Institution
University of Victoria
Education•Victoria, British Columbia, Canada•
About: University of Victoria is a education organization based out in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Galaxy. The organization has 14994 authors who have published 41051 publications receiving 1447972 citations. The organization is also known as: Victoria College.
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TL;DR: Findings from recent biomedical studies on animals in the laboratory demonstrate that exposure to predators or predator cues can induce ‘sustained psychological stress’ that is directly comparable to chronic stress in humans, and this has now become one of the most common stressors used in studies of the animal model of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
Abstract: Summary
Predator-induced stress has been used to exemplify the concept of stress for close to a century because almost everyone can imagine the terror of fleeing for one's life from a lion or a tiger. Yet, because it has been assumed to be acute and transitory, predator-induced stress has not been much studied by either comparative physiologists or population ecologists, until relatively recently.
The focus in biomedical research has always been on chronic stress in humans, which most comparative physiologists would agree results from ‘sustained psychological stress – linked to mere thoughts’ rather than ‘acute physical crises’ (like surviving a predator attack) or ‘chronic physical challenges’ (such as a shortage of food). Population ecologists have traditionally focused solely on the acute physical crisis of surviving a direct predator attack rather than whether the risk of such an attack may have a sustained effect on other demographic processes (e.g. the birth rate).
Demographic experiments have now demonstrated that exposure to predators or predator cues can have sustained effects that extend to affecting birth and survival in free-living animals, and a subset of these have documented associated physiological stress effects. These and similar results have prompted some authors to speak of an ‘ecology of fear’, but others object that ‘the cognitive and emotional aspects of avoiding predation remain unknown’.
Recent biomedical studies on animals in the laboratory have demonstrated that exposure to predators or predator cues can induce ‘sustained psychological stress’ that is directly comparable to chronic stress in humans, and this has now in fact become one of the most common stressors used in studies of the animal model of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
We review these recent findings and suggest ways the laboratory techniques developed to measure the ‘neural circuitry of fear’ could be adapted for use on free-living animals in the field, in order to: (i) test whether predator risk induces ‘sustained psychological stress’ in wild animals, comparable to chronic stress in humans and (ii) directly investigate ‘the cognitive and emotional aspects of avoiding predation’ and hence the ‘ecology of fear’.
424 citations
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TL;DR: Flagellin, which is known to be a glycoprotein, was one of the proteins that showed altered reactivity with O:23 and O:36 antiserum in the mutants, and chemical deglycosylation of protein fractions from the 81‐176 wild type suggests that the other proteins with altered antigenicity in the mutated mutants are also glycosylated.
Abstract: A genetic locus from Campylobacter jejuni 81-176 (O:23, 36) has been characterized that appears to be involved in glycosylation of multiple proteins, including flagellin. The lipopolysaccharide (LPS) core of Escherichia coli DH5α containing some of these genes is modified such that it becomes immunoreactive with O:23 and O:36 antisera and loses reactivity with the lectin wheat germ agglutinin (WGA). Site-specific mutation of one of these genes in the E. coli host causes loss of O:23 and O:36 antibody reactivity and restores reactivity with WGA. However, site-specific mutation of each of the seven genes in 81-176 failed to show any detectable changes in LPS. Multiple proteins from various cellular fractions of each mutant showed altered reactivity by Western blot analyses using O:23 and O:36 antisera. The changes in protein antigenicity could be restored in one of the mutants by the presence of the corresponding wild-type allele in trans on a shuttle vector. Flagellin, which is known to be a glycoprotein, was one of the proteins that showed altered reactivity with O:23 and O:36 antiserum in the mutants. Chemical deglycosylation of protein fractions from the 81-176 wild type suggests that the other proteins with altered antigenicity in the mutants are also glycosylated.
423 citations
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TL;DR: The Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging (CLSA) is a national longitudinal study of adult development and aging that will recruit 50,000 Canadians aged 45 to 85 years of age and follow them for at least 20 years.
Abstract: Canadians are living longer, and older persons are making up a larger share of the population (14% in 2006, projected to rise to 20% by 2021). The Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging (CLSA) is a national longitudinal study of adult development and aging that will recruit 50,000 Canadians aged 45 to 85 years of age and follow them for at least 20 years. All participants will provide a common set of information concerning many aspects of health and aging, and 30,000 will undergo an additional in-depth examination coupled with the donation of biological specimens (blood and urine). The CLSA will become a rich data source for the study of the complex interrelationship among the biological, physical, psychosocial, and societal factors that affect healthy aging.
423 citations
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TL;DR: This review provides a survey of the major classes of stable or persistent organic/organomain group radicals with a view to presenting a unified description of the interdependencies between radical molecular structure and properties.
Abstract: Many kinds of radicals are stable enough to isolate, handle, and store without any special precautions. The diversity in molecular architectures of these stable radicals is sufficiently large that the common factors governing radical stability/persistence, geometric and electronic structure, association/dimerization preferences, and reactivity have generally not been well articulated or appreciated. This review provides a survey of the major classes of stable or persistent organic/organomain group radicals with a view to presenting a unified description of the interdependencies between radical molecular structure and properties.
420 citations
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TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper made a review by synthesizing existing structural, petrological, geochronological and geochemical data of the Cretaceous structures and magmas.
420 citations
Authors
Showing all 15188 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Jie Zhang | 178 | 4857 | 221720 |
D. M. Strom | 176 | 3167 | 194314 |
Sw. Banerjee | 146 | 1906 | 124364 |
Robert J. Glynn | 146 | 748 | 88387 |
Manel Esteller | 146 | 713 | 96429 |
R. Kowalewski | 143 | 1815 | 135517 |
Paul Jackson | 141 | 1372 | 93464 |
Mingshui Chen | 141 | 1543 | 125369 |
Ali Khademhosseini | 140 | 887 | 76430 |
Roger Jones | 138 | 998 | 114061 |
Tord Ekelof | 137 | 1212 | 91105 |
L. Köpke | 136 | 950 | 81787 |
M. Morii | 134 | 1664 | 102074 |
Arnaud Ferrari | 134 | 1392 | 87052 |
Richard Brenner | 133 | 1108 | 87426 |