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UAB Total Joint Replacement Research Collaboration Supported By New NIH Funding
Newly announced National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding will expand the reach of ongoing University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) research into a unique nanostructured coating to improve the performance and longevity of total joint replacement components. The broadened UAB research opportunity is funded by a four-year, $790,931 National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant through the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS).
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Aiming For 'Below The Norm' Blood Pressure Offers No Benefit
Aiming for lower than standard blood pressure targets offers no known clinical benefit, according to a Cochrane Review. In a systematic review of the evidence, researchers found that using antihypertensive drugs to reduce blood pressure below the 140/90 mm Hg standard was not associated with any reduction in death rates or serious morbidity.
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Canadian Lung Association Launches New Online Tools To Help People With Lung Disease Find Local Programs
Want to find an asthma education centre or a chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) clinic near you? Need to get a lung function test and don"t know where to go?
Oncology

What Makes An Angry Fly?

A suite of genes that affect aggression in the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster has been identified. By investigating male flies from a large panel of lines which each carry a mutation in a single gene but are otherwise genetically identical, researchers writing in the open access journal BMC Biology identified particularly angry and particularly placid insects, uncovering 59 mutations in 57 genes that affect aggressive behavior. Trudy Mackay, from North Carolina State University, led a team of researchers who carried out the experiments. She said, "Many of the genes we identified affect the development and function of the nervous system, and are thus plausibly relevant to the execution of complex behaviors. We studied nine mutations in extra detail and found that each had multiple effects on the size and shape of an insect"s brain". In order to measure aggression in the flies, Mackay and her colleagues starved them for a short period, and then allowed them to compete for and defend a limited food re. They found that 32 of the mutations studied resulted in increased aggression while 27 caused flies to become more placid. None of the candidate genes identified in this study have been previously implicated in determining aggressive behavior. The researchers say these results may also be relevant to behavior in other animal species, "Given the conservation of aggressive behavior among different animal species, these are novel candidate genes for future study in other animals, including humans". Notes: Mutations in many genes affect aggressive behavior in Drosophila melanogaster Alexis C Edwards, Liesbeth Zwarts, Akihiko Yamamoto, Patrick Callaerts and Trudy FC Mackay BMC Biology (in press) Graeme Baldwin BioMed Central


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