Building the World’s First University Cloud Lab – Technology Networks

Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) and Emerald Cloud Lab (ECL) recently announced their plans to build a cloud lab at the university's campus in Pittsburgh. A carbon copy of ECLs lab in San Francisco, the CMU Cloud Lab will enable scientists to perform experiments remotely and give them access to nearly 200 types of scientific instruments.To learn more about the CMU Cloud Lab, the motivation behind the project and the benefits it will bring, Technology Networks spoke to Rebecca Doerge, PhD, dean, Mellon College of Science, Carnegie Mellon University, and Toby Blackburn, head of business development and research, Emerald Cloud Lab.Anna MacDonald (AM): What was the motivation behind creating a cloud lab at CMU?Rebecca Doerge (RD): Carnegie Mellon University excels in the foundational sciences, robotics, machine learning and data science all fields that are at the core of the cloud lab and automated science. Were also in the midst of a future of science initiative, where we are devoting our time and resources to creating the future of science and educating the scientists of the future. It just made sense that we should be the ones to create the worlds first cloud lab at a university.AM: This will be the first cloud lab in an academic setting. Why do you think other universities have so far not adopted this approach?RD: CMU is being visionary and forward thinking in bringing a cloud lab to campus. ECLs Brian Frezza and DJ Kleinbaum are our alumni and they presented us with the chance to be a pioneer in this space. To us, the promise of the cloud lab for academic research and education was undeniable, and we jumped on it early.AM: What makes CMU well suited to host a cloud lab?RD: Carnegie Mellon has long been a world leader in the foundational sciences, computer science, robotics, machine learning and data science, all of which are at the foundation of the cloud lab. Were also known for being an institution where interdisciplinary collaboration is encouraged and thrives. Scientists at Carnegie Mellon often collaborate with computer scientists, engineers and statisticians to enhance their work using technology. The cloud lab is an extension of this.Carnegie Mellon is also committed to educating the next generation of scientists. Part of that is preparing them to use the latest methods and technologies. Giving our students access to a cloud lab will expose them to coding and automated science. It will also provide CMU students with greater access to state-of-the-art research equipment when they conduct their own research.

AM: Can you tell us more about the platform that the lab will be based on?Toby Blackburn (TB): Emerald Cloud Lab is the worlds first state-of-the-art pre-clinical biopharma R&D laboratory that runs experiments virtually from the cloud. Experiments ranging from basic chemistry to cell biology can be run using ECLs collection of instruments that encompass 190 different capabilities, all through one single platform, ECL Command Center.The Carnegie Mellon University Cloud Lab will be based on ECLs Global Cloud, a facility located in South San Francisco that is accessible to enterprise, start-up and academic customers. Command Center, the system used to interact with the lab and data, will function in the same way across both facilities, allowing for interoperability of experiment commands and data analysis functions.AM: Can you give us an overview of how the cloud lab will work? What equipment will be available and what experiments will be possible?TB: The cloud lab will work identically to the current ECLs Global Cloud but will be wholly dedicated to the experiments and research of the CMU community.Scientists will use Command Center to design their experiments, which are then performed in the Cloud Lab. Once an experiment is complete, users can also perform all data analysis, visualization and interpretation within Command Center.Equipment and capabilities of the CMU Cloud Lab are largely based on the ECL Global Cloud, but we are presently working with CMU to finalize the list of equipment and ensure that the facility will meet the needs of CMU faculty, staff and students.AM: In what ways do you expect the cloud lab to benefit faculty, students and the wider community?RD: The Carnegie Mellon University Cloud Lab will democratize science. Carnegie Mellon faculty and students, both undergraduate and graduate, will no longer be limited by the cost, availability and location of equipment. We also plan to open the Carnegie Mellon Cloud Lab to others in the research community, including high school students, researchers from smaller universities that may not have advanced research facilities and local life sciences startup companies.AM: How does developing and implementing a cloud lab in an academic setting compare to developing one in an industry setting?TB: Functionally, both Cloud Labs will work the same way, with the CMU facility leveraging all of the development and lessons learned from building the ECL. We plan to maintain this compatibility, allowing CMU to benefit from the further development arising from our pharma and biotech clients, and vice versa.One thing we are really excited about is the public nature of academic research. With the potential for research to be published with not only the raw data associated with the research, but also the experimental commands used to generate that raw data at the push of a button, the cloud lab can really change the landscape of scientific research and go a long way to address the reproducibility crisis.AM: Do you have any advice for other academic institutions thinking of developing a cloud lab?TB: Universities should be constantly looking for new and better ways to do research and provide education. A cloud lab is a great example. Over the last few years Carnegie Mellon faculty has used ECLs facilities for research and education. On the research front, weve found that using the cloud lab accelerates the pace of discovery and yields accurate, replicable and sharable data. On the education front, students are excited about the cloud lab. We believe that the cloud lab is part of the future of science and believe that it is important for academic institutions to begin to use the platform.

Additionally, having access to ECL facilities was a game-changer while many of us were working and learning remotely due to COVID-19. We were able to use the cloud lab to give students who were learning remotely a laboratory experience. And while many researchers had to pause their laboratory work, those who were working with the cloud lab could continue to do experiments.Rebecca Doerge and Toby Blackburn were speaking to Anna MacDonald, Science Writer for Technology Networks.

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Scientists assemble a biological clock in a test tube to study how it works – Newswise

Newswise Daily cycles in virtually every aspect of our physiology are driven by biological clocks (also called circadian clocks) in our cells. The cyclical interactions of clock proteins keep the biological rhythms of life in tune with the daily cycle of night and day, and this happens not only in humans and other complex animals but even in simple, single-celled organisms such as cyanobacteria.

A team of scientists has now reconstituted the circadian clock of cyanobacteria in a test tube, enabling them to study rhythmic interactions of the clock proteins in real time and understand how these interactions enable the clock to exert control over gene expression. Researchers in three labs at UC Santa Cruz, UC Merced, and UC San Diego collaborated on the study,published October 8 inScience.

Reconstituting a complicated biological process like the circadian clock from the ground up has really helped us learn how the clock proteins work together and will enable a much deeper understanding of circadian rhythms, said Carrie Partch, professor of chemistry and biochemistry at UC Santa Cruz and a corresponding author of the study.

Partch noted that the molecular details of circadian clocks are remarkably similar from cyanobacteria to humans. Having a functioning clock that can be studied in the test tube (in vitro) instead of in living cells (in vivo) provides a powerful platform for exploring the clocks mechanisms and how it responds to changes. The team conducted experiments in living cells to confirm that their in vitro results are consistent with the way the clock operates in live cyanobacteria.

These results were so surprising because it is common to have results in vitro that are somewhat inconsistent with what is observed in vivo. The interior of live cells is highly complex, in stark contrast to the much simpler conditions in vitro, said Andy LiWang, professor of chemistry and biochemistry at UC Merced and a corresponding author of the paper.

The new study builds on previous work by Japanese researchers, who in 2005 reconstituted the cyanobacterial circadian oscillator, the basic 24-hour timekeeping loop of the clock. The oscillator consists of three related proteins: KaiA, KaiB, and KaiC. In living cells, signals from the oscillator are transmitted through other proteins to control the expression of genes in a circadian cycle.

The new in vitro clock includes, in addition to the oscillator proteins, two kinase proteins (SasA and CikA), whose activities are modified by interacting with the oscillator, as well as a DNA-binding protein (RpaA) and its DNA target.

SasA and CikA respectively activate and deactivate RpaA such that it rhythmically binds and unbinds DNA, LiWang explained. In cyanobacteria, this rhythmic binding and unbinding at over 100 different sites in their genome activates and deactivates the expression of numerous genes important to health and survival.

Using fluorescent labeling techniques, the researchers were able to track the interactions between all of these clock components as the whole system oscillates with a circadian rhythm for many days and even weeks. This system enabled the team to determine how SasA and CikA enhance the robustness of the oscillator, keeping it ticking under conditions in which the KaiABC proteins by themselves would stop oscillating.

The researchers also used the in vitro system to explore the genetic origins of clock disruption in an arrhythmic strain of cyanobacteria. They identified a single mutation in the gene for RpaA that reduces the proteins DNA-binding efficiency.

A single amino acid change in the transcription factor makes the cell lose the rhythm of gene expression, even though its clock is intact, said coauthor Susan Golden, director of the Center for Circadian Biology at UC San Diego, of which Partch and LiWang are also members.

The real beauty of this project is how the team drawn from three UC campuses came together to pool approaches toward answering how a cell can tell time, she added. The active collaboration extended well beyond the principal investigators, with the students and postdocs who were trained in different disciplines conferring among themselves to share genetics, structural biology, and biophysical data, explaining to one another the significance of their findings. The cross-discipline communication was as important to the success of the project as the impressive skills of the researchers.

The authors of the paper include first authors Archana Chavan and Joel Heisler at UC Merced and Jeffrey Swan at UC Santa Cruz, as well as coauthors Cigdem Sancar, Dustin Ernst, and Mingxu Fang at UC San Diego, and Joseph Palacios, Rebecca Spangler, Clive Bagshaw, Sarvind Tripathi, and Priya Crosby at UC Santa Cruz. This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation.

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Scientists assemble a biological clock in a test tube to study how it works - Newswise

AgTech NEXT 2021 Concludes with a Focus on the Impact of Climate Change on Food Security – Newswise

Newswise ST. LOUIS, MO, October 11, 2021 - Climate changes are occurring in every region of the world according to the recent UN report. The developing world has been disproportionately impacted and the effects of a changing climate are creating greater food and water insecurity and economic instability. With this in mind, AgTech NEXT 2021 CLIMATE CHANGE: Seeing Things Differently, will continue on November 18, at 1PM CST featuring a keynote address by Joe Cornelius, PhD, CEO, Gates Ag One, followed by a panel discussion with leaders of organizations working to advance new technologies to ensure food security in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. AgTech NEXT is complimentary to attend. To register, please visit agtechnext.org/register.

As CEO of Bill & Melinda Gates Agricultural Innovations (also known as Gates Ag One), Cornelius guides the organizations efforts to champion innovations and cultivate global networks that prioritize the needs of smallholder farmers.Cornelius began his career on a small, diversified family farm and has dedicated his professional life to improving the world through agricultural advancements. Most recently, he led efforts to strengthen agricultures adaptive capacity to climate change at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, where he served as a director for its Global Growth and Opportunity Division. Cornelius has more than 30 years experience developing and launching new product inventions and has led breakthrough life-science research at multiple organizations including the Advanced Research Projects Agency in the U.S. Department of Energy. He holds a Ph.D. and M.Sci. in plant, soil and environmental science, as well as an MBA in technology entrepreneurship.

The people most at risk from the consequences of climate change are those in the least developed parts of the world. Thats why the priorities of smallholder famers in regions like sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia need to be at the top of our agenda, shared Dr. Cornelius. Its only when we understand and focus on their priorities that we can develop the tools needed for the world to effectively adapt.

Limiting the negative impact of climate change requires bold and creative action coupled with focused and sustained collaboration, especially in regions of the world that are most at risk, said Stephanie Regagnon, Executive Director, Innovation Partnerships at the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center. Gates Ag Ones presence in St. Louis amplifies the impact the Danforth Center and our local collaborators can have to address these urgent challenges.

NOVEMBER 18, 2021 - St. Louis, MO1:00-2:00 PM AGRICULTURE INNOVATION FOR CLIMATE ADAPTATION AND RESILIENCE

KEYNOTE: Joe Cornelius, PhD, CEO, Bill & Melinda Gates Agricultural Innovations, LLC

PANEL SESSION COLLABORATION AND CO-DEVELOPMENT FOR SUSTAINED IMPACTDr. Rose Gidado, PhD, Deputy Director, National Biotechnology Development Agency & Country Coordinator, Open Forum on Agriculture Biotechnology in Africa, Nigeria ChapterDr. Catherine Taracha, PhD, Head, Crop Biotechnology at the Kenya Agricultural and Livestock Research OrganizationDr. Pooja Bhatnagar-Mathur, PhD, Theme Leader-Cell, Molecular Biology and Genetic Engineering at the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-arid Tropics in Hyderabad, India and Cluster of Activities Leader on Enabling Technologies, CGIAR Research Program on grain Legumes & Dryland CerealsDr. Don MacKenzie, PhD, Executive Director, Institute for International Crop Improvement, Donald Danforth Plant Science CenterMODERATOR: Joseph Opoku Gakpo, Journalist, Joy FM and Joy News TV, Ghana

Sponsored by KWS

Hosted by the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center, AgTech NEXT 2021 is presented by Aon, Bayer, Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner, Thompson Coburn LLP and Wells Fargo.

About the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center

Founded in 1998, the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center is a not-for-profit research institute with a mission to improve the human condition through plant science. Research, education and outreach aim to have impact at the nexus of food security and the environment, and position the St. Louis region as a world center for plant science. The Centers work is funded through competitive grants from many sources, including the National Institutes of Health, U.S. Department of Energy, National Science Foundation, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Follow us on Twitter at@DanforthCenter.

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AgTech NEXT 2021 Concludes with a Focus on the Impact of Climate Change on Food Security - Newswise

Integrated spatial multiomics reveals fibroblast fate during tissue repair – pnas.org

Tissue fibrosis and its sequelae are associated with 45% of all mortality in the United States (1, 2). In the skin, wound healing is achieved through fibrosis and formation of a scar, which is composed of dense extracellular matrix. Scars are stiff, have poor vascularization, lack normal skin appendages, and accordingly are devoid of the skins native functionality. As a result, scars can result in lifelong disability secondary to disfigurement and dysfunction (3). Fibroblasts are the cells responsible for deposition of scar tissue. While several studies have characterized subtypes of fibroblasts involved in wound healing, the development of novel therapies that foster regeneration (rather than fibrosis) has remained limited because the origins, heterogeneity, and behavior of fibroblasts during tissue repair are not yet comprehensively understood.

Current knowledge of wound biology is largely derived from experiments performed in mice. However, translating cutaneous tissue repair in mice to humans is challenging due to species-specific anatomical differences. The panniculus carnosus is a subdermal muscle layer found throughout the body of mice that substantially contracts in response to wounding, enabling wound closure primarily through contracture of the mouses loose skin. In humans, an analog to this muscle exists only in the neck (the platysma muscle), the hand (palmaris brevis), and the scrotum (dartos muscle). Fibroblast heterogeneity has been previously explored in wound healing using mouse models in which large, unstented wounds (1.5-cm diameter) heal primarily by contraction, with only a small portion in the center healing through reepithelialization and deposition of connective tissue from fibroblasts (the primary mechanism of wound healing in humans) (4, 5). To recapitulate clinically relevant wound healing using mouse models, we utilize a stented wound model, which limits contraction of the panniculus carnosus and thereby mimics the wound healing kinetics of tight-skinned humans (6). Given that local tissue mechanics play a central role in scar formation (79), this model permits us to interrogate fibroblast mechanobiology in a more clinically relevant manner.

Recent advances in sequencing and cell capture technology have enabled the assessment of gene expression with reference to tissue organization using spatial transcriptomics. This approach has only been applied to a limited number of tissue types to date, primarily in the study of tumors, including prostate cancer (10), skin cancer (11, 12), and breast cancer (13), as well as bone marrow (14), joints (15), and brain tissue (16). However, to our knowledge, spatial transcriptomic analysis over time has yet to be applied to characterize wound healing. Moreover, the spatial and temporal distributions of the single-cell chromatin landscapes underlying gene expression have yet to be described.

Here, using transgenic mouse models, we assess the proliferation of local, tissue-resident fibroblast cells in wound healing. By establishing a microsurgical approach to independently isolate fibroblasts from spatially distinct regions within the wound, we interrogate Rainbow-labeled fibroblasts from critical timepoints during the course of wound closure. The Rainbow mouse model is a four-color reporter system that permits precise clonal analysis and lineage tracing. Using this model with phenotype-paired single-cell RNA and ATAC sequencing (scRNA-seq and scATAC-seq), we are able to define the spatial and temporal heterogeneity of wound fibroblasts with unique granularity. Using full-length, plate-based scRNA-seq, we assess the differentiation states of individual cells as they proliferate and migrate from the outer wound region inward (17). By disrupting this process using small molecule inhibition or genetic knockdown of focal adhesion kinase (FAK, Ptk2), we further elucidate the relationship between wound healing fibroblast activation and microenvironmental cues. By integrating our scRNA-seq and scATAC-seq analyses using the recently developed ArchR platform (18), we delineate interrelated changes in chromatin accessibility and gene expression driving wound closure and fibrosis and identify distinct wound fibroblast subpopulations. Furthermore, using CIBERSORTx deconvolution (19) of bulk RNA-seq data, we are able to categorize a putative fibroblast subpopulation-based response to local tissue injury. Finally, we introduce spatial multiomics, combining spatial transcriptomics with paired scRNA-seq and scATAC-seq datasets to impute spatial epigenomic properties and map chromatin accessibility states in the healing wound. Collectively, this work defines the spatial and temporal dynamics of the fibroblast response to injury and provides a multimodal -omics framework for future studies in tissue repair.

To explore the lineage dynamics of wound fibroblasts, we examined stented wound healing using the Rainbow (Rosa26VT2/GK3) mouse model (20). Rainbow mice contain a transgenic four-color reporter construct in the Rosa26 locus. Upon induction with Cre recombinase, the four colors irreversibly recombine such that all progeny cells will have the same color as their parent cells, thereby permitting stochastic lineage tracing and clonal analysis (Fig. 1A). We developed a technique for local induction using activated tamoxifen liposomes (LiTMX) in order to induce reporter recombination exclusively in tissue-resident cells (Fig. 1B) (21). Following injury, local skin fibroblasts were found to proliferate in a linear, polyclonal manner along the cross-sectional wound interface (Fig. 1 C and D), whereas fibroblasts in uninjured skin exhibited minimal clonality (Fig. 1 E and F). These data support the presence of local cells that are activated in response to injury and proliferate polyclonally to fill the wound gap.

Wounding triggers polyclonal proliferation of tissue-resident fibroblasts. (A) Schematic of the Rainbow mouse construct. (B) Schematic showing wound healing model using Rainbow mice with local Cre recombinase induction using 4-hydroxytamoxifen liposomes (LiTMX). (C) Schematic showing a Rainbow wound cross-section. Black dotted line highlights wound scar area; arrows indicate the direction of cellular proliferation during wound healing. Structures are as labeled. (D) Representative confocal image of POD 14 wound cross-sections from Actin-CreERT2::Rosa26VT2/GK3 mice induced locally with LiTMX at the time of wound creation. Thick white dotted lines highlight scar boundaries. Individual Rainbow cell clones are highlighted with thin colored dotted lines. Arrows indicate direction of wound healing. n > 5. (Scale bar, 50 m.) (E) Representative confocal images of unwounded skin from Actin-CreERT2::Rosa26VT2/GK3 mice induced locally with LiTMX. Thick white dotted lines highlight dermal boundaries. Individual Rainbow cell clones are highlighted with thin white dotted lines. n > 5. (Scale bar, 50 m.) (F) Rainbow clone counts in wounds versus uninjured skin. n = 5 per condition. *P < 0.05. (G) Schematic of dorsal, stented, excisional wound healing in the Rainbow mouse model (whole-mount view), with polyclonal proliferation of Rainbow fibroblasts from the outer wound edge inward across time from POD 2 (Left), to POD 7 (Middle), to POD 14 (Right). Black arrows highlight the apparent direction of proliferation. (H) Representative confocal imaging of a POD 14 whole-mounted wound harvested from Actin-CreERT2::Rosa26VT2/GK3 mice showing the polyclonal proliferation of wound fibroblasts radially toward the center of the wound (dark area at center). White arrows highlight the direction of cell proliferation; individual cell clones are highlighted with thin colored dotted lines. Bottom subpanels denote individual Rainbow color contributions to merged image. mCh, membrane (m)Cherry; mOr, mOrange; mCe, mCerulean; eG, eGFP. n > 5. (I) Schematics illustrating microdissection strategy for isolation of inner and outer wound regions (Top), followed by enzymatic separation of the dermal scar from the epi- and hypodermis (Bottom). (J) Heatmap displaying expression data for genes significantly different between POD 7 inner and outer region wound fibroblasts. Legend at Right displays fold change. (K) Gene Ontology (GO) enrichment analysis comparing gene expression data from POD 7 inner and outer region wound fibroblasts. Top shows GO biological processes up-regulated in inner region fibroblasts compared with outer region fibroblasts, while the Bottom shows the same for outer region fibroblasts compared with inner. Top 10 most significant gene sets are displayed for each condition.

Many cell surface and lineage markers have been associated with fibroblasts involved in wound healing, including Pdgfra, Engrailed-1 (En1), and CD26 (Dpp4) (2224). However, we and others have found expression of such markers to be variable throughout wound tissue (SI Appendix, Fig. S1A), suggesting spatial and functional heterogeneity among the fibroblasts that respond to injury. We asked whether there might be one or more fibroblasts activated following injury that could give rise to more diverse downstream fibroblast phenotypes. If so, we wondered whether such cells would be of tissue-resident origin, as suggested by previous studies (2527) (SI Appendix, Fig. S1B), or originate from peripheral circulation. To explore this, we employed transgenic parabiotic mice in conjunction with the splinted excisional wound healing model described above (6) (SI Appendix, Fig. S1C). eGFP donor mice were parabiosed to wild-type (C57BL/6J) mice (SI Appendix, Fig. S1D). A shared blood supply was established by 2 wk after surgery (SI Appendix, Fig. S1E), at which time wounds were made on the dorsum of each wild-type parabiont. Wounds were then harvested at postoperative day (POD) 7 (midway through healing) or POD 14 (when the wound has fully reepithelialized). While systemically infiltrating GFP+ cells were found in wild-type mouse wounds at both timepoints, the overwhelming majority (>80%) of GFP+ cells were also CD45+ and thus of hematopoietic (nonfibroblast) lineage (SI Appendix, Fig. S1F). These data further support the growing body of literature indicating that the fibroblasts responsible for wound healing are local, tissue-resident cells (2527).

Returning to the Rainbow mouse model, we developed a tissue clearing and whole-mount protocol to visualize wound healing biology with the Rainbow mouse (28). Using these methods in conjunction with a ubiquitous Actin-CreERT2 driver, we observed that cells were activated along the wound edge and proliferated inward in a distinct radial pattern (Fig. 1 G and H).

Based on the pattern of clonal proliferation extending from the outer wound edge inward, we developed a microsurgical technique to separately isolate the inner and outer components of the wound dermis (Fig. 1I). We isolated wound fibroblasts from these two regions at POD 7 (midpoint of healing) and unwounded skin for bulk RNA-seq evaluation. Clear differences in the gene expression profiles of inner versus outer wound fibroblasts were identified (Fig. 1 J and K and SI Appendix, Fig. S2 AC), including differences in mechanotransduction and cell cycle pathways. Furthermore, we observed that inner wound fibroblasts were transcriptionally more divergent from uninjured skin than were outer wound fibroblasts (SI Appendix, Fig. S2A). These findings support broad regional differences in the proliferation and activation status of fibroblasts in the healing wound; however, these methods are limited by the lack of granularity inherent in bulk transcriptional analysis.

We evaluated how well several recently published cell surface marker profiles, which define fibroblast subtypes largely based on tissue depth, tracked with the regional differences observed in our study (22). Among fluorescence activated cell sorting (FACS)-isolated, lineage-negative (29), Rainbow wound fibroblasts (Fig. 2A and SI Appendix, Fig. S3A), we found that most cells fell into the putative category of reticular fibroblasts (defined as DLK1+/SCA1) rather than papillary (CD26+/SCA1) or hypodermal (DLK1+//SCA1+) (SI Appendix, Fig. S3B). When we considered inner and outer wound fibroblasts separately, we found that distribution of fibroblast subtypes was not significantly different between these two groups (SI Appendix, Fig. S3C), suggesting that fibroblast subpopulations defined by selective marker profiles are not sufficient to delineate inner versus outer wound fibroblasts, though these can be readily distinguished based on their transcriptional programs even at the bulk tissue level.

Single-cell transcriptomic and chromatin accessibility analyses delineate mechanoresponsive fibroblast subpopulations. (A) Schematic illustrating single-cell (sc) isolation of Rainbow wound fibroblasts from inner and outer wound regions (highlighted with black dotted lines). For scRNA-seq, mCerulean+ fibroblasts were arbitrarily selected from the available Rainbow colors and used for the remaining experiments in this figure. (B) (Left) Uniform manifold approximation and projection (UMAP) embedding showing scRNA-seq data from mouse wound fibroblasts FACS isolated using a lineage-negative sort strategy (29) from POD 2, POD 7, and POD 14, digitally pooled and clustered in a manner agnostic to POD and inner versus outer wound regions. Four unique fibroblast clusters were identified (clusters 1 through 4). Dotted lines highlight individual cluster distributions. (Right) Recoloring of Left UMAP plot based on fibroblast tissue region: inner (black) versus outer (orange). (C) CytoTRACE analysis of scRNA-seq data using the UMAP embedding from F. Shading indicates inner (light gray) versus outer (dark gray) wound regions. (D) Box plots showing the predicted ordering by CytoTRACE for individual cells within the four scRNA-seq clusters. Gray arrow indicates direction of predicted differentiation from scRNA-seq cluster 1 to cluster 4 (which corresponds to outer-to-inner wound region expansion). P value was derived from two-sided Students t test. (E) scATAC-seq evaluation of Rainbow mouse wound fibroblasts isolated in parallel with our scRNA-seq experiments (SI Appendix, Methods), integrated using the ArchR toolkit with default Louvain parameters (18) to delineate four unique multimodal fibroblast clusters. (F) Heatmap of scATAC-seq motifs highlighting key gene loci differentially open or closed in putative fibroblast subpopulations. (G) Genome tracking plots showing scATAC-seq peaks for pseudobulk replicates generated for each cluster. Associations between the peaks with fibrosis and mechanotransduction-related genes (Peak2GeneLinks) are included at the Bottom of each plot. Pale orange shading highlights differentially expressed peaks across the scATAC clusters. All highlighted peaks demonstrated statistically significant differential expression in at least one pairwise comparison (false discovery rate [FDR] <0.1 and fold change [FC] 2).

We sought to better characterize wound fibroblast heterogeneity by examining individual fibroblast transcriptional programs at important functional timepoints in the canonical wound healing process: POD 2, inflammation; POD 7, granulation; and POD 14, complete reepithelialization (healed wound). We conducted plate-based scRNA-seq of lineage-negative fibroblasts isolated based on their expression of Rainbow clone colors from both inner and outer wound regions at each timepoint (Fig. 2A). Four transcriptionally defined fibroblast subpopulations were identified (Fig. 2B), with considerable differences in their distributions between wound regions.

Given our interest in understanding lineage trajectories in the context of wound healing, we assessed the relative differentiation states of these fibroblast populations using CytoTRACE, a computational tool that leverages transcriptional diversity to order cells based on developmental potential (Fig. 2C and SI Appendix, Fig. S4) (17). This analysis identified a lineage trajectory stemming from scRNA-cluster 1, which is characterized by elevated expression of fibroblast markers such as Pdgfra and primarily represented by cells from the outer wound region, extending to scRNA-cluster 4, which is primarily represented by cells from the inner wound (Fig. 2D). These findings suggest that fibroblasts may undergo differentiation as they proliferate from the outer wound inward.

To evaluate the epigenomic changes associated with fibroblast activation and lineage differentiation in wound healing, we conducted a series of scATAC-seq experiments in parallel with our scRNA-seq assays (SI Appendix, Fig. S5 A and B). We identified considerable heterogeneity in accessibility profiles among individual wound fibroblasts, which were clustered into six epigenomically distinct subgroups using the ArchR platform (18) (SI Appendix, Figs. S5 C and D and S6 AD). This partitioning was agnostic to the phenotype of cell origin (i.e., wound region or postoperative day), and all clusters included fibroblasts harvested from multiple timepoints and wound regions. We then performed cross-platform integration to link these scATAC data with our earlier scRNA data (18), resulting in four multimodal clusters characterized by both gene expression and chromatin accessibility profiles (Fig. 2 E and F and SI Appendix, Fig. S6E), which we refer to as ArchR-clusters 1 through 4.

We first examined the epigenomic landscape of the largest subpopulation, ArchR-cluster 1, which showed significantly elevated chromatin accessibility proximal to key fibrosis-related genes such as Col1a1, Acta2, and Pdgfra (Fig. 2G and SI Appendix, Figs. S7 A and B and S8), indicating that these cells are primed for their transcription. We also observed specific accessibility peaks and transcription factor footprinting in association with the FAK (Ptk2) locus and its downstream signaling elements such as Jun, suggesting that these fibroblasts may represent a mechanoresponsive, profibrotic subpopulation. ArchR-cluster 2 was associated with elevated Fn1 and Thbs1 accessibility peaks; ArchR-cluster 3 was characterized by increased accessibility at the Jak2 locus and decreased accessibility at the Fsp1 (S100a4) and Il6st loci; and ArchR-cluster 4 was characterized by increased accessibility at the Ptk2b, Jak1, and Jak3 loci.

In addition to specific peak and motif evaluation, we also employed clusterwide enrichment analysis using the Genomics Regions Enrichment of Annotations Tool (GREAT) (30) (SI Appendix, Fig. S9A). We found significant enrichment for increased fibroblast migration, focal adhesion, and FAK-pathway signaling response elements in ArchR-cluster 1. Furthermore, pseudotime analysis of these integrated scRNAATAC data demonstrated an epigenomic progression from the putatively least-differentiated ArchR-cluster 1 to the remaining cell populations that was driven by mechanical signaling elements (SI Appendix, Fig. S9B).

Based on these findings, we provisionally characterized each subpopulation according to its putative role in the wound healing process: mechanofibrotic (ArchR-cluster 1), activated-responder (ArchR-cluster 2), remodeling (ArchR-cluster 3), and proliferator (ArchR-cluster 4) fibroblasts.

Our laboratory has previously shown that local tissue mechanics are crucial in guiding the response to healing after injury (31), and mechanotransduction signaling pathway elements were found to delineate fibroblast subpopulations in our scRNA and scATAC wound data. To further interrogate the role of local tissue mechanics in wound biology, we applied a small molecule FAK inhibitor (FAKi) to disrupt mechanosensation in stented mouse wounds (SI Appendix, Fig. S10A). Consistent with prior work, we found that FAKi-treated wounds healed at the same rate as untreated wounds (SI Appendix, Fig. S10 B and C) but resulted in significantly smaller and thinner scars composed of less-dense matrix tissue (SI Appendix, Fig. S10 D and E) (32).

To validate our FAKi results, we conducted additional wound healing experiments using Actin-CreERT2::Rosa26VT2/GK3::Ptk2fl/+ and Actin-CreERT2::Rosa26VT2/GK3::Ptk2fl/fl (heterozygous Ptk2fl/+] and homozygous [Ptk2fl/fl] knockout) mice, with local LiTMX induction at the time of wounding (SI Appendix, Fig. S10 AC). We found that these mouse wounds also exhibited fewer scar-like patterns of connective tissue (SI Appendix, Fig. S10E). To further explore these differences, we employed an automated feature extraction algorithm (24) to quantify ultrastructure characteristics of wound tissue sections, which demonstrated that FAKi-treated wound specimens were more similar to unwounded skin than to vehicle-control wounds, including for both mature and immature collagen fiber intensities (SI Appendix, Fig. S10F). Taken together, these findings corroborate that when mechanotransduction is disrupted, wounds heal with thinner scars and connective tissue structure that is more similar to that of unwounded skin.

To understand the transcriptional changes associated with modulation of mechanotransduction in wound healing, we conducted additional RNA-seq experiments comparing fibroblasts isolated from inner and outer regions of FAKi-treated and control wounds. We observed significant changes in the transcriptional programs of FAKi-treated cells and found that regional differences between inner and outer wound fibroblasts were dampened in wounds following FAK inhibition (SI Appendix, Fig. S11 A and B). These results suggest that local tissue mechanics contribute to transcriptional differences between inner and outer wound regions. We found that wound healing fibroblasts showed down-regulation of mechanotransduction- and fibrosis-related pathways with FAKi treatment (SI Appendix, Fig. S11C). We also found that when mechanosignaling was blocked in Rainbow mice using FAKi, or in Ptk2fl/+ or Ptk2fl/fl mice, the linear polyclonal proliferation of fibroblasts that was previously appreciated (Fig. 1H) was disrupted (Fig. 3 AC), with smaller and less ordered Rainbow fibroblast clones.

Clonal proliferation of injury-responsive fibroblasts is dependent on mechanotransduction signaling. (A) Representative confocal images of sectioned Rainbow mouse wound specimens treated with FAKi (Second), FAKfl/+ (Third), or FAKfl/fl (Bottom) compared with vehicle control (Top). Imaris rendering in second column of images highlights individual Rainbow clones. Dermal wound area highlighted with thick white dotted line. n = 5. (Scale bars, 25 m.) (B) Quantitation of average clone size based on Imaris rendering. (C) Wedge sections of representative whole-mount confocal images of Rainbow wound specimens embedded within surrounding wound schematics for vehicle control (Top), FAKi-treated (Second), FAKfl/+ (Third), and FAKfl/fl (Bottom) samples. Corresponding vector analyses are provided to the Right of each subpanel. (D) Schematic illustrating our approach to deconvolve bulk RNA-seq data using our multimodal scRNAATAC construct. Transcriptionally defined cluster labels from scRNA-seq analysis were projected onto the scATAC-seq manifold using an anchor transferbased approach in ArchR as previously described (18) (Left column) to construct four multimodal fibroblast subpopulations. Putative names were assigned to these ArchR-clusters based on integrated functional and temporospatial characteristics. Feature and peak plots, above and below, for FAK (Ptk2) are provided for illustrative purposes (Center column). Deconvolution of bulk RNA-seq specimens representing wound fibroblasts treated with FAKi versus vehicle control (Right column) was then performed using CIBRERSORTx (19) (SI Appendix, Methods). Wound schematics (with silicone ring around the outside, and outer and inner regions indicated) are provided to represent CIBRERSORTx output identifying changes in the percentages of ArchR-cluster 1 (mechanofibrotic) cells in bulk samples over time and with/without FAKi treatment (shown in green). Parallel schematic of corresponding changes in other ArchR-clusters are provided in yellow.

We applied the deconvolution tool CIBERSORTx (19) to estimate the abundance of our four scRNAATAC populations (ArchR-clusters 1 through 4) within bulk RNA-seq data for fibroblasts isolated from POD 7 and POD 14 wounds with or without FAKi treatment (Fig. 3D). We found that the majority of cell estimates across all specimens were attributed to mechanofibrotic ArchR-cluster 1, consistent with its prominent representation in both our scRNA-seq and scATAC-seq datasets. The predicted prevalence of these cells was highest at POD 7 and decreased by POD 14. FAK inhibition resulted in decreased representation of ArchR-cluster 1 fibroblasts at POD 14 for both inner and outer wound samples (compared to control wounds at POD 14), further supporting the mechanosensitivity of the putative mechanofibrotic ArchR-cluster 1 subpopulation.

To further explore the significance of fibroblast heterogeneity in healing wounds, we applied the recently developed 10 Genomics Visium platform to analyze gene expression while retaining tissue spatial information. We optimized and validated a protocol to enable highly reproducible Visium spatial transcriptomic analysis of skin and wounds across the healing process (SI Appendix, Methods). We then conducted spatial transcriptomic analysis on tissue from our stented Rainbow mouse wound healing model at POD 2, 7, and 14, as well as uninjured skin (Fig. 4A).

Spatial transcriptomics applied to wound healing and tracking of fibroblast subpopulations over time and space. (A) Schematic for generating spatial transcriptomics data from splinted excisional wounds using the 10 Genomics Visium protocol. Fresh Rainbow mouse wound tissue was harvested, flash frozen, embedded in optimal cutting temperature (OCT), and then sections were taken representing the complete wound radius. H&E staining and tissue section imaging were completed as described in the Visium protocol (SI Appendix, Methods). Each spot captures mRNA from 1 to 10 individual cells at that tissue location. (B) Delineation of scar layers based on underlying tissue histology at each timepoint (Top row), and UMAP plot showing that the three scar layers can easily be distinguished by their transcriptional programs, even independent of spatial information. (C) (i) Schematic of classic stages of wound healing evaluated at POD 2, 7, and 14 relative to uninjured skin. (ii) Keratinocyte activity as measured through expression of the Krt6b gene. (iii) Fibroblast activity as measured through expression of the Pdgfra gene. (iv) Immune cell activity as measured through expression of the Msr1 gene. (D) Anchor-based integration of scRNA-seq populations (defined in Fig. 2B) with Visium gene expression to project partial membership within each spot across all timepoints. These populations exhibit strong spatial preferences within the wound.

The epidermal, dermal, and hypodermal layers of the healing wounds were easily delineated histologically and also found to cluster independently based on transcriptional programs (Fig. 4B). Looking at individual genes for prominent wound healing cell types (Fig. 4 C, i), we found clear delineation of keratinocytes in the epidermis based on Krt6b expression (as well as other keratinocyte-specific genes), allowing us to examine reepithelialization over space and time at the transcriptional level (Fig. 4 C, ii). Similarly, fibroblast activity was evaluated using characteristic genes such as Pdgfra, which were most prominent in the dermis and most active at POD 14 (Fig. 4 C, iii). Likewise, by examining activated macrophage markers like Msr1, we could monitor these immune cells throughout our dataset and found that they were very prominent in the proud flesh at the center of the wound at POD 7 (Fig. 4 C, iv).

One challenge inherent in current spatial transcriptomic platforms such as Visium is that each spot (i.e., discrete spatial subregion from which transcripts are sequenced) can capture gene expression information from more than one cell (1 to 10 cells, characteristically). In a complex tissue such as a healing wound, this often includes cells of different types, particularly within the dermis where fibroblasts, multiple types of immune cells, and nascent blood vessels can be found. As such, to understand our spatial transcriptomics results in the context of our scRNA and scATAC fibroblast data, we needed to account for the contributions of nonfibroblast cells from each Visium spot. This was achieved by first estimating the number of each specific cell type present within individual spots based on the associated histological staining (SI Appendix, Figs. S12 AD and S13). Cell counting was followed by random sampling in a Monte Carlo fashion to subtract out potential contributions from nonfibroblast cells, generating a distribution of 10,000 inferred fibroblast transcriptomes for each Visium spot. These were propagated forward for anchor-based integration to generate and pool spatially overlaid partial memberships for each of our four scRNA-clusters (Fig. 4D).

We found that the predicted spatial distributions for our scRNA-seq clusters were largely congruent with the transcriptional differences observed earlier between inner and outer cells using our microdissection approach (e.g., fibroblasts belonging to the mechanofibrotic cluster became more prominent over time, expanding from the outer to inner wound regions to fill the scar). Upon further examining transcriptional programming relative to tissue depth, we observed clear spatial distinctions between the apical and basal regions of the dermis as early as POD 7 and most prominently at POD 14 (SI Appendix, Figs. S14 AF and S15 A and B). For example, the MMP inhibitor Timp1 is expressed by fibroblasts in the basal dermis, while Thbs2, which mediates cellmatrix interactions, is primarily expressed in the more apical scar region.

To assess the relative differentiation states of fibroblasts in this system, we applied CytoTRACE to our POD 14 dermal scar data and found that, similar to our RNA-seq microdissection findings, fibroblasts exhibited significantly less transcriptional diversity in inner wound regions, further supporting fibroblast differentiation from the outer to the inner wound regions during tissue repair (SI Appendix, Fig. S16).

To further explore fibroblast cell fate with spatial resolution, we developed a method to combine our integrated single cell RNAATAC framework with Visium in order to impute spatially informed epigenomes for wound healing fibroblasts (Fig. 5A). As described above, we generated spatial transcriptomic data from unwounded skin and POD 2, 7, and 14 wounds. To extend this analysis to impute spatial epigenomic properties, we used our RNAATAC construct to ascribe partial membership values to fibroblasts present within each Visium spot. This was achieved by first subtracting out putative nonfibroblast contributions as described above, followed by anchor-based mapping into a higher-dimensional cluster space from our gene integration matrix (Fig. 5B and SI Appendix, Table S1). Parameterization was optimized to preserve spatial autocorrelation for the top measured and imputed gene expression distributions within the POD 14 dermis (SI Appendix, Fig. S17 A and B). To account for residual contributions from nonfibroblast cells that may remain after our initial subtraction step, we also spiked in RNA-seq data for keratinocytes, endothelial cells, macrophages, and neutrophils. The resulting putative reference matrix was then used to assign initial partial set memberships for each spatial datapoint using an anchor transferbased approach. A single-step spatial smoothing filter was applied to this membership space, followed by removal of nonfibroblast contributions and renormalization. The resulting partial set memberships for each spatial datapoint then allowed us to project higher-order epigenomic features from the scRNAATAC data onto these Visium samples (SI Appendix, Fig. S18 AD). These spatial epigenomic imputations provided a valuable complement to further refine our understanding of the fibroblast biology driving tissue repair. Detailed data analysis is provided in Fig. 5 C and D and SI Appendix, Figs. S19 and S20 and more broadly summarized below for each timepoint in the healing process.

Integrated analysis permits imputation of spatial epigenomic properties. (A) Punnett square schematic summarizing the data acquired in Figs. 2 and 4; setting the stage for imputation of spatial epigenomics. (B) Schematic summarizing imputation of spatial epigenomics. Multimodal scRNAATAC fibroblast data were first reclustered into a higher-resolution space to generate 20 partitions, each representing between 27 and 552 cell equivalents. Gene score matrix distributions, informed by both modalities, were then extracted for each partition and subjected to SCT transformation. Spike-in RNA-seq data for keratinocytes, endothelial cells, granulocytes, and macrophages were obtained from pure Visium spots across all timepoints. These data were combined and subjected to a similar variance-stabilizing transformation. The resulting putative single-cell gene expression reference matrix was then used to assign initial partial set memberships for each spatial transcriptomic datapoint using an anchor transferbased approach. Nonfibroblast contributions were subsequently regressed out, and a single-step spatial smoothing filter was applied to the resulting membership space, followed by renormalization. The resulting partial set memberships for each spatial datapoint were then treated as a topological vector space, onto which epigenomic peak, motif, and binding activity from the 20 scRNAATAC partitions can be projected. (C) Visium plots showing POD 0, 2, 7, and 14 (Top to Bottom) wound sections, imputed spatial epigenomics. For housekeeping genes such as Hprt (Top), gene imputed matrix (GIM) correlates with gene score matrix (GSM) epigenomic data and is fairly stable over space and time (Top). However, for Runx1, which we have shown to be very active within wound fibroblasts, GSM data show opening at the Runx1 motif at POD 2, which yields strong gene expression primarily among inner wound fibroblasts at POD 7 (Bottom). (D) Visium plots showing POD 0, 2, 7, and 14 (Top to Bottom) wound sections, motif deviations for genes of interest related to FAK-mediated mechanotransduction, and fibroblast proliferation including Runx1, Ets1, and Ehf.

Immediately following wound injury, tissue trauma leads to inflammatory cell recruitment, provisional clot formation, and a dermal gap resulting in loss of contact inhibition among local fibroblasts. These fibroblasts are recruited into the wound bed and begin proliferating. Our data suggest that by POD 2, subsets of these cells have differentiated along the wound margin to form a putative Activated-Responder Fibroblast subpopulation. Other, less-differentiated and more mechanosensitive (mechanofibrotic), fibroblasts become preactivated in the deeper dermis at this point, increasing chromatin accessibility for Runx1, which is a primary regulator of mesenchymal progenitor cell proliferation and differentiation (33).

By POD 7, macrophage-dominated granulation tissue occupies the central wound defect, allowing overlying keratinocyte proliferation and reepithelialization. At this time, mechanofibrotic Fibroblasts begin to differentiate as they finish migrating toward the wound center, where they appear to transition to a more Proliferator subpopulation. These cells are strongly profibrotic and characterized by elevated Spp1 gene expression and chromatin accessibility. In parallel, a population of Remodeling Fibroblasts begins to appear in the outer deep dermis (Fig. 4 C and D and SI Appendix, Fig. S15 A and B).

At POD 14, reepithelialization is complete, and the wound is traditionally considered to be healed. However, while keratinocyte activity does decrease at this time (consistent with completion of reepithelialization), there remains a strong immune cell presence, supported by continued wound fibroblast chemokine secretion, to stimulate active fibrosis in the dermal layer (SI Appendix, Fig. S14 E and F).

Considering our imputed spatial epigenomics data more globally, we observed that changes to chromatin accessibility frequently preceded downstream changes in gene expression, even within the constraints of our coarse temporal sampling (Fig. 5 C and D and SI Appendix, Fig. S19 AC). For example, we found that the Runx1 motif, which is downstream from and regulated by FAK mechanotransduction, initially becomes open at POD 2, remains open particularly along the leading wound edge at POD 7, and then begins to decrease in accessibility throughout the nascent scar at POD 14. Similarly, Col1a2 motif opening precedes a dramatic increase in Col1a2 gene expression seen in the POD 14 wound scar.

In aggregate, these studies represent a framework for the comprehensive elucidation of wound healing fibroblast phenotypes based on both gene expression and chromatin accessibility across time, space, and lineage. Furthermore, these findings allow us to reevaluate the classical stages of wound healing, typically described as three overlapping phases: inflammation (POD 2), proliferation (POD 7), and remodeling (POD 14) (3). Based on our findings, we propose reframing these overlapping stages as: 1) Early inflammation, in which immune cells are migrating and infiltrating the injury site without proliferation; 2) reepithelialization, which includes rapid keratinocyte proliferation across the wound surface, fibroblast recruitment, and macrophage proliferation; and 3) activated fibrosis, where maximal fibroblast activation is achieved and sustained in a slow asymptotic decay by steady-state inflammatory signaling beneath the healed wound (SI Appendix, Figs. S21 AD and S22 A and B).

In this manuscript, we define fibroblast biology throughout the course of wound healing using integrated, single-cell multimodal -omics to unravel the spatial, temporal, and functional heterogeneity of these cells. We demonstrate that fibroblasts are activated from tissue-resident cells in response to injury and proliferate polyclonally to fill the wound gap. Furthermore, we demonstrate that fibroblasts undergo spatially informed differentiation during this process.

Elucidating these relationships required the integration of nascent technologies and data platforms in what is still a rapidly evolving field of multiomic imputation. This work demonstrates the paired analysis of single-cell RNA and chromatin accessibility with spatial resolution in the context of tissue repair. This approach provides a unique lens through which we can view complex cell processes, and specifically allowed us to demonstrate that upstream chromatin changes surrounding mechanical signaling elements precede transcriptional activation and cell proliferation, thus suggesting a mechanistic link from tissue force to activation of wound healing fibroblasts.

Furthermore, we were able to identify and characterize putative, functionally distinct fibroblast subpopulations with divergent transcriptional and epigenomic programs. We provisionally designate these four wound healing fibroblast phenotypes as Mechanofibrotic, Activated Responder, Proliferator, and Remodeling. Following skin injury, fibroblasts are locally recruited and migrate to the wound. By POD 2, a subset of fibroblasts appears to have differentiated to form an activated-responder subpopulation, while the remaining outer wound fibroblasts comprise the less differentiated mechanofibrotic cells. The latter fibroblasts highly express known fibrosis-associated markers such as Engrailed-1 (23, 24), Col1a1 (34), Tgbf2 (35), and Jun (36). At POD 7, mechanofibrotic cells begin to differentiate in response to mechanotransduction cues as they migrate toward the wound center. By POD 14, despite complete epithelialization, healed wounds remain in a steady state of fibrosis, maintained through sustained inflammatory signaling within scar tissue. Additional studies examining even later timepoints will be required to further characterize the dynamics of these cells within the healed scar tissue.

Taken together, these results illustrate fundamental principles underlying the cellular response to tissue injury. We demonstrate that populations of fibroblasts migrate, proliferate, and differentiate in an adaptive, dynamic response to disruption of their local mechanical environment. Understanding the origin, activation, and differentiation trajectories of injury-responsive cells is critical to develop therapeutic strategies to promote optimal tissue repair.

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Integrated spatial multiomics reveals fibroblast fate during tissue repair - pnas.org

The Sexual Anatomy Of Men – Lucky Mojo

MALE EXTERNAL GENITALIA: PENIS AND SCROTUM

According to the book Mandens Krop (which is translated from English,but does not give the original title) the average is 15cm and 90% are between13 and 18cm.The records fora fully functional penis are 1.5cm and 30cm.

This is probably one of the most frequently asked questions on alt.sex,and that's a shame, because it's really a pointless question. Penis sizeis important if and only if you think it is. If you have sex with men andyou desire a large penis, then penis size is important to you, andonly to you. If you feel your penis should be larger, then penis size isimportant to you, and only to you. Many women reportthat too many men are hung up on the size of their penises. The vaginais only eight to thirteen centimeters long, and even a small penis cantouch every square centimeter within the vagina.

Yes. There are two surgical procedures to increase penis size-- theBihari Procedure, and Fat Injection.The Bihari Procedureconsists of cutting the ligament that secures the base of the penis tothe body. This gives between one-half and two inches of increased lengthto the penis; however, because the penis is no longer anchored to the bodyan erection no longer points 'up.'Fat Injectionis the process of removing fat from the backs of the thighs and injectingit into the body of the penis to make the penis thicker. Because the bodyrejects a significant portion of the injection this procedure may needto be repeated several times and each operation carries with it a severerisk of infection.

According to Harold Reed, M.D., director of the ReedCentre for Ambulatory Urological Surgery in Bay Harbor, Florida, thisis the correct way to measure the length of your penis:

First, while standing, get an erection. Okay, now gently angle your,er, equipment down until it is parallel to the floor. Set your ruler againstyour pubic bone just above the base of the penis, and measure to the tip.Thats how the doctors do it.

One-quarter of all penises bend in some direction and some bend downwardeven when erect. Unless the bend is severe or causes you pain, there isnothing wrong or abnormal about your penis. It should not interfere withsexual intercourse. Some people report that a downward-bending penis iseasier to fellate.In rare cases a condition called Peyrone'sSyndrome can arise from childhood diseases. This condition is caused byscarring on one of the two corpora cavernosa within the penis, stuntingits effectiveness during erection and causing the penis to bend almost90 degrees in that direction. If you feel this may be the case, consulta urologist.

Male circumcision is the surgical removal of the foreskin from thepenis. When performed in a hospital, it is usually done shortly afterbirth by a doctor or midwife. Circumcisions are also given to Jewishboys by a mohel in a ceremony eight days after birth. SomeIslamic boys are circumcised when they are older, around age 12. Themajority of American boys are circumcised.Common reasons for circumcisioninclude: religious beliefs; better hygiene, "normal" or "better"appearance, and "his penis should look like his father's."Common reasons against circumcision include: it is no longer necessaryfor hygienic reasons; it is a painful, barbaric practice; there is a possibility ofinfection or surgical error; destruction of sexual tissue reduces sexual sensitivity; "normal" or "better"appearance; and "his penis should look like his father's."

Blue Balls is a real condition! The "correct" term for blueballs is epididymitis, which is an inflammation of the epididymis.In simple terms blue balls occurs whenthe epididymis get blocked up with sperm that have left the testis butnot the penis. The vas deferns are the conduit for the sperm from the testisto the urethra. When they get blocked you get pain. Why blue balls andnot "swollen balls," well maybe the connotation is that you ballshave the "blues", or maybe its because with all that swellingsome of the blood flow is restricted enough to cause some blueing of thearea because of pooling blood.

The prostate is about the size of a walnut in a normal man, and is immediatelybehind the rectal wall about three centimeters inside the anus. It canbe felt by placing one finger within the anus and feeling along the anteriorwall for a round bulb. For some men, touching or rubbing this spot is extremelypleasurable; a rare few can even orgasm through this technique. Othersreport that the touch is painful or makes them feel as if they need tourinate.The alt.sexFAQ on anal sex answers this question in more detail.

The alt.sex FAQ is hosted by SACRED SEX|ALT SEX FAQ HOME | INDEX | POLICY | DEFINITION OF SEXUAL TERMS | |THE PENIS | THE VULVA, CLITORIS, AND VAGINA | FIRST TIME SEX | GREAT TIME SEX | |ORAL SEX FOR MEN (FELLATIO) | ORAL SEX FOR WOMEN (CUNNILINGUS) | |ANAL SEX AND ANALINGUS | SEX TOYS | CONTRACEPTION (BIRTH CONTROL) | |SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES | LEGALITY (SODOMY LAWS, AGE OF CONSENT) |

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The Sexual Anatomy Of Men - Lucky Mojo

Sister-In-Law Sources Reveal Greys Anatomy Still Running – The Onion

DUBUQUE, IAEmphasizing that the show had really picked up steam lately, the nations sister-in-law sources revealed Monday that Greys Anatomy was still running. Yeah, the last few seasons were kind of a mess, but Ive actually been liking the stuff with this neonatal surgeon [Addison Montgomery] coming back, said Erin Farrow, 30, one of millions of sisters-in-law who participated in a brief conversation that confirmed the medical drama, which debuted on ABC in 2005, now featured characters named Joey and Ted who had recently gotten married. Of course, Meredith Grey is still in it. Shes the main character. The show couldnt exist without her. Anyway, hows work been? At press time, the nations sisters-in-law responded to a follow-up question about whether McDreamy was still on the series by laughing derisively.

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Sister-In-Law Sources Reveal Greys Anatomy Still Running - The Onion

Greys Anatomy Recap: A Joy Initiative – Vulture

Greys Anatomy

Some Kind of Tomorrow

Season 18 Episode 2

Editors Rating 3 stars ***

Photo: ABC

Miranda Bailey wants to bring the joy back to Grey Sloan Memorial. The pandemic has left the hospital a dreary place with low morale. Her employees are retiring to write mystery novels, relax in places with a view, and find the fun in their lives again. She wants people to remember that what they do here is bigger than themselves, that they are all in this together. COVID-19 robbed them of so much, and a big part of that is the reason they do what they do: the joy of their work. Or as Webber puts it: You want to remember the why. He has some ideas of how they can make some changes. And yes, if youre thinking, Hmmm, is this whole finding joy thing a little meta and definitely applicable to the show itself, because, holy shit, things were suffocatingly sad there for so, so long?, you are not alone.

A big portion of how Webber and Bailey want to enact positive change is linked to fixing the residency program, which is (lets be honest) a real shitshow at the moment. These residents stink! Some of that is COVID and some of it well, you cant teach natural talent, babe. But Webber is going to try. Hes taking control of the program again that whole Meredith takes the residency program thing lasted like one episode and hes making observations from the walkway overlooking the lobby, and it feels like old times, doesnt it? Webber is putting the residents through a rigorous day in the skills lab Schmitt calls it the Surgical Olympics, Helm calls it the Hunger Games and the winner gets a solo surgery. Its hard, its fun, even the attendings are getting into it, and at the end of it all Schmitt gets to pull a yoni egg out of a womans bowels with an assist from his fellow residents up in the gallery (Merediths residency class would never). Bailey can see the joy, people.

Someone who needs to see the joy standing right in front of her is Meredith Grey. And by that I mean both the revolutionary medical journey Seth Cohens dad is handing her and the hot transplant surgeon who wants to take her stargazing and tells her things like risk it all. Thats, like, so much joy. Especially for Meredith Grey, who we know loves to be shrouded in darkness for about eight months out of the year. It is her way.

Meredith is still deciding whether she wants to attempt to cure Parkinsons disease, so she calls in Amelia to make sure she isnt crazy for even considering David Hamiltons offer. Mers obviously going to need a skilled neurosurgeon to pull this off, and if shes doing this, she wants Amelia by her side. Amelia pretty much says yes from the moment Meredith walks her up to the Grey Center doors. Then she definitely says yes when she checks out the state-of-the-art equipment and learns theyd be working with Dr. Kai Bartley, a renowned neuroscientist who was a few years behind Amelia at Hopkins. Amelia is a huge fan of Bartleys work. A huge, huge fan. It doesnt take long for Amelia to sit Meredith down and ask her why in the hell she wouldnt say yes to this. Not only is a famous surgeon throwing money at them to change the face of medicine, but it would also get Meredith back to her neuro roots. I dont know if anyone has missed Meredith doing neurosurgery over the years since she switched to general, but sure, we can go with that. Amelia wants to do this with her, and she thinks her sister-in-law shouldve said yes yesterday. She heads back to Seattle.

On Merediths date with Nick he sets up a picnic under the stars, because after he almost died he started to appreciate the simple things in life he asks her about her top-secret project. Shell only tell him one thing: Shes scared. Shes scared of failing. Shes scared of killing a brilliant surgeon. Shes scared of risking the comfort and safety she has in Seattle to possibly be a public failure. But Nick doesnt buy it. You are not a safety person, Meredith, he says, reading her perfectly. She wont be happy playing it safe, and he knows that because hes the same way. Youre going to risk it all, and win or lose, its going to be a hell of a ride. In other news, Im sweating.

Meredith knows Nick is right about her. So she goes to see David and give him her demands: She gets to pick her own team. Any progress they make through this research and surgery has to become public and accessible to anyone with Parkinsons. And she wants to move the lab to Grey Sloan. That last item is a problem for David. Itll be too expensive, and the clock is ticking his prognosis is only getting worse. So they come to an agreement: Shell open a satellite lab in Seattle and travel to Minnesota once a week. They shake on it. Meredith Grey is going to try to cure Parkinsons disease. Talk about finding your joy, huh?

Back in Seattle, Merediths new brother-in-law seems to be fitting in nicely. Winstons on his own this week because Maggies in Boston while her father has hip surgery, but Winston already knows that to be a surgeon at Grey Sloan you must (1) fight for your patients even if it could land you in major trouble and (2) say things in an extra-dramatic tone while exiting rooms in a hurry. Hes a natural! Winston ends up with a patient, Rashida Flowers, who has kidney disease due to diabetes. She also has a clotting disease that makes dialysis difficult, so her only other choice is a transplant, but she doesnt qualify for the list. Both her mother and brother died of kidney disease because they, too, couldnt get a transplant, so she has resigned herself to this fate.

Winston cant wrap his head around this. Rashidas renal function should make her an excellent candidate for a transplant. He looks into the eGFR, the tried-and-true formula they have been using for decades to determine kidney-transplant candidates, and finds something alarming. The formula is based on racist assumptions about Black people that makes it more difficult for them to qualify for the list merely one instance of many that have snaked their way into medicine. He has examples of other patients on the list with the exact same health profile as Rashida, and the only difference between them and her is that theyre white. Its appalling. Unfortunately, theres not a lot that Winston can do. He cant even appeal to the board unless the patients condition is medically emergent.

With her clotting disease, it doesnt take long for Rashida to fall under that category. Yes, its a scary moment when things begin to go south, but Winston gets her stable enough, then delivers the good news: She has finally been placed on the transplant list. Rashida bursts into happy, relieved tears. It doesnt change anything about the eGFR at the moment, but it does change Rashidas life. Its time we start questioning our standards, he tells Rashidas nephrologist, who seems fine with the status quo. Grey Sloan is really rubbing off on Dr. Ndugu.

Owen and Teddy seem to be in a nice little honeymoon period: Theyre joining forces to do whatever it takes to help Noah Young, a vet with pulmonary fibrosis. He contracted it from exposure to burn pits while on one of his six tours, but the VA wont cover treatment. Hes terminal, but he wants to spend whatever time he has left with his son, so he leaves the hospital, against medical advice, before Owen can get to him. Elsewhere, Teddy is worried the world might be cruel to little Leo, who decides to wear an Elsa dress to day care. Owen tells her that yes, the world may be cruel, but they never will be. Leo is happy. They should let him be who he is. Were only two episodes in, but no drama has transpired between these two, and that is a really unexpected win.

More talk of joy: Link is still a Sad Boy, crashing at Jos theyre packing diaper bags together now and singing depressing lullabies to Scout. Jo assures him that hell be okay; he just needs to start looking for the joy around him. Mm-hmm.

Ooh la la: Are Cormac and Megan going to have a steamy hookup? Shes hanging around to fill in while Mer is away, and they have some immediate chemistry. Lets do this! If youre bringing the joy back, you have got to bring the steam back too!

And now Peter Gallagher is quoting Into the Woods and alluding to a deep love for Sondheim musicals? I guess Ive found my joy. Is this man going to die?

Next week: Dr. Addison Montgomery returns, babyyyy!

Keep up with all the drama of your favorite shows!

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Greys Anatomy Recap: A Joy Initiative - Vulture

Female reproductive organ anatomy, parts, and function – Medical News Today

The female reproductive organs include several key structures, such as the ovaries, uterus, vagina, and vulva. These organs are involved in fertility, conception, pregnancy, and childbirth.

The reproductive organs also have a significant influence on other aspects of health. For example, the ovaries create hormones that impact bone density, cholesterol levels, heart health, and mood.

In this article, we will look at the anatomy of the female reproductive organs in detail, including what they do and how they work.

The female reproductive system is a group of organs that work together to enable reproduction, pregnancy, and childbirth. It also produces female sex hormones, including estrogen and progesterone.

The system consists of organs and tissues inside the body and some that are visible outside the body. The internal organs include:

Another organ, the clitoris, extends both inside and outside the body. The external area surrounding the vagina is the vulva.

Not everyone who is assigned female at birth has all of these organs. Sometimes, people are born without some parts or with a mixture of female and male characteristics. This is known as intersex.

Some people also undergo procedures to remove some parts of the reproductive system. Some of these procedures take place for medical reasons, while others are the result of harmful cultural practices, such as female genital mutilation.

Most females have two ovaries, one on each side of the uterus. They are about the shape and size of an almond and have two key functions: producing hormones and releasing eggs.

At birth, two ovaries contain approximately 700,000 oocytes, which are immature eggs. When a person reaches puberty, these eggs begin to develop and mature inside the ovary follicles. Around once each month, the ovaries release a mature egg.

This process is known as ovulation, and it is part of the menstrual cycle. It is also what makes pregnancy possible.

The hormones the ovaries produce regulate the menstrual cycle. They also:

The fallopian tubes are passageways that carry eggs toward the uterus. They consist of several parts:

When an ovary releases an egg, fluid and the fimbriae propel it toward the fallopian tube opening. Once inside, the cilia move the egg toward the uterus. This journey takes about 7 days.

During this time, it is possible for sperm to fertilize the egg if a person has sexual intercourse. Most fertilization happens in the fallopian tubes.

The uterus is an organ that is about the shape and size of a pear. It is also known as the womb. It consists of muscular walls and a lining (endometrium) that grows and diminishes with each menstrual cycle.

After ovulation, the endometrium gets thicker in preparation for a fertilized egg. If not fertilized, the egg dies, and the lining of the womb sheds after around 2 weeks. The lining breaks down into blood, which then leaves the body through the vagina. This is menstruation, also called a period.

If an egg does become fertilized by sperm, it will implant into the lining of the uterus and begin to develop. The cells divide and grow, becoming an embryo. Over time, it grows into a fetus, which receives oxygen and nutrients from the placenta via the umbilical cord.

When it is time for the fetus to be born, the uterus begins strong muscle contractions that dilate the cervix and push the fetus out.

The cervix is a narrow structure at the bottom of the uterus. It has several functions:

Below the cervix is the vagina, which is a flexible, tubular structure that connects the internal and external reproductive organs. It sits behind the bladder and in front of the digestive tract.

The vagina allows fluids, such as menstrual blood and discharge, to leave the body. It also allows semen, which contains sperm, to enter the body.

This can happen in several ways, such as during penetrative sex with someone who has a penis, or during artificial insemination. This is a procedure where a doctor inserts semen into the uterus to help someone conceive.

Just inside the body, around the entrance to the vagina, is the clitoris. This organ is most well known for the clitoral glans, which is a small but highly sensitive tissue that sits above the vaginal opening. Most of the clitoris is actually internal.

The clitoral glans is at the top of the clitoris. From there, the clitoris splits into two parts that extend down either side of the vagina. It is around 5 inches (12.7 centimeters) long and consists of spongy tissue that contains thousands of nerve endings.

The clitoris responds to sexual stimulation. When a person experiences arousal, it becomes swollen. It is the main organ responsible for female orgasms.

The vulva is the external part of the female reproductive system. It includes the:

The female reproductive organs include an array of parts that influence health throughout a persons life. The reproductive system undergoes significant changes during the menstrual cycle, which starts during puberty and ends with menopause. If a person becomes pregnant, it changes further to accommodate a growing fetus.

Female reproductive anatomy also influences sexual well-being, and creates hormones that regulate a wide variety of functions around the body.

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Female reproductive organ anatomy, parts, and function - Medical News Today

The Grey’s Anatomy Tell-All Book Author Spills The Onscreen And Offscreen Tea – BuzzFeed

Yes, just as many rumors with him as there were with Patrick. Ultimately, it comes down to what I can report. And I wasn't able to report it. But yes, I heard stories. We have an old saying in Hollywood: "Where there's smoke, there's fire," and almost always what you heard, there was truth to it. And this isn't necessarily the way that a beloved character goes away in the 18th season.

Once again, it's feeling like it's the last year. Look, we just got Kate Walsh. We're getting more. The ex is coming back and visiting us. It would be outstanding if Katherine Heigl came back. But I don't even think you can now because of the way they sent Justin Chambers off. You can't have her come back without having Justin coming back. I mean, they'd figure out a way, but it wouldn't feel right. And that bums me out because I really would like to see her back, but I don't know if it will.

So we always kind of wondered there for a while we being the reporters that cover Grey's if you get killed off this show, does that mean somehow that Shonda hates you? Yes and no. She didn't hate Eric Dane. And in fact, I remember she wrote a lovely goodbye column for EW at the time, [about] how much she loved Eric, Jay, and that character? And ultimately, maybe things weren't pretty with the way that Patrick left the show, but the only way you can close out that character is by killing him. Any other solution wouldn't have felt organic with his relationship with Meredith. [Shonda] set them up as the perfect couple. She set him up as the perfect man. So if she suddenly had him leave her and go move to Washington, DC, or something which was a possibility and then had them break up, that wouldn't feel right. So this was the only way to get him off the show is you got to kill him.

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The Grey's Anatomy Tell-All Book Author Spills The Onscreen And Offscreen Tea - BuzzFeed

Grey’s Anatomy Recap: Season 18, Episode 2 Some Kind of Tomorrow – TVLine

It feels like the old days, Bailey told Richard in Thursdays Greys Anatomy. And by gauze, it did. As we relished the zippy post-COVID-era Some Kind of Tomorrow, Webber challenged the residents to the toughest surgical workout ever, Meredith sought Amelias input on Davids life-changing offer, and Nick Well, Scott Speedman fantastically Scott Speedmand every scene he was in, throwing so many sparks, the set probably had to be cleared of hairspray lest it present a fire hazard. And if you read on, well go over all of the episodes highlights

THATS A VERY OLD-FASHIONED WAY TO ASK A GIRL FOR A DATE | As Some Kind of Tomorrow began, Nick stuck a note under Mers hotel-room doorand was caught. Not that it mattered; she still happily agreed to have dinner with him that evening at 7. In Seattle, Link and Jo kinda coparented, while Maggie missed Winston, who was working so much that he slept at work. Nearby, Sara reported to her fellow residents that mom Alma had transferred to work more closely with Team Jackson. And Richard had big plans for the lot of them. From there, we cut back to Minnesota, where Amelia had arrived to behold the lab that was being offered to Mer. Oh, you are definitely not coming back to Seattle, Amelia laughed. But the millions werent just being offered to Mer now, they were also being offered to Amelia, because her sister-in-law was inviting her to be a part of it all. Yikes.

At Grey Sloan, Teddy protectively hovered over Leo, whod decided to dress as Elsa from Frozen for the day. Sara teamed up with Winston to treat Reshida, who had diabetes and kidney failure. Shed be starting dialysis, her attending reported. When she reported that she wasnt even able to get on a transplant list, Winston wanted to jump into action. But Reshida was sure that she wasnt long for this world. With his pupils, Richard announced that they would be going through a rigorous series of surgical simulations and evaluations. The resident with the highest score, he added, flies solo in the ER that day with an operations on par with their skills. Well, OK, then game on! Round 1 went to Levi. The next round that we saw went to Mabel. And just like that, Richard announced that Levi had won the competition. Hed get to scrub in on Jos ex lap on a foreign body extraction (on a woman who already had a strawberry removed from her, ahem, you know). While that was going on, Dr. Wong reported to Bailey that he was retiring whether she liked it or not to write mystery novels.

ANYBODY WHO NEEDS LIFE-SAVING CARE SHOULD GET IT | Bumping into a nephrologist who served as a wall between Reshida and qualification for inclusion on the transplant list because she adhered to incorrect clinical assumptions that ignored the differences between Black people and white people Winston appealed to Bailey, then took action himself. He re-approached the nephrologist, who stood by the EGFR but said shed look into his assertions. Of course, there wasnt time for that. It was suddenly do-or-die time for Reshida, and Winston wasnt about to let her die. So he broke protocol, crossing his fingers that he could get a transplant for her before it was later than too late.

Treating an injured boy, Megan charmed Cormac. In the next examining room, the boys dad was doing exceptionally poorly; hed passed out at the wheel and was having trouble breathing. Before you knew it, he was coughing up blood, and Owen was calling his bride for a consult. While she pondered whether they should stop letting Leo dress up, she and Owen discovered that the patients lungs looked like a war zone. He had pulmonary fibrosis, he reported. And he didnt want treatment, he just wanted to spend whatever time he had left with his son. Look at you breaking rules and saving lives, Megan quipped to the newlyweds. Arent you glad I got you to tie the knot? Despite Owens determination to save the terminal patient, Cormac let him go home.

In Minnesota, Amelia checked out David, who wasnt interested in a Band-Aid for his Parkinsons, only something that would make him whole again. Soon, if I wasnt mistaken, sparks flew between Amelia and Davids brilliant colleague, Dr. Bartley; for Amelia, there was no decision to be made Mer had to say yes and cure Parkinsons. Though Mer balked at Amelias enthusiasm, Scouts mom stood her ground. Youre being ridiculous because you havent accepted the offer yet, Amelia said. Hell, this was Mers chance to get back into neuro. Why would she walk away from this? Amelia asked as Nick stood by looking adorable. Back in Seattle, Levi successfully performed his extraction in front of a gallery full of his peers then hit a snag, requiring his colleagues to talk him through the end of the operation over the intercom.

YOURE NOT JUST SAVING MY LIFE, YOURE CHANGING IT | Finally, as the hour drew to a close, Meredith showed up for her date with Nick, who admitted that she might want to change into something less fancy. Why was that? He was taking her on a picnic in the woods. This is why I pulled back on my hours, he explained. He was missing everything including staring up at the stars. She didnt do that much, she admitted. Were gonna have so much fun, he replied. By and by, she shared that she was scared to say yes to David and to then fail. I have a very comfortable situation in Seattle, by contrast. Youre not a safety person, Nick suggested. Youre gonna risk it all and win or lose, its gonna be a hell of a ride. Back at Grey Sloan, Winston reported to Reshida that she was on the transplant list. I honestly never thought Id see this day, she said. I can go back to who I was.

Alone with Richard, Bailey fretted that every day she was losing doctors. They needed for everyone to feel once again like they were all in it together. You want people to remember the why, he said. Luckily, he had some ideas big ones. Finally, Link sang Scout the saddest-ever lullaby about his failed proposal. Youre gonna be OK, Jo assured him. Back at Grey Sloan, Teddy worried some more over Leo and people being cruel to him. They will be, Owen admitted, but they themselves wouldnt be. So lets just let him be happy. And in the last seconds of the episode, Mer made a few demands of David, including that they move the whole project to Grey Sloan. When that notion was shot down, she offered an alternative: I could set up a satellite lab in Seattle and come back and forth once a week. Done, he replied. Does this mean youre in? Indeed, it did.

So, what did you think of Some Kind of Tomorrow? The comments section is now open for your two cents (or even a nickel, if youre feeling generous). While youre here, get your first look at Kate Walshs return as Addison.

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Grey's Anatomy Recap: Season 18, Episode 2 Some Kind of Tomorrow - TVLine