Matching Items (102)
Description
Weight stigma is present in many aspects of society, and especially in medicine. Weight stigma has detrimental effects on individuals physical and mental health, as well as patient-physician interactions. Application of weight-neutral healthcare ideologies such as Health at Every Size (HAES) are promising ways of decreasing weight stigma within the

Weight stigma is present in many aspects of society, and especially in medicine. Weight stigma has detrimental effects on individuals physical and mental health, as well as patient-physician interactions. Application of weight-neutral healthcare ideologies such as Health at Every Size (HAES) are promising ways of decreasing weight stigma within the medical field without reducing the focus on improving patient health. Most widely applicable interventions include changing the focus of interactions from weight to health-promoting behaviors and lab values, improving provider education, and improving the general population's awareness of the problem.
ContributorsBrouhard, Mya (Author) / Chen, Qiang (Thesis director) / Parker, Lynn (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor) / Department of Psychology (Contributor)
Created2024-05
Description

Platelet Rich Plasma (PRP) is an emerging procedure in regenerative medicine that offers a non-surgical minimally invasive way for tissue repair and regeneration. PRP has many different bioactive molecules that are able to influence and help achieve greater recovery and regenerative outcomes. Diet has many effects on platelets and looking

Platelet Rich Plasma (PRP) is an emerging procedure in regenerative medicine that offers a non-surgical minimally invasive way for tissue repair and regeneration. PRP has many different bioactive molecules that are able to influence and help achieve greater recovery and regenerative outcomes. Diet has many effects on platelets and looking at the mechanism in which platelet function and aggregation are affected with different diets shows how they are able to affect PRP therapy. Looking at these mechanisms allows for better physician recommendations for preprocedural diets to optimize efficacy. This paper conducts a systematic review to investigate the influence that diet can have on PRP outcomes. It was shown that high fat diets lower the efficacy of treatment while the Mediterranean diet helps promote platelet function and help efficacy. The future is to look at more diets while also integrating lifestyle choice before treatment for optimal outcomes.

ContributorsLaguna, Sebastian (Author) / Chen, Qiang (Thesis director) / Goyle, Ashu (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor) / Dean, W.P. Carey School of Business (Contributor)
Created2024-05
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Description
Coccidioidomycosis, or valley fever (VF), is a fungal infection caused by Coccidioides that is highly endemic in southern Arizona and central California. The antibody response to infection in combination with clinical presentation and radiographic findings are often used to diagnose disease, as a highly sensitive and specific antigen-based assay has

Coccidioidomycosis, or valley fever (VF), is a fungal infection caused by Coccidioides that is highly endemic in southern Arizona and central California. The antibody response to infection in combination with clinical presentation and radiographic findings are often used to diagnose disease, as a highly sensitive and specific antigen-based assay has yet to be developed and commercialized. In this dissertation, a panel of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) was generated in an attempt to identify circulating antigen in VF-positive patients. Despite utilizing a mixture of antigens, almost all mAbs obtained were against chitinase 1 (CTS1), a protein previously identified as a main component in serodiagnostic reagents. While CTS1 was undoubtedly a dominant seroreactive antigen, it was not successfully detected in circulation in patient samples prompting a shift toward further understanding the importance of CTS1 in antibody-based diagnostic assays. Interestingly, depletion of this antigen from diagnostic antigen preparations resulted in complete loss of patient IgG reactivity by immunodiffusion. This finding encouraged the development of a rapid, 10-minute point-of-care test in lateral flow assay (LFA) format to exclusively detect anti-CTS1 antibodies from human and non-human animal patients with coccidioidal infection. A CTS1 LFA was developed that demonstrated 92.9% sensitivity and 97.7% specificity when compared to current quantitative serologic assays (complement fixation and immunodiffusion). A commercially available LFA that utilizes a proprietary mixture of antigens was shown to be less sensitive (64.3%) and less specific (79.1%). This result provides evidence that a single antigen can be used to detect antibodies consistently and accurately from patients with VF. The LFA presented here shows promise as a helpful tool to rule-in or rule-out a diagnosis of VF such that patients may avoid unnecessary antibacterial treatments, improving healthcare efficiency.
ContributorsGrill, Francisca J (Author) / Lake, Douglas F (Thesis advisor) / Magee, D Mitch (Committee member) / Grys, Thomas (Committee member) / Chen, Qiang (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Microplastics, plastics smaller than 5 mm, are an emerging concern worldwide due to their potential adverse effects on the environment and human health. Microplastics have the potential to biomagnify through the food chain, and are prone to adsorbing organic pollutants and heavy metals. Therefore, there is an urgent need to

Microplastics, plastics smaller than 5 mm, are an emerging concern worldwide due to their potential adverse effects on the environment and human health. Microplastics have the potential to biomagnify through the food chain, and are prone to adsorbing organic pollutants and heavy metals. Therefore, there is an urgent need to assess the extent of microplastic contamination in different environments. The occurrence of microplastics in the atmosphere of Tempe, AZ was investigated and results show concentrations as high as 1.1 microplastics/m3. The most abundant identified polymer was polyvinyl chloride. However, chemical characterization is fraught with challenges, with a majority of microplastics remaining chemically unidentified. Laboratory experiments simulating weathering of microplastics revealed that Raman spectra of microplastics change over time due to weathering processes. This work also studied the spatial variation of microplastics in soil in Phoenix and the surrounding areas of the Sonoran Desert, and microplastic abundances ranged from 122 to 1299 microplastics/kg with no clear trends between different locations, and substantial total deposition of microplastics occurring in the same location with resuspension and redistribution of deposited microplastics likely contributing to unclear spatial trends. Temporal variation of soil microplastics from 2005 to 2015 show a systematic increase in the abundance of microplastics. Polyethylene was prominent in all soil samples. Further, recreational surface waters were investigated as a potential source of microplastics in aquatic environments. The temporal variation of microplastics in the Salt River, AZ over the course of one day depicted an increase of 8 times in microplastic concentration at peak activity time of 16:00 hr compared to 8:00 hr. Concurrently, microplastic concentrations in surface water samples from apartment community swimming pools in Tempe, AZ depicted substantial variability with concentrations as high as 254,574 MPs/m3. Polyester and Polyamide fibers were prevalent in surface water samples, indicating a release from synthetic fabrics. Finally, a method for distinguishing tire wear microplastics from soot in ambient aerosol samples was developed using Programmed Thermal Analysis, that allows for the quantification of Elemental Carbon. The method was successfully applied on urban aerosol samples with results depicting substantial fractions of tire wear in urban atmospheric environments.
ContributorsChandrakanthan, Kanchana (Author) / Herckes, Pierre (Thesis advisor) / Fraser, Matthew (Committee member) / Shock, Everett (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2024
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Description
Atmospheric particulate matter (PM) has a pronounced effect on our climate, and exposure to PM causes negative health outcomes and elevated mortality rates in urban populations. Reactions that occur in fog can form new secondary organic aerosol material from gas-phase species or primary organic aerosols. It is important to understand

Atmospheric particulate matter (PM) has a pronounced effect on our climate, and exposure to PM causes negative health outcomes and elevated mortality rates in urban populations. Reactions that occur in fog can form new secondary organic aerosol material from gas-phase species or primary organic aerosols. It is important to understand these reactions, as well as how organic material is scavenged and deposited, so that climate and health effects can be fully assessed. Stable carbon isotopes have been used widely in studying gas- and particle-phase atmospheric chemistry. However, the processing of organic matter by fog has not yet been studied, even though stable isotopes can be used to track all aspects of atmospheric processing, from particle formation, particle scavenging, reactions that form secondary organic aerosol material, and particle deposition. Here, carbon isotope analysis is used for the first time to assess the processing of carbonaceous particles by fog.

This work first compares carbon isotope measurements (δ13C) of particulate matter and fog from locations across the globe to assess how different primary aerosol sources are reflected in the atmosphere. Three field campaigns are then discussed that highlight different aspects of PM formation, composition, and processing. In Tempe, AZ, seasonal and size-dependent differences in the δ13C of total carbon and n-alkanes in PM were studied. δ13C was influenced by seasonal trends, including inversion, transport, population density, and photochemical activity. Variations in δ13C among particle size fractions were caused by sources that generate particles in different size modes.

An analysis of PM from urban and suburban sites in northeastern France shows how both fog and rain can cause measurable changes in the δ13C of PM. The δ13C of PM was consistent over time when no weather events occurred, but particles were isotopically depleted by up to 1.1‰ in the presence of fog due to preferential scavenging of larger isotopically enriched particles. Finally, the δ13C of the dissolved organic carbon in fog collected on the coast of Southern California is discussed. Here, temporal depletion of the δ13C of fog by up to 1.2‰ demonstrates its use in observing the scavenging and deposition of organic PM.
ContributorsNapolitano, Denise (Author) / Herckes, Pierre (Thesis advisor) / Fraser, Matthew (Committee member) / Shock, Everett (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
Antibodies are naturally occurring proteins that protect a host during infection through direct neutralization and/or recruitment of the innate immune system. Unfortunately, in some infections, antibodies present unique hurdles that must be overcome for a safer and more efficacious antibody-based therapeutic (e.g., antibody dependent viral enhancement (ADE) and inflammatory pathology).

Antibodies are naturally occurring proteins that protect a host during infection through direct neutralization and/or recruitment of the innate immune system. Unfortunately, in some infections, antibodies present unique hurdles that must be overcome for a safer and more efficacious antibody-based therapeutic (e.g., antibody dependent viral enhancement (ADE) and inflammatory pathology). This dissertation describes the utilization of plant expression systems to produce N-glycan specific antibody-based therapeutics for Dengue Virus (DENV) and Chikungunya Virus (CHIKV). The Fc region of an antibody interacts with Fcγ Receptors (FcγRs) on immune cells and components of the innate immune system. Each class of immune cells has a distinct action of neutralization (e.g., antibody dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC) and antibody dependent cell-mediated phagocytosis (ADCP)). Therefore, structural alteration of the Fc region results in novel immune pathways of protection. One approach is to modulate the N-glycosylation in the Fc region of the antibody. Of scientific significance, is the plant’s capacity to express human antibodies with homogenous plant and humanized N-glycosylation (WT and GnGn, respectively). This allows to study how specific glycovariants interact with other components of the immune system to clear an infection, producing a tailor-made antibody for distinct diseases. In the first section, plant-produced glycovariants were explored for reduced interactions with specific FcγRs for the overall reduction in ADE for DENV infections. The results demonstrate a reduction in ADE of our plant-produced monoclonal antibodies in in vitro experiments, which led to a greater survival in vivo of immunodeficient mice challenged with lethal doses of DENV and a sub-lethal dose of DENV in ADE conditions. In the second section, plant-produced glycovariants were explored for increased interaction with specific FcγRs to improve ADCC in the treatment of the highly inflammatory CHIKV. The results demonstrate an increase ADCC activity in in vitro experiments and a reduction in CHIKV-associated inflammation in in vivo mouse models. Overall, the significance of this dissertation is that it can provide a treatment for DENV and CHIKV; but equally importantly, give insight to the role of N-glycosylation in antibody effector functions, which has a broader implication for therapeutic development for other viral infections.
ContributorsHurtado, Jonathan (Author) / Chen, Qiang (Thesis advisor) / Arntzen, Charles (Committee member) / Borges, Chad (Committee member) / Lake, Douglas (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
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Description
Chemical and physical interactions of flowing ice and rock have inexorably shaped planetary surfaces. Weathering in glacial environments is a significant link in biogeochemical cycles – carbon and strontium – on Earth, and may have once played an important role in altering Mars’ surface. Despite growing recognition of the importance

Chemical and physical interactions of flowing ice and rock have inexorably shaped planetary surfaces. Weathering in glacial environments is a significant link in biogeochemical cycles – carbon and strontium – on Earth, and may have once played an important role in altering Mars’ surface. Despite growing recognition of the importance of low-temperature chemical weathering, these processes are still not well understood. Debris-coated glaciers are also present on Mars, emphasizing the need to study ice-related processes in the evolution of planetary surfaces. During Earth’s history, subglacial environments are thought to have sheltered communities of microorganisms from extreme climate variations. On Amazonian Mars, glaciers such as lobate debris aprons (LDA) could have hosted chemolithotrophic communities, making Mars’ present glaciers candidates for life preservation. This study characterizes glacial processes on both Earth and Mars.

Chemical weathering at Robertson Glacier, a small alpine glacier in the Canadian Rocky Mountains, is examined with a multidisciplinary approach. The relative proportions of differing dissolution reactions at various stages in the glacial system are empirically determined using aqueous geochemistry. Synthesis of laboratory and orbital thermal infrared spectroscopy allows identification of dissolution rinds on hand samples and characterization of carbonate dissolution signals at orbital scales, while chemical and morphological evidence for thin, discontinuous weathering rinds at microscales are evident from electron microscopy. Subglacial dissolution rates are found to outpace those of the proglacial till plain; biologically-mediated pyrite oxidation drives the bulk of this acidic weathering.

Second, the area-elevation relationship, or hypsometry, of LDA in the midlatitudes of Mars is characterized. These glaciers are believed to have formed ~500 Ma during a climate excursion. Hypsometric measurements of these debris-covered glaciers enable insight into past flow regimes and drive predictions about past climate scenarios. The LDA in this study fall into three major groups, strongly dependent on basal elevation, implying regional and climatic controls on ice formation and flow.

I show that biologically-mediated mineral reactions drive high subglacial dissolution rates, such that variations within the valley can be detected with remote sensing techniques. In future work, these insights can be applied to examining Mars’ glacial regions for signs of chemical alteration and biosignatures.
ContributorsRutledge, Alicia Marie (Author) / Christensen, Philip R. (Thesis advisor) / Shock, Everett (Committee member) / Clarke, Amanda (Committee member) / Sharp, Thomas (Committee member) / Whipple, Kelin (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
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Description
Natural variations in 238U/235U of marine carbonates might provide a useful way of constraining redox conditions of ancient environments. In order to evaluate the reliability of this proxy, we conducted aragonite and calcite coprecipitation experiments at pH ~7.5 and ~ 8.5 to study possible U isotope fractionation during incorporation into

Natural variations in 238U/235U of marine carbonates might provide a useful way of constraining redox conditions of ancient environments. In order to evaluate the reliability of this proxy, we conducted aragonite and calcite coprecipitation experiments at pH ~7.5 and ~ 8.5 to study possible U isotope fractionation during incorporation into these minerals.

Small but significant U isotope fractionation was observed in aragonite experiments at pH ~ 8.5, with heavier U in the solid phase. 238U/235U of dissolved U in these experiments can be fit by Rayleigh fractionation curves with fractionation factors of 1.00007+0.00002/-0.00003, 1.00005 ± 0.00001, and 1.00003 ± 0.00001. In contrast, no resolvable U isotope fractionation was observed in an aragonite experiment at pH ~7.5 or in calcite experiments at either pH. Equilibrium isotope fractionation among different aqueous U species is the most likely explanation for these findings. Certain charged U species are preferentially incorporated into calcium carbonate relative to the uncharged U species Ca2UO2(CO3)3(aq), which we hypothesize has a lighter equilibrium U isotope composition than most of the charged species. According to this hypothesis, the magnitude of U isotope fractionation should scale with the fraction of dissolved U that is present as Ca2UO2(CO3)3 (aq). This expectation is confirmed by equilibrium speciation modeling of our experiments. Theoretical calculation of the U isotope fractionation factors between different U species could further test this hypothesis and our proposed fractionation mechanism.

These findings suggest that U isotope variations in ancient carbonates could be controlled by changes in the aqueous speciation of seawater U, particularly changes in seawater pH, PCO2, [Ca], or [Mg] concentrations. In general, these effects are likely to be small (<0.13 ‰), but are nevertheless potentially significant because of the small natural range of variation of 238U/235U.
ContributorsChen, Xinming (Author) / Anbar, Ariel (Thesis advisor) / Herckes, Pierre (Committee member) / Shock, Everett (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
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Description
The discovery and development of novel antibacterial agents is essential to address the rising health concern over antibiotic resistant bacteria. This research investigated the antibacterial activity of a natural clay deposit near Crater Lake, Oregon, that is effective at killing antibiotic resistant human pathogens. The primary rock types in the

The discovery and development of novel antibacterial agents is essential to address the rising health concern over antibiotic resistant bacteria. This research investigated the antibacterial activity of a natural clay deposit near Crater Lake, Oregon, that is effective at killing antibiotic resistant human pathogens. The primary rock types in the deposit are andesitic pyroclastic materials, which have been hydrothermally altered into argillic clay zones. High-sulfidation (acidic) alteration produced clay zones with elevated pyrite (18%), illite-smectite (I-S) (70% illite), elemental sulfur, kaolinite and carbonates. Low-sulfidation alteration at neutral pH generated clay zones with lower pyrite concentrations pyrite (4-6%), the mixed-layered I-S clay rectorite (R1, I-S) and quartz.

Antibacterial susceptibility testing reveals that hydrated clays containing pyrite and I-S are effective at killing (100%) of the model pathogens tested (E. coli and S. epidermidis) when pH (< 4.2) and Eh (> 450 mV) promote pyrite oxidation and mineral dissolution, releasing > 1 mM concentrations of Fe2+, Fe3+ and Al3+. However, certain oxidized clay zones containing no pyrite still inhibited bacterial growth. These clays buffered solutions to low pH (< 4.7) and oxidizing Eh (> 400 mV) conditions, releasing lower amounts (< 1 mM) of Fe and Al. The presence of carbonate in the clays eliminated antibacterial activity due to increases in pH, which lower pyrite oxidation and mineral dissolution rates.

The antibacterial mechanism of these natural clays was explored using metal toxicity and genetic assays, along with advanced bioimaging techniques. Antibacterial clays provide a continuous reservoir of Fe2+, Fe3+ and Al3+ that synergistically attack pathogens while generating hydrogen peroxide (H2O¬2). Results show that dissolved Fe2+ and Al3+ are adsorbed to bacterial envelopes, causing protein misfolding and oxidation in the outer membrane. Only Fe2+ is taken up by the cells, generating oxidative stress that damages DNA and proteins. Excess Fe2+ oxidizes inside the cell and precipitates Fe3+-oxides, marking the sites of hydroxyl radical (•OH) generation. Recognition of this novel geochemical antibacterial process should inform designs of new mineral based antibacterial agents and could provide a new economic industry for such clays.
ContributorsMorrison, Keith D (Author) / Williams, Lynda B (Thesis advisor) / Williams, Stanley N (Thesis advisor) / Misra, Rajeev (Committee member) / Shock, Everett (Committee member) / Anbar, Ariel (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
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Description
Amorphous phases are detected over large regions of the Martian surface from orbit and in more localized deposits by rovers on the surface. Amorphous silicates can be primary or secondary in origin, both having formed through very different processes, so the unambiguous identification of these phases is important for understanding

Amorphous phases are detected over large regions of the Martian surface from orbit and in more localized deposits by rovers on the surface. Amorphous silicates can be primary or secondary in origin, both having formed through very different processes, so the unambiguous identification of these phases is important for understanding the geologic history of Mars. Secondary amorphous silicates are poorly understood and underrepresented in spectral libraries because they lack the long-range structural order that makes their crystalline counterparts identifiable in most analytical techniques. Fortunately, even amorphous materials have some degree of short-range order so that distinctions can be made with careful characterization.

Two sets of laboratory experiments were used to produce and characterize amorphous weathering products under probable conditions for the Martian surface, and one global spectral analysis using thermal-infrared (TIR) data from the Thermal Emission Spectrometer (TES) instrument was used to constrain variations in amorphous silicates across the Martian surface. The first set of experiments altered crystalline and glassy basalt samples in an open system under strong (pH 1) and moderate (pH 3) acidic conditions. The second set of experiments simulated a current-day Martian weathering scenario involving transient liquid water where basalt glass weathering solutions, formed in circumneutral (pH ~5.5 and 7) conditions, were rapidly evaporated, precipitating amorphous silicates. The samples were characterized using visible and near-infrared (VNIR) spectroscopy, TIR spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS), and X-ray diffraction (XRD).

All experiments formed amorphous silicate phases that are new to spectral libraries. Moderately acidic alteration experiments produced no visible or spectral evidence of alteration products, whereas exposure of basalt glass to strongly acidic fluids produced silica-rich alteration layers that are spectrally consistent with VNIR and TIR spectra from the circum-polar region of Mars, indicating this region has undergone acidic weathering. Circum-netural pH basalt weathering solution precipitates are consistent with amorphous materials measured by rovers in soil and rock surface samples in Gale and Gusev Craters, suggesting transient water interactions over the last 3 billion years. Global spectral analyses determine that alteration conditions have varied across the Martian surface, and that alteration has been long lasting.
ContributorsSmith, Rebecca (Author) / Christensen, Philip R. (Philip Russel) (Thesis advisor) / Shock, Everett (Committee member) / Hartnett, Hilairy (Committee member) / Shim, Sang-Heon (Committee member) / Sharp, Thomas (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016