locomotion analysis
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2021 ◽  
Vol 50 (2) ◽  
pp. 429-436
Author(s):  
Tzer Sien Tan ◽  
Muhammad Firdaus Sathik Rahman ◽  
Siti Sara Ismail ◽  
Nur Najihah Mohamad ◽  
Ahmad Hazim Mustaffa ◽  
...  

Vitamin E is an established antioxidant. However, the effect of vitamin E on healthspan, which deteriorates during ageing, has not been determined because most related studies have emphasized its effects on lifespan. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to determine the effect of palm tocotrienol-rich fraction (TRF) on the lifespan, locomotion and thermotolerance of Caenorhabditis elegans, which share many common gene sequences with humans. The nematodes were treated with different concentrations of TRF (0 - 200 μg/mL), and the number of surviving nematodes at each concentration (N=30, duplicate) was counted daily under a light microscope to determine the optimal dose of treatment. The nematodes were divided into 3 groups, namely; control, Tween-80 (vehicle) and TRF-treated. Locomotion and thermotolerance were determined on day 4 and 12 of treatment in adult nematodes. ImageJ was used for locomotion analysis, and thermotolerance was determined based on nematode survivals after exposure to 37 °C. TRF-treated C. elegans had significantly longer lifespans compared to controls (P = 0.003). The TRF group (50 μg/mL) had the longest mean lifespan (23.5 days), which was significantly longer compared to controls, (18.5 days; (P = 0.002). However, locomotion was similar between all groups. In the thermotolerance assay, the survival determined on day 4 and day 12 of TRF-treatment was higher compared to controls (P= 0.046). Interestingly, the Tween- 80-treated group showed similar results as the TRF-treated group compared to controls. The findings indicate that TRF prolongs the lifespan and increases the thermotolerance of C. elegans but does not improve the locomotion of the worms as they age.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021.59 (0) ◽  
pp. 10c2
Author(s):  
Shiori MIYAMOTO ◽  
Naoki MIYAMOTO ◽  
Tetsuya KINUGASA ◽  
Ryota HAYASHI ◽  
Koji YOSHIDA ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 138-147
Author(s):  
Grigoriy Yashin ◽  
Anton Egorov ◽  
Zhanibek Darush ◽  
Nikolay Zherdev ◽  
Dzmitry Tsetserukou

2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (16) ◽  
pp. 9274-9282 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianian Zheng ◽  
Huiyi Cao ◽  
Diliang Chen ◽  
Rahila Ansari ◽  
Kuo-Chung Chu ◽  
...  

scholarly journals The Late Carboniferous was a crucial interval for the establishment of terrestrial ecosystems. A dramatic change in tetrapod distribution and ecology is coupled with an ongoing transition from amphibian to amniote domination. Presented here is a new set of tetrapod footprints from a single slab discovered on the island of Bjørnøya in the Norwegian High Arctic. A three-dimensional photogrammetric model was constructed to allow analysis of the trackway, and palaeoenvironmental observations were taken to provide context to the ichnological determinations. The slab appears to preserve the transition from swimming to walking. Statistical tests provide indication that there is a significant change in locomotive behaviour (swimming to walking) present on the slab (p = 0.0026, n = 15). This coincides with a change in the preservation style and an apparent change in the depth of water traversed by the tracemaker. Two trackways can be assigned to the ichnogenus Limnopus Marsh, 1894 (temnospondyl amphibians). They consist of 36 and 24 prints, respectively, and have widths and lengths of 151 mm x 2149 mm and 166 mm x 1226 mm. Two other trackways represent the traces of indeterminate tetrapods. Palaeoenvironmental analysis suggests that the trackways had lain in a fluvial floodplain setting in a palaeo-river valley system, in agreement with regional-scale analyses. Locomotion analysis suggests that on moving from submerged walking and swimming to terrestrial walking, this large Late Carboniferous temnospondyl increased its pace angulation and lengthened its stride. At ~30°N, these tracks may be the farthest north Limnopus trackways yet found in terms of palaeolatitude. They are the first Carboniferous tetrapod traces discovered from Svalbard and are probably among the oldest examples of Limnopus yet found.

Author(s):  
Sean Thor Herron ◽  
Edward James Fleming ◽  
Michael John Flowerdew

2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 3854-3860
Author(s):  
Mert Ali Ihsan Kaln ◽  
Cem Aygul ◽  
Altay Turkmen ◽  
Joanna Kwiczak-Yigitbas ◽  
Bilge Baytekin ◽  
...  
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