Matching Items (127)
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Description
Mycobacterial infections, as represented by leprosy and tuberculosis, have persisted as human pathogens for millennia. Their environmental counterparts, nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM), are commodious infectious agents endowed with extensive innate and acquired antimicrobial resistance. The current drug development process selects for antibiotics with high specificity for definitive targets within bacterial metabolic

Mycobacterial infections, as represented by leprosy and tuberculosis, have persisted as human pathogens for millennia. Their environmental counterparts, nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM), are commodious infectious agents endowed with extensive innate and acquired antimicrobial resistance. The current drug development process selects for antibiotics with high specificity for definitive targets within bacterial metabolic and replication pathways. Because these compounds demonstrate limited efficacy against mycobacteria, novel antimycobacterial agents with unconventional mechanisms of action were identified. Two highly resistant NTMs, Mycobacterium abscessus (Mabs) a rapid-growing respiratory, skin, and soft tissue pathogen, and Mycobacterium ulcerans (MU), the causative agent of Buruli ulcer, were selected as targets. Compounds that indicated antimicrobial activity against other highly resistant pathogens were selected for initial screening. Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) have demonstrated activity against a variety of bacterial pathogens, including mycobacterial species. Designed antimicrobial peptides (dAMPs), rationally-designed and synthetic contingents, combine iterative features of natural AMPs to achieve superior antimicrobial activity in resistant pathogens. Initial screening identified two dAMPs, RP554 and RP557, with bactericidal activity against Mabs. Clay-associated ions have previously demonstrated bactericidal activity against MU. Synthetic and customizable aluminosilicates have also demonstrated adsorption of bacterial cells and toxins. On this basis, two aluminosilicate materials, geopolymers (GP) and ion-exchange nanozeolites (IE-nZeos), were screened for antimicrobial activity against MU and its fast-growing relative, Mycobacterium marinum (Mmar). GPs demonstrated adsorption of MU cells and mycolactone, a secreted, lipophilic toxin, whereas Cu-nZeos and Ag-nZeos demonstrated antibacterial activity against MU and Mmar. Cumulatively, these results indicate that an integrative drug selection process may yield a new generation of antimycobacterial agents.
ContributorsDermody, Roslyn June (Author) / Haydel, Shelley E (Thesis advisor) / Bean, Heather (Committee member) / Nickerson, Cheryl (Committee member) / Stephanopoulos, Nicholas (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), the etiological agent of the tuberculosis disease, is estimated to infect one-fourth of the human population and is responsible for 1.5 million deaths annually. The increased emergence of bacterial resistance to clinical interventions highlights the lack in development of novel antimicrobial therapeutics. Prototypical bacterial two-component systems (TCS)

Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), the etiological agent of the tuberculosis disease, is estimated to infect one-fourth of the human population and is responsible for 1.5 million deaths annually. The increased emergence of bacterial resistance to clinical interventions highlights the lack in development of novel antimicrobial therapeutics. Prototypical bacterial two-component systems (TCS) allow for sensing of extracellular stimuli and relay thereof to create a transcriptional response. The prrAB TCS is essential for viability in Mtb, presenting itself as an attractive novel drug target. In Mtb, PrrAB is involved in the adaptation to the intra-macrophage environment and recent work implicates PrrAB in the dosR-dependent hypoxia adaptation. This work defines a direct molecular and regulatory connection between Mtb PrrAB and the dosR-dependent hypoxia response. Using electrophoretic mobility shift assays combined with surface plasmon resonance, the Mtb dosR gene is established as a specific target of PrrA, corroborated by fluorescence reporter assays demonstrating a regulatory relationship. Considering the scarce understanding of prrAB essentiality in nontuberculous mycobacteria and the presence of multiple prrAB orthologs in Mycobacterium smegmatis and Mycobacterium abscessus, CRISPR interference was utilized to evaluate the essentiality of PrrAB beyond Mtb. prrAB was found to be inessential for viability in M. smegmatis yet required for in vitro growth. Conversely, M. abscessus prrAB repression led to enhanced in vitro growth. Diarylthiazole-48 (DAT-48) displayed decreased selectivity against M. abscessus but demonstrated enhanced intrinsic activity upon prrAB repression in M. abscessus. Lastly, to aid in the rapid determination of mycobacterial drug susceptibility and the detection of mycobacterial heteroresistance, the large volume scattering imaging (LVSim) platform was adapted for mycobacteria. Using LVSim, Mtb drug susceptibility was detected phenotypically within 6 hours, and clinically relevant mycobacterial heteroresistance was detected phenotypically within 10 generations. The data generated in these studies provide insight into the essential role of PrrAB in Mtb and its involvement in the dosR-dependent hypoxia adaptation, advance the understanding of mycobacterial PrrAB essentiality and PrrAB-associated mycobacterial growth dependency. These studies further establish molecular and mechanistic connection between PrrAB and DAT-48 in Mtb and M. abscessus and develop a rapid phenotypic drug susceptibility testing platform for mycobacteria.
ContributorsHaller, Yannik Alex (Author) / Haydel, Shelley E (Thesis advisor) / Bean, Heather (Committee member) / Nickerson, Cheryl (Committee member) / Plaisier, Christopher (Committee member) / Acharya, Abhinav (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
Description

One of the identified health risk areas for human spaceflight is infectious disease, particularly involving environmental microorganisms already found on the International Space Station (ISS). In particular, bacteria belonging to the Burkholderia cepacia complex (Bcc) which can cause human disease in those who are immunocompromised, have been identified in the

One of the identified health risk areas for human spaceflight is infectious disease, particularly involving environmental microorganisms already found on the International Space Station (ISS). In particular, bacteria belonging to the Burkholderia cepacia complex (Bcc) which can cause human disease in those who are immunocompromised, have been identified in the ISS water supply. This present study characterized the effect of spaceflight analog culture conditions on Bcc to certain physiological stresses (acid and thermal as well as intracellular survival in U927 human macrophage cells). The NASA-designed Rotating Wall Vessel (RWV) bioreactor was used as the spaceflight analogue culture system in these studies to grow Bcc bacterial cells under Low Shear Modeled Microgravity (LSMMG) conditions. Results show that LSMMG culture increased the resistance of Bcc to both acid and thermal stressors, but did not alter phagocytic uptake in 2-D monolayers of human monocytes.

ContributorsVu, Christian-Alexander (Author) / Nickerson, Cheryl (Thesis director) / Barrila, Jennifer (Committee member) / Ott, Mark (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / Harrington Bioengineering Program (Contributor)
Created2023-05
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Description
The consumption of food, energy, and water (FEW) resources in U.S. households is very carbon-intensive. However, these negative climate change impacts are often invisible due to insufficient awareness and knowledge. Serious games (SGs) can potentially address this issue through an experiential and rigorous approach to simulate household actions and impacts

The consumption of food, energy, and water (FEW) resources in U.S. households is very carbon-intensive. However, these negative climate change impacts are often invisible due to insufficient awareness and knowledge. Serious games (SGs) can potentially address this issue through an experiential and rigorous approach to simulate household actions and impacts in a playful but realistic setting. This dissertation focuses on: (a) the design and testing of an SG called HomeRUN (Role-play for Understanding Nexus); (b) the effectiveness of gameplay in advancing player knowledge about the upfront costs, financial returns, and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions of various household decisions; and (c) the effectiveness of intervention messages in increasing FEW conservation to reduce household GHG emissions. The results of gameplay sessions played by 150 university students show that HomeRUN is fun to play, creates a flow experience, and results in experiential learning. The majority of players agreed that the game experience will continue over time to influence their future consumption behaviors to conserve FEW resources. Female players tended to gain more knowledge about financial aspects of interventions, whereas male players were more likely to increase their understandings of GHG emissions and resource consumption after playing HomeRUN. Social comparison intervention messages about energy and food consumption led to the highest reductions in household carbon emissions. The messages associated with each FEW resource tended to be most likely to lead to FEW conservation actions with the game that most closely corresponded to the particular FEW resource addressed in the message. This dissertation advances understandings about the design and use of SGs to foster learning and promote sustainable household FEW consumption.
ContributorsHanif, Muhammad Adnan (Author) / Agusdinata, Datu Buyung (Thesis advisor) / Halvorsen, Kathleen (Committee member) / Janssen, Marco (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description

Animals use diverse signal types (e.g. visual, auditory) to honestly advertise their genotypic and/or phenotypic quality to prospective mates or rivals. Behavioral displays and other dynamically updateable signals (e.g. songs, vibrations) can reliably reveal an individual’s quality in real-time, but it is unclear whether more fixed traits like feather coloration,

Animals use diverse signal types (e.g. visual, auditory) to honestly advertise their genotypic and/or phenotypic quality to prospective mates or rivals. Behavioral displays and other dynamically updateable signals (e.g. songs, vibrations) can reliably reveal an individual’s quality in real-time, but it is unclear whether more fixed traits like feather coloration, which is often developed months before breeding, still reveal an individual’s quality at the time of signal use. To address this gap, we investigated if various indices of health and condition – including body condition (residual body mass), poxvirus infection, degree of habitat urbanization, and circulating levels of ketones, glucose, vitamins, and carotenoids – were related to the expression of male plumage coloration at the start of the spring breeding season in wild male house finches (Haemorhous mexicanus), a species in which many studies have demonstrated a link between plumage redness and the health and condition of individuals at the time the feathers are grown in late summer and autumn. We found that, at the time of pair formation, plumage hue was correlated with body condition, such that redder males were in better condition (i.e. higher residual mass). Also, as in previous studies, we found that rural males had redder plumage; however, urban males had more saturated plumage. In sum, these results reveal that feather coloration developed long before breeding still can be indicative to choosy mates of a male’s current condition and suggest that females who prefer to mate with redder males may also gain proximate material benefits (e.g. better incubation provisioning) by mating with these individuals in good current condition.

ContributorsDepinto, Kathryn (Author) / McGraw, Kevin (Thesis director) / Sweazea, Karen (Committee member) / Webb, Emily (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor) / Department of Psychology (Contributor)
Created2021-12
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Description

Bioindicators of wildlife health are useful tools for studying the viability of various organisms and populations, and can include a range of phenotypic variables, such as behavior, body size, and physiological parameters, such as circulating hormones and nutrients. Few studies have investigated the utility of total plasma protein as a

Bioindicators of wildlife health are useful tools for studying the viability of various organisms and populations, and can include a range of phenotypic variables, such as behavior, body size, and physiological parameters, such as circulating hormones and nutrients. Few studies have investigated the utility of total plasma protein as a predictor of environmental or nutritional variation among birds, as well as variation across different seasons and life-history stages. Here I examined relationships between plasma protein and season, urbanization, sex, body condition, molt status, and disease state in house finches (Haemorhous mexicanus). I sampled blood from house finches across three seasons (winter, summer and fall 2021) and measured plasma protein levels using a Bradford assay. I also collected data including condition, sex, and poxvirus infection state at capture, as well as fecal samples to assess gut parasitism (coccidiosis). During the fall season I also estimated molt status, as number of actively growing feathers. I found circulating plasma protein concentration to be lower in the fall during molt than during winter or summer. I also found a significant relationship between circulating protein levels and capture site, as well as novel links to molt state and pox presence, with urban birds, those infected with pox, and those in more intense molt having higher protein levels. My results support the hypotheses that plasma protein concentration can be indicative of a bird’s body molt (which demands considerable protein for feather synthesis) and degree of habitat urbanization, although future work is needed to determine why protein levels were higher in virus-infected birds.

ContributorsDrake, Dean (Author) / McGraw, Kevin (Thesis director) / Sweazea, Karen (Committee member) / Jackson, Daniel (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor)
Created2022-05
Description
Copper demand is surging in the U.S. and around the world as countries embrace new forms of energy to combat climate change. But copper mining – while a key strategy to address supply shortages – can serve as a vehicle for injustice by imposing socio-ecological burdens for nearby communities. Due

Copper demand is surging in the U.S. and around the world as countries embrace new forms of energy to combat climate change. But copper mining – while a key strategy to address supply shortages – can serve as a vehicle for injustice by imposing socio-ecological burdens for nearby communities. Due to the growing demand for copper with resulting justice issues, more research is needed to evaluate governance for the mining sector using an environmental justice lens. The National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) is a key environmental regulation that governs mining in the U.S. Therefore, I used a qualitative case study approach to examine how NEPA requirements shape engagement in public comment opportunities. I selected the Resolution Copper Mine as a case study because of its potential to support the energy transition but pose a significant dilemma for justice: the mine is anticipated to generate 25 percent of the U.S. copper demand each year but disturb lands that hold spiritual significance for Native American Tribes. I used the Institutional Analysis and Development (IAD) framework to analyze institutional dynamics and evaluate the NEPA process for public participation using a procedural justice lens. Drawing on interview data and document analysis, the results show that process rules such as a land exchange bill and the lengths of comment opportunities were among the key barriers for participation. Socioeconomic conditions of communities including access to social resources (i.e. access to internet and technical assistance) and institutional trust posed further barriers for participation. Hence, this study suggests that federal decision-makers should aim to better integrate procedural justice into the NEPA process.
ContributorsLewis, Sydney (Author) / Kellner, Elke (Thesis director) / Janssen, Marco (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor)
Created2024-05
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Description
Reproduction is energetically costly and seasonal breeding has evolved to capitalize on predictable increases in food availability. The synchronization of breeding with periods of peak food availability is especially important for small birds, most of which do not store an extensive amount of energy. The annual change in photoperiod is

Reproduction is energetically costly and seasonal breeding has evolved to capitalize on predictable increases in food availability. The synchronization of breeding with periods of peak food availability is especially important for small birds, most of which do not store an extensive amount of energy. The annual change in photoperiod is the primary environmental cue regulating reproductive development, but must be integrated with supplementary cues relating to local energetic conditions. Photoperiodic regulation of the reproductive neuroendocrine system is well described in seasonally breeding birds, but the mechanisms that these animals use to integrate supplementary cues remain unclear. I hypothesized that (a) environmental cues that negatively affect energy balance inhibit reproductive development by acting at multiple levels along the reproductive endocrine axis including the hypothalamus (b) that the availability of metabolic fuels conveys alterations in energy balance to the reproductive system. I investigated these hypotheses in male house finches, Haemorhous mexicanus, caught in the wild and brought into captivity. I first experimentally reduced body condition through food restriction and found that gonadal development and function are inhibited and these changes are associated with changes in hypothalamic gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH). I then investigated this neuroendocrine integration and found that finches maintain reproductive flexibility through modifying the release of accumulated GnRH stores in response to energetic conditions. Lastly, I investigated the role of metabolic fuels in coordinating reproductive responses under two different models of negative energy balance, decreased energy intake (food restriction) and increased energy expenditure (high temperatures). Exposure to high temperatures lowered body condition and reduced food intake. Reproductive development was inhibited under both energy challenges, and occurred with decreased gonadal gene expression of enzymes involved in steroid synthesis. Minor changes in fuel utilization occurred under food restriction but not high temperatures. My results support the hypothesis that negative energy balance inhibits reproductive development through multilevel effects on the hypothalamus and gonads. These studies are among the first to demonstrate a negative effect of high temperatures on reproductive development in a wild bird. Overall, the above findings provide important foundations for investigations into adaptive responses of breeding in energetically variable environments.
ContributorsValle, Shelley (Author) / Deviche, Pierre (Thesis advisor) / McGraw, Kevin (Committee member) / Orchinik, Miles (Committee member) / Propper, Catherine (Committee member) / Sweazea, Karen (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
Anthropogenic land use has irrevocably transformed the natural systems on which humankind relies. Understanding where, why, and how social and economic processes drive globally-important land-use changes, from deforestation to urbanization, has advanced substantially. Illicit and clandestine activities--behavior that is intentionally secret because it breaks formal laws or violates informal norms--are

Anthropogenic land use has irrevocably transformed the natural systems on which humankind relies. Understanding where, why, and how social and economic processes drive globally-important land-use changes, from deforestation to urbanization, has advanced substantially. Illicit and clandestine activities--behavior that is intentionally secret because it breaks formal laws or violates informal norms--are poorly understood, however, despite the recognition of their significant role in land change. This dissertation fills this lacuna by studying illicit and clandestine activity and quantifying its influence on land-use patterns through examining informal urbanization in Mexico City and deforestation Central America. The first chapter introduces the topic, presenting a framework to examine illicit transactions in land systems. The second chapter uses data from interviews with actors involved with land development in Mexico City, demonstrating how economic and political payoffs explain the persistence of four types of informal urban expansion. The third chapter examines how electoral politics influence informal urban expansion and land titling in Mexico City using panel regression. Results show land title distribution increases just before elections, and more titles are extended to loyal voters of the dominant party in power. Urban expansion increases with electoral competition in local elections for borough chiefs and legislators. The fourth chapter tests and confirms the hypothesis that narcotrafficking has a causal effect on forest loss in Central America from 2001-2016 using two proxies of narcoactivity: drug seizures and events from media reports. The fifth chapter explores the spatial signature and pattern of informal urban development. It uses a typology of urban informality identified in chapter two to hypothesize and demonstrate distinct urban expansion patterns from satellite imagery. The sixth and final chapter summarizes the role of illicit and clandestine activity in shaping deforestation and urban expansion through illegal economies, electoral politics, and other informal transactions. Measures of illicit and clandestine activity should--and could--be incorporated into land change models to account for a wider range of relevant causes. This dissertation shines a new light on the previously hidden processes behind ever-easier to detect land-use patterns as earth observing satellites increase spatial and temporal resolution.
ContributorsTellman, Elizabeth (Author) / Turner II, Billie L (Thesis advisor) / Eakin, Hallie (Thesis advisor) / Janssen, Marco (Committee member) / Alba, Felipe de (Committee member) / Jain, Meha (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
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Description
Despite the safe and effective use of attenuated vaccines for over fifty years, measles virus (MV) remains an insidious threat to global health. Problematically, infants less than one year of age, who are the most prone to severe infection and death by measles, cannot be immunized using current MV vaccines.

Despite the safe and effective use of attenuated vaccines for over fifty years, measles virus (MV) remains an insidious threat to global health. Problematically, infants less than one year of age, who are the most prone to severe infection and death by measles, cannot be immunized using current MV vaccines. For this dissertation, I generated and performed preclinical evaluation of two novel MV vaccine candidates. Based on data from clinical trials that showed increasing the dosage of current MV vaccines improved antibody responses in six-month-old recipients, I hypothesized that increasing the relevant antigenic stimulus of a standard titer dose would allow safe and effective immunization at a younger age. I generated two modified MVs with increased expression of the hemagglutinin (H) protein, the most important viral antigen for inducing protective neutralizing immunity, in the background of a current vaccine-equivalent. One virus, MVvac2-H2, expressed higher levels of full-length H, resulting in a three-fold increase in H incorporation into virions, while the second, MVvac2-Hsol, expressed and secreted truncated, soluble H protein to its extracellular environment. The alteration to the virion envelope of MVvac2-H2 conferred upon that virus a measurable resistance to in vitro neutralization. In initial screening in adult mouse models of vaccination, both modified MVs proved more immunogenic than their parental strain in outbred mice, while MVvac2-H2 additionally proved more immunogenic in the gold standard MV-susceptible mouse model. Remarkably, MVvac2-H2 better induced protective immunity in the presence of low levels of artificially introduced passive immunity that mimic the passive maternal immunity that currently limits vaccination of young infants, and that strongly inhibited responses to the current vaccine-equivalent. Finally, I developed a more physiological infant-like mouse model for MV vaccine testing, in which MV-susceptible dams vaccinated with the current vaccine-equivalent transfer passive immunity to their pups. This model will allow additional preclinical evaluation of the performance of MVvac2-H2 in pups of immune dams. Altogether, in this dissertation I identify a promising candidate, MVvac2-H2, for a next generation measles vaccine.
ContributorsJulik, Emily (Author) / Reyes del Valle, Jorge (Thesis advisor) / Chang, Yung (Committee member) / Blattman, Joseph (Committee member) / Hogue, Brenda (Committee member) / Nickerson, Cheryl (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016