Publications by authors named "Jennifer Gresham"

Widespread antibiotic usage has resulted in the rapid evolution of drug-resistant bacterial pathogens and poses significant threats to public health. Resolving how pathogens respond to antibiotics under different contexts is critical for understanding disease emergence and evolution going forward. The impact of antibiotics has been demonstrated most directly through pathogen passaging experiments.

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Theory predicts that organisms should diversify their offspring when faced with a stressful environment. This prediction has received empirical support across diverse groups of organisms and stressors. For example, when encountered by during early development, food limitation (a common environmental stressor) induces the nematodes to arrest in a developmental stage called dauer and to increase their propensity to outcross when they are subsequently provided with food and enabled to develop to maturity.

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Article Synopsis
  • The dominant reproduction method in nature is biparental sex, even with its high costs, as explained by the Red Queen hypothesis (RQH), which suggests this strategy helps combat coevolving parasites.
  • Previous studies highlighted that interactions with harmful bacteria resulted in higher rates of outcrossing among certain nematode hosts.
  • In this research, the authors found that while parasites did not lead to changes in the specific behavior of outcrossing, outcrossed offspring had better survival rates against parasites, thus supporting the idea that coevolving parasites favor biparental reproduction by selecting against those that reproduce alone.
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Purpose: This study examines the perceived level of stress and burnout among health science educators related to smart device use.

Methods: An interdisciplinary health science research team was created to perform a literature review and design a survey and assessment instrument to investigate the level of stress and burnout among health science educators as a result of excessive connectivity to the workplace through smart device use. A total of 977 assessments were completed through distribution by program directors in athletic training, nursing, radiologic sciences, and respiratory care.

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Genetic variation within the male-specific portion of the Y chromosome (MSY) can clarify the origins of contemporary populations, but previous studies were hampered by partial genetic information. Population sequencing of 1204 Sardinian males identified 11,763 MSY single-nucleotide polymorphisms, 6751 of which have not previously been observed. We constructed a MSY phylogenetic tree containing all main haplogroups found in Europe, along with many Sardinian-specific lineage clusters within each haplogroup.

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The effects of potassium ion on the nested allostery of GroEL are due to increases in the affinity for nucleotide. Both positive allosteric transitions, TT-TR and TR-RR, occur at lower [ATP] as [K(+)] is increased. Negative cooperativity in the double-ringed system is also due to an increase in the affinity of the trans ring for the product ADP as [K(+)] is increased.

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In a study of the timing mechanism of the chaperonin nanomachine we show that the hemicycle time (HCT) is determined by the mean residence time (MRT) of GroES on the cis ring of GroEL. In turn, this is governed by allosteric interactions within the trans ring of GroEL. Ligands that enhance the R (relaxed) state (residual ADP, the product of the previous hemicycle, and K(+)) extend the MRT and the HCT, whereas ligands that enhance the T (taut) state (unfolded substrate protein, SP) decrease the MRT and the HCT.

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