Thursday, September 21, 2023

 

Study reveals the most important considerations for grizzly bear conservation

Peer-Reviewed Publication

WILEY

Humans negatively impact the health of grizzly bear populations through top-down influences like direct mortality associated with forestry roads (from conflict or illegal killings) and displacement from high quality habitats, and through bottom-up influences like reducing availability of food resources. Research published in Wildlife Monographs reveals the relationship between these forces, informing a strategic conservation program.

Investigators radio-collared and followed numerous grizzly bears over multiple years in southeastern British Columbia. They found an interesting interplay between the most important bottom-up factor, huckleberry patches, and mortality risk from forestry roads (road density and the amount of secure habitat away from roads). Top-down influences were not only associated with mortality risk, but they limited contributions of critical food resources, reducing female grizzly fitness and density, in essence having a similar effect as habitat loss. This doubly negative effect likely contributes to the ubiquitous detriment that high forestry road density confers to grizzly bear populations in western North America.

The findings highlight the importance of considering both bottom-up and top-down influences affecting wildlife populations. “The securing of important food resources to make them accessible to bears is accomplished through some degree of restriction of human access,” said lead author Michael Proctor, PhD, of Birchdale Ecological Ltd. “Our results suggest that benefits of critical bear foods are not satisfactorily realized unless human access to nearby roads is reduced.”

URL upon publication: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/wmon.1078

 

Additional Information
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The information contained in this release is protected by copyright. Please include journal attribution in all coverage. For more information or to obtain a PDF of any study, please contact: Sara Henning-Stout, newsroom@wiley.com.

About the Journal
Wildlife Monographs, one of three peer-reviewed journals of The Wildlife Society, publishes research regarding the management and conservation of wildlife, emphasizing comprehensive synthesis of a topic.

About Wiley
Wiley is a knowledge company and a global leader in research, publishing, and knowledge solutions. Dedicated to the creation and application of knowledge, Wiley serves the world’s researchers, learners, innovators, and leaders, helping them achieve their goals and solve the world's most important challenges. For more than two centuries, Wiley has been delivering on its timeless mission to unlock human potential. Visit us at Wiley.com. Follow us on FacebookTwitterLinkedIn and Instagram.

 

Cognitive behavioral therapy eases how fibromyalgia pain is experienced by the brain


A randomized, controlled trial led by Mass General Brigham researchers demonstrates that cognitive behavioral therapy can significantly reduce the impact of fibromyalgia pain


Peer-Reviewed Publication

MASS GENERAL BRIGHAM




Patients living with fibromyalgia (FM) – a disease that predominantly affects women and is characterized by chronic pain, fatigue and brain fog – often find limited treatment options and a scarcity of explanations for their symptoms. Research led by Mass General Brigham investigators has found that cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) can significantly reduce the burden of FM by, in part, reducing pain-catastrophizing, a negative cognitive and emotional response that can intensify pain through feelings of helplessness, rumination and intrusive thoughts. This finding is backed by neuroimaging data, evidencing reduced connectivity between regions of the brain associated with self-awareness, pain and emotional processing. Results are published on September 20 in Arthritis & Rheumatology.

“In this study, we looked at the interplay between psychological processes and the brain's connectivity patterns in response to pain,” said co-senior author Robert Edwards, PhD, a clinical psychologist in the Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative & Pain Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, a founding member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system. “We wanted to explore how CBT, a talk therapy aimed at combatting maladaptive thoughts, can enhance individuals’ daily functioning and alter the brain’s processing of pain-related information.”

Edwards explains that CBT can reduce negative cognitive and emotional responses to pain. He says that while these responses are normal, they can amplify the disabling effects of chronic pain, and make conditions like FM more burdensome.

The research team for the study included researchers from three Mass General Brigham members: Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital, Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital. Mass General Brigham brings together 16 member institutions, including academic medical centers, top-tier specialty hospitals, community hospitals and more. Research that spans more than one of these entities is more than the sum of its parts, helping to provide insights and unique perspectives from multiple settings and areas of expertise.

Researchers recruited 98 women, randomly assigning 64 to a treatment group receiving CBT and 34 to a control group that received education about FM and chronic pain but was not taught specific CBT techniques. All participants were between 18 and 75 years old and had a confirmed FM diagnosis for at least six months. To collect baseline data, all participants completed several validated pain and quality of life questionnaires.

Each group participated in eight intervention sessions, consisting of 60–75-minute visits with a licensed mental health provider. Participants were primarily assessed for their levels of pain interference, or a measure of how much their pain disrupted their daily activities, pain catastrophizing, pain severity and the overall impact FM had on patients’ quality of life.

Results demonstrated that those who underwent CBT experienced significantly greater reductions in pain interference. CBT participants also exhibited significantly less pain catastrophizing and reported that their FM symptoms had significantly less impact on their daily lives.

The team saw evidence that after undergoing CBT, patients experienced changes in the activities of all three networks that suggested a diminished focus on pain.

“Prior to participants undergoing CBT, we saw that certain parts of the brain linked to self-awareness and sensation were very connected, suggesting patients were pertinently aware of the pain sensation they were experiencing and internalized these symptoms,” said co-first author Jeungchan Lee, PhD, an instructor in the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation based at Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital and the Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging at Massachusetts General Hospital. “After CBT, these connections were significantly less strong, suggesting that patients were better at separating themselves from their pain after therapy.”

This study was limited to women, partly because of its high prevalence, and partly to eliminate confounding gender differences in brain activity. In the future, the researchers hope to collect data from men and non-binary patients with FM. Additionally, CBT includes several therapeutic components, and these results cannot be generalized to assess the impact across all forms of CBT on reducing FM chronic pain.

Both Lee and Edwards agree that these findings ultimately suggest that complex chronic pain conditions like fibromyalgia should be addressed with a multitude of pharmacological and cognitive therapies.

“I hope that these findings motivate healthcare providers to consider CBT as an effective treatment option to reduce the impact of pain patients experience,” explained Edwards. “Chronic pain conditions like fibromyalgia involve long-standing patterns of changes in the central nervous system, and CBT is one among many treatment options, such as medication and physical therapy, that we know can be beneficial for those living with FM.”

Authorship: Other Mass General Brigham authors of this study include co-first author Asimina Lazaridou (Brigham and Women’s Hospital), Myrella Paschali (Brigham and Women’s Hospital), Marco L. Loggia (Massachusetts General Hospital), Michael P. Berry (Massachusetts General Hospital), Kylie Isenburg (Massachusetts General Hospital), Alessandra Anzolin (Massachusetts General Hospital and Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital), Arvina Grahl (Massachusetts General Hospital and Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital), and co-senior author Vitaly Napadow (Massachusetts General Hospital and Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital). Other authors include Dan-Mikael Ellingsen and Ajay D. Wasan.

Disclosures: The authors declared no potential conflicts of interest.

Funding: Supported by the National Institutes of Health: National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (R01-AT007550, R33-AT009306, P01-AT009965), National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (R01-AR064367, R01- AR079110), and the National Center for Research Resources (P41RR14075, S10RR021110, S10RR023043).

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About Mass General Brigham

Mass General Brigham is an integrated academic health care system, uniting great minds to solve the hardest problems in medicine for our communities and the world. Mass General Brigham connects a full continuum of care across a system of academic medical centers, community and specialty hospitals, a health insurance plan, physician networks, community health centers, home care, and long-term care services. Mass General Brigham is a nonprofit organization committed to patient care, research, teaching, and service to the community. In addition, Mass General Brigham is one of the nation’s leading biomedical research organizations with several Harvard Medical School teaching hospitals. For more information, please visit massgeneralbrigham.org.

 

Team led by professor In Soo-Il at DGIST develops eco-friendly high-efficiency photocatalysts that convert atmospheric CO2 into fuel


Peer-Reviewed Publication

DGIST (DAEGU GYEONGBUK INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY)

Ag@Ru-P25 Photocatalyst Electron Microscopy 

IMAGE: DGIST view more 

CREDIT: DGIST

□ 



The team led by Professor In Soo-Il in the Department of Energy Engineering at DGIST has developed a high-efficiency photocatalyst capable of converting carbon dioxide (CO2), a major contributor to global warming, into the energy resource methane. The research team optimized the composition of nanoparticle co-catalysts and ruthenium doping to maximize the optical and electrical properties of the photocatalyst. Simultaneously, they improved the methane conversion efficiency by enhancing CO2 adsorption through hydroxy surface treatment. The research team expects this technology to be applicable to carbon capture and utilization, making it possible to control the steadily increasing concentration of atmospheric CO2 while converting it into methane resources.

 

□ In 2022, the global CO2 concentration surpassed 420ppm, the highest level in 4.1 million years. Unprecedented increases in atmospheric CO2 concentrations have led to climate-related disasters worldwide, including 20 billion USD (approximately 25.4 trillion KRW) in economic losses due to droughts in Europe and record-breaking torrential rains on the Korean Peninsula.

 

□ To address this issue, the concentration of CO2, the cause of climate disasters, should be reduced. The World Economic Forum has identified “solar compounds” capable of converting CO2, a major contributor to global warming, into various fuels using solar energy as one of the top ten promising technologies of 2020. Among solar compound technologies, photocatalysts that convert highly stable CO2 into fuels such as methane using only sunlight and photocatalysts through gas-phase reactions are drawing attention as key technologies for the future chemical industry, with the aim to reduce atmospheric CO2 and produce fuel simultaneously.

 

□ However, currently commercialized photocatalysts like P25[1] have limitations, such as a large bandgap[2] that prevents the absorption of visible light and slow charge transfer. Several studies have attempted to solve these issues. However, challenges in achieving high-efficiency photocatalyst development have persisted due to inherent problems like low CO2 adsorption and conversion efficiency in gas-phase reactions.

 

□ The research team at DGIST led by Professor In Soo-Il developed a high-efficiency photocatalyst by attaching silver nanoparticle co-catalysts[3] to P25 made of titanium dioxide, and improving charge transfer performance with ruthenium doping. They also resolved the issue of a low CO2 concentration on the catalyst surface during gas-phase reactions by forming hydroxy groups on the surface of the photocatalyst through hydrogen peroxide treatment.

 

□ The research team demonstrated that electrons accumulate in an intermediate state of the P25 band structure through ruthenium doping. These accumulated electrons are then transferred to the silver nanoparticle co-catalyst, converting CO2 into methane. The team also identified the optimal composition[4] to efficiently produce methane from CO2 by analyzing the silver nanoparticle co-catalyst and ruthenium doping. Furthermore, by measuring the amount of adsorbed CO2, they proved that the photocatalyst surface adsorbed more acidic CO2 when it was alkalized with hydrogen peroxide.

 

 

□ Professor In Soo-Il from DGIST stated, “The newly developed photocatalyst improves visible light absorption, CO2 adsorption, and electron transfer capabilities simultaneously. It converts 135 times more methane with 95% selectivity compared to the currently commercialized P25 photocatalysts and maintains over 96% stability even after 24 hours of continuous operation. We will conduct follow-up research to improve the stability and selectivity of hydrocarbons for the practical application of this technology.”

 

□ This research was conducted as part of a medium-term research project sponsored by the Ministry of Science and ICT, and the results were published online in July in Carbon Energy (IF 20.5), a prestigious international journal in the field of energy and the environment.

- Correspondence author e-mail : insuil@dgist.ac.kr

 


[1] P25: A commercialized titanium dioxide photocatalyst.

[2] Bandgap: The energy difference between the lowest energy level of the conduction band and the highest energy level of the valence band.

[3] Co-catalyst: An additive that enhances the activity of a catalyst or regulates or modifies the reactions induced by a catalyst.

[4] Composition: Ratio of the various components that make up a system.

 POSTMODERN MESMERISM

Team led by Professor Choi Hong-Soo at DGIST elucidates the rotational magnetic field mechanism for maximizing the therapeutic effects on cancer cells using magnetic nanotherapeutics


Peer-Reviewed Publication

DGIST (DAEGU GYEONGBUK INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY)




 The team led by Professor Choi Hong-Soo in the Department of Robotics and Mechatronics Engineering at DGIST has discovered a method to enhance the penetration of magnetic nanoparticles into cancer cells and their magnetic hyperthermia effects through research on chain disassembly and magnetic propulsion mechanisms using a rotational magnetic field. This study focused on the delivery of magnetic therapeutic agents using magnetic fields, an area receiving attention in the field of cancer treatment. It is expected to contribute significantly by improving drug delivery efficiency and therapeutic effects in targeted cancer treatments.

 

□ Recently, the development of targeted therapeutics that selectively treat cancer cells has been gaining attention in the field of cancer treatment. Among them, research on magnetic carriers that target cancer cells using magnetic fields is underway. However, a problem arises when magnetic nanoparticles are exposed to a uniform magnetic field[1] with a general form; they form long chains in the direction of the magnetic field, making penetration into cancer cells or tumors difficult and reducing the therapeutic efficacy.

 

□ In response, the team led by Professor Choi Hong-Soo at DGIST analyzed the interaction between the behavior of magnetic nanoparticles and fluidic viscosity resistance using a unique rotational magnetic field, conducting research on chain disassembly mechanisms that can selectively control magnetic nanoparticle chain lengths. The research team aimed to verify several factors using a 3D tumor model (tumor spheroids), such as adjusting the length of magnetic nanoparticle chains through a rotational magnetic field, enhanced cellular absorption, and improved magnetic hyperthermia treatment for cancer cells.

 

□ First, the team verified the chain disassembly mechanism of magnetic nanoparticles induced by a rotational magnetic field. Targeting cancer cells and tumor spheroids, they induced increased cellular absorption and penetration by driving magnetic nanoparticles with a rotational magnetic field. Using fluorescence microscopy for intracellular fluorescent magnetic nanoparticle imaging and transmission electron microscopy for cell and spheroid cross-section observation, they proved that the use of a rotational magnetic field led to the deepest penetration of cells and tumor spheroids compared to the comparison groups (those exposed to a uniform magnetic field and those not exposed to any magnetic field).

 

□ Moreover, they induced cancer cell destruction using alternating magnetic fields to confirm the magnetic hyperthermia effects of magnetic nanoparticles in each group. The group with the highest penetration rate due to the rotational magnetic field showed the most effective treatment results. This confirmed that the chain disassembly and magnetic propulsion of magnetic nanoparticles through rotational magnetic fields can enhance cellular absorption, penetration, and ultimately, the therapeutic effects of magnetic nanotherapeutics.

 

□ Professor Choi Hong-Soo of DGIST stated, "We have verified that magnetic propulsion through rotational magnetic fields aids in the absorption and penetration of magnetic nanoparticles into cancer cells and tumor spheroids, ultimately improving tumor treatment efficacy. We expect that the technology developed through this research can be widely utilized to enhance therapeutic effects in targeted cancer treatment using magnetic therapeutics."

 

□ This research was supported by the Ministry of Science and ICT, the National Research Foundation's National Science Challenge Project and Global Research Lab Project, and the Institute for Basic Science. The results were published in the top-tier journal ACS NANO (JCR IF 17.1, top 5.7% in the field) in July.

- Correspondence author e-mail : mems@dgist.ac.kr 


 


[1] Uniform magnetic field: A magnetic field that has the same magnitude and direction throughout a given area.

SPAGYRIC HERBALISM

DGIST Core Protein Resources Center and Honam National Institute of Biological Resources, utilizing island wildlife to treat prostate cancer!


Peer-Reviewed Publication

DGIST (DAEGU GYEONGBUK INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY)




The DGIST (President Kuk Yang) Core Protein Resources Center (Center Director Choi Seong-gyun) and Honam National Institute of Biological Resources (Director Ryu Tae-chul) announced on August 14th (Monday) that they have molecularly elucidated the mechanism by which veratramine, extracted from the wild island plant Veratrum japonicum, inhibits the proliferation of prostate cancer cells, through the “Advancing Island Wildlife Materials” (Research Director Choi Gyeong-min) project.

 

□ Prostate cancer ranks first in incidence among male cancers in Western countries including the United States, and it is also the fastest-growing male cancer in South Korea. In the early stages of onset, hormone suppression therapy can control proliferation; however, as the disease progresses, it becomes hormone-refractory, making treatment more difficult. Therefore, developing treatments using natural substances without side effects is considered an important area of research.

 

□ Veratramine extracted from Veratrum japonicum, a wild island plant, has been known to inhibit the proliferation of liver cancer and brain neuroglioma cells and is also effective for high blood pressure and inflammatory diseases. However, the effect of veratramine on prostate cancer had not been studied before.

 

□ The research team led by Choi Seong-gyun applied veratramine to prostate cancer cells and identified the concentration at which it inhibits the cells’ biological functions. They confirmed that veratramine significantly inhibits the proliferation of prostate cancer. Furthermore, the experiments revealed that veratramine significantly reduces the cancer cells’ survivability and mobility.

 

□ Through immunostaining, proteomics, and microarray analyses, the research team found that veratramine increases the expression of ATM/ATR, a DNA damage-related protein in prostate cancer cells, and suppresses the expression of the Akt protein involved in cancer cell proliferation. Additionally, when veratramine was administered to immunodeficient mice with prostate cancer, both the tumor size and the expression of tumorigenic proteins significantly decreased without any toxic lesions in the parenchymal organs.

 

□ This research was conducted as part of the “Advancing Island Wildlife Materials” project initiated last April. This project is a collaborative effort involving the Honam National Institute of Biological Resources (Ministry of Environment) and academia–industry collaborations, aimed at accelerating growth in the biosector by fostering bio-material infrastructure. Plans are underway to continue research on enhancing the utility of island-specific wildlife materials in collaboration with relevant organizations.

 

□ Choi Seong-gyun, Director of the DGIST Core Protein Resources Center, stated, “This research lays the groundwork for developing effective substances that can overcome the limitations of existing treatments using island wildlife extracts. We will take the lead in constructing a utility database for various effective substances from island wildlife extracts for different diseases through active joint research between DGIST and the Honam National Institute of Biological Resources.”

 

□ Choi Gyeong-min, the leader of the research group, expressed great satisfaction with the excellent results achieved based on inter-ministerial cooperation in the initial stage of the project, stating, “We will continue to meet the public’s expectations through fruitful outcomes from multi-ministerial collaborations.”

 

□ Kim Hee-yeon and Lee Seung-woo from the DGIST Core Protein Resources Center participated in the research as the first authors, with Choi Seong-gyun as the corresponding author. The research findings were published in the globally recognized natural products scientific journal The American Journal of Chinese Medicine on June 30.