476 results on '"Kendall C"'
Search Results
2. Labeling cell surface glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored proteins through metabolic engineering using an azide-modified phosphatidylinositol
- Author
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Sayan Kundu, Mohit Jaiswal, Kendall C. Craig, Jiatong Guo, and Zhongwu Guo
- Subjects
Biophysics ,Cell Biology ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry ,Article - Abstract
Glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchorage is one of the most common mechanisms to attach proteins to the plasma membrane of eukaryotic cells. GPI-anchored proteins (GPI-APs) play a critical role in many biological processes but are difficult to study. Here, a new method was developed for the effective and selective metabolic engineering and labeling of cell surface GPI-APs with an azide-modified phosphatidylinositol (PI) as the biosynthetic precursor of GPIs. It was demonstrated that this azido-PI derivative was taken up by HeLa cells and incorporated into the biosynthetic pathway of GPIs to present azide-labeled GPI-APs on the live cell surface. The azido group was used as a molecular handle to install other labels through a biocompatible click reaction to enable various biological studies, e.g., fluorescent imaging and protein pull-down, which can help explore the functions of GPI-APs and discover new GPI-APs.
- Published
- 2023
3. Characterizing Evaporative Losses From Sprinkler Irrigation Using Large Weighing Lysimeters
- Author
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Gary W. Marek, Steve R. Evett, Kelly R. Thorp, Kendall C. DeJonge, Thomas H. Marek, and David K. Brauer
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Biomedical Engineering ,Soil Science ,Forestry ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Food Science - Abstract
Highlights Losses for MESA and LESA were comparable on the day of irrigation and oftentimes greater for the subsequent day. Losses were greater due to incomplete canopy conditions for both MESA and LESA on both days. Evaporative losses from irrigation extended to at least the subsequent day following irrigation in most cases. Losses over two days accounted for as much as 39.5% and 28.0% of irrigation depth for MESA and LESA, respectively. Abstract. Effective irrigation systems that increase crop water productivity by minimizing evaporative losses are paramount for extending the longevity of finite groundwater resources in the semi-arid U.S. Southern High Plains (SHP). Although subsurface drip irrigation (SDI) acreage has increased in recent years, center-pivot sprinkler systems still account for greater than 85% of the irrigated area in the SHP. Modern sprinkler configurations are typically classified according to application height as either mid-elevation spray application (MESA) or low-elevation spray application (LESA). While application drift and evaporative losses are easily measured under fallow conditions, quantifying evaporative losses under cropped conditions is difficult. Lysimeter-derived daily evapotranspiration (ET) values for SDI-irrigated and sprinkler-irrigated fields planted to corn in 2016 (MESA) and 2018 (LESA) near Bushland, TX, were compared for days when sprinkler irrigation events occurred and for subsequent days, when possible. Differences (extra ET) were attributed to evaporative losses associated with MESA and LESA irrigation. Average daily extra ET values for both sprinkler irrigation methods were similar on the day of irrigation, although MESA was slightly larger than LESA at 1.4 and 1.2 mm, respectively. The average daily extra ET values for incomplete canopy conditions were 2.2 mm for MESA and 1.9 mm for LESA, while values were identical for both methods at 0.6 mm for full canopy conditions. Average daily extra ET values were also expressed as a percentage of daily standardized grass reference ET (ETos) values. Average values for MESA and LESA were 20.1% and 13.5%, respectively, for the season, with similar findings of 29.3% and 19.4% for incomplete canopy conditions. Average extra ET/ETos values for incomplete canopy conditions were similar at 7.5% and 7.7% for MESA and LESA, respectively. Evaporative irrigation losses, calculated as the percentage of extra ET to irrigation depth, were slightly larger overall for the day of irrigation for MESA (5.4%) than LESA (5.2%). Losses of 7.9% and 7.0% were observed for incomplete canopy conditions for MESA and LESA, respectively. Average losses for LESA (3.5%) under full canopy conditions were greater than those for MESA (1.9%). A comparison of extra ET values for days following irrigation revealed that evaporative losses from irrigation events extended beyond the day of irrigation. MESA extra ET values for the day following irrigations increased by 57.1% (2.2 mm) overall, 13.6% (2.5 mm) for incomplete canopy conditions, and 150.0% (1.5 mm) for full canopy conditions. The same was true for LESA, with increases of 125.0% (2.7 mm) overall, 78.9% (3.4 mm) for incomplete, and 216.7% (1.9 mm) for full canopy conditions. Summing of extra ET values for the day of irrigation and the subsequent day yielded average values more than double those for the day of irrigation only, at 3.9 and 4.3 mm for MESA and LESA, respectively. Similarly, values for extra ET as a percentage of irrigation depth were also more than double those for the day of irrigation only, with the greatest loss values of 39.5% for MESA and 28.0% for LESA. These findings suggest that although LESA appears to mitigate evaporative losses marginally more in corn than MESA on the day of irrigation, considerably more evaporative losses occurred for both methods during the subsequent day, with slightly increased losses for LESA, resulting in little difference between overall losses over the two days. This may in part be explained by the temporary cooling effect of the irrigation inside the canopy on the day of irrigation, which is diminished by the second day. A greater discrepancy between evaporative losses for MESA and LESA is likely to be observed for crops having shorter stature or lower leaf density, such as cotton, although more study is needed to corroborate this claim. Knowledge of these findings provides useful information for both producers and water managers when considering irrigation management and water planning strategies. Keywords: Evaporation, Evapotranspiration, LESA, MESA, Semi-arid, Sprinkler Irrigation, Subsurface Drip Irrigation, Transpiration, Weighing Lysimeters.
- Published
- 2023
4. Rapid quantification of cannabinoids in beef tissues and bodily fluids using direct-delivery electrospray ionization mass spectrometry
- Author
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Shubhashis Chakrabarty, Eric M. Serum, Thomas M. Winders, Bryan Neville, Michael D. Kleinhenz, Geraldine Magnin, Johann F. Coetzee, Carl R. Dahlen, Kendall C. Swanson, and David J. Smith
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Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization ,Cannabinoids ,Plant Extracts ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Cannabinol ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,General Chemistry ,General Medicine ,Toxicology ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Animals ,Cannabidiol ,Cattle ,Dronabinol ,Cannabis ,Chromatography, Liquid ,Food Science - Abstract
Hempseed cake is a byproduct of hempseed oil extraction and is potentially a useful source of protein and fiber for use in ruminant diets. However, data are lacking on the appearance and/or clearance of cannabinoids in tissues of animals fed hempseed cake. To this end, a rapid method for quantifying cannabinol (CBN), cannabidiol (CBD), cannabinolic acid (CBNA), cannabidiolic acid (CBDA), cannabigerolic acid (CBGA), cannabichromenic acid (CBCA), cannabidivarin (CBDV), cannabidivarinic acid (CBDVA), tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and tetrahydrocannabinolic acid (THCA) in cattle tissues, plasma, and urine was developed using rapid screen electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (RS-ESI-MS). Regression coefficients of matrix-matched standard curves ranged from 0.9946 to0.9999 and analyte recoveries averaged from 90.2 ± 15.5 to 108.7 ± 18.7% across all compounds. Limits of detection and quantification ranged from 0.05 to 2.79 ng · mL
- Published
- 2022
5. Design and Synthesis of a Doubly Functionalized Core Structure of a Glycosylphosphatidylinositol Anchor Containing Photoreactive and Clickable Functional Groups
- Author
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Venkanna Babu Mullapudi, Kendall C. Craig, and Zhongwu Guo
- Subjects
Glucosamine ,Glycosylphosphatidylinositols ,Organic Chemistry ,Proteins ,Article ,Inositol - Abstract
A bifunctional derivative of the core structure of glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchors having a clickable alkynyl group and a photoreactive diazirine group attached to the GPI glucosamine and lipid moieties, respectively, was synthesized from myo-inositol, D-glucosamine, and (R)-1,2-O-acetonized glycerol. The target molecule should be useful for the investigation of GPI-interacting components in the cell membrane that play a key role in the signal transduction and other biological functions of GPI-anchored proteins.
- Published
- 2022
6. Feeding hempseed cake alters the bovine gut, respiratory and reproductive microbiota
- Author
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Thomas M. Winders, Devin B. Holman, Kaycie N. Schmidt, Sarah M. Luecke, David J. Smith, Bryan W. Neville, Carl R. Dahlen, Kendall C. Swanson, and Samat Amat
- Subjects
Multidisciplinary - Abstract
A growing number of studies have investigated the feasibility of utilizing hemp by-products as livestock feedstuffs; however, their impact on livestock microbiomes remains unexplored. Here, we evaluated the effects of feeding hempseed cake on the gastrointestinal, respiratory, and reproductive microbiota in beef heifers. Angus-crossbred heifers (19-months old, initial body weight = 494 ± 10 kg [SE]) were fed a corn-based finishing diet containing 20% hempseed cake as a substitute for 20% corn dried distillers’ grains with solubles (DM basis; Control; n = 16/group) for 111 days until slaughter. Ruminal fluid and deep nasopharyngeal swabs (days 0, 7, 42, 70 and 98), and vaginal and uterine swabs (at slaughter) were collected, and the microbiota assessed using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Diet affected the community structure of the ruminal (d 7−98; 0.06 ≤ R2 ≤ 0.12; P 2 = 0.18; P 2 = 0.06; P
- Published
- 2023
7. Weather data-centric prediction of maize non-stressed canopy temperature in semi-arid climates for irrigation management
- Author
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Hope Njuki Nakabuye, Daran R. Rudnick, Kendall C. DeJonge, Katherine Ascough, Wei-zhen Liang, Tsz Him Lo, Trenton E. Franz, Xin Qiao, Abia Katimbo, and Jiaming Duan
- Subjects
Soil Science ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Water Science and Technology - Published
- 2023
8. Supplementary Figures 1 - 3 from Regression of Metastatic Merkel Cell Carcinoma Following Transfer of Polyomavirus-Specific T Cells and Therapies Capable of Reinducing HLA Class-I
- Author
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Paul Nghiem, Cassian Yee, David M. Koelle, Cindy Desmarais, Ted Gooley, Kendall C. Shibuya, Shailender Bhatia, Heather L. Sloan, Ilana M. Roberts, Ivy Lai, Joo Ha Hwang, Upendra Parvathaneni, Kelly G. Paulson, Jayasri G. Iyer, Olga K. Afanasiev, and Aude G. Chapuis
- Abstract
PDF file - 738K, Supplementary Fig. S1: Detection of MCPyV-specific CD8 T cells among tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) from the primary MCC tumor (left) and PBMC (right). Cells were stained with A24/MCPyV.LT.92-101 tetramer and CD8. Supplementary Fig. S2: A) Cell products destined for infusions 1, 2 and 3 bound the MCPyV LT-Ag92-101 peptide-HLA tetramer. B) Products secreted IFNγ (left) and lysed MCPyV LT-Ag92-101 -pulsed FUJI (A24+ cell line) and autologous PBMC pulsed with 10?g/ml peptide (right). The product used for infusion 1 is shown and is representative. Supplementary Fig. S3: Assessment of CD25hiCD127loCD4+ T-cells in PBMC collected at baseline (137 days and immediately prior to the first treatment) and at indicated timepoints after treatments. Gray bars on x-axis indicate the timing of each treatment as detailed in Figure 1.
- Published
- 2023
9. Data from Regression of Metastatic Merkel Cell Carcinoma Following Transfer of Polyomavirus-Specific T Cells and Therapies Capable of Reinducing HLA Class-I
- Author
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Paul Nghiem, Cassian Yee, David M. Koelle, Cindy Desmarais, Ted Gooley, Kendall C. Shibuya, Shailender Bhatia, Heather L. Sloan, Ilana M. Roberts, Ivy Lai, Joo Ha Hwang, Upendra Parvathaneni, Kelly G. Paulson, Jayasri G. Iyer, Olga K. Afanasiev, and Aude G. Chapuis
- Abstract
Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) is an aggressive skin cancer that typically requires the persistent expression of Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCPyV) oncoproteins that can serve as ideal immunotherapeutic targets. Several immune evasion mechanisms are active in MCC, including downregulation of HLA class-I expression on tumor cells and dysfunctional endogenous MCPyV-specific CD8 T-cell responses. To overcome these obstacles, we combined local and systemic immune therapies in a 67-year-old man, who developed metastatic MCPyV-expressing MCC. Intralesional IFN-β-1b or targeted single-dose radiation was administered as a preconditioning strategy to reverse the downregulation of HLA-I expression noted in his tumors and to facilitate the subsequent recognition of tumor cells by T cells. This was followed by the adoptive transfer of ex vivo expanded polyclonal, polyomavirus-specific T cells as a source of reactive antitumor immunity. The combined regimen was well tolerated and led to persistent upregulation of HLA-I expression in the tumor and a durable complete response in two of three metastatic lesions. Relative to historical controls, the patient experienced a prolonged period without development of additional distant metastases (535 days compared with historic median of 200 days; 95% confidence interval, 154–260 days). The transferred CD8+ T cells preferentially accumulated in the tumor tissue, remained detectable and functional for more than 200 days, persisted with an effector phenotype, and exhibited evidence of recent in vivo activation and proliferation. The combination of local and systemic immune stimulatory therapies was well tolerated and may be a promising approach to overcome immune evasion in virus-driven cancers. Cancer Immunol Res; 2(1); 27–36. ©2013 AACR.
- Published
- 2023
10. Whole-body Microbiota of Newborn Calves and Their Response to Prenatal Vitamin and Mineral Supplementation
- Author
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Sarah M. Luecke, Devin B. Holman, Kaycie N. Schmidt, Katherine E. Gzyl, Jennifer L. Hurlbert, Ana Clara B. Menezes, Kerri A. Bochantin, James D. Kirsch, Friederike Baumgaertner, Kevin K. Sedivec, Kendall C. Swanson, Carl R. Dahlen, and Samat Amat
- Abstract
Here, we investigated whether initial microbial colonization at seven different anatomical locations in newborn calves and their blood cytokines are influenced by prenatal vitamin and mineral (VTM) supplementation. Samples were collected from the hoof, liver, lung, nasal cavity, eye, rumen (tissue and fluid), and vagina of beef calves that were born from dams that received diets with or without VTM supplementation throughout gestation (n=7/group). Calves were separated from their dams immediately after birth and fed colostrum and milk replacer until euthanasia at 30 h post-initial colostrum feeding. The microbiota of all samples was assessed using 16S rRNA gene sequencing and qPCR. 15 cytokines and chemokines were quantified in their serum. The hoof, ocular, liver, respiratory, and reproductive sites of newborn calves were colonized by site-specific microbiota that differed from that of the rumen (0.64 ≥ R2≥ 0.12,P≤ 0.003). Only the ruminal fluid microbiota was differed by on prenatal VTM supplementation (P<0.01 Differences (PP=0.02) in VTM calves. Overall, our results suggest that despite immediate separation from the dam upon birth, whole-body of 32-h old calves are colonized by relatively rich, diverse and site-specific bacterial communities, and that initial microbial colonization of the rumen, vagina and oculus seem to be influenced by the prenatal VTM supplementation.IMPORTANCEIncreased appreciation of maternal nutrition and microbiome’s involvement in developmental programming and evidence supportingin uteromicrobial colonization highlight that maternal nutrition factors could impact offspring microbial colonization. Here, we investigated whether initial microbial colonization in any of 7 different anatomical sites of newborn calves was influenced by maternal vitamin and mineral (VTM) supplementation. We identified changes in ruminal, vaginal, and ocular microbiota in newborn calves in response to prenatal VTM supplementation. We provided a “holistic” view on the whole-body calf microbiota. Our data was obtained from calves of the same sex and age, and who were immediately separated from dams, and hence provides novel insights on taxonomic composition of initial bacterial microbiota colonization in those anatomical sites examined. Combined, this study provides direction for future work targeting the manipulation of early life microbiome via alteration of maternal nutrition and harnessing early life microbiota for improved cattle health and production.
- Published
- 2023
11. Efficacy and Safety of a Novel Non-Myeloablative Conditioning Regimen for Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation in Adults with Severe Aplastic Anemia
- Author
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Rachel M Gilmore, Karin M Abernathy, Kendall C Shultes, Dwight D Eplin, Lindsay Orton, Adetola A. Kassim, Bipin N. Savani, Salyka M. Sengsayadeth, Brian G. Engelhardt, Wichai Chinratanalab, Tae Kon Kim, Bhagirathbhai Dholaria, Reena Jayani, Leena Choi, Elizabeth McNeer, and Katie S. Gatwood
- Subjects
Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2022
12. The paradoxical role of inositol in cancer: a consequence of the metabolic state of a tumor
- Author
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Kendall C. Case, Michael W. Schmidtke, and Miriam L. Greenberg
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,Oncology - Published
- 2022
13. Prevalence and Correlates of Cannabis Use and Cannabis Use Disorder Among U.S. Veterans: Results From the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions (NESARC-III)
- Author
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Andrew J. Saxon, Kipling M. Bohnert, Jaimie L. Gradus, Scott E. Sherman, Mark Olfson, Silvia S. Martins, Kendall C. Browne, David S. Fink, Deborah S. Hasin, Magdalena Cerdá, and Malki Stohl
- Subjects
Male ,Marijuana Abuse ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Alcohol ,Medical Marijuana ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Humans ,Psychiatry ,Epidemiologic survey ,Cannabis ,Veterans ,Cannabis use disorder ,Ethanol ,biology ,business.industry ,Cannabis use ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Substance abuse ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,chemistry ,Hallucinogens ,business ,Alcohol-Related Disorders - Abstract
The authors sought to estimate the prevalence of past-12-month and lifetime cannabis use and cannabis use disorder among U.S. veterans; to describe demographic, substance use disorder, and psychiatric disorder correlates of nonmedical cannabis use and cannabis use disorder; and to explore differences in cannabis use and cannabis use disorder prevalence among veterans in states with and without medical marijuana laws.Participants were 3,119 respondents in the 2012-2013 National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions-III (NESARC-III) who identified as U.S. veterans. Weighted prevalences were calculated. Logistic regression analyses tested associations of nonmedical cannabis use and cannabis use disorder with demographic and clinical correlates and examined whether prevalence differed by state legalization status.The prevalences of any past-12-month cannabis use and cannabis use disorder were 7.3% and 1.8%, respectively. Lifetime prevalences were 32.5% and 5.7%, respectively. Past-12-month and lifetime cannabis use disorder prevalence estimates among nonmedical cannabis users were 24.4% and 17.4%, respectively. Sociodemographic correlates of nonmedical cannabis use and use disorder included younger age, male gender, being unmarried, lower income, and residing in a state with medical marijuana laws. Nonmedical cannabis use and use disorder were associated with most psychiatric and substance use disorders examined.Among veterans, the odds of nonmedical cannabis use and use disorder were elevated among vulnerable subgroups, including those with lower income or psychiatric disorders and among survey participants residing in states with medical marijuana laws. The study findings highlight the need for clinical attention (e.g., screening, assessment) and ongoing monitoring among veterans in the context of increasing legalization of cannabis.
- Published
- 2022
14. Profiling Glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-Interacting Proteins in the Cell Membrane Using a Bifunctional GPI Analog as the Probe
- Author
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Sayan Kundu, Chuwei Lin, Mohit Jaiswal, Venkanna Babu Mullapudi, Kendall C. Craig, Sixue Chen, and Zhongwu Guo
- Subjects
General Chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Article - Abstract
Glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchorage of cell surface proteins to the membrane is biologically important and ubiquitous in eukaryotes. However, GPIs do not contain long enough lipids to span the entire membrane bilayer. To transduce binding signals, GPIs must interact with other membrane components, but such interactions are difficult to define. Here, a new method was developed to explore GPI-interacting membrane proteins in live cell with a bifunctional analog of the glucosaminylphosphatidylinositol motif conserved in all GPIs as a probe. This probe contained a diazirine functionality in the lipid and an alkynyl group on the glucosamine residue to respectively facilitate the cross-linkage of GPI-binding membrane proteins with the probe upon photoactivation and then the installation of biotin to the cross-linked proteins via a click reaction for affinity-based protein isolation and analysis. Profiling the proteins pulled down from the Hela cells revealed 94 unique and 18 overrepresented proteins compared to the control, and most of them are membrane proteins and many are GPI-related. The results have proved not only the concept of using the new bifunctional GPI probe to investigate GPI-binding membrane proteins but also the important role of inositol in the biological functions of GPI anchors and GPI-anchored proteins.
- Published
- 2023
15. NCCC308: Nutrition and Management of Feedlot Cattle to Optimize Performance, Carcass Value, and Environmental Compatibility – Feature Collection - Nutrition and Management of Finishing Cattle
- Author
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Kendall C Swanson, Alejandro E Relling, and Alfredo DiCostanzo
- Subjects
Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Food Science - Published
- 2023
16. Effects of hempseed cake on ruminal fermentation parameters, nutrient digestibility, nutrient flow, and nitrogen balance in finishing steers
- Author
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Thomas M Winders, Bryan W Neville, and Kendall C Swanson
- Subjects
Rumen ,Fermentation ,Genetics ,Animals ,Cattle ,Digestion ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Nutrients ,General Medicine ,Animal Feed ,Zea mays ,Diet ,Food Science - Abstract
Five ruminally and duodenally cannulated red angus steers (n = 5; initial body weight [BW] = 542 kg, SD = 40 kg) were used in a three-period Youden square design consisting of three 21-d periods, three treatments, and five steers (one or two steers per treatment within each period) to evaluate the effect of feeding hempseed cake on ruminal fermentation parameters, organic matter (OM) intake, total tract nutrient digestion, and nitrogen (N) balance in steers fed finishing diets. The control (CON) diet contained 75% dry-rolled corn, 20% corn silage, and 5% supplement (DM basis). The dried corn distillers grains plus solubles (DDGS) and hempseed cake (HEMP) diets contained 55% dry-rolled corn, 20% corn silage, 20% dried corn distillers grains plus solubles or hempseed cake, and 5% supplement (DM basis). Total ruminal volatile fatty acid concentration was greater (P0.01) in steers fed the HEMP diet than in steers fed the DDGS or CON diets. Ruminal fluid pH was not influenced (P = 0.93) by treatment. Organic matter intake tended (P = 0.07) to be greater and OM total tract digestibility was less (P = 0.03) in steers fed the HEMP diet compared with steers fed the DDGS or CON diets. Ruminal true and total tract apparent N digestibility was greater (P0.01) in steers fed the HEMP diet than steers fed the DDGS or CON diets. Duodenal flow of essential, nonessential, and total amino acids was not influenced (P ≥ 0.37) by dietary treatment, but the lack of response was likely because ruminally degradable protein (RDP) supply exceeded the RDP requirement. Steers fed the HEMP diet had greater (P0.01) N retention (g/d) than steers fed the DDGS diet, which was greater (P0.01) than steers fed the CON diet, suggesting that feeding hempseed cake improved utilization of N. Although inclusion of hempseed cake decreased total tract OM digestibility compared with dried corn distillers grains or corn, improvements in N utilization suggest that hempseed cake could be a useful alternative feed ingredient for finishing cattle diets.This experiment evaluated the effects of dietary inclusion of hempseed cake or dried corn distillers grains plus solubles on ruminal fermentation parameters, organic matter (OM) intake, total tract nutrient digestion, and nitrogen (N) balance in steers fed finishing diets. Steers were assigned to one of three dietary treatments (no byproduct [CON], 20% dried corn distillers grains plus solubles [DDGS], or 20% hempseed cake [HEMP]; dry matter basis). Hempseed cake had greater acid detergent fiber concentrations, which resulted in greater acid detergent fiber flow to the small intestine and reduced total tract organic matter digestibility in steers fed the HEMP diet than in steers fed the DDGS or CON diets. Steers fed the HEMP diet had greater ruminal and total tract N digestibility, and greater ruminal ammonia concentrations than steers fed DDGS or CON diets, suggesting that the crude protein in hempseed cake is degraded to a greater extent in the rumen and total tract. Although inclusion of hempseed cake decreased total tract OM digestibility compared with dried corn distillers grains or no byproduct, the observed greater ruminal and total tract N digestibility suggest that it could be a useful alternative feed ingredient for finishing cattle diets.
- Published
- 2023
17. Effects of long-term postgastric infusion of casein or glutamic acid on small intestinal starch digestion and energy balance in cattle
- Author
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Subash Acharya, Emily A Petzel, Kristin E Hales, Keith R Underwood, Kendall C Swanson, Eric A Bailey, Kristi M Cammack, and Derek W Brake
- Subjects
Rumen ,Nitrogen ,Caseins ,Glutamic Acid ,Starch ,General Medicine ,Animal Feed ,Intestine, Small ,Genetics ,Animals ,Cattle ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Intestine, Large ,Food Science - Abstract
The objective of this experiment was to evaluate effects of postruminal flows of casein or glutamic acid on small intestinal starch digestion and to quantify changes in energy and nutrient balance. Twenty-four steers (body weight = 179 ± 4 kg) were duodenally infused with raw cornstarch (1.46 ± 0.04 kg/d) and either 413 ± 7.0 g casein/d, 121 ± 3.6 g glutamic acid/d or water (control). Measures of small intestinal starch digestion and nutrient excretion were collected across 4 d after 42 d of infusion and measures of respiration via indirect calorimetry were collected across 2 d after 48 d of infusion. Ileal starch flow was least among calves provided casein, but ileal starch flow was not different between glutamic acid or control. Small intestinal starch digestion tended to be greatest among calves provided casein, least for glutamic acid and intermediate for control. Casein increased ileal flow of ethanol soluble oligosaccharides compared to glutamic acid and control. Large intestinal starch digestion was not different among treatments. By design, N intake was greatest among cattle provided casein, intermediate among calves provided glutamic acid and least for control. Nitrogen retention was greater in response to casein compared to control and glutamic acid. Intake of gross energy from feed was similar across treatments, and gross energy from infusate was greatest for casein, intermediate for glutamic acid and least for control. Variation in gross energy intake from feed resulted in no difference in overall gross energy intake across treatments. Similar to measures of small intestinal starch digestion and N retention, casein increased calories of digestible energy and metabolizable energy, compared to glutamic acid and control, which did not differ. Postruminal infusions did not influence methane production, but heat production was greatest in steers infused with casein, intermediate for steers provided glutamic acid, and least for control. Overall, amounts of energy retained by casein tended to be nearly 34% greater than control, but glutamic acid had no impact on energy balance. Improvement in small intestinal starch digestion in response to casein increased energy and N retained; however, glutamic acid did not influence small intestinal starch digestion and energy or N balance in cattle, which seems to suggest that responses in small intestinal starch digestion to greater postruminal flows of glutamic acid become refractory across greater durations of time.Small intestinal digestion of starch can provide greater energy from dietary starch in comparison to ruminal fermentation, which can increase performance and improve feed efficiency in cattle fed starch-based diets; however, small intestinal starch digestion in cattle is restricted in comparison to nonruminant animals or to ruminal fermentation of starch. In this experiment, long-term increases in postruminal protein but not glutamic acid increased small intestinal starch digestion, and increases in small intestinal starch digestion resulted in improvements in nitrogen and energy balance. Responses in this study compared to previous reports may suggest effects of increased postgastric flows of glutamic acid in cattle are transient, but that effects of casein are not.
- Published
- 2023
18. Nutritional and Physiological Constraints Contributing to Limitations in Small Intestinal Starch Digestion and Glucose Absorption in Ruminants
- Author
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Ronald J. Trotta, David L. Harmon, James C. Matthews, and Kendall C. Swanson
- Subjects
food and beverages - Abstract
Increased efficiency of nutrient utilization can potentially be gained with increased starch digestion in the small intestine in ruminants. However, ruminants have quantitative limits in the extent of starch disappearance in the small intestine. The objective is to explore the nutritional and physiological constraints that contribute to limitations of carbohydrate assimilation in the ruminant small intestine. Altered digesta composition and passage rate in the small intestine, insufficient pancreatic α-amylase and/or small intestinal carbohydrase activity, and reduced glucose absorption could all be potentially limiting factors of intestinal starch assimilation. The absence of intestinal sucrase activity in ruminants may be related to quantitative limits in small intestinal starch hydrolysis. Multiple sequence alignment of the sucrase-isomaltase complex gives insight into potential molecular mechanisms that may be associated with the absence of intestinal sucrase activity, reduced capacity for intestinal starch digestion, and limitations in the efficiency of feed utilization in cattle and sheep. Future research efforts in these areas will aid in our understanding of small intestinal starch digestion and glucose absorption to optimize feeding strategies for increased meat and milk production efficiency.
- Published
- 2021
19. Contrasts in forage mineral concentration with patch-burn grazing: a preliminary analysis
- Author
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Devan A McGranahan, Megan R Wanchuk, Kendall C Swanson, Torre J. Hovick, Kevin K. Sedivec, and Ryan F. Limb
- Subjects
Mineral ,General Veterinary ,Agronomy ,Grazing ,Environmental science ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Forage ,Preliminary analysis - Published
- 2021
20. Synthesis of a Bifunctionalized Glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) Anchor Useful for the Study of GPI Biology
- Author
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Venkanna Babu Mullapudi, Kendall C. Craig, and Zhongwu Guo
- Subjects
Organic Chemistry ,General Chemistry ,Catalysis - Abstract
A new, bifunctional glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) derivative containing the highly conserved core structure of all natural GPI anchors with a photoactivable diazirine in the lipid chain and clickable alkynes in the glycan was synthesized by a convergent [3 + 2] glycosylation strategy with late stage protecting group manipulation and regioselective phosphorylation. The challenges of this synthesis were due to the presence of several distinctive functional groups in the synthetic target, which complicated the protection tactics, in addition to the inherent difficulties associated with GPI synthesis. This bifunctional GPI derivative can cross-react with molecules in proximity upon photoactivation and be subsequently labeled with other molecular tags via click reaction. Therefore, it should be a valuable probe for biological studies of GPIs, such as analysis of GPI-interacting membrane proteins, and gaining insights into their functional mechanisms.
- Published
- 2022
21. Understanding the relationship between weather variables and intake in beef steers
- Author
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Mustapha Yusuf, Kendall C Swanson, Lauren L Hulsman Hanna, and Marc L Bauer
- Subjects
Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Food Science - Abstract
The relationship between weather variables and dry matter intake (DMI) in beef steers was examined using daily intake data from 790 beef steers collected through a computer-controlled feeding system in nonsummer months. Daily data were condensed into weekly averages (N = 13,895 steer-weeks). The variables considered to predict DMI (2.50 to 23.60 kg/d) were body weight (197 to 796 kg), dietary net energy for maintenance (NEm; 0.79 to 2.97 Mcal/kg), ambient temperature (−23.73 °C to 21.40 °C), range of temperature (2.79 °C to 19.43 °C), dew point (−27.84 °C to 14.34 °C), wind speed (2.08 to 6.49 m/s), solar radiation (30.8 to 297.1 W/m2), and 2-wk lag (average of previous 2 wk’s values) and monthly lag (average of previous 4 wk’s values) of each weather variable. Toeplitz variance-covariance structure for repeated measures was used to determine the model to predict DMI, while accounting for the effects of body weight, dietary NEm, and other variables in the model. Two-week lag of ambient temperature interacted (P ≤ 0.005) with 2-wk lag of range of temperature, monthly lag of wind speed, 2-wk lag of solar radiation, and dew point to predict DMI. Interactions (P = 0.0001) between 2-wk lag of range of temperature vs. dew point and monthly lag of wind speed vs. 2-wk lag of solar radiation were also detected. This study reports important weather variables associated with differences in DMI of growing and finishing steers and will help improve the accuracy of DMI prediction equations for beef cattle. Improvements in the accuracy of predicting DMI should give producers better tools to plan and execute efficient feeding management programs. The R2 of the overall model was 0.8891.
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- 2022
22. Solar radiation and temperature as predictor variables for dry matter intake in beef steers
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Mustapha Yusuf, Kendall C. Swanson, Lauren L. Hulsman Hanna, Ronald Degges, and Marc L. Bauer
- Abstract
Solar radiation may be an important weather variable that has not been included in previous dry matter intake (DMI) prediction models. Solar radiation affects the overall effective ambient temperature, which in turn contributes to the net gain of heat in an animal’s body. This experiment examined ambient temperature and solar radiation with DMI in beef steers. Data from 790 beef steers collected between 2011 and 2018 using an Insentec feeding system was used. Daily data was condensed into weekly averages (n = 13,895 steer-weeks). The variables considered for this study were DMI (2.50 to 23.60 kg/d), body weight (197 to 796 kg), calculated dietary energy density (NEm; 0.79 to 2.97 Mcal/kg), ambient temperature (-23.73 to 21.40°C), two-week lag of ambient temperature (-20.73 to 23.56°C), monthly lag of ambient temperature (-17.95 to 22.74°C), solar radiation (30.8 to 297.1 W/m2), two-week lag of solar radiation (34.6 to 272 W/m2) and monthly lag of solar radiation (43.7 to 256.6 W/m2). Residuals of DMI fitting week of the year (fixed) and experiment (random) were used to generate scatter plots with other explanatory variables to identify if non-linear relationships existed. Body weight and NEm had both linear and quadratic relationships with DMI, while the relationship with DMI for other variables was linear. The MIXED procedure of SAS with Toeplitz variance-covariance structure was used to determine the final model of DMI. After accounting for body weight and NEm in the model, two-week lag of ambient temperature and monthly lag of solar radiation interacted together (P = 0.0001), and this accounted for 0.7790 (R2) variation in DMI and improved the model fit. Therefore, these two variables and their interactions should be considered in DMI prediction equations of beef steers.
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- 2022
23. Physiological trait networks enhance understanding of crop growth and water use in contrasting environments
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Sean M. Gleason, Dave M. Barnard, Timothy R. Green, Scott Mackay, Diane R. Wang, Elizabeth A. Ainsworth, Jon Altenhofen, Timothy J. Brodribb, Hervé Cochard, Louise H. Comas, Mark Cooper, Danielle Creek, Kendall C. DeJonge, Sylvain Delzon, Felix B. Fritschi, Graeme Hammer, Cameron Hunter, Danica Lombardozzi, Carlos D. Messina, Troy Ocheltree, Bo Maxwell Stevens, Jared J. Stewart, Vincent Vadez, Joshua Wenz, Ian J. Wright, Kevin Yemoto, Huihui Zhang, Water Management and Systems Research (WMSR), United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), University at Buffalo [SUNY] (SUNY Buffalo), State University of New York (SUNY), Purdue University [West Lafayette], University of Tasmania [Hobart, Australia] (UTAS), Laboratoire de Physique et Physiologie Intégratives de l’Arbre en environnement Fluctuant (PIAF), Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)-Université Clermont Auvergne (UCA), Queensland Alliance for Agriculture and Food Innovation (QAAFI), University of Queensland [Brisbane], Biodiversité, Gènes & Communautés (BioGeCo), Université de Bordeaux (UB)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), University of Missouri [Columbia] (Mizzou), University of Missouri System, Colorado State University [Fort Collins] (CSU), National Center for Atmospheric Research [Boulder] (NCAR), University of Florida [Gainesville] (UF), International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics [Inde] (ICRISAT), Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research [CGIAR] (CGIAR), and Macquarie University
- Subjects
photosynthesis ,Physiology ,stomata ,Water ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,plant growth ,xylem ,maize ,process simulation ,crop improvement ,Droughts ,Plant Leaves ,Soil ,breeding ,Plant Stomata ,hydraulic traits ,[SDE]Environmental Sciences ,water potential ,Edible Grain ,Ecosystem - Abstract
Plant function arises from a complex network of structural and physiological traits. Explicit representation of these traits, as well as their connections with other biophysical processes, is required to advance our understanding of plant-soil-climate interactions. We used the Terrestrial Regional Ecosystem Exchange Simulator (TREES) to evaluate physiological trait networks in maize. Net primary productivity (NPP) and grain yield were simulated across five contrasting climate scenarios. Simulations achieving high NPP and grain yield in high precipitation environments featured trait networks conferring high water use strategies: deep roots, high stomatal conductance at low water potential (“risky” stomatal regulation), high xylem hydraulic conductivity, and high maximal leaf area index. In contrast, high NPP and grain yield was achieved in dry environments with low late-season precipitation via water conserving trait networks: deep roots, high embolism resistance, and low stomatal conductance at low leaf water potential (“conservative” stomatal regulation). We suggest that our approach, which allows for the simultaneous evaluation of physiological traits and their interactions (i.e., networks), has potential to improve crop growth predictions in different environments. In contrast, evaluating single traits in isolation of other coordinated traits does not appear to be an effective strategy for predicting plant performance.Summary statementOur process-based model uncovered two beneficial but contrasting trait networks for maize which can be understood by their integrated effect on water use/conservation. Modification of multiple, physiologically aligned, traits were required to bring about meaningful improvements in NPP and yield.
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- 2022
24. Wildfire and climate change amplify knowledge gaps linking mountain source-water systems and agricultural water supply in the western United States
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David M. Barnard, Timothy R. Green, Kyle R. Mankin, Kendall C. DeJonge, Charles C. Rhoades, Stephanie K. Kampf, Jeremy Giovando, Mike J. Wilkins, Adam L. Mahood, Megan G. Sears, Louise H. Comas, Sean M. Gleason, Huihui Zhang, Steven R. Fassnacht, R. Daren Harmel, and Jon Altenhofen
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Soil Science ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Water Science and Technology - Published
- 2023
25. Evaluation of artificial intelligence algorithms with sensor data assimilation in estimating crop evapotranspiration and crop water stress index for irrigation water management
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Abia Katimbo, Daran R. Rudnick, Jingwen Zhang, Yufeng Ge, Kendall C. DeJonge, Trenton E. Franz, Yeyin Shi, Wei-zhen Liang, Xin Qiao, Derek M. Heeren, Isa Kabenge, Hope Njuki Nakabuye, and Jiaming Duan
- Published
- 2023
26. Major brain malformations: corpus callosum dysgenesis, agenesis of septum pellucidum and polymicrogyria in patients with BCORL1-related disorders
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Marina Michelson, Emanuela Argilli, Ronen Hady-Cohen, Michal Gafner, Eleina M. England, Dorit Lev, Elliott H. Sherr, Keren Yosovich, Z. Leibovitz, Yael Michaeli-Yosef, Lubov Blumkin, Tally Lerman-Sagie, and Kendall C. Parks
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Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Clinical Sciences ,Nervous System Malformations ,Corpus callosum ,Article ,Dysgenesis ,Clinical Research ,Exome Sequencing ,Genetics ,Polymicrogyria ,Humans ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Medicine ,Global developmental delay ,Aetiology ,Child ,Preschool ,Genetics (clinical) ,Septum pellucidum ,Exome sequencing ,Family Health ,Pediatric ,Genetics & Heredity ,business.industry ,Human Genome ,Neurosciences ,Brain ,Infant ,Perisylvian polymicrogyria ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Brain Disorders ,Repressor Proteins ,Child, Preschool ,Agenesis ,Mutation ,Neurological ,Septum Pellucidum ,Agenesis of Corpus Callosum ,business - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: BCORL1, a transcriptional co-repressor, has a role in cortical migration, neuronal differentiation, maturation, and cerebellar development. We describe BCORL1 as a new genetic cause for major brain malformations. METHODS AND RESULTS: We report three patients from two unrelated families with neonatal onset intractable epilepsy and profound global developmental delay. Brain MRI of two siblings from the first family depicted hypoplastic corpus callosum and septal agenesis (ASP) in the older brother and unilateral perisylvian polymicrogyria (PMG) in the younger one. MRI of the patient from the second family demonstrated complete agenesis of corpus callosum (CC). Whole Exome Sequencing revealed a novel hemizygous variant in NM_021946.5 (BCORL1):c.796C>T (p.Pro266Ser) in the two siblings from the first family and the NM_021946.5 (BCORL1): c.3376G>A; p.Asp1126Asn variant in the patient from the second family, both variants inherited from healthy mothers. We reviewed the patients’ charts and MRIs and compared the phenotype to the other published BCORL1-related cases. Brain malformations have not been previously described in association with the BCORL1 phenotype. We discuss the potential influence of BCORL1 on brain development. CONCLUSIONS: We suggest that BCORL1 variants present with a spectrum of neurodevelopmental disorders and can lead to major brain malformations originating at different stages of fetal development. We suggest adding BCORL1 to the genetic causes of PMG, ASP, and CC dysgenesis.
- Published
- 2021
27. Effects of Mid-Gestation Nutrient Restriction, Realimentation, and Parity on the Umbilical Hemodynamics of the Pregnant Ewe
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Manuel A. Vasquez-Hidalgo, Kendall C. Swanson, and Kimberly A. Vonnahme
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General Medicine - Abstract
Previous studies have reported that nutritional restriction from days 50 to 130 applied in young nulliparous ewes reduces umbilical blood flow (UBF). We hypothesized that during restriction, UBF and fetal and placentome dimensional measurements would decrease compared to adequately fed ewes, but upon realimentation, ewes would have similar UBF as ewes that were not restricted. We also hypothesized that multiparous ewes would be more resilient to nutrient restriction compared to nulliparous ewes. In experiment 1, second-parity Dorset ewes carrying singletons were assigned to an adequate nutrition group (CON, n = 7) or a restricted (60% of CON) group (RES, n = 8), from days 50 to 90 of gestation. In experiment 2, on day 50 of gestation, adult (15-month) nulliparous (NUL; n = 12) and multiparous (MUL; n = 16) Dorset ewes carrying singletons were randomly assigned to receive 100% of NRC recommendations (CON) or 60% of CON (RES). On day 90, all ewes were fed 100% of nutritional recommendations according to body weight. Ewe body weight and conceptus measurements via ultrasonography were recorded every 10 days from days 50 to 130 of gestation. We measured 10 random placentomes, fetal biparietal and abdominal length, and kidney length and width. Doppler mode was used to obtain UBF, pulsatility index (PI), and resistance index (RI). Lamb weight and parturition problems were recorded. In experiment 1, on day 80, UBF decreased (P ≤ 0.05 means separation of unprotected F test), placentome size tended to decrease (P ≤ 0.10), and PI and RI tended to increase in RES vs. CON ewes (P ≤ 0.10). In experiment 2, there were no three-way interactions or main effects of treatments on UBF, PI, RI, and placentome size (P ≥ 0.57). There was a parity-by-day interaction (P < 0.05) for RI, but UBF was not affected by parity or diet. After realimentation, there was no effect of treatment on ultrasound measurements in both experiments. At birth, lambs and placental measurements were not different (P ≥ 0.43). Restriction from days 50 to 90 does not seem to influence umbilical hemodynamics or conceptus growth in adult white face sheep, regardless of parity.
- Published
- 2022
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28. Veterans self-reported reasons for non-attendance in psychotherapy for posttraumatic stress disorder
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Kathleen M. Grubbs, Natalie E. Hundt, Jessica A. Chen, Kendall C. Browne, John C. Fortney, and Teresa J. Hudson
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Psychotherapist ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Psychological intervention ,Poison control ,Suicide prevention ,Article ,Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic ,Group psychotherapy ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Injury prevention ,Humans ,Medicine ,Outpatient clinic ,health care economics and organizations ,Applied Psychology ,Veterans ,Cognitive Behavioral Therapy ,business.industry ,Attendance ,humanities ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychotherapy ,Clinical Psychology ,Cognitive processing therapy ,Self Report ,business - Abstract
This study explored rates of non-attendance (i.e., non-initiation, inconsistent attendance, early discontinuation) in cognitive processing therapy (CPT) and other posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) focused individual and group psychotherapies (i.e., interventions with at least some PTSD and/or trauma-related content) and characterized veterans' self-reported reasons for non-attendance in these treatments. Baseline and 6-month follow-up data from the Telemedicine Outreach for PTSD study, a pragmatic randomized effectiveness trial conducted in 11 Veterans Health Administration community-based outpatient clinics, was examined (N = 265 veterans). Over 90% of veterans with a scheduled psychotherapy appointment attended at least one appointment by 6-month follow-up. Self-reported treatment completion was higher for veterans attending individual CPT (25%) than for those attending PTSD-focused individual (4.4%) and group psychotherapy (15.5%). However, rates of inconsistent attendance (13.3%) and early discontinuation (18.3%) were also higher in veterans attending CPT when compared to other forms of PTSD-focused psychotherapy (inconsistent attendance-individual: 2.2%, group: 6.9%; early discontinuation-individual: 14.6%; group: 10.3%). Issues with scheduling appointments was one of the most frequently reported reasons for non-attendance across treatments (> 20%). Logistical barriers, including transportation (CPT), therapy taking too much time (PTSD-focused individual psychotherapy) and not being able to afford counseling (PTSD-focused group psychotherapy), were also commonly cited (i.e., > 15%). Those scheduled to attend CPT (26%) or PTSD-focused individual psychotherapy (11%) also cited treatment efficacy concerns as a reason for non-attendance. Findings suggest logistical barriers, particularly scheduling convenient appointments, and beliefs about treatment may be important to address when engaging veterans in psychotherapy for PTSD. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2021
29. Influence of ractopamine hydrochloride supplementation on pancreatic digestive enzyme activity in finishing steers
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K.R. Maddock-Carlin, Kendall C Swanson, and Ronald J Trotta
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0301 basic medicine ,biology ,Chemistry ,Insulin ,medicine.medical_treatment ,0402 animal and dairy science ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Pharmacology ,Trypsin ,040201 dairy & animal science ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Ractopamine hydrochloride ,Food Animals ,Digestive enzyme ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Animal Science and Zoology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Sixty-nine finishing steers were randomly assigned to one of two treatment groups: supplementation to provide 0 or 267 mg·d−1 of ractopamine hydrochloride (RAC) for 42 d. Twelve steers were slaughtered for tissue and blood collection. Final body weight (BW) tended to be greater with RAC supplementation. Ractopamine hydrochloride supplementation decreased liver mass as a percentage of BW. Pancreatic protein concentration, digestive enzyme activities, serum glucose, and insulin concentrations were not influenced by RAC supplementation. Ractopamine hydrochloride supplementation decreased the pancreatic:α-amylase:trypsin and serum urea nitrogen concentrations. These data suggest that RAC may influence pancreatic exocrine function in cattle.
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- 2021
30. Version 1.1.0—pyfao56: FAO-56 evapotranspiration in Python
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Josh Brekel, Kelly R. Thorp, Kendall C. DeJonge, and Thomas J. Trout
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Software ,Computer Science Applications - Published
- 2023
31. PSIII-6 Late-Breaking: Ground Hybrid Rye as a Partial or Sole Concentrate in Backgrounding Rations
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Colin Tobin, Zachary Carlson, Kendall C Swanson, and Karl Hoppe
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Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Food Science - Abstract
Cereal rye has been utilized in multiple ways within cropping systems in the northern Great Plains. Rye has traditionally not been utilized as a suitable grain for growing and finishing calves. Previously, recommendations have limited the use of rye due to the negative effects of ergot ingestion. Recent hybrid rye germplasms have shown increased yields with decreased incidence of ergot. The aim of this study was to determine the effects of ground hybrid rye inclusion rate on dry matter intake (DMI), growth performance, and feed efficiency in backgrounding beef steers. Two hundred crossbred steers were shipped to the Carrington Research Extension Center near Carrington, ND, stratified by weight, and assigned to one of twenty pens (n = 10 steers/pen). Four treatments were used in a completely randomized block design to evaluate animal performance during backgrounding when fed partial or complete replacement of corn with rye as the concentrate source. Ground hybrid rye was substituted for DRC as follows: a basal diet formulated with 20% DRC: 0% ground hybrid rye (CON), 13.5% DRC: 6.5% ground hybrid rye (RYE1), 6.5% DRC: 13.5% ground hybrid rye (RYE2), or 0% DRC:20% ground hybrid rye (RYE3) on a dry matter basis. Steers were fed for a total of 56 days beginning Oct. 25, 2021. Interim weights were taken on Nov. 22, 2021, and final weights were taken Dec. 20, 2021. At the conclusion of the feeding period, cattle were weighed on two consecutive days to determine final body weight. Performance data including animal live weights, ADG, DMI and G:F ratio were calculated. The use of rye within the diet did not influence steer weight throughout the study (P = 0.11). No differences in ADG were detected throughout the study (P = 0.68). Steers fed diets containing hybrid rye had higher DMI (P = 0.03) and higher F:G (P = 0.04) during the first month of the study. Increased DMI during the initial month of backgrounding may promote improved intake and growth. Results from the study suggest that steers fed rye as a partial or sole grain in a high forage backgrounding diet weighed similar to calves fed corn as the sole concentrate source.
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- 2022
32. 346 Feeding Hempseed Cake Alters the Bovine gut, Respiratory and Reproductive Microbiota
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Thomas Winders, Devin Holman, Kaycie Schmidt, David J Smith, Bryan W Neville, Carl R Dahlen, Kendall C Swanson, and Samat Amat
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Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Food Science - Abstract
A growing number of studies have investigated the viability of feeding hemp by-products as livestock feedstuffs; however, their impact on livestock microbiomes remains unexplored. Here, we evaluated the effects of feeding hempseed cake (HSC) on the gastrointestinal, respiratory, and reproductive microbiota in beef heifers. Angus-crossbred heifers [19-months old; initial body weight (BW) = 494 ± 10 kg] were fed a corn-based finishing diet (10% forage) containing either 20% HSC (n = 15) or 20% corn distillers grains (Control, n = 16) for 111 days until slaughter. Individual feed intake, feeding behavior and BW were measured throughout the study. Rumen fluid and deep nasopharyngeal swabs (days 0 7, 42, 70 and 98), and vaginal and uterine swabs (at slaughter) were collected, and the microbiota assessed using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. HSC feeding resulted in reduced average daily gain (P = 0.05) without influencing feed intake and feeding behavior (P > 0.05) (reported elsewhere). Sampling time had a significant effect on both ruminal (PERMANOVA: R2 = 0.39; P < 0.001) and nasopharyngeal (R2 = 0.18; P < 0.001) microbial community structure. There was also a significant effect of diet on the ruminal (d7– 98; 0.06 ≤ R2 ≤ 0.12; P < 0.05), nasopharyngeal (d 42; R2= 0.18; P < 0.001), and vaginal (R2 = 0.06; P < 0.01) microbiota. Although microbial richness in the rumen, nasopharynx, vagina, and uterus was not affected (P > 0.05) by HSC feeding, microbial diversity (Shannon diversity) was increased in the rumen (d42-98) but reduced in the uterus of HSC heifers (P < 0.05). The relative abundance of five ruminal genera was enriched, while five vaginal genera were reduced in HSC heifers (P < 0.05). Overall, the results of our longitudinal study suggest that feeding hemp by-products can alter the bovine gut, respiratory and reproductive microbiota.
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- 2022
33. Influence of hempseed cake inclusion on growth performance, carcass characteristics, feeding behavior, and blood parameters in finishing heifers
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Thomas M Winders, Eric M Serum, David J Smith, Bryan W Neville, Golam K Mia, Samat Amat, Carl R Dahlen, and Kendall C Swanson
- Subjects
Nitrogen ,General Medicine ,Feeding Behavior ,Animal Feed ,Zea mays ,Diet ,Genetics ,Animals ,Urea ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Cattle ,Female ,Amino Acids ,Edible Grain ,Ruminant Nutrition ,Food Science - Abstract
As the hemp industry continues to develop in the United States, there is an increasing interest in feeding byproducts of industrial hemp production to livestock. A completely randomized design experiment using crossbred finishing heifers (initial body weight [BW] ± SE = 494 ± 10 kg) was conducted to determine the effects of feeding hempseed cake in a corn-based finishing diet (10% forage) formulated to meet or exceed ruminally degradable and metabolizable protein requirements on growth performance, carcass characteristics, feeding behavior, and plasma parameters. Dietary treatments were the inclusion of 20% (dry matter [DM] basis) of dried corn distillers grains plus solubles (DDGS, n = 16) or hempseed cake (HEMP, n = 15). Cattle were housed in two pens, had ad libitum access to feed and water, and individual intakes and feeding behavior were monitored using the Insentec feeding system. Cattle were fed treatment diets for 111 d, and every 14 d BW were measured and blood samples were collected. Blood plasma was analyzed for glucose, urea nitrogen, and individual amino acids, and results were analyzed using repeated-measures analysis in SAS. Final BW, average daily gain, gain:feed, and hot carcass weight decreased (P ≤ 0.05) by 2.3%, 7.7%, 7.7%, and 2.6%, respectively, in heifers fed the HEMP diet than in heifers fed the DDGS diet. Net energy for maintenance and gain (Mcal/kg of feed, DM basis), estimated based on heifer intake and performance, were greater (P = 0.02) for the DDGS diet than for the HEMP diet. All other performance and carcass characteristics were not different (P ≥ 0.20) between treatments. Heifers fed the HEMP diet had greater (P 0.05) plasma urea nitrogen concentration in samples from each collection day compared with heifers fed the DDGS diet, although there was a treatment-by-day interaction (P 0.01) because of variability in the magnitude of treatment differences over time. Plasma glucose concentration was not influenced (P = 0.17) by dietary treatment. Plasma concentrations of total amino acids, nonessential amino acids, and essential amino acids were not different between treatments (P ≥ 0.09), although there were several interactions between treatment and day (P ≤ 0.04) for individual amino acids. These data suggest that hempseed cake has a lower net energy for maintenance and gain relative to DDGS when adequate metabolizable protein is supplied, while still providing adequate nutrition to support the acceptable performance of finishing cattle.This experiment evaluated the effects of dietary inclusion of hempseed cake in comparison with dried corn distillers grains plus solubles (DDGS) on growth performance, feeding behavior, carcass characteristics, and blood parameters in finishing heifers. Angus-crossbred heifers were assigned randomly to one of two treatments (20% hempseed cake [HEMP] or 20% DDGS; dry matter basis) and were fed for 111 d until slaughter. Heifers receiving the DDGS treatment had greater final body weights, average daily gain, gain efficiency, dietary concentration of net energy for maintenance and gain, and carcass weight than heifers fed the HEMP treatment. All other carcass characteristics, as well as feeding behavior, were not influenced by treatment. Plasma urea nitrogen was greater in heifers fed the HEMP diet compared with the DDGS diet, while glucose was not influenced by treatment. Several plasma amino acid concentrations were influenced by treatment. Although the inclusion of hempseed cake decreased growth performance, it could be a viable alternative feed source for cattle.
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- 2022
34. Interaction of replacing corn silage with soyhulls as a roughage source with or without 3% added wheat straw in the diet: impacts on intake, digestibility, and ruminal fermentation in steers fed high-concentrate diets
- Author
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Bryan W Neville, Wayde J Pickinpaugh, Lea J Mittleider, Rebecca L Moore, Kendall C Swanson, and Joel S Caton
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General Veterinary ,food and beverages ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Ruminant Nutrition - Abstract
Six ruminally cannulated steers [475.0 ± 49.6 kg initial body weight (BW)] were used in a 6 × 3 incomplete Latin square design (six treatments and three periods), to evaluate the impacts replacing of corn silage with pelleted soyhulls as roughage in high-concentrate finishing diets containing 30% modified distillers grains with solubles. Treatments were based on increasing dietary inclusion of soyhulls and consisted of: (1) Control (0), roughage supplied by dietary inclusion of 20% corn silage [dry matter (DM) basis]; (2) 50% replacement of corn silage with soyhulls (50); (3) 100% replacement of corn silage with soyhulls (100), and the same three treatments repeated with 3% added wheat straw (DM basis) replacing corn in the diet (0S, 50S, and 100S, respectively). Absolute dry matter intake (DMI; kg/d basis) tended to decrease both linearly and quadratically (P ≤ 0.09) and proportional DMI (% of BW) decreased linearly (P = 0.04) with increasing soyhull inclusion but was not affected by the addition of straw in the diet (P = 0.68). Total tract digestibility of organic matter and crude protein were not affected by soyhull inclusion or added straw (P ≥ 0.32). Ruminal pH did not differ (P = 0.65) with increasing soyhull inclusion but increased with the addition of straw (P < 0.01; 5.9 vs. 6.1 for no straw and straw, respectively). Molar proportions of acetate and butyrate decreased while propionate increased with increased soyhull inclusion (P ≤ 0.03; linearly and quadratically, respectively). Ruminal fluid kinetics were unaffected by either rate of replacement of corn silage with soyhulls or wheat straw inclusion (P ≥ 0.13). Decreases in DMI observed in this study would likely decrease finishing cattle performance and underscores the need for additional research before recommending this practice to cattle feeders.
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- 2022
35. Controversies about immunoglobulin replacement therapy in HSCT recipients with hypogammaglobulinemia
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Akihiro Ohmoto, Shigeo Fuji, Kendall C. Shultes, Bipin N. Savani, and Hermann Einsele
- Subjects
Transplantation ,Agammaglobulinemia ,Hematologic Neoplasms ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Humans ,Immunoglobulins ,Hematology ,Leukemia, Lymphocytic, Chronic, B-Cell - Abstract
The efficacy of immunoglobulin replacement therapy (IgRT) has been demonstrated for primary immune deficiency diseases and hematological malignancies such as chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) or multiple myeloma with hypogammaglobulinemia. Clinical development of anti-B cell therapies including a monoclonal antibody, bispecific antibody, or chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy which could result in severe hypogammaglobulinemia accelerates the argument of prophylactic use of IgRT. Clinical guidelines for CLL describe immunoglobulin administration in patients with a low IgG who have experienced a severe/repeated bacterial infection. The utility in hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation (HSCT) remains unknown. Although an early randomized trial demonstrated that IgRT decreased infection risk and transplant-related mortality after HSCT, subsequent clinical trials could not validate the benefit. Consequently, a meta-analysis did not show the benefit of IgRT in HSCT. Most of the available data derives from matched-related HSCT using myeloablative regimen, and the impact in haploidentical and cord blood transplantation, or reduced-intensity HSCT remains unknown. One crucial issue is that no studies exist for patients with only hypogammaglobulinemia after HSCT. Other challenges are heterogeneous patient characteristics, or immunoglobulin formulation, dosage, schedule, route and duration of IgRT. Without evidence in HSCT, it would be reasonable to follow the guidelines for other diseases with hypogammaglobulinemia.
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- 2022
36. Effects of Supplemental Leucine on Growth, Nutrient Use, and Muscle and Visceral Tissue Mass in Holstein Bull Calves Fed Milk Replacer
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Jessica N. Reiners, Michael A. Steele, Kimberly A. Vonnahme, Kasey R. Maddock Carlin, and Kendall C. Swanson
- Abstract
To determine the effects of leucine supplementation on body weight (BW), tissue mass, nutrient digestibility, the concentration of serum amino acids (AAs) and metabolites, and protein abundance of elongation initiation factor 4E (eIF4E) in skeletal muscle, 23 Holstein bull calves (43. 3 ± 1.16 kg; 11.3 ± 0.57 days of age) fed milk replacer at 2.5% of body weight (BW; dry matter basis) were used in a randomized complete block design. Leucine was supplemented at 0, 0.4, 0.6, or 0.8 g Leu/kg BW per day for 28 d. Data were analyzed using the MIXED procedure of SAS. Leucine supplementation did not affect calf BW (P = 0.73), and digestibility of nitrogen (P = 0.21), organic matter (P = 0.28), and dry matter (P = 0.28). Masses proportional to BW of the pancreas (P = 0.04), omasum (P < 0.01), and spleen (P = 0.01) were quadratically affected by treatment where tissue mass decreased at 0.4 g Leu/kg BW and increased at 0.6 and 0.8 g Leu/kg BW. Semitendinosus mass proportional to BW tended (P = 0.07) to be quadratically affected, as tissue mass increased at 0.4 g Leu/kg BW, and decreased at 0.6 and 0.8 g Leu/kg BW. Serum Leu concentration increased linearly (P = 0.002; day × time × treatment) across days and after feedings with increased supplemental Leu. Increasing supplemental Leu linearly decreased serum Ala (P < 0.01), Arg (P = 0.04), Ile (P = 0.02), Met (P < 0.01), and Pro (P = 0.05) concentrations, and quadratically affected serum Glu (P = 0.04) and Lys (P = 0.03) concentrations where serum Glu and Lys concentrations were decreased at 0.4 g Leu/kg BW and increased at 0.6 and 0.8 g Leu/kg BW. There was no effect of treatment on protein abundance of eIF4E in semitendinosus or longissimus dorsi. These data indicate that supplemental Leu did not influence ADG and nitrogen retention in calves fed milk replacer. However, changes in serum AA concentrations and tissue masses proportional to BW suggest that supplementation of Leu at lower levels could increase the use of AA for non-visceral tissue growth.
- Published
- 2022
37. Influence of dietary fructose supplementation on visceral organ mass, carbohydrase activity, and mRNA expression of genes involved in small intestinal carbohydrate assimilation in neonatal calves
- Author
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Ronald J Trotta, Alison K Ward, and Kendall C Swanson
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Glycoside Hydrolases ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Carbohydrase ,Fructose ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,Intestine, Small ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,RNA, Messenger ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,biology ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Lactase ,Nutrients ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Carbohydrate ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Small intestine ,Diet ,Glucose ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Animals, Newborn ,chemistry ,Dietary Supplements ,biology.protein ,Carbohydrate Metabolism ,GLUT2 ,Cattle ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Milk Substitutes ,Maltase ,GLUT5 ,Food Science - Abstract
The hypothesis of this experiment was that dietary fructose would influence visceral organ mass, carbohydrase activity, and mRNA expression of carbohydrases and nutrient transporters in the small intestine in neonatal calves. Therefore, our objective was to use the neonatal calf as a model to evaluate the effects of postruminal fructose supply on small intestinal carbohydrate assimilation. Ten calves (
- Published
- 2020
38. Therapeutic alliance across trauma-focused and non-trauma-focused psychotherapies among veterans with PTSD
- Author
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Kathleen M. Grubbs, Hannah E. Bergman, Jessica A. Chen, Kendall C. Browne, John C. Fortney, Patrick J. Raue, and Teresa J. Hudson
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Therapeutic Alliance ,Collaborative Care ,PsycINFO ,Psychological Trauma ,Article ,law.invention ,Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Humans ,Outpatient clinic ,Medicine ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,Applied Psychology ,Aged ,Veterans ,Cognitive Behavioral Therapy ,Primary Health Care ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,United States ,United States Department of Veterans Affairs ,Clinical Psychology ,Posttraumatic stress ,Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care ,Alliance ,Supportive psychotherapy ,Cognitive processing therapy ,Female ,business ,Follow-Up Studies ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Trauma-focused psychotherapies for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are not widely utilized. Clinicians report concerns that direct discussion of traumatic experiences could undermine the therapeutic alliance, which may negatively impact retention and outcome. Studies among adolescents with PTSD found no difference in alliance between trauma-focused and non-trauma-focused psychotherapies, but this has not been tested among adults. The present study is a secondary analysis of a randomized trial of collaborative care, also known as care management, for PTSD. We examined patient-reported therapeutic alliance among 117 veterans with PTSD who participated in cognitive processing therapy (CPT, now called CPT + A; n = 54) or non-trauma-focused supportive psychotherapy for PTSD (n = 73) at VA community outpatient clinics. We tested the hypothesis that alliance in CPT would be noninferior to (i.e., not significantly worse than) non-trauma-focused psychotherapy using patient ratings on the Revised Helping Alliance Questionnaire. Patients' therapeutic alliance scores were high across both groups (CPT: M = 5.13, SD = 0.71, 95% CI [4.96, 5.30]; non-trauma-focused psychotherapy: M = 4.89, SD = 0.64, 95% CI [4.73, 5.05]). The difference between groups (0.23, 95% CI [0.01, 0.48]) was less than the "noninferiority margin" based on suggested clinical cutoffs (0.58 points on a 1-6 scale). These results held even after adjusting for veterans' demographic and clinical characteristics and change in PTSD symptoms from baseline to follow-up. Although there are concerns that direct discussion of traumatic experiences could worsen therapeutic alliance, patients report similar levels of alliance in CPT and non-trauma-focused supportive psychotherapy. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2020
39. Overcoming presynaptic effects of VAMP2 mutations with 4‐aminopyridine treatment
- Author
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Marwan Shinawi, Malay A. Phoong, Angela E. Scheuerle, Susan M. Voglmaier, Nitin Khandelwal, Magda S. Santos, Elliott H. Sherr, Roxanne Simmons, Ege T. Kavalali, Michael Chez, Ruiji Jiang, Haiyan Li, Bethany Smith-Packard, Kendall C. Parks, Shaun A. Hussain, Audrey Cortesi, Baris Alten, Brianna M. Paul, Sanam J. Lalani, and Heather G. Fisher
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Vesicle-Associated Membrane Protein 2 ,Biology ,Neurotransmission ,Synaptic Transmission ,Synaptic vesicle ,Exocytosis ,03 medical and health sciences ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Synaptic vesicle recycling ,4-Aminopyridine ,Genetics (clinical) ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,VAMP2 ,030305 genetics & heredity ,Potassium channel blocker ,Electrophysiology ,Mutation ,GABAergic ,Female ,Synaptic Vesicles ,Neuroscience ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Clinical and genetic features of five unrelated patients with de novo pathogenic variants in the synaptic vesicle-associated membrane protein 2 (VAMP2) reveal common features of global developmental delay, autistic tendencies, behavioral disturbances, and a higher propensity to develop epilepsy. For one patient, a cognitively impaired adolescent with a de novo stop-gain VAMP2 mutation, we tested a potential treatment strategy, enhancing neurotransmission by prolonging action potentials with the aminopyridine family of potassium channel blockers, 4-aminopyridine and 3,4-diaminopyridine, in vitro and in vivo. Synaptic vesicle recycling and neurotransmission were assayed in neurons expressing three VAMP2 variants by live-cell imaging and electrophysiology. In cellular models, two variants decrease both the rate of exocytosis and the number of synaptic vesicles released from the recycling pool, compared with wild-type. Aminopyridine treatment increases the rate and extent of exocytosis and total synaptic charge transfer and desynchronizes GABA release. The clinical response of the patient to 2 years of off-label aminopyridine treatment includes improved emotional and behavioral regulation by parental report, and objective improvement in standardized cognitive measures. Aminopyridine treatment may extend to patients with pathogenic variants in VAMP2 and other genes influencing presynaptic function or GABAergic tone, and tested in vitro before treatment.
- Published
- 2020
40. A concavity property of generalized complete elliptic integrals
- Author
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Jordan N. Smith and Kendall C. Richards
- Subjects
Pure mathematics ,Property (philosophy) ,Applied Mathematics ,010102 general mathematics ,Elliptic integral ,010103 numerical & computational mathematics ,Function (mathematics) ,0101 mathematics ,Hypergeometric function ,01 natural sciences ,Analysis ,Mathematics - Abstract
We prove that, for p∈(1,∞) and β∈R, the function x↦β−log1−xpKp(xp) is strictly concave on (0,1) if and only if β≥λ(p):=2p(p2−2p+2)(p−1)(2p2−3p+3), where Kp represents the generalized complete p-el...
- Published
- 2020
41. Lessons Learned from Running a Conference in the Time of COVID-19 and the Silver Linings of Shifting to Online
- Author
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Stuart Young, Madelaine Broadfoot, Rosanne Hart, David Schmidt, Kendall C. Mollison, Paul Donaldson, Annette Burke, and Hannah E. Power
- Subjects
World Wide Web ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,History ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Oceanography - Published
- 2020
42. Differences in soil water changes and canopy temperature under varying water × nitrogen sufficiency for maize
- Author
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Tsz Him Lo, Yufeng Ge, Derek M. Heeren, Daran R. Rudnick, Hope Njuki Nakabuye, Trenton E. Franz, Geng Bai, Abia Katimbo, Kendall C. DeJonge, and Xin Qiao
- Subjects
Canopy ,Irrigation ,0207 environmental engineering ,Irrigation scheduling ,Soil Science ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Growing season ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,02 engineering and technology ,Nitrogen ,chemistry ,Agronomy ,Neutron probe ,Soil water ,040103 agronomy & agriculture ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Environmental science ,020701 environmental engineering ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Water use ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
Crop nitrogen (N) status is known to affect crop water status and crop water use. To investigate further the N effects on soil water changes and on canopy temperature, three water levels × four N levels were imposed on two growing seasons of maize in west central Nebraska, USA. Soil water changes were measured using a neutron probe, whereas canopy temperature was measured using infrared thermometers on a ground-based mobile platform. At all water levels, soil water losses over month-long intervals were generally greater as N levels increased. Given equal water levels, early afternoon canopy temperatures were usually lower with higher N levels, but no trend or even the opposite trend was occasionally observed. Jointly considering canopy reflectance and soil water depletion shows potential to explain much of the variation in estimated instantaneous water use among plots. However, determining the relative contributions of the canopy and soil factors on a particular day may require season-to-date knowledge of the crop. Further research on assimilating such sensor data for a combined stress coefficient would improve crop modeling and irrigation scheduling when variable water sufficiency and variable N sufficiency are simultaneously significant.
- Published
- 2020
43. Effects of dietary supplement sources on the rate and extent of in vitro ruminal degradation of alfalfa-based diets for cattle
- Author
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Ronald J Trotta and Kendall C Swanson
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,030109 nutrition & dietetics ,Dietary supplement ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Frothy bloat ,food and beverages ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Biology ,Body weight ,040201 dairy & animal science ,03 medical and health sciences ,Rumen ,Animal science ,Food Animals ,Alfalfa hay ,Animal Science and Zoology - Abstract
Two ruminally cannulated steers [928 ± 25.5 kg body weight (BW)] were fed alfalfa hay at 2.0% of BW and served as donors of rumen fluid. Treatments were early-bud alfalfa (CON) or a combination [dry matter (DM) basis] of 80% early-bud alfalfa with 20% of corn silage (CS), brome grass hay (BGH), soybean hulls (SBH), beet pulp (BP), corn grain (CORN), dried corn distillers’ grains with solubles (DDGS), or wheat middlings (MIDD). Tubes were incubated at multiple time points over a 72 h period and assessed for rate and extent of digestion. Samples were run in duplicate and replicated over 3 d. The potential extent of DM and organic matter (OM) degradation increased (P
- Published
- 2020
44. Duodenal Infusions of Starch with Casein or Glutamic Acid Influence Pancreatic and Small Intestinal Carbohydrase Activities in Cattle
- Author
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Subash Acharya, Ronald J Trotta, Kendall C Swanson, Derek Brake, and Leonardo G Sitorski
- Subjects
Male ,Glycoside Hydrolases ,Duodenum ,Glutamic Acid ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Carbohydrase ,Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic ,Sucrase ,03 medical and health sciences ,Casein ,medicine ,Animals ,Food science ,Pancreas ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,biology ,Chemistry ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Caseins ,Starch ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Small intestine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Alpha-glucosidase ,biology.protein ,Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena ,Cattle ,Digestion ,Maltase ,Isomaltase - Abstract
BACKGROUND Small intestinal starch digestion in ruminants is potentially limited by inadequate production of carbohydrases. Previous research has demonstrated that small intestinal starch digestion can be improved by postruminal supply of casein or glutamic acid. However, the mechanisms by which casein and glutamic acid increase starch digestion are not well understood. OBJECTIVES The objective of this experiment was to evaluate the effects of duodenal infusions of starch with casein or glutamic acid on postruminal carbohydrase activities in cattle. METHODS Twenty-two steers [mean body weight (BW) = 179 ± 4.23 kg] were surgically fitted with duodenal and ileal cannulas and limit-fed a soybean hull-based diet containing small amounts of starch. Raw cornstarch (1.61 ± 0.0869 kg/d) was infused into the duodenum alone (control), or with 118 ± 7.21 g glutamic acid/d, or 428 ± 19.4 g casein/d. Treatments were infused continuously for 58 d and then steers were killed for tissue collection. Activities of pancreatic (α-amylase) and intestinal (maltase, isomaltase, glucoamylase, sucrase) carbohydrases were determined. Data were analyzed as a randomized complete block (replicate group) design using the GLM procedure of SAS to determine effects of infusion treatment. RESULTS Duodenal casein infusion increased (P
- Published
- 2020
45. A concavity property of the complete elliptic integral of the first kind
- Author
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Kendall C. Richards and Horst Alzer
- Subjects
Pure mathematics ,Property (philosophy) ,If and only if ,Applied Mathematics ,010102 general mathematics ,Elliptic integral ,010103 numerical & computational mathematics ,Function (mathematics) ,0101 mathematics ,Hypergeometric function ,01 natural sciences ,Analysis ,Mathematics - Abstract
We prove that the function Ga(x)=a−log(1−x)K(x)(a∈R) is strictly concave on (0,1) if and only if a≥8/5. This solves a problem posed by Yang and Tian and complements their result that 1/Ga (a≥0) is...
- Published
- 2020
46. Review: Nutritional regulation of intestinal starch and protein assimilation in ruminants
- Author
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David L. Harmon and Kendall C Swanson
- Subjects
Rumen ,Brush border ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Starch ,Protein digestion ,digestion ,SF1-1100 ,0403 veterinary science ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Casein ,Intestine, Small ,Dietary Carbohydrates ,medicine ,Animals ,Food science ,Amino Acids ,Pancreas ,intestinal ,Chemistry ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Caseins ,Proteins ,Assimilation (biology) ,Ruminants ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Carbohydrate ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Small intestine ,Diet ,Animal culture ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,carbohydrate ,cattle ,Fermentation ,Animal Science and Zoology ,alpha-Amylases ,Energy Intake ,absorption ,amino acid - Abstract
Pregastric fermentation along with production practices that are dependent on high-energy diets means ruminants rely heavily on starch and protein assimilation for a substantial portion of their nutrient needs. While the majority of dietary starch may be fermented in the rumen, significant portions can flow to the small intestine. The initial phase of small intestinal digestion requires pancreatic α-amylase. Numerous nutritional factors have been shown to influence pancreatic α-amylase secretion with starch producing negative effects and casein, certain amino acids and dietary energy having positive effects. To date, manipulation of α-amylase secretion has not resulted in substantial changes in digestibility. The second phase of digestion involves the actions of the brush border enzymes sucrase-isomaltase and maltase-glucoamylase. Genetically, ruminants appear to possess these enzymes; however, the absence of measurable sucrase activity and limited adaptation with changes in diet suggests a reduced capacity for this phase of digestion. The final phase of carbohydrate assimilation is glucose transport. Ruminants possess Na+-dependent glucose transport that has been shown to be inducible. Because of the nature of pregastric fermentation, ruminants see a near constant flow of microbial protein to the small intestine. This results in a nutrient supply, which places a high priority on protein digestion and utilization. Comparatively, little research has been conducted describing protein assimilation. Enzymes and processes appear consistent with non-ruminants and are likely not limiting for efficient digestion of most feedstuffs. The mechanisms regulating the nutritional modulation of digestive function in the small intestine are complex and coordinated via the substrate, neural and hormonal effects in the small intestine, pancreas, peripheral tissues and the pituitary-hypothalamic axis. More research is needed in ruminants to help unravel the complexities by which small intestinal digestion is regulated with the aim of developing approaches to enhance and improve the efficiency of small intestinal digestion.
- Published
- 2020
47. Canopy Temperature Bias from Soil Variability Enhanced at High Temperatures
- Author
-
Huihui Zhang, Kendall C. DeJonge, Thomas J. Trout, and Saleh Taghvaeian
- Subjects
Canopy ,Biomedical Engineering ,Soil Science ,Environmental science ,Forestry ,Atmospheric sciences ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Food Science - Abstract
HighlightMaize canopy temperature (Tc) was evaluated among four replicates of seven irrigation treatments.Individual replicates showed Tc bias correlated with soil electroconductivity and increasing Tc.At high Tc values (above 35°C), Tc bias was up to 5.0°C among plots with the same irrigation schedule.ABSTRACT. Maize canopy temperature was monitored on a continuous basis for two growing seasons in a limited-irrigation maize experiment with seven separate irrigation treatments and four replicates of each treatment. Soil electroconductivity (EC) was measured and mapped to quantify the variation in soil texture throughout the plots and was correlated with the average field capacity of the soil (R2 = 0.51). At lower canopy temperatures, indicating little or no water stress, very little difference was observed between replicates within the same treatment. However, at higher temperatures, soil texture had a greater influence on temperature, with soils having lower EC (and therefore lower water-holding capacity) showing more water stress. More specifically, at canopy temperatures above 29°C, the influence of soil texture biased the temperature by up to 2.0°C over the EC range of 16.9 to 40.2 mS m-1; at mean canopy temperatures of 35°C, this bias could be more than 5.0°C between field replicates. Results similar to the continuous infrared thermometry were found using nadir thermal images. This study demonstrates the importance of understanding the potential effects of soil variability on canopy temperature, which could have profound implications for spatially variable field-based management using thermal imaging or similar technologies. Keywords: Canopy temperature, Infrared thermometry, Limited irrigation, Soil variability.
- Published
- 2020
48. Perspectives on Global Water Security
- Author
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Margaret Catley-Carlson, Indra Mani, R. Daren Harmel, Edward M. Barnes, Kendall C. DeJonge, Sherry Hunt, Srinivasulu Ale, Suat Irmak, Steven R. Evett, A. Pouyan Nejadhashemi, and Indrajeet Chaubey
- Subjects
Wastewater reuse ,Food security ,business.industry ,0208 environmental biotechnology ,Biomedical Engineering ,Soil Science ,Forestry ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,02 engineering and technology ,Public relations ,Natural resource ,020801 environmental engineering ,Water scarcity ,Water security ,Work (electrical) ,Agriculture ,Political science ,040103 agronomy & agriculture ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Irrigation efficiency ,business ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Food Science - Abstract
HighlightsASABE and ISAE convened the Global Water Security Conference for Agriculture and Natural Resources in Hyderabad, India, in 2018.Recommendations represent collective contribution of attendees and presenters in seven key priorities.Continuation of a narrow focus on technical aspects will likely prevent the success of technical solutions.Scientists and engineers should work together across all disciplines and boundaries to ensure global water security. Keywords: Climate change, Crop water productivity, Food security, Irrigation efficiency, Natural resource policy, Wastewater reuse, Water resource infrastructure, Water scarcity.
- Published
- 2020
49. Effect of feeding a low-vitamin A diet on carcass and production characteristics of steers with a high or low propensity for marbling
- Author
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Kendall C Swanson, J.H. Liu, E. E. Knutson, K.R. Maddock-Carlin, A Fontoura, A. C. B. Menezes, Alison K Ward, Marc L Bauer, and Xin Sun
- Subjects
Vitamin ,Meat ,040301 veterinary sciences ,genotype ,Marbled meat ,Biology ,SF1-1100 ,Feed conversion ratio ,adipogenesis ,meat quality ,0403 veterinary science ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animal science ,Animals ,Backgrounding ,Camera image ,Vitamin A ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Retinol ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Animal Feed ,beef ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Breed ,Diet ,Animal culture ,Adipose Tissue ,chemistry ,Body Composition ,Cattle ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Intramuscular fat ,retinol - Abstract
Our research group demonstrated that vitamin A restriction affected meat quality of Angus cross and Simmental steers. Therefore, the aim of this study is to highlight the genotype variations in response to dietary vitamin A levels. Commercial Angus and Simmental steers (n = 32 per breed; initial BW = 337.2 ± 5.9 kg; ~8 months of age) were fed a low-vitamin A (LVA) (1017 IU/kg DM) backgrounding diet for 95 days to reduce hepatic vitamin A stores. During finishing, steers were randomly assigned to treatments in a 2 × 2 factorial arrangement of genotype × dietary vitamin A concentration. The LVA treatment was a finishing diet with no supplemental vitamin A (723 IU vitamin A/kg DM); the control (CON) was the LVA diet plus supplementation with 2200 IU vitamin A/kg DM. Blood samples were collected at three time points throughout the study to analyze serum retinol concentration. At the completion of finishing, steers were slaughtered at a commercial abattoir. Meat characteristics assessed were intramuscular fat concentration, color, Warner-Bratzler shear force, cook loss and pH. Camera image analysis was used for determination of marbling, 12th rib back fat and longissimus muscle area (LMA). The LVA steers had lower (P < 0.001) serum retinol concentration than CON steers. The LVA treatment resulted in greater (P = 0.03) average daily gain than the CON treatment, 1.52 and 1.44 ± 0.03 kg/day, respectively; however, there was no effect of treatment on final BW, DM intake or feed efficiency. Cooking loss and yield grade were greater and LMA was smaller in LVA steers (P < 0.05). There was an interaction between breed and treatment for marbling score (P = 0.01) and percentage of carcasses grading United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Prime (P = 0.02). For Angus steers, LVA treatment resulted in a 16% greater marbling score than CON (683 and 570 ± 40, respectively) and 27% of LVA Angus steers graded USDA Prime compared with 0% for CON. Conversely, there was no difference in marbling score or USDA Quality Grades between LVA and CON for Simmental steers. In conclusion, feeding a LVA diet during finishing increased marbling in Angus but not in Simmental steers. Reducing the vitamin A level of finishing diets fed to cattle with a high propensity to marble, such as Angus, has the potential to increase economically important traits such as marbling and quality grade without negatively impacting gain : feed or yield grade.
- Published
- 2020
50. The sedimentology and tsunamigenic potential of the Byron submarine landslide off New South Wales, Australia
- Author
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Samantha Clarke, Kendall C. Mollison, Thomas Hubble, Emily M. Lane, A.T. Baxter, and Hannah E. Power
- Subjects
Paleontology ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Geology ,Ocean Engineering ,Sedimentology ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Water Science and Technology ,Submarine landslide - Published
- 2020
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