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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: may + worms + illuminate  Related to the article below (Last Update: 5/13/2008)

Casada: May brings best time of year to hook bream
Spartanburg Herald Journal (subscription), SC -
Crickets are probably the most popular of the various types of bait, but bream readily hit red worms, catalpa worms, night crawlers, grasshoppers, leeches, ...
Wales fights death-dealing worms
News Wales, UK -
Remarkably, the worms can live in humans for up to 30 years. Although the parasites can be treated with drugs, they may be building resistance to the ...
Freshwater Fishing Trends
Lakefront Hartwell, GA -
The hot lure remains dark swamp crawler green pumpkin Zoom worms. Also try topwater plugs and Texas rigged worms fished on the bottom. ...
Fishing Report for May 12
Palm Beach Post,  United States -
Top water plugs are working well early in the morning with crank baits, live shiners and plastic worms enticing the bass throughout the day. ...
MfD: Luxury restaurants to offer insects, worms
Prague Daily Monitor, Czech Republic - May 12, 2008
By ČTK / Published 12 May 2008 Prague, May 10 (CTK) - Cockroaches, crickets, meal beetles and other insects, along with worms, can soon start to be offered ...
Fishing Report for Sunday, May 11
Aiken Standard (subscription), SC - May 11, 2008
Fish in 6 to 15 feet for the biggest fish; smaller fish may still be right on the banks. Fish Carolina or Texas Rigged worms; the best colors are watermelon ...
From the New Europe: Eating bugs and worms because you can afford it
Gadling, CA -
by Iva Skoch May 12th 2008 @ 9:40AM The luxury restaurant market in the Czech Republic is apparently looking for new, creative ways to cater to their ...
Monday, May 12th, 2008 | No Comments
SLAM Online, FL -
To the point where, these seven games against Atlanta have really opened a lot of cans of worms that made me start to think you know? ...
Bread Mold May Unlock Secret To Eliminating Disease-causing Genes
Science Daily (press release) - May 10, 2008
"Meiotic silencing also occurs in worms, mice and human beings," said Patrick Shiu, assistant professor of biological sciences in the MU College of Arts and ...

Sydney Morning Herald
Is testosterone evil?
Sydney Morning Herald, Australia -
The "delinquents" had higher testosterone levels than the book worms. Dabbs also went into the workplace, examining the salivary testosterone of men in ...
Source: Google News

Autograph: Toward Automated, Distributed Worm Signature Detection -
HA Kim, B Karp - USENIX Security Symposium, 2004 - usenix.org
... Our collected results illuminate the inherent tension between early generation of
a worm's ... 3 In future, worms may be designed to minimize the overlap in their ...

Worms on Ice Bram Duchovnay and Daniel H. Shain -
Y Classroom, Y Membership, N Calendar - nsta.org
... the worms? response to light may provide clues ... the soil-containing chamber, and ice
worms were placed ... tungsten light source to equally illuminate the chambers ...

Invertebrates may not be so different after all -
D Zarkower - Novartis Found Symp, 2002 - doi.wiley.com
... Page 3. sex-speci?cally will not only explain sexual dimorphism, but also will help
illuminate how these ... We think that the worm pathway may have been ...

Clues from worms: a Slug at Puma promotes the survival of blood progenitors -
S Haupt, O Alsheich-Bartok, Y Haupt - Cell Death Differ, 2006 - nature.com
... Such a conjecture may be exemplified in the HSC malignancy ... in the primitive archives
of the worm that can be deciphered to illuminate the intricacies of our ...

To print this page, select" Print" from the File menu of your browser -
B Duchovnay, DH Shain - The Science Teacher, 2002 - nsta.org
... the worms? response to light may provide clues ... the soil-containing chamber, and ice
worms were placed ... tungsten light source to equally illuminate the chambers ...

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RD May - US Patent 2,792,646, 1957 - Google Patents
... The operation of this device may be visualized as follows ... combination of the worm
20 and worm gear 21 ... Illuminating means 61 (Figure 1 ) illuminate the mark- ings ...


MA Strickler - US Patent 2,891,811, 1959 - Google Patents
... clamping lever 20 to release the worm while simultaneously ... The flashlight 52 may
be employed when seeking bait ... is positioned so as to illuminate the clamping ...

Parasitic worms and inflammatory diseases -
P ZACCONE, Z FEHERVARI, JM PHILLIPS, DW DUNNE, A … - Parasite Immunology, 2006 - Blackwell Synergy
... Parasitic worms can establish and reproduce in mammalian ... products or their synthetic
analogues may also allow a ... project will also surely illuminate the search ...

AGING RESEARCH: Old Flies May Hold Secrets of Aging -
E Pennisi - Science, 2000 - sciencemag.org
... It may also illuminate why worms, fruit flies, and rodents, at least, live
longer on a spartan diet. Figure 1 Antiaging protein. ...

What Makes Us Tick? -
L Guarente - Science, 1997 - sciencemag.org
... results show that life-span in the worm can be ... its yeast homolog suggests that
metabolism may be one ... cerevisiae, and mammals will help to illuminate the answers ...

Source: Google Scholar

Crawling Worms May Illuminate Dopamine's Role in Human Aging Diseases

Research carried out with a paintbrush bristle, a metronome, smelly chemicals and thousands of microscopic worms called nematodes may reveal important information about human aging diseases like Parkinson's and Alzheimer's, thanks to a grant from the Ellison Medical Foundation awarded to a University at Buffalo neurobiologist.

Denise M. Ferkey, Ph.D., assistant professor of biological sciences in UB's College of Arts and Sciences, has received a prestigious $200,000 New Scholar Award in Aging from the Ellison Medical Foundation in order to investigate the little-understood link between the neurotransmitter called dopamine and diseases like Parkinson's and Alzheimer's.

The New Scholar Awards reward exceptional scientists during the first three years of their research careers. The Ellison Medical Foundation awarded just 18 of these awards this year nationwide.

The purpose of Ferkey's grant is to look at how dopamine affects the complex chain of messages that constitutes neuronal signaling, ultimately affecting mental and physical health, especially in aging adults.

Her research addresses fundamental questions about how dopamine affects neuronal signal transduction using as a model the chemosensation (ability to smell and taste) of the nematode C. elegans, found in backyards everywhere.

The ultimate goal of the research is to discover new signaling molecules and pathways that are targets of dopamine in order to identify new avenues for drug development for human neurological age-related diseases.

"We know that Parkinson's disease results from the progressive loss of the dopamine-producing neurons in the brain," Ferkey said, "but we don't yet fully understand what dopamine does normally to affect neuronal signaling. It is absolutely critical to understand the normal role of dopamine before we can begin to understand how loss of dopamine contributes to human diseases."

Her research takes a novel approach by using chemosensory responses, the behaviors that organisms exhibit when they encounter chemical sensory stimuli, as a marker for dopamine function in vivo.

In her previous position as a postdoctoral researcher at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Ferkey found that dopamine affects the ways in which C. elegans respond to their environments.

In her current work at UB, she builds on that observation by using C. elegans as a model to dissect dopamine function in individual cells and in neuronal circuits in the whole living animal.

Nematodes, or worms, are pretty easy to "read," according to Ferkey, relying primarily on their ability to taste and smell to find mates and food and avoid harm.

"If a neuron in a circuit is firing correctly, we see a behavioral response," she said.

She noted that with just 302 neurons compared to a human brain's 100 billion neurons, the nervous system of a C. elegans is far simpler, naturally, than that of a human.

"However, it's amazing that the chemicals that stimulate our brains are the same ones that function in the C. elegans' nervous system," she said. "That's why it's not strange to say that by understanding their neurons and how they function, they will hopefully give us new insights into complex human diseases."

In the lab, Ferkey and her students provoke a response by presenting an individual nematode with a single paint brush hair that has been attached to the end of a pipette and dipped in an "odorous" chemical.

If the nematode senses a chemical that's potentially toxic the researchers, observing the organisms under a dissecting microscope, will see it instinctively back away within two seconds, while the lab's metronome ticks away.

Those avoidance responses, repeated thousands of times in the lab, will enable Ferkey and her colleagues to determine which neurons in a circuit dopamine acts upon and how dopamine ultimately affects the sensitivity of those neurons.

"Recent studies suggest that dopamine has novel targets in the nervous system that have not yet been identified," said Ferkey.

Thus, her research also will focus on developing a genetic screen that may reveal new physiological targets of dopamine in neuronal circuits in living animals.

Such a genetic screen will be of special interest, she added, because current dopamine treatments for Parkinson's disease decrease in efficacy as a patient's disease progresses.

By providing detailed information on as yet unknown dopamine receptors and pathways, it is hoped that Ferkey's research at UB will provide potential new targets for drug development and therapy for human diseases that result from decreased dopamine signaling.

 
 
 
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