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This creative thesis project aimed to create career development resources that School of Life Sciences majors could use to enhance their college experience, expand the breadth of relevant career options for School of Life Sciences majors, and confront and divert career problems through the implementation of these career development resources.

This creative thesis project aimed to create career development resources that School of Life Sciences majors could use to enhance their college experience, expand the breadth of relevant career options for School of Life Sciences majors, and confront and divert career problems through the implementation of these career development resources. Students encounter career problems when their intention and action diverge. These career problems may cause a student to stop their pursuit of a given career, change majors, or even stop schooling completely. It is the objective of this project to help resolve these career problems by introducing a career development resource flyer that educates the student about a given career, provides coursework to guide a student towards this career path, familiarize students with extracurricular efforts necessary for this position, propose valuable resources that the student can utilize to learn more about the career, and offer a question and answer portion for further career and professional understanding. In order to create these career development resource flyers a variety of professionals, both with and without relationships with Arizona State University were contacted and interviewed. The answers gathered from these interviews were then utilized to create the career flyers. The project was successful in creating five distinct career development resource flyers, as well as a blank template with instructions to be used in the future by the School of Life Sciences. The career development resource flyers will be utilized by the School of Life Sciences advising staff for future exploratory majors, but is not limited to just these students. Aspirations are set to create an expansive reservoir of these resources for future generations of students to access in hopes that they will be better suited to find a career path that they are passionate about and be better prepared to attain.
ContributorsGallegos, Darius Sloan (Author) / Wilson Sayres, Melissa (Thesis director) / Downing, Virginia (Committee member) / DeNardo, Dale (Committee member) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2017-05
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2D fetal echocardiography (ECHO) can be used for monitoring heart development in utero. This study’s purpose is to empirically model normal fetal heart growth and function changes during development by ECHO and compare these to fetuses diagnosed with and without cardiomyopathy with diabetic mothers. There are existing mathematical models describing

2D fetal echocardiography (ECHO) can be used for monitoring heart development in utero. This study’s purpose is to empirically model normal fetal heart growth and function changes during development by ECHO and compare these to fetuses diagnosed with and without cardiomyopathy with diabetic mothers. There are existing mathematical models describing fetal heart development but they warrant revalidation and adjustment. 377 normal fetuses with healthy mothers, 98 normal fetuses with diabetic mothers, and 37 fetuses with cardiomyopathy and diabetic mothers had their cardiac structural dimensions, cardiothoracic ratio, valve flow velocities, and heart rates measured by fetal ECHO in a retrospective chart review. Cardiac features were fitted to linear functions, with respect to gestational age, femur length, head circumference, and biparietal diameter and z-scores were created to model normal fetal growth for all parameters. These z-scores were used to assess what metrics had no difference in means between the normal fetuses of both healthy and diabetic mothers, but differed from those diagnosed with cardiomyopathy. It was found that functional metrics like mitral and tricuspid E wave and pulmonary velocity could be important predictors for cardiomyopathy when fitted by gestational age, femur length, head circumference, and biparietal diameter. Additionally, aortic and tricuspid annulus diameters when fitted to estimated gestational age showed potential to be predictors for fetal cardiomyopathy. While the metrics overlapped over their full range, combining them together may have the potential for predicting cardiomyopathy in utero. Future directions of this study will explore creating a classifier model that can predict cardiomyopathy using the metrics assessed in this study.

ContributorsNumani, Asfia (Co-author) / Mishra, Shambhavi (Co-author) / Sweazea, Karen (Thesis director) / Plasencia, Jon (Committee member) / School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences (Contributor) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2021-05
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Description
The glycation of plasma proteins leading to the production of advanced glycation end products (AGEs) and subsequent damage is a driving factor in the pathophysiology of diabetic complications. The overall research objective was to elucidate the mechanisms by which birds prevent protein glycation in the presence of naturally high plasma

The glycation of plasma proteins leading to the production of advanced glycation end products (AGEs) and subsequent damage is a driving factor in the pathophysiology of diabetic complications. The overall research objective was to elucidate the mechanisms by which birds prevent protein glycation in the presence of naturally high plasma glucose concentrations. This was accomplished through the specific purpose of examining the impact of temperature and glucose concentration on the percent glycation of chicken serum albumin (CSA) in comparison to human serum albumin (HSA). Purified CSA and HSA solutions prepared at four different glucose concentrations (0 mM, 5.56 mM, 11.11 mM, and 22.22 mM) were incubated at three different temperatures (37.0°C, 39.8°C, and 41.4°C) on separate occasions for seven days with aliquots extracted on days 0, 3, and 7. Samples were analyzed by LC-ESI-MS for percent glycation of albumin. The statistically significant interaction between glucose concentration, temperature, albumin type, and time as determined by four-way repeated measures ANOVA (p = 0.032) indicated that all independent variables interacted to affect the mean percent glycation of albumin. As glucose concentration increased, the percent glycation of both HSA and CSA increased over time at all temperatures. In addition, HSA was glycated to a greater extent than CSA at the two higher glucose concentrations examined for all temperature conditions. Temperature differentially affected percent glycation of HSA and CSA wherein glycation increased with rising temperatures for HSA but not CSA. The results of this study suggest an inherent difference between the human and chicken albumin that contributes to the observed differences in glycation. Further research is needed to characterize this inherent difference in an effort to elucidate the mechanism by which birds protect plasma proteins from glycation. Future related work has the potential to lead to the development of novel therapies to prevent or reverse protein glycation prior to the formation of AGEs in humans, thus preventing the development and devastating effects of numerous diabetic complications.
ContributorsZuck, Jessica (Author) / Sweazea, Karen (Thesis advisor) / Johnston, Carol (Committee member) / Lespron, Christy (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
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Description
Background: Sugars form advanced glycation end products (AGEs) throughnatural metabolism and interactions with proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids, which accumulate in tissues and have been implicated in the etiology of chronic diseases. Due to the increased consumption of fructose and its high ability to form AGEs, a further understanding of

Background: Sugars form advanced glycation end products (AGEs) throughnatural metabolism and interactions with proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids, which accumulate in tissues and have been implicated in the etiology of chronic diseases. Due to the increased consumption of fructose and its high ability to form AGEs, a further understanding of this association is important to clarify the role of sugars in disease. The objective was to explore the association between usual fructose intake and serum levels of AGEs, as measured by carboxymethyl-lysine (CML) and methylglyoxal derivative (MG-H1), in healthy adults. Methods: This is a secondary analysis of a 15-d controlled feeding study (n=100) with participants consuming their usual diet conducted in the Phoenix metropolitan area. To assess participants’ usual diet, they were asked to complete two 7-d food diaries, which were then used to create custom 15-d menu plans administered during the feeding period. Forty participants were selected based on their 15-d mean total fructose intake for this analysis [top and bottom 20% of the sample distribution (median, IQR); high fructose (HF) n= 20, 72.6 (66.1-90.4) g/day, low fructose (LF) n= 20, 28.8 (22.7-32.2) g/day. Fasting serum collected five weeks after the feeding period were analyzed for CML and MG-H1, two well-established AGEs, using ELISA kits. A database of 549 common foods with known CML amounts was used to calculate exogenous CML intake based on daily food intake data. A general linear model was fitted to investigate the difference in serum CML and MG-H1 between LF and HF groups while adjusting for age, gender, BMI, and exogenous CML intake. Results: Participants in the HF group had significantly higher serum CML and lower MG-H1 levels compared to participants in the LF group (p=0.013 and p=0.002, respectively). This difference remained statistically significant after adjusting for covariates. Conclusions: The findings suggest that endogenous CML formation may be an explanation for the significantly higher serum CML levels in the HF compared to the LF group. This is significant in further understanding mechanisms of fructose intake and disease etiology and could have implications for at-risk populations consuming a high fructose diet.
ContributorsWeigand, Bethany (Author) / Tasevska, Natasha (Thesis advisor) / Sweazea, Karen (Committee member) / Lee, Chong (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021