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- Title
- TECHNOLOGY INTEGRATION IN SCIENCE EDUCATION: A STUDY OF HOW TEACHERS USE MODERN LEARNING TECHNOLOGIES IN BIOLOGY CLASSROOMS
- Creator
- Gnanakkan, Dionysius Joseph
- Date
- 2017, 2017-07
- Description
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This multiple case-study investigated how high school biology teachers used modern learning technologies (probes, interactive simulations and...
Show moreThis multiple case-study investigated how high school biology teachers used modern learning technologies (probes, interactive simulations and animations, animated videos) in their classrooms and why they used the learning technologies. Another objective of the study was to assess whether the use of learning technologies alleviated misconceptions in Biology documented by American Association for the Advancement of Science. The sample consisted of eight teachers: four rural public school teachers, two public selective enrollment school teachers, and two private school teachers. Each teacher was followed for two Units of instruction. Data collected included classroom observations, field notes, student assignments and tests, teacher interviews, and pre-and post-misconception assessments. Paired t-tests were done to analyze the pre-post test data at a significance level of 0.05 and the qualitative data was analyzed using the constant comparative method. Each case study was characterized and then a cross-case analyses was done to find common themes across the different cases. Teachers were found to use the learning technologies as a tool to supplement instruction to visualize abstract processes, collect data, and explore abstract concepts and processes. Teachers were found to situate learning, use scaffolding and questioning and make students work in collaborative groups. The genetics, photosynthesis, and evolution misconceptions were better alleviated than cellular respiration. Student work that was collected demonstrated a superficial understanding of the concepts under discussion even when they had misconceptions. The teachers used the learning technologies in their classrooms for a variety of reasons: visual illustrations, time-saving measure to collect data, best way to collect data, engaging and fun for students and the interactive nature of the visualization tools and models. The study’s findings had many implications for research, professional development, teacher education, teaching practice, administrators, and learning technology developers. More detailed research within similar school settings (public, charter, and private) is needed to verify the common findings across the different cases in this study. An implication is that learning technology integration could be modeled with instructional scaffolds and questioning and incorporating higher order thinking tasks. Learning technology developers should consider the collaborative learning groups while developing these technologies.
Ph.D. in Science Education, July 2017
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- Title
- ROLES OF RESPIRATORY CHAIN ENZYMES IN BIOFILM FORMATION OF PSEUDOMONAS AERUGINOSA
- Creator
- DING, JIE
- Date
- 2019
- Description
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Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a Gram-negative, rod-shaped bacterium, resistant to many antibiotics. It can cause several chronic infections such...
Show morePseudomonas aeruginosa is a Gram-negative, rod-shaped bacterium, resistant to many antibiotics. It can cause several chronic infections such as lung, bloodstream, urinary tract, and surgical wound infections. This bacterium produces biofilms which confer resistance to hazardous environments. P. aeruginosa contains five stages of colony development, which are planktonic attachment, cell to cell adhesion, proliferation, maturation, and dispersion. After five stages, biofilms of P. aeruginosa are matured. The biofilm structure produced by P. aeruginosa is important for cell survival, providing protection and resistance to harsh environment and antibiotics. In this research, the biofilms formed by wildtype strain PA01 and mutated strains of PA14, including NDH-2, NQR F, and NUO I, were developed in LB medium and Artificial Urine Medium separately for 96 hours. After washing, collecting, and staining the biofilms, the analyses of measurement of OD562 showed that in LB medium, PA01 formed more biofilms than mutants while NUO I and NDH2 had less biofilms, although not significantly. In AUM the situation was different. PA01 formed least biofilms while NQR F formed largest biofilms than any other strains. Also, the NDH-2 formed more biofilms than NUO I in AUM. The deficiencies of enzymes loss in those strains result in growing biofilm concentrations. Because the difference was not significant, we can only say that the NQR and NADH dehydrogenases have important roles in biofilm formation.
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- Title
- Detection Of BAXΔ2 Reading Frame Shift Using A Dual Luciferase Reporter System
- Creator
- Beatty, Evan Alexander
- Date
- 2019
- Description
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While initial studies of the pro-apoptotic Bcl-2-associated X protein isoform Δ2 (BAXΔ2) identified the combination of an alternative splicing...
Show moreWhile initial studies of the pro-apoptotic Bcl-2-associated X protein isoform Δ2 (BAXΔ2) identified the combination of an alternative splicing event and a gene-level mutation as the prerequisites for biosynthesis in microsatellite unstable (MSI+) human colon cancer cells, no similar explanation existed to explain the presence of this protein in normal and normal adjacent tissues. To identify an alternative to the gene-level mutation in the absence of an MSI+ phenotype, we utilized a dual luciferase reporter assay designed to observe epigenetic recoding. Plasmid constructs containing the first two exons encoding BAXΔ2 were either transcribed and translated in vitro or transfected into BAX-negative human colon cancer cells. In both cases, assay of the protein products of the reporter genes demonstrate that a low level (2.82% in vitro, 4.43% in vivo) of all translational events which produce the protein product of an upstream reporter gene also produce the protein product of a downstream reporter gene. This occurs despite the two existing in different reading frames as a result of the BAX exons cloned between them. These results confirm that an epigenetic recoding event is able to salvage the BAX reading frame in cases where exon 2 has been excised, and further narrow down the potential mechanism involved to either transcriptional slippage or programmed ribosomal frameshifting.
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- Title
- Inflammation induced changes in adipocytes
- Creator
- Kim, Kihwan
- Date
- 2019
- Description
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The significant features of Crohn’s Disease include creeping fat that covers more than 50% of both small and large intestine surfaces and high...
Show moreThe significant features of Crohn’s Disease include creeping fat that covers more than 50% of both small and large intestine surfaces and high level of inflammatory cytokines such as TNF-alpha and IL-6. However, the relationship between these two factors of Crohn’s Disease is still unknown. Therefore, verifying the relationship could contribute to understanding the cause of Crohn’s Disease. In this study, preadipocytes were used because they have a potential to grow as adipocytes which are developed as creeping fat. The objective of this study was to observe proliferation, differentiation, and chemotaxis of preadipocytes in inflammatory microenvironment. It was found that only TNF-alpha stimulates preadipocyte proliferation whereas IL-6 does not. However, both TNF-alpha and IL-6 inhibit differentiation of preadipocytes. Furthermore, preadipocytes did not have chemotactic responses towards both cytokines. Therefore this study concludes that these inflammatory microenvironments induce the preadipocytes proliferation in Crohn’s. However, they inhibit adipogenesis and recruitment of the preadipocytes in Crohn’s.
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- Title
- MITOCHONDRIA RELOCALIZATION IN CHLAMYDIA TRACHOMATIS INFECTED HFF-1 CELLS
- Creator
- Shuppara, Alexander Mitchell
- Date
- 2021
- Description
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Chlamydia trachomatis is an infectious, gram-negative, obligate intracellular human bacterial pathogen. With over eight hundred million cases...
Show moreChlamydia trachomatis is an infectious, gram-negative, obligate intracellular human bacterial pathogen. With over eight hundred million cases worldwide, C. trachomatis is the most prevalent sexually transmitted infection. It manifests as either trachoma, lymphogranuloma venereum, or other urogenital tract sequelae. As an intracellular pathogen, Chlamydia must scavenge for essential metabolites from establishing networks with its host’s organelles including Golgi apparatus, endoplasmic reticulum, endocytic vesicles, mitochondria, and the cytoskeleton. C. trachomatis was considered an “energy parasite” that is entirely dependent on their host’s ATP production. Yet, recent mitochondrial inhibitor-based evidence suggests that C. trachomatis possess a sodium-based energy gradient for ATP production. Despite this finding, literature on specific interactions between host cell mitochondria and C. trachomatis requires further definition. This project evaluates mitochondrial dynamics changes from C. trachomatis infection in the human foreskin fibroblast cell line, HFF-1. We first defined C. trachomatis growth characteristics in HFF-1 over 36 hours-post infection. Next, we determined changes in mitochondrial dynamics and content throughout infection using immunofluorescent and immunoblotting techniques. observations on infected cells show mitochondrial morphology changes from an elongated appearance at the early stages of infection to fragmented in the late infection stages. Unlike in HeLa cells, HFF-1 remains in a normal distribution throughout the cell and we do not observe mitochondria relocalizing toward the inclusion. By studying mitochondrial relocalization dynamics, new insights into the dynamic and parasitic relationship of Chlamydia and its host can be discovered.
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- Title
- Evaluation of Bax∆2 Positive-Staining in Skin Samples Using Two Immunohistochemical Methods
- Creator
- Basheer, Sana
- Date
- 2021
- Description
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BaxΔ2 is a pro-death and tumor suppressor protein that sensitizes cells to certain chemotherapies. Previous diaminobenzidine (DAB)-based...
Show moreBaxΔ2 is a pro-death and tumor suppressor protein that sensitizes cells to certain chemotherapies. Previous diaminobenzidine (DAB)-based staining revealed that Bax∆2 is found in all organs, including breast, colon, and skin tissues. In the skin, the Bax∆2 positive cells were mainly found in the basal cell layer of the epidermis with a few Bax∆2 positive cells in the connective tissue of the dermis, although their cellular identity was unknown. Previous literature has shown that melanin, which is found throughout the cells of the epidermis, is a brown color that provides no visual contrast to the DAB staining. While the DAB-based immunostaining showed cells that appeared to be Bax∆2 positive, this result needed to be confirmed. For this, a set of human skin samples from normal and cancerous tissue of various patients was examined. The co-staining of these samples for Bax∆2 and basal cells using immunofluorescence revealed that the apparent Bax∆2-positve DAB staining in epidermal basal cells and squamous cell carcinoma as false-positive, but the Bax∆2 positive cells found in the dermal connective tissue were not false positive—which is consistent with both previous DAB-based and fluorescence-based immunostaining. Using co-immunostaining for Bax∆2 with different cellular markers, the Bax2-positive cells in the connective tissue were identified potentially as macrophages and fibroblasts. Further studies are required to confirm the identity of the Bax∆2 positive cells in the connective tissue.
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- Title
- PURIFICATION AND ANALYSIS OF BAXΔ2 PROTEIN AGGREGATES FROM MAMMALIAN CELLS
- Creator
- Wang, Xiling
- Date
- 2020
- Description
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BaxΔ2 is a unique isoform of the proapoptotic protein Bax that does not target mitochondria. The proapoptotic function of BaxΔ2 is through...
Show moreBaxΔ2 is a unique isoform of the proapoptotic protein Bax that does not target mitochondria. The proapoptotic function of BaxΔ2 is through forming cytotoxic aggregates in the cytosol. The cytotoxicity of BaxΔ2 is known as associated with the BH3 killing domain and the C-terminus, which recruits caspase 8. BaxΔ2 proteins without C-terminal form large cytosolic protein aggregates unable to induce caspase 8-dependent cell death. Since abnormal cytosolic protein aggregates often contain complexes of proteins that involved in many diseases, we would like to purify BaxΔ2 aggregates and examine their components. In this study, we expressed GFP-tagged BaxΔ2(Δ6) in the Bax-negative HCT116 cell line and purified the aggregates via different digestion processes. We found that most aggregates were trapped into a DNA pellet after cell lysis. Digestion with DNase could release the aggregates, which were susceptible to detergent solvent. The yield of purification is very low and needed improvement. The results from Western Blot showed that, in addition to BaxΔ2 proteins, stress granule protein TIAR was also potentially in the aggregates. Identification of the components inside aggregates will help us to understand the mechanism of BaxΔ2 cytotoxicity.
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- Title
- IDENTIFICATION OF BAX∆2 FRAMESHIFTING REGION VIA DUAL LUCIFERASE ANALYSIS
- Creator
- Reiner, Katherine
- Date
- 2020
- Description
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The antitumor protein Bax is susceptible to microsatellite instability (MSI) mutations that alter its open reading frame by changing Baxs’...
Show moreThe antitumor protein Bax is susceptible to microsatellite instability (MSI) mutations that alter its open reading frame by changing Baxs’ microsatellite of eight guanines (G8) to seven guanines (G7). This mutation results in a frameshift that is corrected by alternative splicing, making Bax∆2. Evidence shows that non-MSI mutated full length Bax∆2 (Bax∆2 G8) can be found in tissue. However, the extra guanine in Bax∆2 should result in premature termination of protein synthesis. Therefore, we believe that Bax∆2 is capable of +1 frameshifting to correct the out of frame sequence caused by splicing. The dual luciferase assay system is a useful tool for measuring frameshifting and in this study, we cloned full length Bax∆2 G8 into a dual luciferase vector to analyze frameshifting. Using this method, we found that the full length Bax∆2 G8 sequence has 3.5% frameshifting activity. To further determine whether the frameshifting occurs in or near the G8 microsatellite, we focused on several truncated constructs containing the first three exons. The results from dual luciferase assay showed that frameshifting activity was high in the constructs containing the G8 microsatellite but diminished when the G8 microsatellite region was removed. Surprisingly, constructs containing exon 4 and 5, which are away from the predicted frameshifting region, also showed frameshifting activity. One possibility to explain these results is that mRNA structures, which are critical to frameshifting, could be altered by construct truncation and consequently lead to artificial frameshifting. Thus, using truncated constructs may not be a viable option for testing frameshifting activity. To maintain mRNA integrity, point mutations within the full sequence, could be a better option to identify the frameshifting site.
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- Title
- EXPERIMENTAL AND STRUCTURAL STUDIES OF FDA APPROVED EXON SKIPPING TREATMENT DRUGS
- Creator
- Zhang, Jingwen
- Date
- 2021
- Description
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DMD is an X-chromosome related genetic disease caused by loss of dystrophin protein expression, and which impacts 1 in 5000 boys born in the...
Show moreDMD is an X-chromosome related genetic disease caused by loss of dystrophin protein expression, and which impacts 1 in 5000 boys born in the world. The usual cause of this at the genetic level is a frame shift due to internal deletions of one or more exons that results in a change of the reading frame. This results in loss of expression of the protein encoded by this gene, dystrophin, which in turn leads to the disease phenotype. Exon skipping is a therapy for DMD which restores dystrophin pre-mRNA reading frame to produce a modified dystrophin. This is done by antisense oligonucleotides, AONs, which disturb the process of exon splicing and exclude targeted exons near the patient’s defect which restore the correct reading frame in the pre-mRNA transcript. In 2016, the first AON was approved for clinical use targeting exon 51, called eteplirsen. This provided the first disease modifying therapy for DMD, but it was only relevant to ~6% of patients who had defects that were correctable by skipping this specific exon. In 2020 two more AONs targeting exon 53 were developed, viltolarsen and golodirsen, providing benefit to an additional 5% of patients, and in 2021 casimersen targeting exon 45 was approved.However, this raises an interesting issue, in that for some patients, with an exon 52 deletion, skipping exon 51 or skipping exon 53 could both restore the reading frame. Which approved exon skipping treatment is better and the differences between them are still unknown. This is the aim of this study: to help patients figure out which AON can have a consequence of less long-term health problems like cardiomyopathy and longer life and get more precise treatment. We selected three exon skipped edits – two that represent exon 53 skipping repair of an underlying Δe52 defect and one targeting exon 51 skipping repair of a Δe52 defect. We then used a panel of biophysical and biochemical including dynamic light scattering, circular dichroism Spectroscopy, thermal denaturation, and protease K challenge to investigate the biophysical characteristics of these different exon skipped edits. From our results we found that Δe51-52 has the more structure (i.e., is less perturbed), compared to e52-53, as assessed by CD or by proteinase K challenge, but it also has lower thermal stability, with a low Tm=48C transition that begins to unfold at the physiological relevant temperature of 37C. On the other hand, e52-53 has less helical structure, but what structure did form had unfolding transitions in the normal range for wild type STRs, Tm> 60C; but this edit also had more non-helical structure. So, the total experimental results of these three edits are very complex, which may be due to the fact that these edits span the normally unfolded H3 region.
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- Title
- THE EFFECTS OF MODIFIED SURFACES ON INSULIN CRYSTALLIZATION
- Creator
- Hammadi, Okba Tahar
- Date
- 2021
- Description
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Engineered nucleation features (ENFs) were designed with the hope to improve the efficiency of protein crystallization and increase...
Show moreEngineered nucleation features (ENFs) were designed with the hope to improve the efficiency of protein crystallization and increase reproducibility both in quality and quantity. These ENFs were tested with human insulin as the protein of choice since it has flexible parameters, only one cofactor, and a large amount of commercially available crystal ready protein. Insulin crystallization on the ENFs will produce more crystals while also having a reduced crystallization on-set time compared to the control glass surface. The ENFs were compared to control surfaces under similar conditions and observed over time to record both onset-times and end times. The ENFs performed markedly better in on-set times, having an overall 87%-time reduction when compared to the control drops. The drops placed on the ENF produced more than 2.5x the number of crystals in the control drops.
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- Title
- Population dynamics and pathogens of the western bean cutworm (Striacosta albicosta)
- Creator
- Bunn, Dakota C.
- Date
- 2022
- Description
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Understanding an herbivorous pest’s population dynamics is necessary to ensure proper integrated pest management strategies are being...
Show moreUnderstanding an herbivorous pest’s population dynamics is necessary to ensure proper integrated pest management strategies are being developed and used. The western bean cutworm is a pest of both corn and dry beans that is understudied and difficult to manage due to its nocturnal lifestyle, adaptation to current management techniques and a general lack of understanding regarding its population structure. Our studies focused on the effects of host plant and pathogens on western bean cutworm population structure and found that mainly adults which developed on corn are contributing to the next generation of western bean cutworm in Michigan, making corn and dry beans unsuitable as co-refuges in insecticide resistance management strategies.We also found a 100% prevalence of the Nosema sp. in the adult population of western bean cutworm in Michigan. This prevalence, when paired with the consistent crop damage caused annually by the western bean cutworm, which confirms an abundance of cutworms are present, suggests the infection is slow acting and non-lethal to its host. Following sequencing, assembly, and annotation of the Nosema sp. genome, we were unable to provide a reason for the Nosema sp.’s low virulence, however, we were able to confirm the presence of all 6 polar tube proteins. Upon further examination of the Nosema sp. genome we were able to determine that it is a true Nosema with genome size of ~9.57 Mbp (~20% of which are transposable elements), which is within the typical range for this genus.
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- Title
- Biophysical and Computational Characterization of CinDel Edits of Dystrophin
- Creator
- Stojkovic, Vladimir
- Date
- 2022
- Description
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Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a degenerative genetic disease caused by a genetic defect that results in the absence of dystrophin, a...
Show moreDuchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a degenerative genetic disease caused by a genetic defect that results in the absence of dystrophin, a protein with an important stabilizing role in muscle cells. DMD causes progressive muscle degeneration leading to the loss of ambulation, and typically results in death before the third decade of life. Treatments for DMD aim to restore dystrophin expression and typically do so by producing edited or modified dystrophins. The only FDA approved therapy, exon skipping, produces dystrophin edits at exon boundaries but emerging therapeutic approaches like gene replacement therapy and CRISPR-Cas9-based gene editing techniques like CinDel allow for greater flexibility and are not constrained to exon boundary edits. However, understanding of what makes a “good”, functional edit is limited so it is not clear how to make use of this increased flexibility to produce optimal edits which are believed to be necessary for robust treatment. In an effort to improve understanding of the biophysics of these non-exon edits, we have embarked on a mixed experimental and computational study of a set of CinDel edits in the D19-D21 region of the dystrophin central rod domain. First, we have conducted an Alphafold structure prediction-based screen of a subset of possible edits in this region and selected one edit for follow-up characterization. We then compared this computationally-selected edit to three other heuristically designed edits experimentally and computationally by molecular dynamics simulations. We found that the computationally selected edit is significantly more thermodynamically stable than the other edits in the cohort. This edit also generally exhibited more favorable properties in MD simulations across multiple measures such as helicity, STR-junction unwinding and conformational variability.
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- Title
- Apalutamide Modulates the Expression of Regulatory Genes for Prostate Cancer Cell Invasion and Migration In Vivo and In Vitro
- Creator
- Qualter, Gina E.
- Date
- 2022
- Description
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The next generation antiandrogen, Apalutamide (Apa), improves both overall survival and metastasis-free survival in men with castration...
Show moreThe next generation antiandrogen, Apalutamide (Apa), improves both overall survival and metastasis-free survival in men with castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC). In vitro and in vivo studies were performed to characterize the mechanistic effects of Apalutamide on prostate cancer cell proliferation, invasion, and migration, and the expression of genes that regulate these processes. Apalutamide inhibited the proliferation of LNCaP human prostate cancer cells in both the presence and absence of dihydrotestosterone (DHT), and also inhibited LNCaP cell migration/invasion. At the mRNA level (RT-PCR), Apalutamide down-regulated the expression of androgen receptor (AR), c-Myc, MMP-2, MMP-9, DANCR, and lncRNA, and up-regulated TIMP-2 expression. Similar data were obtained for protein expression (western blot). In the in vivo study, male Hi-Myc mice received daily oral administration of Apalutamide beginning at age 8 weeks for 2 months, 3.5 months, or 5 months. Daily oral administration of Apalutamide reduced accessory sex gland weights by over 50% at all three time points, inhibited the progression of prostatic intraepithelial neoplasms (PIN) to cancer, and significantly affected the expression of genes that regulate invasion and migration. However, in vitro findings indicated that resistance to Apalutamide through the emergence of the AR splice variant 7 (AR-V7) following extended treatment is possible and may be reversed following knockdown of AR-V7 gene expression.In summary, these results suggest that while Apalutamide is an effective inhibitor of prostate cancer invasion/migration, further investigation into the mechanism of AR-V7 mediated Apalutamide-resistance and strategies to overcome resistance may be indicated to improve prostate cancer patient outcomes following extended periods of treatment.
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- Title
- The Detection of Emerging Pathogenic Arcobacter Species In Poultry and Poultry By-Products
- Creator
- Nguyen, Paul
- Date
- 2022
- Description
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Arcobacter species are emerging foodborne pathogens that are associated with human gastrointestinal illness. Typical symptoms of Arcobacter...
Show moreArcobacter species are emerging foodborne pathogens that are associated with human gastrointestinal illness. Typical symptoms of Arcobacter infection that have been reported include diarrhea, abdominal cramps, nausea, vomiting, and in severe cases, bacteremia. Consumption of contaminated food and water is the most common transmission source that leads to human infection. When consumed, pathogenic Arcobacter spp. pass through the stomach and establishes themselves in the host intestinal tract, where they cause gastroenteritis. Currently, there is no standard isolation method to detect pathogenic Arcobacter spp. from food and environment sample matrices. The research detailed in this thesis describes the development of the Nguyen-Restaino-Juárez Arcobacter detection system (NRJ) comprised of a selective enrichment broth and a chromogenic agar plate used to isolate three pathogenic species: Arcobacter butzleri, Arcobacter cryaerophilus, and Arcobacter skirrowii. Results revealed that NRJ yielded 97.8% inclusivity and 100.0% exclusivity when evaluating against select bacterial strains found in foods. Our research group internally validated the novel chromogenic detection system by comparing its efficacy against the modified Houf reference method (HB). Method-performance evaluations determined the NRJ method was significantly more sensitive and specific than modified HB when isolating the three Arcobacter species from ground chicken samples. Furthermore, 16S amplicon sequencing data identified that greater than 97% of bacterial isolates recovered using the NRJ detection system were Arcobacter species. This thesis presents the development and validation of a new gold standard method for isolating these emerging pathogens in food, clinical and environmental sampling.
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- Title
- DEVELOPING FUSION BACTERIOCINS FOR ERADICATING PSEUDOMONAS AERUGINOSA BIOFILMS
- Creator
- An, Sungjun
- Date
- 2022
- Description
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The opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in cystic fibrosis patients and...
Show moreThe opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in cystic fibrosis patients and immunocompromised individuals. Due to its remarkable ability to resist antibiotics, eradicating P. aeruginosa has become increasingly difficult. As previously reported, we have successfully engineered a colicin-secretion system that kills target biofilm cells rapidly and selectively in multispecies biofilms as well as demonstrated the potential of using live microorganisms engineered to produce antimicrobial colicin protein to treat biofilm-associated infections. In this study,we constructed a fusion colicin-pyocin that could target P. aeruginosa by DNase activity of colicin E2. The newly engineered bacteriocin-secretion system upon the shift in target, maintained biofilm inhibition capacity. Both during biofilm formation and after its development, the system was able to suppress the P. aeruginosa biofilm. This result opened up the possibility that it could be used for novel live biotherapeutics. A further study was conducted to overcome the challenge of requiring an exogenous inducer. We applied the concept of Quorum-Sensing signal that recognize autoinducer as a trigger of fusion colicin-pyocin producing genetic circuit so that it automates the production and secretion of fusion colicin-pyocin as soon as the genetic circuit senses the target population growing. This study demonstrated that combining the domains of colicin and pyocin could broaden the genetic circuit target range, maintaining strain specificity, while employing the QS system could remove the fundamental problem of diffusion or degradation of extra compounds as they approach engineered cells.
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- Title
- Evolution and adaptations to host plants in the beetle genus Diabrotica
- Creator
- Lata, Dimpal
- Date
- 2022
- Description
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Corn rootworms (Diabrotica spp.) are among the most destructive pests impacting agriculture in the U.S and are an emerging model for insect...
Show moreCorn rootworms (Diabrotica spp.) are among the most destructive pests impacting agriculture in the U.S and are an emerging model for insect-plant interactions. We have a limited understanding of the genome-scale level difference between specialist and generalist corn rootworm species and their interaction with their host plants. Genome sizesof several species in the genus Diabrotica and an outgroup were estimated using flow cytometry. Results indicated that there has been a recent expansion in genome size in the common ancestor of the virgifera group leading to Diabrotica barberi, Diabrotica virgifera virgifera, and Diabrotica virgifera zeae. Comparative genomic studies between the fucata and virgifera groups of Diabrotica revealed that repeat elements, mostly miniature inverted-transposable elements (MITEs) and gypsy-like long terminal repeat (LTR) retroelements, contributed to genome size expansion. The initial transcriptional profile in western corn rootworm neonates when fed on different potential host plants demonstrated a strong association between western corn rootworm and maize, which was very distinct from other possible hosts and non-host plants. The results also showed presence of several larval development related transcripts unique to host plants and the presence of several muscle development and stress response related transcripts unique to non-host plants. The effect of the maize defensive metabolite DIMBOA on corn rootworms was studied using a novel plant-free system. The survival of both southern and western corn rootworms was not affected at a low concentration of DIMBOA. However, the concentration above the physiological dose found in plants affected the survival of corn rootworms. DIMBOA had no plant independent effect on these corn rootworms weight gain.
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- Title
- IDENTIFICATION OF THE RIBOFLAVIN BINDING SITE IN VIBRIO CHOLERAE ION PUMPING NQR COMPLEX
- Creator
- Lee, Chia-Hsing
- Date
- 2021
- Description
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NQR is a six-subunit complex that transfers electrons from NADH to ubiquinone, one of the essential enzymes in the bacterial respiratory chain...
Show moreNQR is a six-subunit complex that transfers electrons from NADH to ubiquinone, one of the essential enzymes in the bacterial respiratory chain of many pathogens such as Vibrio cholerae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Chlamydia trachomatis. Its electron transfer path requires three different flavin cofactors to facilitate: FAD, FMN, and riboflavin. The FMN in subunit B (FMNB) brings electrons to riboflavin and then transfers it to the final electron receptor UQ in subunit B, coupled with the Na+ pumping mechanism. NQR has a unique evolutionary history, and one of the pieces of evidence is that NQR has been reported as the only one flavoenzyme that uses riboflavin as its redox cofactor. However, the binding site of riboflavin has not been well understood. To gain insight into the electron transfer at this site in V.cholerae NQR, we generated mutants at the interface of subunits B, D, and E where the possible location of riboflavin is. To characterize these mutants, we assessed NQR properties with different approaches including enzyme kinetics and flavin radical profiling. We found that the mutagenesis surrounding the hydrophobic pocket disrupted the NQR activity, and cause the loss of neutral radical, but did not interfere with the binding affinity between the substrates and NQR. This study will help to understand electron transfer better in NQR and develop the drugs targeting the riboflavin binding site in the future.
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- Title
- COMPREHENSIVE ANALYSIS OF EXON SKIPPING EDITS WITHIN DYSTROPHIN D20:24 REGIONS
- Creator
- Niu, Xin
- Date
- 2020
- Description
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Exon skipping is a disease modifying therapy that operates at the RNA level. In this strategy, oligonucleotide analog drugs are used to...
Show moreExon skipping is a disease modifying therapy that operates at the RNA level. In this strategy, oligonucleotide analog drugs are used to specifically mask specific exons and prevent them from being included in the mature mRNA. Exon skipping can also be used to restore protein expression in cases where a genetic frameshift mutation has occurred, and this how it is applied to Duchenne muscular dystrophy, DMD. DMD most commonly arises as a result of large exonic deletions that juxtapose flanking exons of incompatible reading frame, which abolishes dystrophin protein expression. This loss leads to the pathology of the disease, which is severe, causing death generally in the second or third decade of life. Here, the primary aim of exon skipping is to restore the reading frame by skipping an exon adjacent to the patient’s original. While restoring some protein expression is good, how removing some region from the middle of protein affects its structure and function is unclear. Complicating this in this case is that the dystrophin gene is very large, containing 79 exons. Many different underlying deletions are knowns, and exon skipping can be applied in many ways. It has previously been shown that many exon-skip edits result in structural perturbations of varying degrees. Very few studies are focused on the protein biophysical study and it is still basically unclear whether and how such editing can be done to minimize such perturbations. In order to provide the solid evidences which prove the significant variation among those cases (especially for the clinically relevant cases) and better understanding the general principles of “what makes a good edit”, we examine a systematic and comprehensive panel of possible exon edits in a region of the dystrophin protein. The domain D20:24 of dystrophin rod region are selected for its entirety which is separated by hinge region (mostly random coiled structure) and addition of other STRs will not disrupt the structure stability. Also D20:24 regions lie in the Hot Spot region II (HS2) which holds the most number of DMD patients. During the comprehensive scan, we identify for the first time, exon edits that appear to maintain structural stability similar to wild-type protein and those clinically relevant edits. Then we figure out the factors that appear to be correlated with the degree of structural perturbation, such as the number of cooperative protein domains, as well as how the edited exon structure interacts with the protein domain structure. Our study is the first systematic and comprehensive scan for an entire multiple STRs domain. This would help us understand the protein nature of various exon skipping edits and provide useful target for clinical treatment. Also the knowledge we learned may be applied to produce more sophisticated CRISPR edits in the future work.
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- Title
- Computational Genomics of Human-Infecting Microsporidia Species from the Genus Encephalitozoon
- Creator
- Mascarenhas dos Santos, Anne Caroline
- Date
- 2023
- Description
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Microsporidia are obligate intracellular pathogens classified as category B priority pathogens by the National Institute of Allergy and...
Show moreMicrosporidia are obligate intracellular pathogens classified as category B priority pathogens by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), a division of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Microsporidian species from the genus Encephalitozoon infect humans and can cause encephalitis, keratoconjunctivitis or enteric diseases in both immunocompromised and immunocompetent individuals. The main treatment for disseminated microsporidiosis available in the United States is albendazole, an anthelmintic benzimidazole that is also used to treat fungal infections, but species from the Encephalitozoonidae have already shown signs of resistance against this drug. The Encephalitozoonidae harbors highly specialized pathogens with the smallest known eukaryote genomes, with Encephalitozoon cuniculi featuring a genome of only 2.9 Mbp and coding for a proteome of roughly 2,000 proteins. Pathogens are in an everlasting race to quicken their adaptation pace against host defenses. This adaptation is often driven by gene duplication, recombination and/or mutation, and due to the potentially disruptive nature of duplication and recombination processes, many of these evolutions in pathogens are taking place outside conserved genomic loci. As such, genes involved in virulence and drug resistance in pathogens are often localized in the (sub)telomeres rather than in chromosome cores. The small and streamlined nature of microsporidian genomes makes them excellent candidates to investigate the adaptation of pathogens to host defenses, the evolution of their virulence, and the development of their resistance to drugs from a genomic perspective. However, microsporidian genomes are highly divergent at the DNA sequence level and the ones that have been sequenced so far are incomplete and are lacking the telomeres. This high level of sequence divergence hinders standard sequence homology-based functional annotations, blurring our understanding of what these organisms are capable of from a metabolic perspective. The gap in our knowledge of what is encoded in the microsporidia telomeres could lead to an underestimation of their pathogenic capabilities. Therefore, deciphering the functions of unknown proteins in microsporidia genomes and unraveling the content of their telomeres is important to fully assess their potential for adaptability to host defenses and predisposition to drug resistance. Likewise, a better understanding of the genetic diversity in microsporidia will help assess the extent by which host-pathogen interactions are shaping the adaptation of these parasites to humans. As observed in the COVID-19 pandemic, genetic diversity can influence the speed at which pathogens adapt to host defenses and thus can pose a big challenge to disease control. The development of strategies for controlling microsporidiosis outbreaks will likely benefit from the work performed in this thesis. As part of my PhD work, I investigated the virulence and host-adaptation capabilities of human-infecting microsporidia species from the genus Encephalitozoon with computational genomic approaches. This work included: 1) using structural homology to infer the functions of unknown proteins from the microsporidia proteome; 2) sequencing the complete genomes from telomere-to-telomere of three distinct Encephalitozoon spp. (E. cuniculi, E. hellem and E. intestinalis) to determine the genetic makeup of their telomeres and better understand the extent of their diversity; and 3) assessing the intraspecies genetic diversity that exists between Encephalitozoon species.
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- Title
- Utility of a Low-Coverage Genome Assembly for Discovery of Genes Associated with Pyrethroid Resistance in Smicronyx Fulvus LeConte
- Creator
- Markiv, Paulina Patrycja
- Date
- 2023
- Description
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Red sunflower seed weevil (RSSW) is a major insect pest of cultivated and wild common sunflowers in the Great Plains of North America. The...
Show moreRed sunflower seed weevil (RSSW) is a major insect pest of cultivated and wild common sunflowers in the Great Plains of North America. The extent of the sunflower damage due to RSSW infestation is too great for the natural sunflower defense mechanisms to protect the agriculture industry from losses. Pyrethroids are the only type of insecticide designated for the control of RSSW; however, instances of pyrethroid insecticide ineffectiveness against RSSW have been annually reported to entomologists at South Dakota State University since 2017. The biological bases of insecticide resistance are unknown but common mechanisms associated with pyrethroid resistance include general detoxification mechanism driven by cytochrome P450s (CYP450s) as well as mutations in the pyrethroid target, voltage-gated sodium channels (VGSCs). The goal of this study was to determine if the computational analysis of a low-coverage genome assembly is sufficient to identify and characterize genes associated with insecticide resistance which could contribute to pest control research efforts. By using a low-coverage genome assembly, RNA-Seq data, and bioinformatic tools, 40 complete and 33 partial gene models coding for CYP450 as well as a partial gene model coding for VGSC have been identified in the genome of RSSW. Twenty-seven mutation sites, previously associated with the pyrethroid resistance in other insects, have been identified in the VGSC gene of RSSW. The low-coverage genome proved to be a sufficient resource for preliminary studies of gene identification which could bring significant knowledge to subsequent research focusing on insecticide resistance and pest control.
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