52 results match your criteria: "University of Miami Rosenstiel School[Affiliation]"

Nurse sharks (Ginglymostoma cirratum), especially juveniles, are often encountered by near-shore and shore-based recreational anglers and are suggested to exhibit minimal behavioral and physiological responses to capture, largely based on studies of adults using commercial or scientific fishing methods. To quantify the sub-lethal effects of recreational angling on juvenile nurse sharks, 27 individuals (across 31 angling events) were caught using hook-and-line fishing methods. Over a 30-min period, 4 blood samples were taken with variable time intervals between sampling (i.

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  • - Annual mammography screening in the U.S. declined for the first time since 2018, with up-to-date screening dropping from 78.7% in 2018 to 76.6% in 2022, indicating 747,791 fewer women met the screening recommendations.
  • - Although there was a slight increase in past-year breast cancer screening (from 57.9% to 59.6% between 2020 and 2022), significant disparities were noted, particularly among American Indian/Alaska Native women and those with lower educational levels.
  • - The study highlights the ongoing impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on women's health screenings and calls for further research to understand how these trends affect breast cancer diagnosis
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The molecular mechanisms underlying age-related declines in learning and long-term memory are still not fully understood. To address this gap, our study focused on investigating the transcriptional landscape of a singularly identified motor neuron L7 in Aplysia, which is pivotal in a specific type of nonassociative learning known as sensitization of the siphon-withdraw reflex. Employing total RNAseq analysis on a single isolated L7 motor neuron after short-term or long-term sensitization (LTS) training of Aplysia at 8, 10, and 12 months (representing mature, late mature, and senescent stages), we uncovered aberrant changes in transcriptional plasticity during the aging process.

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  • Marine heatwaves are becoming more common and severe, posing a significant threat to coral reefs and marine ecosystems.
  • A study on two coral species in Hawaii showed that high temperatures adversely affected coral physiology more than elevated CO2 levels, with one species (Pocillopora acuta) experiencing greater bleaching and mortality than the other (Montipora capitata).
  • The research suggests that the different responses and survival rates of corals are linked to their unique physiological traits and symbiont compositions, which could impact how they cope with future climate stressors.
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Improvements in operant memory of are correlated with age and specific gene expression.

Front Behav Neurosci

October 2023

Department of Marine Biology and Ecology, University of Miami Rosenstiel School, Miami, FL, United States.

The transcription factor CCAAT/enhancer binding protein () is expressed as an immediate early gene in the cAMP responsive element binding protein (CREB) mediated gene cascade, and it has essential functions in the synaptic consolidation of memory following a learning event. Synaptic consolidation primarily involves morphological changes at neuronal synapses, which are facilitated through the reorganization of the actin and microtubular cytoarchitecture of the cell. During early nervous system development, the transmembrane synaptic protein teneurin acts directly upon neuronal presynaptic microtubules and postsynaptic spectrin-based cytoskeletons to facilitate the creation of new synapses.

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Mosquitoes are the most important disease vector in the world, and gaining knowledge of their physiology to develop novel population control strategies has been a focus of research for some time. Both aquatic larvae and terrestrial adults face harsh environmental factors that severely challenge their salt and water balance, which are regulated by the function of epithelia of various organs. The regulated passage of water and solutes across epithelia occurs, in part, through transporters expressed in epithelial cell membranes.

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Localizing Protein Expression of Transporters in Epithelial Cell Membranes of Mosquitoes.

Cold Spring Harb Protoc

May 2024

Department of Biology, York University, Toronto, Ontario M3J 1P3, Canada

Identifying and localizing ion transport proteins in epithelia is important for understanding how these tissues can regulate salt and water balance in animals. Mosquitoes face distinct challenges regarding salt and water balance as larvae live in water of varying ionic composition while adult female mosquitoes must deal with periodic large blood meals. This protocol will explain how to localize ion transporters in epithelia of mosquitoes.

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  • Corals serve as key models for studying invertebrate host-microbe interactions, but to truly understand these relationships, experimental methods are needed to manipulate coral-bacteria associations.
  • The study used antibiotics to alter the bacterial communities in two coral species, measuring their effects on coral health through photosynthetic efficiency of algal symbionts and oxygen consumption rates over 5 days.
  • Results showed that while antibiotics changed bacterial diversity and decreased oxygen consumption, they didn't harm the photosynthetic efficiency of symbionts but increased the expression of immunity and stress genes in corals, highlighting the importance of native bacteria for coral health and providing a foundation for future research.
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A multi-targeted investigation of Deepwater Horizon crude oil exposure impacts on the marine teleost stress axis.

Aquat Toxicol

April 2023

Department of Marine Biology and Ecology, University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine, Atmospheric, and Earth Science, 4600 Rickenbacker Causeway, Miami, FL 33149-1098, USA. Electronic address:

The toxicity of the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in Deepwater Horizon (DWH) oil is well-established, but a knowledge gap exists regarding how this combination of PAHs affects the vertebrate stress axis. We hypothesized that (1) marine vertebrates exposed to DWH PAHs experience stress axis impairment, and co-exposure to an additional chronic stressor may exacerbate these effects, (2) serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine; 5-HT) may act as a secondary cortisol secretagogue in DWH PAH-exposed fish to compensate for impairment, and (3) the mechanism of stress axis impairment may involve downregulation of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP; as proxy for melanocortin 2 receptor (MC2R) functionality), total cholesterol, and/or mRNA expression of CYP1A and steroidogenic proteins StAR, P450scc, and 11β-h at the level of the kidney. We found that in vivo plasma cortisol and plasma adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) concentrations in Gulf toadfish exposed to an environmentally relevant DWH PAH concentration (ΣPAH= 4.

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Despite evidence of their importance to marine ecosystems, at least 32% of all chondrichthyan species are estimated or assessed as threatened with extinction. In addition to the logistical difficulties of effectively conserving wide-ranging marine species, shark conservation is believed to have been hindered in the past by public perceptions of sharks as dangerous to humans. Shark Week is a high-profile, international programming event that has potentially enormous influence on public perceptions of sharks, shark research, shark researchers, and shark conservation.

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Physiological trait variation underlies health, responses to global climate change, and ecological performance. Yet, most physiological traits are complex, and we have little understanding of the genes and genomic architectures that define their variation. To provide insight into the genetic architecture of physiological processes, we related physiological traits to heart and brain mRNA expression using a weighted gene co-expression network analysis.

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Editorial: Innate Immunity in Early Diverging Metazoans.

Front Immunol

March 2022

The Shraga Segal Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Genetics, Faculty of Health Sciences, Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research Center, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheva, Israel.

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Sharks are a taxon of significant conservation concern and associated public interest. The scientific community largely supports management policies focusing on sustainable fisheries exploitation of sharks, but many concerned members of the public and some environmental advocates believe that sustainable shark fisheries cannot and do not exist and therefore support total bans on all shark fisheries and/or trade in shark products. The belief that sustainable shark fisheries cannot and do not exist persists despite scientific evidence showing that they can and do, and are important to livelihoods.

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While physiological responses to low-light environments have been studied among corals on mesophotic coral ecosystems worldwide (MCEs; 30-150 m), the mechanisms behind acclimatization and adaptation to depth are not well understood for most coral species. Transcriptomic approaches based on RNA sequencing are useful tools for quantifying gene expression plasticity, particularly in slow-growing species such as scleractinian corals, and for identifying potential functional differences among conspecifics. A tag-based RNA-Seq (Tag-Seq) pipeline was applied to quantify transcriptional variation in natural populations of the scleractinian coral Montastraea cavernosa from mesophotic and shallower environments across five sites in Belize and the Gulf of Mexico: Carrie Bow Cay, West and East Flower Garden Banks, Pulley Ridge, and Dry Tortugas.

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The Gulf of Mexico (GoM) is home to the world's largest remaining wild oyster fisheries, but baseline surveys needed to assess habitat condition are recent and may represent an already-shifted reference state. Here, we use prehistoric oysters from archaeological middens to show that oyster size, an indicator of habitat function and population resilience, declined prior to the earliest assessments of reef condition in an area of the GoM previously considered pristine. Stable isotope sclerochronlogy reveals extirpation of colossal oysters occurred through truncated life history and slowed growth.

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Behavioural impairment following exposure to ocean acidification-relevant CO levels has been noted in a broad array of taxa. The underlying cause of these disruptions is thought to stem from alterations of ion gradients across neuronal cell membranes that occur as a consequence of maintaining pH homeostasis via the accumulation of . While behavioural impacts are widely documented, few studies have measured acid-base parameters in species showing behavioural disruptions.

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Rough-toothed dolphins () are a common mass stranding species in Florida. These large stranding events typically include a small number of sick or injured individuals and a much larger number of healthy individuals, making rapid triage essential. Little data exist on rehabilitation outcomes, and historically, successful outcomes are limited.

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Impacts of Crude Oil on Mahi-Mahi () Heart Cell Function.

Environ Sci Technol

August 2019

Department of Biological Sciences , University of North Texas, 1511 W. Sycamore Street , Denton Texas 76203 , United States.

crude oil is comprised of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons that cause a number of cardiotoxic effects in marine fishes across all levels of biological organization and at different life stages. Although cardiotoxic impacts have been widely reported, the mechanisms underlying these impairments in adult fish remain understudied. In this study, we examined the impacts of crude oil on cardiomyocyte contractility and electrophysiological parameters in freshly isolated ventricular cardiomyocytes from adult mahi-mahi ().

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The simplified nervous system of Aplysia californica (Aplysia) allows for detailed studies of physiological and molecular changes in small sets of neurons. Sensory neurons of the biting and tail withdrawal reflexes are glutamatergic and show reduced L-Glutamate current density in aged animals, making them a good candidate to study age-related changes in glutamatergic responses. To examine if changes in ionotropic L-Glu receptor (iGluR) transcription underlie reduced physiology, mRNA expression of iGluR was quantified in two sensory neuron clusters of two cohorts of Aplysia at both sexual maturity (~8 months) and advanced age (~12 months).

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Comparative analysis of the expanding genomic resources for scleractinian corals may provide insights into the evolution of these organisms, with implications for their continued persistence under global climate change. Here, we sequenced and annotated the genome of Pocillopora damicornis, one of the most abundant and widespread corals in the world. We compared this genome, based on protein-coding gene orthology, with other publicly available coral genomes (Cnidaria, Anthozoa, Scleractinia), as well as genomes from other anthozoan groups (Actiniaria, Corallimorpharia), and two basal metazoan outgroup phlya (Porifera, Ctenophora).

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Aplysia californica was hatchery-reared in two turbulence protocols intended to imitate the intermittent turbulence of the native habitat and to promote development of the foot muscle from the exercise of adhering to the substrate. Hatchery-reared animals in turbulence regimes were compared to siblings reared in quiet water, and to wild animals, using noninvasive assessments of the development of the foot muscle. The objective was to learn if the turbulence-reared phenotype mimicked laboratory-targeted aspects of the wild phenotype, that is, reflex behavior, swim tunnel performance, and resting oxygen consumption (MO).

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A suite of coupled climate model simulations and experiments are used to examine how resolved mesoscale ocean features affect aspects of climate variability, air-sea interactions, and predictability. In combination with control simulations, experiments with the interactive ensemble coupling strategy are used to further amplify the role of the oceanic mesoscale field and the associated air-sea feedbacks and predictability. The basic intent of the interactive ensemble coupling strategy is to reduce the atmospheric noise at the air-sea interface, allowing an assessment of how noise affects the variability, and in this case, it is also used to diagnose predictability from the perspective of signal-to-noise ratios.

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Thermal stress exposure, bleaching response, and mortality in the threatened coral Acropora palmata.

Mar Pollut Bull

November 2017

University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, Cooperative Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Studies, 4600 Rickenbacker Cswy, Miami, FL 33149, USA.

Demographic data for Elkhorn coral, Acropora palmata, and in situ water temperature data from seven upper Florida Keys (USA) reefs revealed three warm thermal stress events between 2010 and 2016. During a mild bleaching event in 2011, up to 59% of colonies bleached, but no mortality resulted. In both 2014 and 2015, severe and unprecedented bleaching was observed with up to 100% of colonies bleached.

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Energetic costs associated with ion and acid-base regulation in response to ocean acidification have been predicted to decrease the energy available to fish for basic life processes. However, the low cost of ion regulation (6-15% of standard metabolic rate) and inherent variation associated with whole-animal metabolic rate measurements have made it difficult to consistently demonstrate such a cost. Here we aimed to gain resolution in assessing the energetic demand associated with acid-base regulation by examining ion movement and O consumption rates of isolated intestinal tissue from Gulf toadfish acclimated to control or 1900 μatm CO (projected for year 2300).

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As humans expand into natural environments, populations of wild organisms may become relegated to marginal habitats at the boundaries of their distributions. In the ocean, mesophotic coral ecosystems (30-150 m) at the depth limit of photosynthetic reefs are hypothesized to act as refuges that are buffered from anthropogenic and natural disturbances, yet the viability and persistence of subpopulations in these peripheral habitats remains poorly understood. To assess the potential for mesophotic reefs to support robust coral reef fish populations, we compared population density and structure, growth, size, and reproductive output of the bicolor damselfish (Stegastes partitus) from shallow (<10 m), deep shelf (20-30 m), and mesophotic reefs (60-70 m) across the Florida Platform.

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