PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

RIT researcher looks for genetic switch to prevent ‘sleeping sickness’ in cattle

U.S.D.A. National Institute of Food and Agriculture funds study

2023-11-06
(Press-News.org) As parasites adapt to a warming world, an infectious disease expert at Rochester Institute of Technology has his eye on the tsetse fly in sub-Saharan Africa. The biting fly transmits Trypanosomiasis, or “sleeping sickness,” to cattle there and could someday migrate to northern climates, including to the United States.

RIT researcher Bolaji Thomas is leading a $650,000 study funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the National Institute of Food and Agriculture, and the Agriculture and Food Research Initiative. The aim of the research project is to compare the genetic response in cattle to the parasitic disease that attacks their blood and brain. Outbreaks decimate cattle herds in Nigeria and neighboring countries, resulting in food insecurity and economic hardship.

Global climate change makes the problem in sub-Saharan Africa a potential threat elsewhere because the tsetse fly and Trypanosome parasite can migrate and adapt to genetically similar flies and cattle breeds in other parts of the world, according to Thomas, an RIT professor of biomedical sciences.

“When we speak about adaptation of local vectors or their transport of them from endemic countries, it’s just a plane ride or a ship ride away,” Thomas said. “If we aren’t careful, the vectors that we thought couldn’t survive here will get introduced here and become a big problem. If we have learned anything from the spread of COVID-19, it is to be prepared. That’s why this project has major significance.”

Federal funding supporting the study underlies the need to protect the U.S. cattle industry from future scenarios in which Trypanosome arrives and thrives here. The genetic similarities between cattle breeds in the United States and those in the study make the research especially relevant, Thomas said.

The project centers around Thomas’ collaboration with Emmanuel Obishakin, a veterinary parasitologist at the flagship veterinary center in Nigeria—the National Veterinary Research Institute, which is home to the National Center for Trypanosomiasis Research—and Olanrewaju “Lanre” Morenikeji, assistant professor at the University of Pittsburgh at Bradford.

Thomas’ team will conduct the RNA transcript sequencing and profiling at RIT using purified RNA from infected cattle at the National Veterinary Research Institute in Nigeria.

The researchers will characterize and analyze immune gene expression to identify genetic markers associated with disease tolerance and susceptibility among different cattle species. Their work will map genes of interest to exploit the evolutionary adaptation that allows one cattle species (N’Dama) to survive the same disease that kills another one (White Fulani).

Prior research by Thomas and then-postdoctoral researcher Morenikeji showed that a specific gene (CD14) in both breeds evolved differently in response to the Trypanosome pathogen and that natural variants of this gene protect the N’Dama breed.

Thomas builds upon their findings in the current project by combining analytical tools and using messenger RNA and non-coding RNA to make separate genetic profiles on a cellular level for each of the animals in their study.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Improving the efficacy of cancer immunotherapy with modified CAR-T cells

2023-11-06
CAR-T cell therapy is a last hope for many patients with blood, bone marrow or lymph gland cancer when other treatments such as chemotherapy are unsuccessful. A limiting factor of this otherwise very effective and safe therapy is that the cells used in the process quickly reach a state of exhaustion. Researchers at the University of Freiburg have now been able to prevent this exhaustion and thus significantly improve the effect of the therapy in a preclinical animal model. The new results have been published in the journal Nature Immunology. Using the body’s own defences ...

UMD researchers developed a nasal vaccine that prevents COVID in preclinical studies

2023-11-06
A team of University of Maryland researchers developed a nasal spray vaccine that delivers the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein into cells of the airway in mice and hamsters, triggering an immune response that significantly reduced infection and spread of COVID-19. The technology can be adapted to induce immunity to other respiratory illnesses, such as influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infections. A nasal vaccine for respiratory viruses would be a significant improvement over intramuscular shots, because they are less invasive and stop viral particle replication in the airway, before a virus can enter the bloodstream. This could improve the rate ...

Learning more about how flu strains evolved may help guide future vaccine development – SFU research

2023-11-06
Simon Fraser University researchers studying the evolutionary history of flu viruses have found that a new quantitative analysis of how they evolved may help predict future strains. The research draws on a field known as phylogenetics, which focuses on how groups of organisms are evolutionarily related, and is published in the journal Science Advances. Researchers used large phylogenetic ‘trees’ to predict which strains are most likely to grow during the upcoming flu season, and determined that this approach was moderately effective in detecting future strains of the influenza virus, and could be another tool in the toolbox to guide seasonal ...

UTSA psychology professor, grad student to research cognitive impairment in cancer patients

UTSA psychology professor, grad student to research cognitive impairment in cancer patients
2023-11-06
(SAN ANTONIO, NOVEMBER 6, 2023) — The University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA) associate professor of psychology Joe Houpt, is part of a team that has earned a one-year, $50,000 grant from the Mays Cancer Center at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio (UT Health San Antonio). The project, “Surviving is Not Enough: Enhancing Cognitive Function in Cancer Survivors through Movement and Introspection,” aims to measure and enhance the cognitive functioning of cancer survivors at the Mays Cancer ...

Viano receives NSF CAREER Award

2023-11-06
Samantha Viano, Assistant Professor, Education, received funding from the National Science Foundation for the project: "CAREER: Second Chance STEM: Uncovering school policies structuring access to and engagement in high school STEM credit recovery."   Viano will conduct three individual studies as part of this research. The first study will be located in 14 schools in a large and demographically changing suburban school district. This work will be followed by a survey of optimal policy/practice ...

Furst to study disinfection resiliency and microbial risk in drinking water distribution systems during extreme heat disasters

2023-11-06
Kirin Furst, Assistant Professor, Civil, Environmental and Infrastructure Engineering, is set to receive funding from the National Science Foundation for the project: "Disinfection Resiliency and Microbial Risk in Drinking Water Distribution Systems During Extreme Heat Disasters." Furst and Katherine E. Graham, Assistant Professor, School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, will evaluate the effect of extreme heat on disinfection efficacy and failure risk in drinking water distribution systems, and evaluate a novel engineering solution to improve ...

CEC researchers to receive funding for study aimed at broadening students' mindset for ethical and responsible cybersecurity in AI

2023-11-06
Aditya Johri, Professor, Information Sciences and Technology; Khondkar Islam, Professor, Associate Chair, Undergraduate Studies, Information Sciences and Technology; and Vivian Motti, Associate Professor, Information Sciences and Technology, are set to receive $299,486 from the National Science Foundation for the project: "EAGER: Education DCL: An Embedded Case Study Approach for Broadening Students' Mindset for Ethical and Responsible Cybersecurity in AI."  Using prior research on situated learning and perspectival thinking, the project team will create a series of four ...

Yang receives funding for climate risk profile studies for Africa

2023-11-06
Ruixin Yang, Associate Professor, Geography and Geoinformation Science/Assistant Director, Center for Earth Observing Spatial Research (CEOSR), received $8,000 from the International Food Policy Research Institute for the project: "Climate Risk Profile Studies For Africa." Yang is producing hazard maps by major crops and by seasons. He is conducting an extensive review of existing hazard development methods employed by the Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS). Yang is also developing a Python program that focuses on mapping and identifying ...

Lebovic receives funding for Visiting Research Scholarship at Knight First Amendment Institute At Columbia University

2023-11-06
Sam Lebovic, Professor, History, received funding for: "Visiting Research Scholarship at the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University."  His project will focus on the law and politics of public employee speech, focusing particularly on how a modern bureaucratized American government should manage the speech of its employees while balancing competing democratic values. The project will explore such problems as academic freedom, administrative law, public sector employment law, transparency, and whistleblowing regulation. It will seek to generate new understandings of legal ...

NIH study validates new scale for measuring pandemic-related traumatic stress in children and adults

NIH study validates new scale for measuring pandemic-related traumatic stress in children and adults
2023-11-06
The Pandemic-related Traumatic Stress Scale (PTSS) can be used to effectively measure stress related to the COVID-19 pandemic and identify children and adults with higher levels of stress who may need additional mental health support, according to a new study funded by the Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes Program (ECHO) at the National Institutes of Health. The study included 17,830 children and adults from 47 ECHO Cohort study sites representing all 50 states, Washington, DC, and Puerto Rico. Researchers split the sample into four groups ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

SrGa12O19: The first low-εr Ga-based microwave dielectric ceramic with anomalous positive τf

HiTIP-seq profiles epigenomic reprogramming of patient-derived diffuse midline glioma stem cells to epigenetic therapy

SNU researchers develop ‘Selective Metal Films Deposition Technique’ enabling fabrication of soft electronics with various form factors

Extinct volcanoes a ‘rich’ source of rare earth elements

PSU English professor to lift curtain on one of world’s most powerful supercomputers

UTSA Center for Public Opinion Research releases survey of Bexar County voter opinions ahead of November 5 election

Emily Carter wins prestigious Marsha I. Lester Award from American Chemical Society

New report from the University of Phoenix Career Institute® and the Center on Rural Innovation reveals keys to retaining rural America’s future generation

Greenhouse gas emissions from silage fed to livestock

The impact of AI on specific jobs

Diagnosing respiratory infections with breath

Well-being as student success

Spinning artificial spider silk into next-generation medical materials

Low-temperature conversion of ammonia to hydrogen via electric field-aided surface protonics

Challenges in availing reproductive health services experienced by migrant Nepalese men and women in Japan

A risky business: Why do some Parkinson’s disease treatments affect decision making?

New species of flatworm invading the United States

First observation of ultra-rare process that could uncover new physics

New indoor vertical farming research could help future-proof food demand for a changing planet

Common brain network detected among veterans with traumatic brain injury could protect against PTSD

Duke-NUS study finds outbreak detection under-resourced in Asia

Lengthened consonants mark the beginning of words

Astronomers catch a glimpse of a uniquely inflated and asymmetric exoplanet

TGen named Certified Service Provider for PacBio

The environmental impacts of genetically modified crops

Graphene spike mat and fridge magnet technology to fight against antibiotic resistance

Queen’s University Belfast to launch Figshare-powered repository to share, showcase and manage its research data and theses

Nursing shortages can be deadly

60-second heartbeat recordings offer window into autonomic health after severe brain trauma

Psychedelic drug psilocybin changes brain connectivity to treat body dysmorphic disorder

[Press-News.org] RIT researcher looks for genetic switch to prevent ‘sleeping sickness’ in cattle
U.S.D.A. National Institute of Food and Agriculture funds study