograph through a single section plane illustrating spiny dendrites (yellow), nonspiny dendrites (orange), excitatory axons (green), excitatory synapses (red), astroglia (light blue), microglia (dark brown). Kristen Harris

AUSTIN, Texas The National Science Foundation (NSF) has awarded Kristen Harris, a professor in the Department of Neuroscience at The University of Texas at Austin, a $9 million grant to explore the brain in microscopic detail and understand the cell biology of the nervous system. Harris plans to image and map synapses, the tiny points of contact between neurons throughout the brain, in detail and to model synapse function and share the data publically for use by colleagues throughout the world.

Harris says that the funding from NSFs Next Generation Networks for Neuroscience (NeuroNex) program allows her to expand her expertise through collaborations with James Carson of the Texas Advanced Computing Center and Terrence Sejnowski of the Salk Institute.

Ive been working to understand synapse structure and function for my whole academic life. We have created accurate three-dimensional reconstructions of all the synapses and their associated structures (dendrites, axons and glia) using sophisticated electron microscopy. We discovered, for example, that in brain volumes as tiny as a single red blood cell, there are more than 500 synapses, says Harris. With this grant, we will collect new images more quickly from a variety of brain regions and taxa from mice to humans and share them more easily with the scientific community.

Part of the funding is to design a new electron microscope capable of imaging at a greater volume while simultaneously peeking inside the tiniest substructure of individual synapses using a new tomographic approach. As the images are collected, they will be shared with collaborators at the Salk Institute to expand existing and build new computational modeling tools for understanding how synapse ultrastructure supports brain function.

Our team at the Salk Institute will build a computational microscopeto animate the electron microscope data from the NeuroNex projectand probe the function of synapses at the molecular level, says Sejnowski, laboratory head of Salks Computational Neurobiology Laboratory and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator.

The images and tools will be shared with the scientific community through a portal being developed at the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC).

Electron microscopy is a powerful tool for understanding the tiny details of the brain that are critical to how advanced organisms learn and remember, said Carson, a co-primary investigator with Harris and Research Associate in Life Sciences Computing at TACC. Yetthe amount of data collected is not currentlylimited by the microscope itself, but insteadthe ability to process the data and interpret it. By leveraging TACC'shigh-performance computing, we intend to greatly speed up the rate of knowledge discovery in this field. By creating a public portal for other researchers, we provide the foundation for collaboration and sharing of data and analysis methods, thusfurther accelerating our ability to learn about how our brains work.

Students in an undergraduate course Harris is teaching on synapses will help to test the new modeling and reconstruction tools as well as produce some of the data that will be shared in the portal. The educational element also features workshops that will help bring top neuroscience students to UT Austin.

The award to Harris is part of a major public-private joint endeavor, the Brain Initiative, which is pursuing one of sciences grandest challenges: understanding the brain. The NSF states that the overall goal of the NeuroNex program within the Brian Initiative is to establish a coherent national infrastructure to enhance understanding of brain function across organizational levels and a diversity of species. The initiative focuses on interdisciplinary approaches and new technologies, with the promise of ushering in new ways of conducting neuroscience research.

Through the development of advanced instrumentation to observe and model the brain, were closer to our goal of building a more complete knowledge base about how neural activity produces behavior, says Jim Olds, the NSFs assistant director for biological sciences. NeuroNex seeks to take that progress forward by creating an ecosystem of new tools, resources and theories. Most importantly, NeuroNex aims to ensure their broad dissemination to the neuroscience community. With these awards, NSF is building a foundation for the next generation of research into the brain.

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Neuroscientist Receives Grant to Advance Understanding of Brain Structure - UT News | The University of Texas at Austin

Joyce Harper – The Conversation UK

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Joyce Harper is Professor of Human Genetics and Embryology at University College London in the Institute for Womens Health where she is head of the Reproductive Health Department, Principal Investigator of the Embryology, IVF and Reproductive Genetics Group, Director of Education and Director of two MSc programmes - Prenatal Genetics and Fetal Medicine and Reproductive Science and Womens Health. She has been working in the fields of IVF and reproductive genetics since 1987 and written over 170 scientific papers and published two textbooks. Her research includes preimplantation genetic diagnosis, factors affecting preimplantation development, comparison of in vivo and in vitro development, differences in culture media, embryo selection methods, sperm DNA damage and social and ethical issues surrounding IVF and reproductive genetics including gamete donation, surrogacy, social egg freezing, religious views to ART and fertility education and awareness.

Joyce is passionate about public engagement to discuss all aspects of womens health, including wellbeing. She has established a public engagement group with daily posts http://www.globalwomenconnected.com. Joyce is writing a book covering womens health from birth to death. She is deputy chair of the UK Fertility Education Initiative, trying to improve fertility awareness in the UK and a member of the Fertility Arts Education Project Steering Group.

Joyce has had many senior roles in the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology (ESHRE), including establishing the ESHRE PGD Consortium. She is chair of the HFEA Horizon Scanning Group and an advisor to the HFEA Science and Clinical Advances Advisory Committee. She is on the Board of the British Fertility Society. She is a member of the Nuffield Council for Bioethics working group on genome editing.

For further information see http://www.joyceharper.com.

1987

Kings College London, PhD

1984

Queen Elizabeth College, BSc

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Joyce Harper - The Conversation UK

Scientists baffled by bizarre conjoined twin bats found dead under a tree – NEWS.com.au

Scientists find dead conjoined twin bats in Brazil. Picture: MARCELO R. NOGUEIRA: LABORATRIO DE CINCIAS AMBIENTAIS

THEY say two heads are better than one

Scientists have been left completely astonished after finding the perfectly preserved remains of dead conjoined twin bats under a tree in Brazil, reports The Sun.

It is only the third recorded case of conjoined bats and experts are now examining their remains to find out more about the phenomena.

Scientists find dead conjoined twin bats in Brazil. Picture: LABORATRIO DE RADIOGRAFIAS, MUSEU NACIONAL, UNIVERSIDADE FEDERAL DO RIO DE JANEIROSource:Supplied

The bats are believed to have been stillborn and still had the placenta attached when they were discovered under a mango tree in the southeast of the country.

Marcelo Nogueira, from the State University of Northern Rio de Janeiro, said: We believe the mother of these twins was roosting in this tree when she gave birth.

It is our hope that cases like this will encourage more studies on bat embryology, an open and fascinating field of research that can largely benefit from material already available in scientific collections.

Scientists find dead conjoined twin bats in Brazil. Picture: NADJA L. PINHEIRO, FROM REA DE EMBRIOLOGIA, UNIVERSIDADE FEDERAL RURAL DO RIO DE JANEIROSource:Supplied

Little is known about conjoined animals. Just one in around 200,000 human births involved conjoined twins.

Survival rates are around 15 per cent in humans but are thought to be much lower in the animal world.

An X-ray shows the male bats have separate heads and necks but their spines eventually merge into one.

Scientists find dead conjoined twin bats in Brazil. Picture: NADJA L. PINHEIRO, FROM REA DE EMBRIOLOGIA, UNIVERSIDADE FEDERAL RURAL DO RIO DE JANEIROSource:Supplied

They also have two separate but similar size hearts.

The total breadth of the twins, including wingspan, measures around 13cm.

Based on their physical characteristics the scientists determined they were most likely Artibeus bats.

This story first appeared on The Sun.

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Scientists baffled by bizarre conjoined twin bats found dead under a tree - NEWS.com.au

Two-headed bat baffles scientists – Bundaberg News Mail

THEY say two heads are better than one

Scientists have been left "completely astonished" after finding the perfectly preserved remains of dead conjoined twin bats under a tree in Brazil, reportsThe Sun.

It is only the third recorded case of conjoined bats and experts are now examining their remains to find out more about the phenomena.

The bats are believed to have been stillborn and still had the placenta attached when they were discovered under a mango tree in the southeast of the country.

Marcelo Nogueira, from the State University of Northern Rio de Janeiro, said: "We believe the mother of these twins was roosting in this tree when she gave birth.

"It is our hope that cases like this will encourage more studies on bat embryology, an open and fascinating field of research that can largely benefit from material already available in scientific collections."

Little is known about conjoined animals. Just one in around 200,000 human births involved conjoined twins.

Survival rates are around 15 per cent in humans but are thought to be much lower in the animal world.

An X-ray shows the male bats have separate heads and necks but their spines eventually merge into one.

They also have two separate but similar size hearts.

The total breadth of the twins, including wingspan, measures around 13cm.

Based on their physical characteristics the scientists determined they were most likely 'Artibeus' bats.

Little is known about conjoined animals. Just one in around 200,000 human births involved conjoined twins.

Survival rates are around 15 per cent in humans but are thought to be much lower in the animal world.

An X-ray shows the male bats have separate heads and necks but their spines eventually merge into one.

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Two-headed bat baffles scientists - Bundaberg News Mail

IVF babies grow up heavier and may have higher risk of obesity – New Scientist

Whats the weight?

Jenny Elia Pfeiffer/Getty

By Jessica Hamzelou

SINCE the first test tube baby arrived 39 years ago, an estimated 6.5 million children have been born thanks to IVF and similar techniques. But we are only just starting to learn about the long-term health of people conceived using assisted reproduction techniques (ART), who may have a higher risk of obesity in later life.

Today, 1 in every 30 babies in Japan is conceived by ART, says Tomoya Hasegawa of Tokyo Medical University. These babies are usually healthy, but tend to have a lower birth weight. Large studies that didnt look at conception method have previously found that low birth weight is linked to adult obesity and diabetes.

To investigate further, Heleen Zandstra of Maastricht Medical Centre, the Netherlands, and her team have been comparing the effects of using two different culture media to support the growth of early IVF embryos. Earlier they had found that one of these was associated with babies that were 112 grams lighter at birth than those beginning life in the other medium. Thats a big difference, considering babies only weigh about 3 kilograms, says Zandstra.

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Now the team have followed up on these babies at the age of 9, recording the height, weight and fat mass of 136 children, as well as blood pressure and heart rate.

They were surprised to find that, while children conceived using each type of culture medium were around the same height, the BMI of the group that had been lighter at birth was an average of 0.9 lower than those who had been heavier babies. There was a difference in weight of 2 kilograms, says Zandstra.

Given that heavier children are more likely to develop obesity later on, the results are worrying

However, both groups were heavier than average 9-year-olds living in similar circumstances, and had more abdominal fat. Given that heavier children are more likely to become obese later in life, the results are worrying, says Zandstra, who presented her findings at the annual meeting of the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology (ESHRE) in Switzerland in July.

At the same meeting, Hasegawa presented his analysis of 1830 children in Japan. His team found that babies conceived using ART were heavier than naturally conceived babies when they were born, but there was no real difference at 18 months. However, the ART children were heavier again at 6 years old. The results were surprising, says Hasegawa.

What this might mean for adult health in unknown. Louise Brown, the first person born via IVF, is only 39 we dont know yet what will happen to IVF-conceived people in their 50s, says Zandstra.

But people neednt be wary of fertility treatment. We know that IVF is safe, because we have so many children, says Arianna DAngelo, who coordinates the ESHRE group on safety in assisted reproduction. We shouldnt worry, but we should be doing more to monitor children. Studies might flag up problems later in life, says DAngelo.

This article appeared in print under the headline IVF babies grow up to be heavier

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IVF babies grow up heavier and may have higher risk of obesity - New Scientist

The Halsey’s 2017 fall programs highlight human behavior and its effects on the environment – Charleston City Paper

In American Purgatory, Marc Trujillo captures what Americans witness every day: airports, big box stores, fast food restaurants. The ostensibly straightforward paintings actually tap into the uncanny this looks familiar, it feels familiar, but where is it? The paintings are not specific to any place, inhabiting instead a non-place, purgatory, perhaps. While we consume en masse, Trujillo takes snapshots, eerie reminders that we are all in this together, whether we realize it or not. American Purgatory opens Aug. 25 and runs through Oct. 7.

Sharing an opening date with Trujillo, Riccarda de Eccher's Montagnatackles the sublime, taking the form of mountain peaks painted with watercolors in different scales and from varying perspectives. De Eccher's snow-peaked Italian Alps (the artist is an Italian native) are cropped, so we are not looking at a complete landscape, but instead a fraction of a scene, a scene, like Trujillo's, that could be found any where, recognizable to anyone.

The two exhibits run concurrently, and the opening reception for both begins at 6:30 p.m. Fri. Aug 25 with refreshments from Monza and ICEBOX.

As part of SEA CHANGE, a collaboration between the Halsey and the South Carolina Aquarium, the art institute presents a series of exhibitions and programs to raise awareness about the world's plastic waste problem. From Oct. 20-Dec. 7, artists Aurora Robson and Chris Jordan will present exhibits addressing environmental issues, and the deleterious effects humans have on the land and the sea.

Robson's site-specific installation, The Tide is High, is a new body of work for the New York-based sculptor. The inorganic plastic materials Robson uses become organic as she manipulates their properties so that they take on ethereal shapes, reminiscent of sea creatures. Robson's work reminds us that whether we're on the coast or landlocked, our daily actions affect the world's water.

Chris Jordan will present his newest photo series, Olympic, a collection of high-res photos that convey the vastness of the world's oceans, alongside Midway, a collection featuring images taken at Midway Atoll, a remote cluster of islands that, although 2,000 miles from the nearest continent, are still being damaged by human action. Even baby albatrosses are not safe the picture at right shows the plastic found in their stomachs.

The opening reception for both artists' exhibits is Fri. Oct. 20 from 6:30 to 8 p.m. with refreshments provided by Whole Foods and ICEBOX.

Artist talks and lectures On Sat. Aug. 26 at 2 p.m., de Eccher will hold an artist talk and gallery walk-through of her exhibit, Montagna.

Sat. Oct. 21 at 2 p.m. Robson holds a talk and walk-through on The Tide is High.

The S.C. Aquarium presents a lecture, "The Tide is High: When Art and Action Collide," onsite Mon. Oct 23 starting at 6:30 p.m. In this lecture, Robson discusses her work as both an artist and activist. The event is free for students and $10 for non-students.

In connection with his exhibit, artist and filmmaker Chris Jordan hosts a lecture, "Encounter with the Albatross,"at the Sottile Theatre Tues. Oct 24 at 7 p.m. Jordan will describe his travels to Midway Atoll and the plight of the native albatrosses he encountered.

Film screenings

Wed. Sept. 6 at 7 p.m. in the Simon Center for the Arts Recital Hall, filmmaker Paul Tschinkel will present a screening of two programs from his documentary series ART/new york. The programs include a 1987 interview with Louise Bourgeois, an envelope pushing sculptor, and a 1994 interview with Kiki Smith, a West-German born American artist known for her visceral and innovative work. A Q & A with Tschinkel follows the screening.

Wed. Oct. 25 at 7 p.m. the Charleston Music Hall will screen the premiere of Jordan's film ALBATROSS, a documentary that follows Jordan to Midway Atoll, a remote cluster of islands that sits amid the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.

All events are free and open to the public unless otherwise noted.

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The Halsey's 2017 fall programs highlight human behavior and its effects on the environment - Charleston City Paper