128 results match your criteria: "Earlham College[Affiliation]"
FEMS Microbiol Ecol
November 2024
Department of Biology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30322, United States.
Diet profoundly influences the composition of an animal's microbiome, especially in holometabolous insects, offering a valuable model to explore the impact of diet on gut microbiome dynamics throughout metamorphosis. Here, we use monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus), specialist herbivores that feed as larvae on many species of chemically well-defined milkweed plants (Asclepias sp.), to investigate the impacts of development and diet on the composition of the gut microbial community.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Perinatol
December 2024
Department of Pediatrics, Emory University, 2015 Uppergate Drive, Suite 534, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA; Department of Epidemiology, Emory University, 1518 Clifton Road, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA. Electronic address:
Genome Res
October 2024
Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa 50011, USA;
Understanding the evolution of chromatin conformation among species is fundamental to elucidate the architecture and plasticity of genomes. Nonrandom interactions of linearly distant loci regulate gene function in species-specific patterns, affecting genome function, evolution, and, ultimately, speciation. Yet, data from nonmodel organisms are scarce.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
October 2024
Department of Anthropology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT, United States of America.
Cell Rep Med
September 2024
Department of Psychiatry, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, OH, USA; Brain Health Medicines Center, Harrington Discovery Institute, University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center, Cleveland, OH, USA; Geriatric Psychiatry, GRECC, Louis Stokes VA Medical Center, Cleveland, OH, USA; Institute for Transformative Molecular Medicine, School of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, OH, USA; Department of Neurosciences, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, OH, USA; Department of Pathology, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, OH, USA. Electronic address:
Progression of acute traumatic brain injury (TBI) into chronic neurodegeneration is a major health problem with no protective treatments. Here, we report that acutely elevated mitochondrial fission after TBI in mice triggers chronic neurodegeneration persisting 17 months later, equivalent to many human decades. We show that increased mitochondrial fission after mouse TBI is related to increased brain levels of mitochondrial fission 1 protein (Fis1) and that brain Fis1 is also elevated in human TBI.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychiatry Res Neuroimaging
October 2024
Department of Psychiatry, University of Vermont Medical Center, 111 Colchester Avenue Burlington, VT, 05401, USA.
Many psychopathologies tied to internalizing symptomatology emerge during adolescence, therefore identifying neural markers of internalizing behavior in childhood may allow for early intervention. We utilized data from the Adolescent Brain and Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study® to evaluate associations between cortico-amygdalar functional connectivity, polygenic risk for depression (PRS), traumatic events experienced, internalizing behavior, and internalizing subscales: withdrawn/depressed behavior, somatic complaints, and anxious/depressed behaviors. Data from 6371 children (ages 9-11) were used to analyze amygdala resting-state fMRI connectivity to Gordon parcellation based whole-brain regions of interest (ROIs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS Comput Biol
June 2024
Institute for Computational Medicine and Department of Biomedical Engineering, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America.
Therapeutic interventions are designed to perturb the function of a biological system. However, there are many types of proteins that cannot be targeted with conventional small molecule drugs. Accordingly, many identified gene-regulatory drivers and downstream effectors are currently undruggable.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Phylogenet Evol
August 2024
Museum of Zoology, Senckenberg Natural History Collections Dresden, 01109 Dresden, Germany. Electronic address:
Kinosternon is the most speciose genus of extant turtles, with 22 currently recognized species, distributed across large parts of the Americas. Most species have small distributions, but K. leucostomum and K.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNucleic Acids Res
March 2024
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, USA.
Thiolutin is a natural product transcription inhibitor with an unresolved mode of action. Thiolutin and the related dithiolopyrrolone holomycin chelate Zn2+ and previous studies have concluded that RNA Polymerase II (Pol II) inhibition in vivo is indirect. Here, we present chemicogenetic and biochemical approaches to investigate thiolutin's mode of action in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Promot Pract
November 2024
Department of Health, Behavior and Society, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Front Public Health
October 2023
Institute for Vaccine Safety, Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, United States.
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2023.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Psychiatry
October 2023
Department of Behavioral Neuroscience (Marr, Graham, Sturgeon, Schifsky, Fair) and Department of Psychiatry (Graham, Fair), Oregon Health and Science University School of Medicine, Portland; Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston (Marr); Department of Psychiatry, McLean Hospital, Belmont, Mass. (Marr); Masonic Institute for the Developing Brain, Institute of Child Development (Fair), and Department of Pediatrics (Feczko, Fair), University of Minnesota, Minneapolis; Department of Psychology and Speech-Language Pathology, University of Turku, Turku, Finland (Nolvi, Korja); Institute of Medical Psychology, Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, corporate member of Freie Universität Berlin and Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Berlin (Nolvi, Entringer, Buss); Department of Neuroscience, Earlham College, Richmond, Ind. (Thomas); Development, Health, and Disease Research Program and Departments of Pediatrics, Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Obstetrics and Gynecology, and Epidemiology, University of California, Irvine, School of Medicine, Irvine (Rasmussen, Entringer, Wadhwa, Buss); Department of Pediatrics, University of California, Irvine, School of Medicine, Orange (Rasmussen, Entringer, Wadhwa, Buss); Departments of Psychiatry and Human Behavior (Entringer, Wadhwa), Obstetrics and Gynecology (Wadhwa), and Epidemiology (Wadhwa), University of California, Irvine, School of Medicine, Orange; FinnBrain Birth Cohort Study, Turku Brain and Mind Center, Department of Clinical Medicine, University of Turku (Korja, H. Karlsson, L. Karlsson); Centre for Population Health Research, University of Turku and Turku University Hospital (Korja, H. Karlsson, L. Karlsson); Department of Paediatrics and Adolescent Medicine (L. Karlsson) and Department of Psychiatry (H. Karlsson), Department of Clinical Medicine, Turku University Hospital and University of Turku; Department of Psychiatry, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine, Chapel Hill (Gilmore); Department of Psychiatry, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill (Styner).
Front Public Health
July 2023
Institute for Vaccine Safety, Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, United States.
Introduction: Vaccine hesitancy is a global health threat undermining control of many vaccine-preventable diseases. Patient-level education has largely been ineffective in reducing vaccine concerns and increasing vaccine uptake. We built and evaluated a personalized vaccine risk communication website called in English, Spanish and French (Canadian) for vaccines across the lifespan.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhilos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci
August 2023
Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology, Iowa State University, Ames, IA 50011, USA.
Species with large geographical ranges provide an excellent model for studying how different populations respond to dissimilar local conditions, particularly with respect to variation in climate. Maternal effects, such as nest-site choice greatly affect offspring phenotypes and survival. Thus, maternal behaviour has the potential to mitigate the effects of divergent climatic conditions across a species' range.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudent responsiveness's role in promoting intervention outcomes for students who exhibit problem behavior is understudied. Due to the relational nature of many interventions delivered by teachers that target social, emotional, or behavioral outcomes of students in classrooms, it is essential to assess how responsive students are to teachers' attempts to engage them in the intervention, particularly for students with problem behaviors that may impede teachers' attempts to engage these students in intervention effectively. In the current study, we combine samples from four randomized controlled trials to examine the relationship between student outcomes and teacher attempts to deliver BEST in CLASS, a Tier 2 intervention, via student responsiveness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Comp Physiol B
June 2023
Department of Biology, Lafayette College, Easton, PA, 18042, USA.
Changes in the physiological health of species are an essential indicator of changing conditions and environmental challenges. Reponses to environmental challenges can often induce stress, influence physiology, and change metabolism in organisms. Here we tested blood chemistry parameters indicative of stress and metabolic activity using an i-STAT point-of-care blood analyzer in seven populations of free-ranging rock iguanas exposed to varying levels of tourism and supplemental feeding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImmun Ageing
March 2023
Department of Biology, Earlham College, Richmond, IN, 47374, USA.
Background: The progressive deregulation of the immune system with age, termed immunosenescence, has been well studied in mammalian systems, but studies of immune function in long-lived, wild, non-mammalian populations are scarce. In this study we leverage a 38-year mark-recapture study to quantify the relationships among age, sex, survival, reproductive output and the innate immune system in a long-lived reptile, yellow mud turtles (Kinosternon flavescens; Testudines; Kinosternidae).
Methods: We estimated rates of survival and age-specific mortality by sex based on mark-recapture data for 1530 adult females and 860 adult males over 38 years of captures.
J Clin Invest
April 2023
Department of Pathology, Sol Goldman Pancreatic Cancer Research Center, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Ant societies are primarily composed of females, whereby labor is divided into reproductive, or queen, and non-reproductive, or worker, castes. Workers and reproductive queens can differ greatly in behavior, longevity, physiology, and morphology, but queen-worker differences are usually modest relative to the differences in males. Males are short-lived, typically do not provide the colony with labor, often look like a different species, and only occur seasonally.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Med Humanit
December 2023
Department of English, Albion College (Formerly at Penn State University, Departments of English and Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies), Albion, MI, USA.
Many of those teaching at the intersection of medicine and the humanities are siloed within institutional spaces. This essay recounts the teaching of Sarah Manguso's The Two Kinds of Decay to students across different academic contexts and considers what we can learn when we put classrooms in conversation with each other. This essay argues for the value of texts like Manguso's, which explicitly hold the narrating subject and form of illness narrative up for critical examination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Sociol
January 2023
Business Department, Earlham College, Richmond, IN, United States.
In his early work, Moore argues that business itself was a MacIntyrean practice. He later rejected this view in response to criticisms from Beadle and others. Most subsequent work, including that of Moore, adopted a view of organizations, including firms, as institutions that house a core practice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBacteriophage (phage) therapy in combination with antibiotic treatment serves as a potential strategy to overcome the continued rise in antibiotic resistance across bacterial pathogens. Understanding the impacts of evolutionary and ecological processes to the phage-antibiotic-resistance dynamic could advance the development of such combinatorial therapy. We tested whether the acquisition of mutations conferring phage resistance may have antagonistically pleiotropic consequences for antibiotic resistance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiversifying curricula is of increasing interest in higher education, including in ecology and evolution and allied fields. Yet, many educators may not know where to start. Here we provide a framework for meeting standard curriculum goals while enacting anti-racist and anti-colonial syllabi that is grounded in the development of a sustainable network of educators.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF