Publications by authors named "J A Stillman"

Nucleic acids are a critical trigger for the innate immune response to infection, wherein pathogen-derived RNA and DNA are sensed by nucleic acid sensing receptors. This subsequently drives the production of type I interferon and other inflammatory cytokines to combat infection. While the system is designed such that these receptors should specifically recognize pathogen-derived nucleic acids, it is now clear that self-derived RNA and DNA can also stimulate these receptors to cause aberrant inflammation and autoimmune disease.

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Article Synopsis
  • Salinization is a growing global issue that impacts freshwater organisms like Daphnia magna, raising concerns about their adaptability to increasing salinity levels.
  • Research showed that Daphnia populations with higher salt tolerance are better adapted to their native habitats, as evidenced by a correlation between local salinity and salt tolerance.
  • A crucial gene, TPS, linked to trehalose production was identified as key to managing salinity stress, with experiments confirming that animals lacking functional TPS struggle to tolerate higher salinity.
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Organisms within freshwater and marine environments are subject to a diverse range of often co-occurring abiotic and biotic stressors. Despite growing awareness of the complex multistress systems at play in aquatic ecosystems, many questions remain regarding how simultaneous stressors interact with one another and jointly impact aquatic species. We looked at multistress interactions in a protected stream ecosystem in Mendocino County, California.

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Crabs are a large subtaxon of the Arthropoda, the most diverse and species-rich metazoan group. Several outstanding questions remain regarding crab diversification, including about the genomic capacitors of physiological and morphological adaptation, that cannot be answered with available genomic resources. Physiologically and ecologically diverse Anomuran porcelain crabs offer a valuable model for investigating these questions and hence genomic resources of these crabs would be particularly useful.

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Engulfment of cellular material and proteins is a key function for microglia, a resident macrophage of the central nervous system (CNS). Among the techniques used to measure microglial engulfment, confocal light microscopy has been used the most extensively. Here, we show that autofluorescence (AF) likely due to lipofuscin (lipo-AF) and typically associated with aging, can also be detected within microglial lysosomes in the young mouse brain by light microscopy.

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