Category Archives: Physiology

Grim picture of crowded and understaffed medical schools – Daily Nation

By KARIUKI WAIHENYAMore by this Author

Most medical schools in universities are overenrolled, understaffed and lack basic teaching equipment, a new inspection report shows.

The damning report released on Saturday cites specific cases where departments of medicine are headed by unqualified lecturers, lessons are conducted in incomplete buildings and ill-equipped laboratories, with lecturer absenteeism and mix-up in lessons.

At Uzima University Colleges medical school, which was ordered shut immediately, six out 10 departments are headed by lecturers who are not qualified. Some of the students learn in incomplete lecture halls and the school lacks dedicated laboratories for parasitology, haematology and pathology, according to the East African Communitys joint inspection of new and existing medical and dental schools in Kenya.

While the standard lecturer-to-student ratio for pre-clinical programmes is 1:12, the school runs a ratio of one lecturer for an average of 50 students and 50 percent of the teaching staff are temporary. In human anatomy for example, the ratio is 1:99.

At Egerton University, the faculty of health sciences has inadequate classrooms with broken tiles and insufficient chairs and has no audiovisual teaching tools. The report notes that microbiology is being taught together with pathology, which is against the rules.

The faculty does not meet the ratio of 1 lecturer for 12 students in pre-clinical lessons and 1 for seven in clinical lessons. On average, the faculty runs a ratio of 1 for every 50 students, demonstrating severe understaffing especially in human anatomy, microbiology, pathology and pharmacology programmes.

The report criticises the academic dean of Kenyatta University for failing to provide effective management of the school of medicine although he is qualified for the job. It notes that the human anatomy department is headed by a lecturer who is not an anatomist, while that of medical physiology is led by one who is not a physiologist.

The contact hours between the lecturers and the students is wanting and this has compromised the quality of learning, says the report, adding that the students reported missing histology practicals for a full semester. It also cites outdated equipment in laboratories and congested timetables.

The University of Nairobi is accused of overenrolling students in both pre-clinical and clinical years, against the set guidelines. Significantly, it says that some lecturers do not attend classes and that undergraduate students are taught together with their post-graduate colleagues in the human anatomy programme.

The school of medicine is understaffed in every department except paediatrics and child health. At Kenya Methodist University, the department of medical physiology is headed by a lecturer who doesnt have a masters degree. Some lecturers are not conversant with the contents of the curriculum.

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Grim picture of crowded and understaffed medical schools - Daily Nation

Agrilife gardening seminar sheds light on turf, trees and tomatoes – Runnels County Register

The Tom Green County Agrilife Extension office held their annual gardening seminar at the Tom Green County 4H facility on Saturday, February 29th. The seminar was named, Turf, Trees and Tomatoes, the Three Ts of Texas Horticulture. Hosting the event was the Tom Green County Texas A&M Agrilife Extension Service office. Allison Watkins, the horticulturist for the Tom Green County Agrilife Extension office was the hostess for the Extension Office.

Along with Watkins, 2 other Agrilife agents made presentations; Dr. Russ Wallace, Professor and Extension Vegetable Specialist Department of Horticultural Sciences

Texas A&M AgriLife Research and Extension Center in Lubbock and Dr. Chrissie Segars, Assistant Professor and Extension Turfgrass Specialist, from the Agrilife Department of Soil and Crop Sciences in Dallas.

Agrilife spared no expense or experience for the seminar, with Wallace coming in from Lubbock and Segars from Dallas. Wallace is a highly respected professor and researcher with his Ph.D in Vegetable Crops from Cornell University. Wallaces territory for Agrilife covers the Texas High Plains and Panhandle regions.

Segars earned her Ph.D in Crop sciences from Oklahoma State University and is the go-to person when it comes to turf grass. Her interests include Turfgrass Management, Turfgrass Physiology, Athletic Field Management and Player Safety as well as Reducing Inputs in Turfgrass Management.

There isnt much that Watkins doesnt know about trees and she, as well as Segars and Wallace, covered an extensive amount of information in an easily understandable and gardener-friendly manner. The presenters answered technical questions about chemicals and mixes as well as less-detailed questions such as, What grass do I plant in the shade? Every question was important and the presenters encouraged participation. The time limits for each class werent enforced, which allowed everyone time to ask all of the questions that they wanted to.

The seminar, as promised, offered everything anyone could want when it came to turf, trees and tomatoes.

Watkins started off the day with her presentation on, Tree Selection and Establishment. Watkins began with several quotes about trees, including one from Alexander Smith, A man doesnt plant a tree for himself. He plants it for posterity. Watkins then delved into the topic of trees. She went over tree selection and establishment such as selecting native trees or adapted trees and consider mature size. Watkins also covered selecting a site, or rather, a tree, Select a tree for the site, not a site for the tree. She also covered the subject of purchasing trees; Dont buy root bound trees; Select trees with good form; The biggest tree is not always the best; as well as Inspecting for girdling roots and double leaders, Watkins pointed out that only the outer ring of a tree will take up the water. She talked about transplant shock, Smaller trees will go through less transplant shock than larger tree, and discussed handling of trees, Always handle a tree by the root ball and not by the trunk. She covered Oak Wilt as well, with one bit of information centering on how the disease is transmitted. Buying infect oak firewood from other places and bringing it here can spread Oak Wilt. You can find out further information on Oak Wilt at http://www.TexasOakWilt.org.

The remainder of Watkins class covered prepping the site for your tree, planting the tree and protecting the tree. Watkins also said that that staking a tree should only be done as a last resort. Her presentation, as well as the presentations from Wallace and Segars included slides with photos of the dos and donts.

Watkins also gave out information on recommended trees for this specific area of the state, which included; Texas Redbud; Mexican Redbud; Oklahoma Redbud; Mexican Buckeye; Chisos Rosewood; Mexican Paloverde; Evergreen Sumac; Western Soapberry as well as many more species that she said do well here with the proper care.

The next class was Growing Tomatoes, and was taught by Wallace. It seems that growing tomatoes is woven into the DNA of every Texas gardener and it was a hot topic at the seminar. Wallace is not only the Extension Agent Vegetable Specialist, hes also a tomato judge at the fair in Lubbock and in the Panhandle. Wallace grows tomatoes for Texas A&M Agrilife at their facility in Lubbock and is a master of the red fruit that is the subject of so much frustration one year and pride the next year for Texas gardeners. Yes, tomatoes are fruits but theyre considered vegetables by nutritionists.

The subject of tomatoes went well beyond the 60 minutes that was schedule for the topic, but the subject never bogged down or hit a lull. There was a great deal of conversation and numerous questions about growing tomatoes. Some of the information put out by Wallace included: Tomatoes are a tropical fruit; they like an average temperature of 70-80 degrees; they dont tolerate freezes; they like a pH of 5.5 7.3; they dont like salinity (some fertilizers contain salt and tomatoes dont like it); they prefer consistent moisture and dont like to be waterlogged; they prefer starter fertilizer; they respond best if regularly fertilized with small amounts throughout the season. Wallace said that Miracle Grow is a good fertilizer, especially starter solutions. Miracle Grow is made in Ballinger at Buddys Plant Plus.

Wallace said that drip-irrigations systems worked best for growing tomatoes and stressed the importance of keeping them regularly fertilized and watered uniformly throughout the season.

Wallace also covered the selection of tomato varieties. Some of the varieties covered were Phoenix, Shady Lady, Solar Fire, Sun King, Celebrity, Classy Lady, Sun Master and BHN 444. The pros and cons of each variety were discussed in depth, as well as their resistance to various diseases and pests such as Verticillum Wilt (V), Tomato Spotted Wilt Virus (TSWV), Tomato Yellow Leaf Curl Variety (TYLCV), Fusarium (F), Nematode (N), Tobacco Mosaic (T), Alternaria Stem Canker (A) and Stemphylium solani (S), which also known as Gray Leaf Spot.

Wallace covered how to identify problems in your tomato plants, such as iron deficiency, which can be spotted by a yellowing/bleaching of leaves. Iron deficiency is common to soils with high pH and salinity; Physiological Heat Roll was also discussed. Physiological Heat Roll is caused by heat stress. He also spoke about how to address issues such as Physiological Heat Roll: Use shade cloth to protect them from the sun; cool down the plant with a spray bottle of water. Wallace said that irrigating your tomatoes more will not help. Perhaps the most concerning, at least to Texas gardeners, is that tomato flowers will pop off when they hit 92 - 93. Giving them protection from scalding afternoon sun is critical when our temperatures get into the high 90s and 100s.

Segars covered the subjects of, Turf Irrigation, and Hot Topics in Turf. Segars said that good turf grass can help in several ways, It can absorb pollutants, heat, noise, dust and it can prevent soil erosion. She said that the primary selection criteria should revolve around heat/drought tolerance, irrigation requirements, traffic tolerance, desired use and the time of year the turf is most used. Anyone who has endured a west Texas summer knows the frustration of watching your lawn turn brown in July when water restrictions set in and you can only water your yard once a week while temperatures bake it at 100.

When it comes to native grasses and drought-resistant grasses, Segars said that Buffalo Grass is the only native turf grass in the USA. She said that Buffalo Grass and Bermuda grass are the most drought-resistant grasses and the Zoysia grass thrives in filtered shade. St. Augustine is another good grass for shady areas. Buffalo Grass is the most cold-tolerant grass. According to Segars, the downside to Zoysia is that it is a slow-growing grass. All of the grasses and varieties of each grass were covered during the class, along with how to care for them and how to build a great lawn, even in drought conditions.

If youd like more information on the material covered in the classes or have questions about horticulture, you can email Watkins at aewatkins@ag.tamu.edu or call her at (325) 659-6528.

If you would like more information or have questions about growing tomatoes, or vegetable gardens in general, you can email Wallace at: rwwallace@ag.tamu.edu or call him at the Lubbock Agrilife Extension office at (806) 746-4057.

For questions about grasses, Segars can be reached at Chrissie.Segars@ag.tamu.edu or follow her on Twitter: Hairyligule21. The phone number to the Agrilife Dallas office is (972) 952-9212.

The annual Concho Valley Master Gardeners plant sale is on April 4th, from 8 a.m. until noon (or sold out, whichever comes first). Last year over 4,500 plants were sold. The event is wildly popular and most plants are sold out within 1-2 hours of the doors opening. The event is at the Tom Green County 4H facility and its best to get there 30 minutes to an hour early to get in line.

In September the 9th Annual Fall Landscaping Symposium will be held at the Tom Green County 4H facility.

You can find out more information, as well as Allison Watkins horticulture updates, soil testing and Earthkind Landscaping at http://www.txmg.org/conchovalley.

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Agrilife gardening seminar sheds light on turf, trees and tomatoes - Runnels County Register

Area high schoolers go beyond the books at Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine – News at OU

Twenty-four area high school students visited Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine last week to study the brain as part of the schools community outreach.

The students were from an anatomy class at Avondale High School in Auburn Hills.

The first-of-its-kind event was led by OUWBs Student Interest Group in Neurology/Neurosurgery (SIGN) and made possible through a grant from Compass, OUWBs department for community engagement.

Those who helped coordinate the event generally wanted to provide a unique, beyond-the-books experience for the students.

I hope this is one of those particularly memorable days they have in high school, said Katie Wheeler, M1 representative, SIGN. I remember having things like this in high school, and it really propelled me forward to get into medicine. I hope this event lights a fire inside of them to pursue medicine or science in general.

Sharon Hyde, principal, Avondale High School, stressed the importance of the hands-on experience for the high schoolers.

Many of our students want to go into the medical field, and I think they learn greatly from seeing medical students who are slightly older than them being successful and sharing their experience, said Hyde. Often theyre more willing to learn from students in the field.

The event kicked off in one of OUWBs lecture halls with a brief overview of the human brain from Joseph Fullmer, M.D., Ph.D, neuroanatomist, Beaumont Health, and assistant professor, Department of Pathology, OUWB.

During the engaging session, students asked many questions about the brain pertaining to topics such as sleep, dreams, concussions, and the impact of smoking/vaping and alcohol.

Fullmer said he felt the questions were particularly relevant to their lives, and created an opportunity for him to have quality engagement with the high school students.

A lot of people dont know about medical careers and how exciting it can be, he said. Im very much an advocate for STEM and helping these students recognize their potential.

A memorable anatomy lab experience

Following Fullmers lecture, the students moved to the OUWB Anatomy Lab, where they were split up into smaller groups with each taking part in dissection of a sheep brain.

It felt like we were in a real medical lecture and it was super interesting to learn about the different parts of the brain, said Qijia Zhou, senior, Avondale High School.

Zhou with a lengthy list of accomplishments that includes a perfect ACT score of 36 plans to attend Harvard University next fall.

Zhou said she is currently undecided in course of study, but the interactive OUWB event definitely piqued her interest in the possibility of medicine.

She noted that being able to dissect a sheeps brain is completely different than learning about it from a book or online.

Pictures are nice and color-coded, but seeing it in real life and touching it makes it easier to remember things for me, she said.

That was exactly the point of the day, according to Alexandra Beels, who teaches biology, anatomy, physiology, and wilderness survival at Avondale.

I have a very diverse group of students, and they dont always get to get out and do things like dissect a sheep brain and interact with medical students, she said. If that gets them more interested in the sciences, then Im happy.

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Area high schoolers go beyond the books at Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine - News at OU

Pleuritic Chest Pain, Other Vague Symptoms — What Could It Be? – MedPage Today

A 44-year-old otherwise healthy man presents to an emergency department in Baltimore, noting that for the past 24 hours he has had a sharp pain in his chest that worsens when he breathes deeply. He says he is also short of breath even when he is at rest, feels feverish, and is having chills.

The patient has no past medical conditions to explain these symptoms. Initial assessment reveals sinus tachycardia with rates of 140 to 150 seconds and a blood pressure of 143/73 mm Hg. Physical examination identifies a large pericardial friction rub.

Clinicians perform a preliminary electrocardiogram (ECG) that reveals sinus tachycardia, frequent premature ventricular contractions of outflow tract morphology, and mild diffuse ST elevations with PR segment depression.

Results of laboratory tests are notable for leukocytosis of 12,000 cells/mm3 and elevated C-reactive protein of 206.0 mg/L. Clinicians order a chest x-ray that shows mild cardiomegaly, but there is no sign of pulmonary edema.

Subsequently, an echocardiogram demonstrates a small pericardial effusion, thus fulfilling the diagnostic criteria for acute pericarditis.

The patient is started on treatment with colchicine and ibuprofen. However, his symptoms do not improve and he undergoes several transthoracic echocardiograms (TTE) over the next 4 days. Imaging reveals an enlarging circumferential pericardial effusion and with depressed ejection fraction of 40%-45%, without evidence of tamponade.

Echocardiogram showing large pericardial effusion, without evidence of tamponade physiology.

Day 5

Pericardiocentesis is performed resulting in drainage of 450 cc of straw-colored fluid. Analysis shows 100,000 white blood cells with neutrophilic predominance. Placement of a pericardial drain removes an additional 450 mL of fluid over the following 48 hours, and clinicians then remove the drain.

Fluid culture findings included polymicrobial growth of Micromonas micro, Prevotella intermedia, and Fusobacterium species, all anaerobic flora of the oral cavity, and treatment is started with ceftriaxone.

Day 8

Within 48 hours of the removal of the pericardial drain, a repeat TTE shows that pericardial fluid has re-accumulated, and there is partial diastolic collapse of right atrial and right ventricular, indicating echocardiographic tamponade.

The patient's systolic blood pressure is noted to have fallen by 30 mm Hg. Urgent pericardiocentesis is performed, removing 550 mL of purulent thick fluid that, again, has a high white blood cell count, consistent with purulent pericarditis.

Day 9

A repeat TTE the following day shows no further re-accumulation of fluid. However, a few hours later, a transesophageal echocardiogram (TEE) and subsequent computed tomography (CT) scan of the chest shows that pericardial fluid is indeed again re-accumulating.

On the mediastinal-view scan, clinicians also note evidence of gas in the pericardium with an enhancing rim suggestive of infection, along with evidence of new nodules in the lungs that raise concern for septic emboli. A repeat echocardiogram shows large, echo-dense circumferential pericardial effusion, as well as "septal bounce" suggestive of constrictive physiology.

Clinicians decide that the patient requires a pericardial window, and perform another TEE prior to the surgery, with the results consistent with tamponade physiology.

The pericardial window procedure is completed, and 750 cc of pus is removed under pressure. The esophagram is negative, confirming there is no path from the upper gastrointestinal tract to the pericardial area.

Day 10 Follow-up

Blood cultures drawn on days 1, 8, and 10 indicate that the patient was never bacteremic. Likewise, an extensive infectious work-up was negative, consistent with primary pericarditis. The patient is discharged with 4 weeks of intravenous ceftriaxone from the time of the pericardial window, and he subsequently has a full clinical recovery.

Discussion

Clinicians reporting this case of primary bacterial purulent pericarditis with cardiac tamponade in a healthy immunocompetent adult male note that this is a rare phenomenon, virtually unheard of in immunocompetent patients without underlying infection.

Because acute bacterial purulent pericarditis can progress rapidly into cardiac tamponade, early diagnosis and treatment are critical to reduce mortality and improve clinical outcomes. Of patients who do receive treatment, about 40% develop fatal cardiac tamponade, constrictive pericarditis, and septic shock.

The case authors note that most cases of acute pericarditis are of an unknown etiology, which may or may not be infectious in nature. However, bacteria -- usually gram-positive cocci -- have been reported as the cause of spontaneous pericarditis leading to clinical and echocardiographic tamponade. For instance, while a bacterial cause was identified in up to a third of purulent pericarditis cases in a 1977 study, the rate of gram-positive bacteria as the cause of bacterial pericarditis has fallen slowly with increasing use of antibiotics.

Similarly, a 20-year retrospective review published in 1993 by researchers in Spain reported a bacterial cause of pericarditis in about 5.5% of cases, 42% of which were diagnosed postmortem.

The anaerobic bacteria implicated in cases of purulent pericarditis were most commonly Peptostreptococcus, Clostridium, Fusiform, Bifidobacterium, and Actinomyces spp.

Risk factors for purulent pericarditis have notably been alcohol abuse, immunosuppression, and chest trauma. However, the case authors note that none of these applied to this patient, whose pericarditis was due to normal flora from the oropharynx.

Most commonly, patients develop a secondary bacterial pericarditis as either an extension of infection from within the thorax, through hematologic spread if the patient is bacteremic, direct inoculation via trauma, or spread from site of infection within the heart.

Complications

As in this case, patients with purulent pericarditis may develop complications such as cardiac tamponade and constrictive pericarditis; additional complications include aortic mycotic aneurysms and left ventricular pseudoaneurysms.

Purulent pericarditis generally presents with non-specific symptoms such as fever and chills. Clinicians reporting this case note that although this patient had pleuritic chest pain, pericardial friction rub, and diffuse ST segment elevation, these symptoms may be seen more commonly in pericarditis with a viral rather than a bacterial cause.

Suspected cases of bacterial pericarditis should immediately receive an echocardiogram to evaluate for cardiac tamponade. Echocardiographic signs of tamponade, such as diastolic collapse of the right ventricle, can precede clinical symptoms of tamponade, the case authors note. They advise urgent pericardiocentesis to relieve pressure and analysis of the pericardial aspirate for cytology examination, as well as bacterial and fungal cultures. Despite initial pericardiocentesis, 40% of patients ultimately require a surgical pericardial window.

Although there have been reports of cases of bacterial pericarditis that involved Fusiform species, there have been only two documented cases of Prevotella, both in patients receiving cancer chemotherapy.

Early antibiotic treatment is necessary to prevent recurrence of bacterial pericardial effusion, the authors note, adding that oral anaerobic bacteria are generally sensitive to beta-lactam antibiotics. This patient was successfully treated with 4 weeks of intravenous ceftriaxone.

Conclusions

The authors conclude that when patients present with non-specific symptoms and pleuritic chest pain, clinicians should have a high level of suspicion for purulent pericarditis due to its high level of mortality.

Last Updated March 09, 2020

Disclosures

The case report authors noted no conflicts of interest.

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Pleuritic Chest Pain, Other Vague Symptoms -- What Could It Be? - MedPage Today

Introducing the Life in Extreme Environments Collection – PLoS Blogs

Written by Daniel Colman (Guest Editor, Montana State University), Ruth Blake (Guest Editor, Yale University) and Hanna Landenmark (Associate Editor, PLOS ONE).

We are delighted to introduce a Collection entitled Life in Extreme Environments, consisting of papers published in PLOS Biology and PLOS ONE. This interdisciplinary Collection helps us better understand the diversity of life on Earth in addition to the biological processes, geochemistry, and nutrient cycling taking place in many of the Earths most inhospitable environments, while also enabling us to make inferences about the potential for life beyond Earth. Microorganisms and other life in extreme environments are fundamental agents of geochemical and nutrient cycling in many of the most poorly understood environments on Earth. While we tend to think of these environments as lying at the boundaries of what life is capable of dealing with, many organisms are uniquely adapted to thrive in habitats at the extremes of temperatures, pressures, water availability, salinity, and other environmental characteristics. Indeed, these environments are certainly not extreme to these organisms, but represent their unique niches within ecosystems on Earth. The papers included in this Collection bring together research from different disciplines including the biosciences, geosciences, planetary sciences, and oceanography in order to shed light on this crucial topic.

We are immensely grateful to our Guest Editor team- Paola Di Donato (Universit degli Studi di Napoli Parthenope), Jiasong Fang (Hawaii Pacific University), David Pearce (Northumbria University), Anna Metaxas (Dalhousie University), Henrik Sass (Cardiff University), Ruth Blake (Yale University), Daniel Colman (Montana State University), Karen Olsson-Francis (The Open University), Frank Reith (The University of Adelaide), Felipe Gmez (Centro de Astrobiologa, Instituto Nacional de Tcnica Aeronutica)- for curating this Collection.

The importance of studying life in extreme environments

It is important to study life in extreme environments in order to establish lifes limits both physical and geographic (e.g., the depth of life beneath the seafloor), as well as the capacity of life to withstand and adapt to change. Besides significantly expanding our understanding of the limits of familiar and extreme life on Earth, studies in extreme environments have also revised our understanding of the nature of the earliest life on our planet, as well as providing the possibility of discovering new industrially useful organisms or biological products. Moreover, if there is life on other planetary bodies in our solar system or elsewhere, they will almost certainly be living in what we consider extreme environments on Earth. Thus, understanding how life copes with what we consider extreme conditions can provide insight into how life may be able to persist on other planetary bodies, perhaps in the subsurface oceans of Saturns moon, Enceladus, or Jupiters moon, Europa.

Investigating extreme life

One of the most exciting aspects of researching extreme life is the exploration of the unknown and discovery of new things in unexpected places that expands our very way of thinking. Microbial life, in particular, has evolved to find a way to exist and even thrive pretty much everywhere we have looked so far.Moreover, contemporary research of extremophiles is happening at an exciting time when the lines between scientific fields have been increasingly blurred. The more we understand about how environments not only influence life in extreme environments, but how life also influences those environments, the more apparent it becomes that extreme ecosystems are dynamic systems with feedback between biological activities and ecosystem properties. These interdisciplinary perspectives certainly invigorate the study of extreme life.

Extremophile research is often interdisciplinary by nature, perhaps due to the close association with biological organisms and their ecosystems, and thus the need to consider environmental, geologic, ecological, physiological, and even evolutionary considerations when investigating how organisms are able to push the limits of life. The challenges can be considerable due to the need to integrate across many disciplines, which requires expertise in a number of areas (and requiring scientists across disciplines to productively engage one another). But the reward for conducting this type of research is that it can transform how we view the relationships between living organisms and their environments. These insights can be profound in terms of our understanding of organismal biology and broader evolutionary processes of adaptation.

Yet, by their very nature, extreme environments pose significant challenges for studying biological life within them. This can be due to their remote locations (e.g., deep sea environments, high altitude environments), or to specific dangers associated with studying them (e.g., geothermal fields or other volcanic environments). Indeed, the reason that these environments are considered extreme is because they are not amenable to humans spending much time within them. It takes serious dedication and preparation to execute scientific research under such conditions.

The future of extremophile research

The last 30-40 years have reshaped our understanding of life in extreme environments, but much remains to be discovered. As one example, were still only beginning to understand what types of microbial life can exist in extreme environments, let alone what the physiological adaptations of these organisms might be. One of the greatest questions in the study of life in extreme environments i whether life is present in other extreme environments of the Universe beyond our planet. While we cannot know whether answers to this question will be forthcoming in the near future, great strides are being made in pointing us in what may be the most likely directions.

The Life in Extreme Environments Collection

This Collection showcases a wide variety of research on how life, from microorganisms like bacteria, archaea, diatoms, and algae, through to macroorganisms like humans, survive and flourish in diverse extreme environments, ranging from hydrothermal vents and the deep ocean to permafrosts and hypersaline lakes, and from the high Andes to deep space. Many papers illustrate highly interdisciplinary approaches and collaborations, and provide important insights into the limits of life on Earth in truly extreme environments. As indicated above, extremophiles provide insight into far-ranging topics like the limits of life on Earth, biogeochemical cycling in extreme but globally important environments, insights into early life on Earth, and how organisms cope with conditions that push the boundaries of organismal physiology.

A critical component of extremophile research is understanding how extremophiles are distributed across environments in both contemporary settings as well as over geologic time. Serpentinizing environments are considered to be analogs for the environments where life originated on Earth (and that may also support life on other planetary bodies). The investigation of fully serpentinized rocks by Khilyas et al. document the endolithic (i.e., within-rock dwelling) microbial diversity within these unique environments, their associations with their mineral environments, and contrast their findings with those of active serpentinizing aqueous environments. Such studies examining the connection between extreme environments and their native microbiomes can be critical for understanding how organisms have and continue to interact with their environments over time. Another study in the Collection by Kiel and Peckmann provides new insights into the association of macrofauna with hydrothermal vents over the past ~550 million years. Their survey of dominant brachiopod and bivalve fossils over this period challenge the pre-existing hypotheses that these two groups competed for the same resources, with the latter group ultimately gaining prominence in the last ~100 million years. However, the authors show that the two groups likely inhabited different vent environments altogether, with brachiopods inhabiting hydrocarbon seeps and bivalves preferring sulfide-producing vents in association with their symbiotic sulfide oxidizing bacteria. To better understand the contemporary distributions of important marine microorganisms, Ferreira da Silva et al. documented how diatom communities are associated with macroalgae in the waters near the South Shetland Islands of Antarctica, revealing a potential role of the unique Antarctic climate in determining the biogeography of diatoms and their associated macroalgae. Indeed, the relationships among organisms may be critical for the habitation of extreme environments. In another investigation of cross-taxa associations in extreme environments, Gallet et al. evaluated the diversity of microbiota associated with enigmatic bioluminescent lantern fish species, and found that the latter might interact with its microbiome to inhabit the extreme environment of deep southern oceans. The data provide a better understanding of these important associations in key species involved in the ecosystem function of extreme deep sea environments.

Although extreme environments are often considered marginal habitats of mostly local influence, the functions of some extreme environments, and the organisms inhabiting them, can have particularly important implications for global biogeochemical cycling. For example, Nayak et al. document new insights into the functioning of one of the most important microbial enzymes involved in global carbon cycling, the methyl-coenzyme M reductase protein of methanogens, which catalyzes the key step of methanogenesis allowing the biological production of methane, which contributes to a significant portion of global methane production. In the authors investigation, they show how the protein is post-translationally modified by a previously unknown mechanism, and that this tuning of methyl-coenzyme M reductase has profound impacts on the adaptation of methanogens to various environmental conditions. Anoxic peatlands are one such environment where methanogens play critical roles in biogeochemical cycling. These anoxic peatland environments are extreme environments that are important for global biogeochemical cycling, despite only occupying a small fraction of the total land space. Kluber et al. used an experimental warming approach to investigate how deep, anoxic peatland reserves would respond to fluctuating environmental conditions. The authors document that temperature is a key parameter that could drastically affect the decomposition of peatland nutrient stocks and their contribution to global biogeochemical cycling.

Key to the interaction between organisms and extreme environments are the adaptations that extreme environments impose upon organisms. The Collection features a number of investigations documenting the unique adaptations of microorganisms and macroorganisms to habitats ranging from hydrothermal vents to space at both the genomic and physiological levels. One of the most enigmatic discoveries of extreme environments over the past half century was the identification of entire ecosystems that dwell on or around hydrothermal vents at the ocean floor that are sustained by inorganic chemical synthesis from hydrothermal vent fluid chemicals. The paper within this Collection by Zhu et al. provides new evidence for the genetic mechanisms that allow the habitation of vent ecosystems by two distinct shrimp species that characteristically inhabit different thermal regions of vents. Using transcriptomic approaches, the authors identified new molecular mechanisms underlying how macrofauna can adapt to different hydrothermal niches within these extreme systems. Likewise, Daz-Riao et al. used transcriptomics to identify the mechanisms of ultraviolet radiation resistance (UVR) within high UVR bacterial strains that were isolated from high altitudes within the Colombian Andes. These new insights provide much needed resolution into the RNA-based regulatory mechanisms underlying UVR in organisms, which represents a fundamental knowledge-gap in our understanding of organismal adaptations to extreme altitude environments.

While life that persists continuously under extreme environments provide valuable information to understand the physiological limits of life, it is also critical to understand how life adapted to more normal environments can withstand excursions to extreme environments over prolonged periods of time. One such example are oxygen minimum zones that occur in deep oceans where oxygen levels have been depleted to levels thought to not be able to support higher life, in what is termed hypoxic conditions. Nevertheless, some higher organisms are capable of living in such environments, although their adaptations to this lifestyle are not currently clear. One such species is the bluntnose sixgill shark that can tolerate very low levels of oxygen. Using an array of biologging techniques that allowed them to monitor the physiological and behavioral activities of these sharks, Coffey et al. provide evidence for their migratory behavior and long periods of exposure to hypoxic conditions in the deep sea. In addition to elucidating how sixgill sharks cope with extreme deep sea conditions, the new ecophysiological logging techniques provide a new platform for future studies of organisms adapted to the extremes of deep oceans. Among the possible excursions of life to extreme environments, none are potentially more problematic than the travel of humans to space. A common physiological effect of space transit is the bone mineral density (BMD) loss that is experienced by astronauts. In a paper within the Collection, Axpe et al., performed a modeling analysis based on BMD loss by previous astronauts involved in long-term missions in order to evaluate the potential for these harmful effects on trips that might become targets for longer manned missions to Mars or elsewhere. The study thus provides critical new data to inform these important missions.

As exemplified by the papers within this Collection, unique adaptations allow life to persist in extreme environments. These adaptations can also be useful in biotechnological applications, as several other papers in the Collection demonstrate. Halophiles that inhabit extremely saline environments have long been a source for bioprospecting due to their unique adaptations that allow them to maintain osmotic balance within environments that most types of life could not survive in. Notably, halophiles often concentrate unique biomolecules in order to overcome the abiotic stress of hypersaline environments. In their manuscript, Abdollahnia et al. explore the previously little-investigated ability of halophiles to concentrate nanoparticles, finding evidence for the unique ability to concentrate metal nanoparticles within archaeal and bacterial species. Importantly, these organisms could represent a potential environmentally-friendly means of synthesizing unique metal nanoparticles. Thus, the identification of new bio-resources is an area of ongoing and intense interest in the investigation of extreme life.

As is evident by the diverse range of topics, organisms, and environments within the papers of this Collection, the investigation of extreme life incorporates numerous fields of study and a wealth of methods to understand the limits to life on Earth. Well be adding new papers to the Collection as they are published, so please do keep checking back.

Ruth Blake

Ruth Blake is a Professor in the departments of Geology & Geophysics and Environmental Engineering, and in the School of Forestry & Environmental Studies at Yale University. Dr. Blakes areas of expertise include marine biogeochemistry, stable isotope geochemistry and geomicrobiology. Her recent work focuses on developing new stable isotope tools, geochemical proxies and biomarkers to study marine/microbial phosphorus cycling and evolution of the phosphorus cycle from pre-biotic to recent.

Dr. Blake is engaged in a range of studies on co- evolution of earth and life and the impacts of both on biogeochemical processes occurring in the oceans, deep-sea sediments, seafloor hydrothermal systems and the sub-seafloor deep biosphere. Dr. Blake has participated in several ocean exploration/ research expeditions including cruises to: FeMO observatory at Loihi undersea volcano, 9N EPR, Orca Basin in the Gulf of Mexico and North Pond in the mid-Atlantic. She has also served as shipboard scientist on Ocean Drilling Program and R/V Atlantis /DSV ALVIN platforms. Ruth Blake graduated from the University of Michigan in 1998 with a PhD in geochemistry.

Daniel Colman

Dan is currently an assistant research professor at Montana State University and is an environmental microbiologist with primary research interests in broadly understanding how microbial populations interact with one another and with their environments. To investigate these broad topics, he uses a suite of interdisciplinary techniques at the intersection of environmental microbiology, biogeochemistry, geomicrobiology, microbial physiology, geochemistry, hydrology, and microbial evolution.

In particular, his work leverages environmental genomics methods coupled to in situ and laboratory experiments along with geochemical insights from hydrological and geochemical analyses to understand 1) how and why environments structure micobial communities, 2) how microbial communities shape their environments, and 3) how environments and microbial populations have co- evolved through time. In particular, he has largely focused on evaluating these questions in extreme environments, and especially hydrothermal systems, which represent an excellent platform to deconvolute microbial-environment relationships across substantial environmental gradients.

Paola Di Donato

Graduated in Chemistry, Paola received her PhD in 2002 and since 2008 she is a Researcher in Biochemistry at the Department of Science and Technology of University of Naples Parthenope; in 2016 she has been appointed as the Deans delegate to managing the Institutional Repository of the University Parthenope.

Her research interests are the valorisation of waste vegetable biomass and the study of extremophilic bacteria. With regard to the first topic, her research focuses on the recovery of value added chemicals (polysaccharides and polyphenols) and the production of energy (bioethanol) from wastes of vegetables food industry and of dedicated crops (giant reed, cardoon). With regard to the study of extremophilic bacteria, her research activity is aimed at studying the biotechnologically useful biomolecules (enzymes and exopolysaccharides) produced by these bacteria; in the last seven years, particular attention has been paid to the study of extremophiles in relation to Astrobiology, the multidisciplinary approach to the study of origin and evolution of life on Earth and in the Universe.

Felipe Gmez

Dr. Felipe Gmez is a senior staff scientist at the CAB. His research work focuses on the study of extreme environments, limits of life and, by extrapolation, development of habitability potential in adverse environments. He participates in Mars exploration space missions to search for traces of life and study the habitability potential of the red planet. He is currently part of the scientific team (Co-Investigator) of the Rover Environmental Monitoring Station (REMS) instrument aboard the NASA Curiosity-MSL rover that is studying the surface of Mars at this time. Dr. Felipe Gmez is Co-I of MEDA instrument that will be onboard Mars2020 NASA mission to Mars.

He has been part of the scientific team of several campaigns of astrobiological interest in studying different extreme environments. The project M.A.R.T.E. (Mars Analogue Research and Technology Development) began in 2003 and extended until 2006. Its principal investigator was Dr. Carol Stocker of NASA Ames Research Center. This project was funded by NASA within NASAs ASTEP program for the development of technology for future space missions. This project was developed with the collaboration of several institutions in the United States and CAB. It consisted in the study of the subterranean environment of the zone of origin of the Tinto River (Huelva) where several perforations were made (160 m deeper) until reaching the anoxic zone isolated from the surface. The ultimate goal of the project was the design and development of an automatic platform for drilling without direct human intervention (automatic drilling) on the surface of Mars. This project was the beginning of research into the development of automatic drilling instruments for this purpose. It was developed in three phases: first and second year with non-automatic perforations and in situ study of the samples that were obtained in real time. In the third year, the automatic platform was implemented.

Jiasong Fang

Jiasong Fang is a professor in the College of Natural and Computational Sciences of Hawaii Pacific University, Distinguished Chair Professor in the College of Marine Sciences of Shanghai Ocean University, and Director of the Shanghai Engineering Research Center of Hadal Science and Technology. Dr. Fang received his Ph.D. in oceanography from Texas A&M University and did his postdoctoral training at the Department of Microbiology of Miami University.

His scientific interests are primarily in the areas of high-pressure microbiology and biogeochemistry, focusing on piezophilic microorganisms and their role in mediating biogeochemical cycles in the deep ocean and the deep biosphere. He has co-authored 100 scientific publications.

Anna Metaxas

Dr. Anna Metaxas is a Professor in Oceanography at Dalhousie University. She received a B.Sc. in Biology from McGill University in 1986, a MSc in Oceanography from the University of British Columbia in 1989 and a PhD from Dalhousie University in 1994. She was a Postdoctoral Fellow at Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institution from 1995 to 1997, and a Postdoctoral Scholar at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution from 1997 to 1999.

Her research focuses on the factors that regulate populations of benthic marine invertebrates, particularly early in their life history. She uses a combination of approaches, such as field sampling, laboratory experiments and mathematical modelling, to study organisms of ecological and economic importance, including invasive species. She has worked in a variety of habitats from shallow rocky subtidal regions to the deep-sea, including hydrothermal vents and deep- water corals, in temperate and tropical regions of the world. Her research has implications for marine conservation, such as the establishment and success of conservation areas for benthic populations.

Karen Olsson-Francis

Dr. Karen Olsson-Francis is a Senior Lecturer at the Open University, in the United Kingdom. Her research focuses on understanding the role that microorganisms play in biogeochemical cycling in extreme environments. She is interested in this from a diversity and functional prospective. In particular, she has focused on studying terrestrial analogue sites and utilizing this information to understand how, and where, potential evidence of life can be found elsewhere in the Solar System.

David Pearce

The underlying theme of David Pearces research is to use microbiology (and in particular novel molecular techniques applied to microbial ecology, microbial biodiversity and activity, environmental genomics, biogeochemical cycling and model extremophiles) to understand Polar ecosystem function and the potential for shifts in biogeochemical activity that may result from environmental change. He has taken the lead in the development of new frontiers of research in metagenomics, chemosynthetic communities, sediment sequestration of carbon and subglacial lake environments and have initiated new interdisciplinary approaches on the aerial environment (with chemists), ice nucleation activity (with physicists) and in the biogeochemistry of ice (with glaciologists).

Frank Reith

Frank Reith is an Associate Professor in geomicrobiology at the School of Biological Sciences at University of Adelaide and CSIRO Land and Water, where he heads the Microbes and Heavy Metal Research Group. He holds a PhD in Earth Sciences from the Australian National University. He is interested in microbial processes that affect metal cycling and the formation of new minerals. In turn, he also studies how microbes are affected by elevated concentrations of heavy metals in extreme environments. His particular interests lie in the biomediated cycling of noble/heavy metals, e.g., gold, silver, platinum, uranium, osmium and iridium.

An important aim of the fundamental processes understanding created by his research is to use it to develop tools for industry, e.g., biosensors and bioindicators for mineral exploration, as well as biotechnological methods for mineral processing and resource recovery from electronic waste. Thereby, his approach is highly multidisciplinary and covers field expeditions to remote corners of the Earth, synchrotron research, meta-genomic and proteomic approaches as well as statistical-, geochemical- and reactive transport modelling.

We were very saddened to hear of Franks passing before this Collection published. We are immensely grateful for his contributions to PLOS and to his field of research, as well as for his enthusiasm and kindness. Our thoughts go out to his family and friends.

Henrik Sass

Dr. Henrik Sass is senior lecturer in Geomicrobiology at the School of Earth and Ocean Sciences of Cardiff University. He received his PhD from the University of Oldenburg (Germany).

Henrik is a biogeochemist, geomicrobiologist and microbial physiologist with a special interest in anaerobic processes and the prokaryotes involved, such as the strictly anaerobic sulphate reducers and methanogens. He has been working on anaerobic metabolism and described new metabolic pathways in methanogens. One main topic of his research is life in the extreme environments, particularly life in the deep biosphere and in deep-sea anoxic brine lakes. These studies aim to reveal how anaerobes adapt to their particular ecological niches (e.g. oxygen tolerance of sulphate reducers). His work utilizes a range of different approaches including in situ activity measurements and the estimation of viable population sizes, but also culture-based laboratory experiments. Another aspect of his work has been the use of biomarkers, including dipicolinic acid for the detection of endospores in environmental samples.

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Baylor College of Medicine and UH team up for new research collaborations – The Medical News

Baylor College of Medicine and the University of Houston are teaming up for new research collaborations. The two Texas Medical Center member institutions have awarded grant funding for nine research projects, each with investigators from both schools, as part of a pilot program resulting from a 2019 Memorandum of Understanding between Baylor College of Medicine and UH to foster new partnerships and research collaborations.

The grants will give awardees $60,000 over 18 months, with each institution providing half the funding. The winners cover research in a wide variety of subjects, including oncology, cardiology, genetics, biochemistry, virology, ophthalmology, molecular biology, nutrition and health services.

Baylor College of Medicine and the University of Houston have unique strengths and resources that can contribute to an outstanding platform for population health and precision medicine. Nine excellent projects were selected from a very large and competitive pool. This joint research collaboration will greatly enhance scientific innovation and discovery that will benefit both our institutions and the city of Houston."

Dr. Ashok Balasubramanyam, vice president for academic integration at Baylor

"The impact of the synergy between the clinical research depth of Baylor and the fundamental and technological biomedical research of the University of Houston will be transformative," said Amr Elnashai, UH vice president for research and technology transfer. "The cohesion of the two research visions was demonstrated from the very first meeting and continues to date. I cannot think of a better, more collaborative and capable research partner than Baylor."

The full list of winners is:

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Tags: Biochemistry, Bryostatin, Cancer, Cardiology, Cataract, Cell, Cellular Biology, Evolution, Exercise, Exosome, Eye, Genetics, Genome, Heart, HIV, HIV-1, Hydrogel, Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells, Medicinal Chemistry, Medicine, Microbiology, Microbiome, Molecular Biology, Nutrition, Oncology, Ophthalmology, Pediatrics, pH, Pharmacology, Physiology, Progenitor Cells, Research, Stem Cells, Surgery, Telemedicine, Vascular, Virology

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UVA Discovers Why Obesity Causes High Blood Pressure and Potential Ways to Stop It – University of Virginia

Researchers at theUniversity of Virginia School of Medicinehave discovered why obesity causes high blood pressure and identified potential ways of treating that form of high blood pressure.

The researchers have already confirmed their discovery in human tissue samples and used it to reverse high blood pressure in lab mice.

Our study identifies the cellular mechanisms that increase blood pressure in obesity, and shows that these mechanisms can be targeted for lowering the blood pressure. If we are able to design the appropriate compounds, we might be able to treat hypertension in obese patients, said lead researcher Swapnil K. Sonkusare of UVAs Department of Molecular Physiology and Biological Physics and UVAs Robert M. Berne Cardiovascular Research Center.

Obesity is a growing problem worldwide. The number of people considered obese has nearly tripled since 1975, and with obesity comes greater risk of cardiovascular disease, high blood pressure (hypertension) and stroke, among other health problems.

Small arteries in our body control blood pressure. Scientists have suspected that hypertension in obesity is related to problems in endothelial cells that line these small arteries. The reasons for this, however, have been unclear until now.

Sonkusare and colleagues found that a protein on the membranes surrounding endothelial cells allows calcium to enter the cells and maintains normal blood pressure. Obesity, it turns out, affects this protein, called TRPV4, within tiny subsections of the cell membrane. Sonkusare calls these faulty subsections pathological microdomains.

Under healthy conditions, TRPV4 at these tiny microdomains helps maintain normal blood pressure. We, for the first time, show the sequence of events that lead to a harmful microenvironment for calcium entry through TRPV4, he said. I think the concept of pathological microdomains is going to be very important not just for obesity-related studies, but for studies of other cardiovascular disorders as well.

Obesity, the researchers found, increases the levels of peroxynitrite-making enzymes in the microdomains containing TRPV4. Peroxynitrite silences TRPV4 and lowers calcium entry into the cells. Without the proper amount of calcium, blood pressure goes up.

Sonkusare believes that targeting peroxynitrite or the enzymes that make it could be an effective way to treat and prevent high blood pressure in obesity, without the side effects that would come with trying to target TRPV4 itself.

People asked me, Why dont you use a drug to directly activate TRPV4? But TRPV4 is present in many other tissues, including brain, muscle and bladder, he explained. So if you directly activate TRPV4, you will likely get undesirable side effects. The better approach would be to target the specific events that reduce TRPV4 function in obesity.

Sonkusares discovery also may explain why attempts to use antioxidants to lower high blood pressure have not been very effective in clinical trials. This could be due to the lack of specificity of these antioxidants, he said. We, for the first time, identify peroxynitrite as the precise oxidant molecule that increases blood pressure in obesity. The next step would be to design drugs that specifically target peroxynitrite and provide therapeutic benefit.

The discovery was made possible by innovative techniques developed in Sonkusares lab. Researchers in his lab can visualize the calcium entry through TRPV4 in real time and use tools that enable the studies of microdomains.

Historically, researchers have studied larger blood vessels that dont control blood pressure, Sonkusare said. Because of our unique techniques, we are able to study the microdomains in very small arteries that control the blood pressure. So our technical ability allows us to obtain these unique insights.

Sonkusare and his colleagues have described their discovery in the scientific journal Circulation. The research team consisted of Matteo Ottolini, Kwangseok Hong, Eric L. Cope, Zdravka Daneva, Leon J. DeLalio, Jennifer D. Sokolowski, Corina Marziano, Nhiem Y. Nguyen, Joachim Altschmied, Judith Haendeler, Scott R. Johnstone, Mohammad Y. Kalani, Min S. Park, Rakesh P. Patel, Wolfgang Liedtke, Brant E. Isakson and Sonkusare.

The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health, grants HL142808, HL146914, HL138496 and HL088554; and the American Heart Association, grant 18POST33960212.

To keep up with the latest medical research news from UVA, subscribe to theMaking of Medicineblog.

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UVA Discovers Why Obesity Causes High Blood Pressure and Potential Ways to Stop It - University of Virginia

UVA researchers discover why obesity causes high blood pressure and potential ways to fix – The Medical News

Researchers at the University of Virginia School of Medicine have discovered why obesity causes high blood pressure and identified potential ways of treating that form of high blood pressure.

The researchers have already confirmed their discovery in human tissue samples and used it to reverse high blood pressure in lab mice.

Our study identifies the cellular mechanisms that increase blood pressure in obesity, and shows that these mechanisms can be targeted for lowering the blood pressure. If we are able to design the appropriate compounds, we might be able to treat hypertension in obese patients."

Swapnil K. Sonkusare, Ph.D., lead researcher, UVA's Department of Molecular Physiology and Biological Physics and UVA's Robert M. Berne Cardiovascular Research Center

Obesity is a growing problem worldwide. The number of people considered obese has nearly tripled since 1975, and with obesity comes greater risk of cardiovascular disease, high blood pressure (hypertension) and stroke, among other health problems.

Small arteries in our body control blood pressure. Scientists have suspected that hypertension in obesity is related to problems in endothelial cells that line these small arteries. The reasons for this, however, have been unclear - until now.

Sonkusare and colleagues found that a protein on the membranes surrounding endothelial cells allows calcium to enter the cells and maintains normal blood pressure. Obesity, it turns out, affects this protein, called TRPV4, within tiny subsections of the cell membrane. Sonkusare calls these faulty subsections "pathological microdomains."

"Under healthy conditions, TRPV4 at these tiny microdomains helps maintain normal blood pressure. We, for the first time, show the sequence of events that lead to a harmful microenvironment for calcium entry through TRPV4," he said. "I think the concept of pathological microdomains is going to be very important not just for obesity-related studies but for studies of other cardiovascular disorders as well."

Obesity, the researchers found, increases the levels of peroxynitrite-making enzymes in the microdomains containing TRPV4. Peroxynitrite silences TRPV4 and lowers calcium entry into the cells. Without the proper amount of calcium, blood pressure goes up.

Sonkusare believes that targeting peroxynitrite or the enzymes that make it could be an effective way to treat and prevent high blood pressure in obesity, without the side effects that would come with trying to target TRPV4 itself.

"People asked me, 'Why don't you use a drug to directly activate TRPV4?' But TRPV4 is present in many other tissues, including brain, muscle and bladder," he explained. "So if you directly activate TRPV4, you will likely get undesirable side effects. The better approach would be to target the specific events that reduce TRPV4 function in obesity."

Sonkusare's discovery also may explain why attempts to use antioxidants to lower high blood pressure have not been very effective in clinical trials. This could be due to the lack of specificity of these antioxidants, he said. "We, for the first time, identify peroxynitrite as the precise oxidant molecule that increases blood pressure in obesity. The next step would be to design drugs that specifically target peroxynitrite and provide therapeutic benefit."

The discovery was made possible by innovative techniques developed in Sonkusare's lab. Researchers in his lab can visualize the calcium entry through TRPV4 in real time and use tools that enable the studies of microdomains. "Historically, researchers have studied larger blood vessels that don't control blood pressure," Sonkusare said. "Because of our unique techniques, we are able to study the microdomains in very small arteries that control the blood pressure. So our technical ability allows us to obtain these unique insights."

Sonkusare and his colleagues have described their discovery in the scientific journal Circulation. The research team consisted of Matteo Ottolini, Kwangseok Hong, Eric L. Cope, Zdravka Daneva, Leon J. DeLalio, Jennifer D. Sokolowski, Corina Marziano, Nhiem Y. Nguyen, Joachim Altschmied, Judith Haendeler, Scott R. Johnstone, Mohammad Y. Kalani, Min S. Park, Rakesh P. Patel, Wolfgang Liedtke, Brant E. Isakson and Sonkusare.

Source:

Journal reference:

Ottolini, M., et al. (2020) Local Peroxynitrite Impairs Endothelial TRPV4 Channels and Elevates Blood Pressure in Obesity. Circulation. doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.119.043385.

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UVA researchers discover why obesity causes high blood pressure and potential ways to fix - The Medical News

Introduction to physiology: History, biological systems, and …

Physiology is the study of normal function within living creatures. It is a sub-section of biology, covering a range of topics that include organs, anatomy, cells, biological compounds, and how they all interact to make life possible.

From ancient theories to molecular laboratory techniques, physiological research has shaped our understanding of the components of our body, how they communicate, and how they keep us alive.

Merrian-Webster defines physiology as:

[A] branch of biology that deals with the functions and activities of life or of living matter (such as organs, tissues, or cells) and of the physical and chemical phenomena involved.

Here are some key points about physiology. More detail and supporting information is in the main article.

The study of physiology is, in a sense, the study of life. It asks questions about the internal workings of organisms and how they interact with the world around them.

Physiology tests how organs and systems within the body work, how they communicate, and how they combine their efforts to make conditions favorable for survival.

Human physiology, specifically, is often separated into subcategories; these topics cover a vast amount of information.

Researchers in the field can focus on anything from microscopic organelles in cell physiology up to more wide-ranging topics, such as ecophysiology, which looks at whole organisms and how they adapt to environments.

The most relevant arm of physiological research to Medical News Today is applied human physiology; this field investigates biological systems at the level of the cell, organ, system, anatomy, organism, and everywhere in between.

In this article, we will visit some of the subsections of physiology, developing a brief overview of this huge subject. Firstly, we will run through a short history of physiology.

The study of physiology traces its roots back to ancient India and Egypt.

As a medical discipline, it goes back at least as far as the time of Hippocrates, the famous father of medicine around 420 BC.

Hippocrates coined the theory of the four humors, stating that the body contains four distinct bodily fluids: black bile, phlegm, blood, and yellow bile. Any disturbance in their ratios, as the theory goes, causes ill health.

Claudius Galenus (c.130-200 AD), also known as Galen, modified Hippocrates theory and was the first to use experimentation to derive information about the systems of the body. He is widely referred to as the founder of experimental physiology.

It was Jean Fernel (1497-1558), a French physician, who first introduced the term physiology, from Ancient Greek, meaning study of nature, origins.

Fernel was also the first to describe the spinal canal (the space in the spine where the spinal cord passes through). He has a crater on the moon named after him for his efforts it is called Fernelius.

Another leap forward in physiological knowledge came with the publication of William Harveys book titled An Anatomical Dissertation Upon the Movement of the Heart and Blood in Animals in 1628.

Harvey was the first to describe systemic circulation and bloods journey through the brain and body, propelled by the heart.

Perhaps surprisingly, much medical practice was based on the four humors until well into the 1800s (bloodletting, for instance). In 1838, a shift in thought occurred when the cell theory of Matthias Schleiden and Theodor Schwann arrived on the scene, theorizing that the body was made up of tiny individual cells.

From here on in, the field of physiology opened up, and progress was made quickly:

The major systems covered in the study of human physiology are as follows:

There are a great number of disciplines that use the word physiology in their title. Below are some examples:

The topics mentioned above are just a small selection of the available physiologies. The field of physiology is as essential as it is vast.

Anatomy is closely related to physiology. Anatomy refers to the study of the structure of body parts, but physiology focuses on how these parts work and relate to each other.

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Introduction to physiology: History, biological systems, and ...

Anatomage Introduces Physiology Functions to Digital Cadavers with Table 7 – BioSpace

SAN JOSE, Calif., March 5, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Anatomage Inc, a leader in 3D medical technology, today announces the launch of Table 7, bringing physiology elements to real human cadavers.

Anatomage is the first company to successfully integrate physiology functions into a real human cadaver. Through the Table 7 software release for the Anatomage Table, users can restore a portion of a cadaver back to life using four physiology tools - Heart Motion, Nerve Connection, Pathways, and Catheterization.

The Heart Motion tool restores the cardiac physiological functions of the cadaver's heart. By simulating the entire cardiac cycle and synchronizing heart rhythms with the integrated digital electrocardiography, the tool can be used to elevate cardiovascular physiology learning.

The Nerve Connection tool interactively displays the cadaver's nerve innervation from the brain to a dermatome, muscle or organ. The tool provides students with the physiological context of the human nervous system, allowing them to locate the nerve root responsible for any stimulus, thereby supporting neuroanatomy education.

The Pathways tool illustrates drug delivery and different physiological pathways on the cadaver. Depicting the physiological mechanism occurring during the transport of chemical compounds, this tool offers visual references of physiology for toxicology, pharmacology, and any applicable studies in medicine.

The Catheterization tool enables users to practice catheter insertion on a digital cadaver. With the Anatomage Table, students can learn how real-life cardiac catheterization procedures are carried out on a living human body, preparing them for medical careers.

Introducing physiology elements to deceased bodies is the first step toward building a digital body that functions as an alive human body for medical simulation and educational applications. Aside from the physiology elements, Table 7 features medical-school level educational materials, including 60 3D real-cadaver prosections with annotations, 400 fully-prepared medical illustration presets, and 3D radiology reports reviewed by real radiologists. The update also comes with additional high-resolution regional anatomy scans, improved quizzing options, annotated bony landmarks, and refinements in the Table's histology-viewing feature such as the ability to compare 4 different histology tissues. Altogether, these technologies bring values that a physical cadaver couldn't deliver to various medical disciplines.

Containing 4 life-size real human cadavers and over 1,000 real-life pathology cases, the Anatomage Table has been trusted and adopted by thousands of educational and clinical institutes worldwide. Now with the launch of Table 7, the Anatomage Table has become an unrivaled healthcare education platform that marks a beginning of an era where learning with a living cadaver is possible.

For more information about Table 7, please visit here.

About Anatomage

A market leader in medical imaging technology, Anatomage enables an ecosystem of 3D anatomy hardware and software, allowing users to visualize anatomy at the highest level of accuracy. Through its highly innovative products, Anatomage is transforming standard anatomy learning, medical diagnosis and treatment planning.

Contact:Jack ChoiCEOAnatomage Inc.Phone: 1-408-885-1474Email: info@anatomage.comwww.anatomage.com

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Anatomage Introduces Physiology Functions to Digital Cadavers with Table 7 - BioSpace