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Frontiers news briefs: June 13

2013-06-14
(Press-News.org) Frontiers in Microbiology

Insights into fungal communities in composts revealed by 454-pyrosequencing: Implications for human health and safety

Composting is a process for converting waste into materials beneficial for plant growth through the action of microbes, especially of fungi which can break down large molecules. But fungi involved in composting are not always harmless. Vidya De Gannes and colleagues show that composts can contain more fungi that are potentially harmful to humans than was previously realized. Using intensive DNA-sequencing to analyze fungal communities in three different composts of tropical agricultural plant waste, the authors found many fungal species not previously known to occur in composts. These include 15 species of opportunistic pathogens that can cause a variety of diseases, especially in people whose immune system has been weakened. Intensive DNA-sequencing can therefore serve as a "sentinel" technology to identify a potential health risk, conclude the authors.

Researcher contact: Prof. William Hickey
O.N. Allen Laboratory for Soil Microbiology, Department of Soil Science
University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA
E-mail: wjhickey@wisc.edu

Ms. Vidya de Gannes
Department of Food Production
University of the West Indies, St. Augustine, Trinidad and Tobago
E-mail: vidyadegannes@gmail.com

URL: http://www.frontiersin.org/Microbiotechnology,_Ecotoxicology_and_Bioremediation/10.3389/fmicb.2013.00164/abstract

Frontiers in Oncology

The role of microRNAs in the tumorigenesis of ovarian cancer

Despite intensive research on epithelial ovarian cancer over the last decade, there is still an urgent need to develop new genetic markers and treatments to detect, treat and cure the disease. It was recently discovered that so-called microRNAs, short RNA molecules that are not translated into protein, play a major role in the origin and the progression of ovarian cancer. Carlo Croce and Gianpiero Di Leva from the Ohio State University here review the most recent evidence on this subject. After discussing the essentials of microRNA activity in human cancer, the authors show that the measurement of the expression profile of microRNAs within the ovary can be used to identify neoplastic tissues, to distinguish between subtypes of ovarian cancers, and to predict the response to chemotherapy. Croce and di Leva conclude that microRNAs are a powerful avenue for the detection and diagnosis of ovarian cancer.

Researcher contacts: Dr. Carlo Croce and Dr. Gianpiero Di Leva
Department of Molecular Virology, Immunology and Medical Genetics
Ohio State University, USA
Email: carlo.croce@osumc.edu, gianpiero.dileva@osumc.edu

URL: http://www.frontiersin.org/Women%27s_Cancer/10.3389/fonc.2013.00153/abstract

Frontiers in Neuroscience

On the nature of extraversion: variation in conditioned contextual
activation of dopamine-facilitated affective, cognitive, and motor processes

The difference between extroverts and introverts comes down to a person's sensitivity to the neurotransmitter dopamine in the brain. When we encounter "rewards", dopamine activates positive emotions, such as, euphoria and elation, and motivational feelings like desire and craving. Richard Depue and Yu Fu from Cornell University, USA, here explain why extroverts consistently seek out rewarding environments: in extroverts, dopamine has a stronger capacity to promote the formation of mental associations between environmental stimuli and rewards. Over four consecutive days, Depue and Yu gave methylphenidate, a drug that activates dopamine, to volunteers to increase their perception of subjective reward. They found that extroverts more readily associated stimuli with reward, as shown by an increase of those motor, affective, and cognitive processes that are regulated by dopamine. These results suggest that extraversion is associated with individual variation in the capacity to encode rewarding stimuli in memory.

Researcher contact: Prof. Richard A. Depue
Department of Human development
Cornell University, USA
Email: rad5@cornell.edu

URL: http://www.frontiersin.org/Human_Neuroscience/10.3389/fnhum.2013.00288/abstract

Also of interest, published in Frontiers in Microbiology last month (not under embargo):

Epidemiology of criniviruses, an emerging problem in world agriculture

The genus Crinivirus includes the whitefly-transmitted members of the family Closteroviridae. Criniviruses emerged as major agricultural threats at the end of the twentieth century with the establishment and naturalization of their whitefly vectors, members of the genera Trialeurodes and Bemisia, in temperate climates around the globe. These viruses are responsible for diseases that lead to losses measured in the billions of dollars annually, many through single infections; whereas other criniviruses remain asymptomatic alone but interact with other viruses during mixed infections that cause disease. This article discusses the emerging significance of criniviruses to global production agriculture, and provides a detailed review on each member of the genus Crinivirus, addressing factors influencing virus epidemiology, disease etiology, transmission by whiteflies, and the role of mixed virus infections in disease severity.

Researcher contact: Dr. William M. Wintermantle
Agricultural Research Service
United States Department of Agriculture, USA
Email: bill.wintermantel@ars.usda.gov

URL: http://www.frontiersin.org/Virology/10.3389/fmicb.2013.00119/abstract

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ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

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2013-06-14
Irvine, Calif., June 10, 2013 – New satellite imagery reveals that several areas across the United States are all but certain to suffer water-related catastrophes, including extreme flooding, drought and groundwater depletion. The paper, to be published in Science this Friday, June 14, underscores the urgent need to address these current and rapidly emerging water issues at the national scale. "We don't recognize the dire water situation that we face here in the United States," said lead author Jay Famiglietti, a professor of Earth System Science at the University of ...

Experts propose restoring invisible and abandoned trials 'to correct the scientific record'

2013-06-14
Sponsors and researchers will be given one year to act before independent scientists begin publishing the results themselves using previously confidential trial documents. The BMJ and PLOS Medicine have already endorsed the proposal and committed to publishing restorative clinical trial submissions - and will discuss it in more detail at a meeting in London on Friday 14 June 2013. Unpublished and misreported studies make it difficult to determine the true value of a treatment. Around half of all clinical trials for the medicines we use today have never been published ...

Severe maternal complications less common during home births

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However, the authors stress that the overall risk of severe problems is small and the results are significant only for women who have previously given birth – not for first-time mums. The relative safety of planned home births is a topic of continuous debate, but studies have so far been too small to compare severe maternal complications between planned home and planned hospital birth among low risk women. Of all Western countries, the Netherlands has the highest percentage of home births, assisted by a primary care midwife. So a team of Dutch researchers decided ...

Putting flesh on the bones of ancient fish

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Grenoble, 12 June 2013: Swedish, Australian and French researchers present for the first time miraculously preserved musculature of 380 million year old armoured fish discovered in north-west Australia. This research will help scientists to better understand how neck and abdominal muscles evolved during the transition from jawless to jawed vertebrates. The scientific paper describing the discovery is published today in the journal Science. The team of scientists who studied the fossilised fish was jointly directed by Prof. Kate Trinajstic, Curtin University, Perth, Australia ...

Universal paid sick leave reduces spread of flu, according to Pitt simulation

2013-06-14
PITTSBURGH, June 13, 2013 – Allowing all employees access to paid sick days would reduce influenza infections in the workplace, according to a first-of-its-kind analysis by University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health modeling experts. The researchers simulated an influenza epidemic in Pittsburgh and surrounding Allegheny County and found that universal access to paid sick days would reduce flu cases in the workplace by nearly 6 percent and estimated it to be more effective for small, compared to large, workplaces. The results are reported in the online version ...

Warm ocean drives most Antarctic ice shelf loss, UC Irvine and others show

2013-06-14
Irvine, Calif. – Ocean waters melting the undersides of Antarctic ice shelves, not icebergs calving into the sea, are responsible for most of the continent's ice loss, a study by UC Irvine and others has found. The first comprehensive survey of all Antarctic ice shelves discovered that basal melt, or ice dissolving from underneath, accounted for 55 percent of shelf loss from 2003 to 2008 – a rate much higher than previously thought. Ice shelves, floating extensions of glaciers, fringe 75 percent of the vast, frozen continent. The findings, to be published in the June ...

Study: Context crucial when it comes to mutations in genetic evolution

2013-06-14
With mutations, it turns out that context can be everything in determining whether or not they are beneficial to their evolutionary fate. According to the traditional view among biologists, a central tenet of evolutionary biology has been that the evolutionary fates of new mutations depend on whether their effects are good, bad or inconsequential with respect to reproductive success. Central to this view is that "good" mutations are always good and lead to reproductive success, while "bad" mutations are always bad and will be quickly weeded out of the gene pool. However, ...

Exoplanet formation surprise

2013-06-14
Washington, D.C.—-A team of researchers has discovered evidence that an extrasolar planet may be forming quite far from its star—- about twice the distance Pluto is from our Sun. The planet lies inside a dusty, gaseous disk around a small red dwarf TW Hydrae, which is only about 55 percent of the mass of the Sun. The discovery adds to the ever-increasing variety of planetary systems in the Milky Way. The research is published in the Astrophysical Journal.* This dusty protoplanetary disk is the closest one to us, some 176 light-years away in the constellation Hydra. The ...

Farmworkers feel the heat even when they leave the fields

2013-06-14
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – June 13, 2013 – Hot weather may be the work environment for the 1.4 million farmworkers in the United States who harvest crops, but new research shows that these workers continue to experience excessive heat and humidity even after leaving the fields. Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center researchers conducted a study to evaluate the heat indexes in migrant farmworker housing and found that a majority of the workers don't get a break from the heat when they're off the clock. Lead author Sara A. Quandt, Ph.D., a professor of epidemiology and prevention ...

Depression in postmenopausal women may increase diabetes and cardiovascular disease risk

2013-06-14
WORCESTER — Postmenopausal women who use antidepressant medication or suffer from depression might be more likely to have a higher body mass index (BMI), larger waist circumference and inflammation—all associated with increased risk for diabetes and cardiovascular disease, according to a study led by University of Massachusetts Medical School investigator Yunsheng Ma, PhD, MD, MPH, and published in the June 13 issue of the American Journal of Public Health. The UMass Medical School study investigated whether elevated depressive symptoms and antidepressant use are associated ...

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[Press-News.org] Frontiers news briefs: June 13