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Acute and Sublethal Impacts of Crude Oil Photo-Induced Toxicity in an Early Life Stage Marine Fish (Sciaenops ocellatus) and Invertebrate (Americamysis bahia)

We investigated the modifying effects of ultraviolet (UV) light and chemical dispersant (Corexit 9500A) on crude oil toxicity in juvenile mysids (≤ 24 h) (Americamysis bahia) and larval red drum (24-72 hpf) (Sciaenops ocellatus). These results demonstrate that crude oil toxicity significantly increases with co-exposure to environmentally relevant UV levels in both species, indicating photo-induced toxicity. This toxicity was further exacerbated by the application of chemical dispersants which increased the dissolution and concentration of oil-derived polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in test solutions. To better understand the mechanisms and initiating events of this observed photo-induced toxicity, the incidence of apoptotic cell death and global transcriptomic changes were assessed in larval red drum (24-72 hpf) following co-exposure to crude oil and UV. These results showed that co-exposure to UV and low concentrations of crude oil (<1 µg/L ∑PAH50) induced apoptotic cell death in skin and eye tissue and altered transcriptomic pathways related to visual processing and dermatological disease. To link these cellular and molecular impacts of photo-induced toxicity to apical endpoints of ecological performance, sublethal impacts to growth, metabolic rate, and visually mediated behaviors were explored in larval red drum at 2 developmental stages. These results suggested that earlier life stages may …
Date: December 2023
Creator: Leads, Rachel Renee
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library

Bottom-Up Impacts of Grazing Disturbance on Ground-Nesting Bee Assemblages: Do They Dig It?

In my thesis, I examined impacts of nesting and floral resources on ground-nesting bee assemblages at nine ranch sites with differing grazing histories. Because ecological disturbances can strongly affect the availability of foraging and nesting resources over time, I also examined the impacts of grazing history on nesting and floral resources for ground-nesting bees. I sampled bee assemblages, a comprehensive array of vegetation and soil measures, and floral abundance and richness. I used these data to determine (1) the importance of different nesting habitat resources and livestock grazing history for ground-nesting bees and (2) how livestock grazing history influenced the availability of nesting and floral resources. I found that sites with sandier soils had greater abundance and richness of ground-nesting bees, and sites with less compacted soils had greater bee abundance. Contrary to many other studies, the availability of bare ground was not important for ground-nesting bee abundance or richness. Grazing history did not affect any measures of nesting or floral habitat, and had negligible effects on ground-nesting bee abundance, richness, and community composition. My results suggest that the availability of sandier or less compacted soils may be limiting for ground-nesting bee abundance or richness, especially in areas with predominately …
Date: December 2023
Creator: Collins, Shannon Marie
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library

The Effect of Developmental Hypoxia on Cardiac Physiology in Three Species: Alligator mississippiensis, Chelydra serpentina, and Danio rerio

In this dissertation, I explored the effects of developmental hypoxia on heart contractility in three separate species of ectotherms: the common snapping turtle (Chelydra serpentina), the American alligator (Alligator mississippiensis), and the zebrafish (Danio rerio). I began with the common snapping turtle and tested whether the utilization of the sarcoplasmic reticulum was altered in response to developmental hypoxia. In the next two chapters, developmental hypoxia of the American alligator was explored studying how the cardiac tissue was affected, specifically in physiological stressors, sarcoplasmic reticulum utilization and sensitivity to pharmacological increases in contractility. The last chapter explored how zebrafish heart contractility was altered in response to chronic hypoxia from egg to adult. Findings from these chapters suggest that while developmental hypoxia did alter cardiac contractility, it did not alter the response of the heart to physiological stressors such as increased heart rate or under hypoxia. Overall, these findings contribute to increasing the current understanding of how developmental hypoxia alters the cardiovascular system but with an emphasis on the cardiac tissue level.
Date: December 2023
Creator: Smith, Brandt Ragan
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library

Factors Affecting MeHg Contamination of Spiders and Insect-Mediated MeHg Flux from Human-Made Ponds

The present study focused on methylmercury (MeHg) in emergent aquatic insects and spiders from human-made ponds. This dissertation addresses two main topics: (1) factors affecting variation in spider MeHg concentrations around human-made ponds and (2) the magnitude of MeHg transported out of human-made ponds by emergent aquatic insects (insect-mediated MeHg flux). Spiders were specifically targeted in this study because they have been proposed as sentinels of MeHg contamination (organism whose tissue concentrations reflect the level of MeHg in the environment). Spider MeHg concentrations were related to spider diet, size, and proximity to waterbody, but affected individual spider taxa differently. In a second study, I found that only "large" spiders within a taxa had tissue concentrations positively related to prey MeHg concentrations. These results indicate that the relationship between spider and prey MeHg could be size-dependent and that "large" spiders within a taxa may better reflect ambient MeHg contamination. Finally, I tested a conceptual model hypothesizing insect-mediated MeHg flux from human-made ponds is controlled by pond permanence and fish presence. In agreement with the conceptual model, insect-mediated MeHg flux from ponds was suppressed by the presence of fish, likely due to fish predation on emergent insect larvae. I found the mean …
Date: December 2023
Creator: Hannappel, Madeline Pratt
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library

Suburban Succession and Stream Dynamics

Increasingly higher numbers of people are moving into urbanizing environments, yet our understanding of ecosystem consequences of rapid urbanization is still in its infancy. In this dissertation, I assessed dynamics of residential landscapes during suburban succession and consequences for ecosystem functioning. First, I used a space-for-time approach to quantify more than a century of suburban succession in the Dallas – Fort Worth metroplex (DFW). Attributes of residential landscape plant diversity and habitat complexity were quantified for 232 individual properties nested within 14 neighborhoods constructed between 1906 and 2020. Suburban succession progressed from simple turf lawns with limited habitat complexity to landscapes dominated by deciduous trees and high habitat complexity, but homeowner decisions related to landscape management affect the rate of that transition and the number of plants and taxa present. Next, I used the novel spatial construct of "neighborhoodsheds" to test for effects of suburban succession on carbon export, and found that the proportion of carbon derived from C3 vs. C4 plants was affected by neighborhood plant community structure (i.e. greater proportion of trees and shrubs primarily in later stages of suburban succession). Finally, I conducted a mesocosm experiment to test effects of changes in allochthonous inputs during suburban succession …
Date: December 2023
Creator: McGillewie, Sara B.
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Air Breathing Fish: Development of Air Breathing in Bristlenose Plecos (Ancistrus cirrhosus) (open access)

Air Breathing Fish: Development of Air Breathing in Bristlenose Plecos (Ancistrus cirrhosus)

The bristlenose pleco (Ancistrus cirrhosus) is a species of armored catfish in the Loricariidae family that breathes air facultatively when the aquatic environment becomes hypoxic. The bristlenose pleco uses its highly vascularized stomach as an air breathing organ. The two main goals of this developmental study were to determine the size of onset of air breathing and to determine the frequency of air breathing behavior in bristlenose plecos from juveniles to adults. Developing juveniles reach functional maturity within four to six months of hatching and grow to an adult size of eight to ten cm in length. To examine the developmental timing for the onset of air breathing, we tested different sized juveniles beginning at one cm up until 8 cm in length. The developmental timing for the onset of air breathing was measured by exposing each fish to a slowly decreasing aquatic oxygen content from 100% air saturation down to 8% air saturation. Fish were first able to breathe air at just over 2 cm and 1 gram in mass. There was a weak negative correlation between fish length and % air saturation at which air breathing began. When exposed to 15% air saturation, frequency of air breathing was …
Date: July 2023
Creator: Crowder, Lauren Whitney
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Detection and Classification of Cancer and Other Noncommunicable Diseases Using Neural Network Models (open access)

Detection and Classification of Cancer and Other Noncommunicable Diseases Using Neural Network Models

Here, we show that training with multiple noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) is both feasible and beneficial to modeling this class of diseases. We first use data from the Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) to train a pan cancer model, and then characterize the information the model has learned about the cancers. In doing this we show that the model has learned concepts that are relevant to the task of cancer classification. We also test the model on datasets derived independently of the TCGA cohort and show that the model is robust to data outside of its training distribution such as precancerous legions and metastatic samples. We then utilize the cancer model as the basis of a transfer learning study where we retrain it on other, non-cancer NCDs. In doing so we show that NCDs with very differing underlying biology contain extractible information relevant to each other allowing for a broader model of NCDs to be developed with existing datasets. We then test the importance of the samples source tissue in the model and find that the NCD class and tissue source may not be independent in our model. To address this, we use the tissue encodings to create augmented samples. We test …
Date: July 2023
Creator: Gore, Steven Lee
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library

Developmental Effects of a Non-Dioxin-Like Polychlorinated Biphenyl Mixture on Zebrafish (Danio rerio)

PCBs are synthetic organic compounds known for their toxicity to many organisms and are notorious for having large discrepancies between measured and nominal concentrations. Historically thought to be less toxic, non-dioxin-like (NDL) PCBs represent the majority of congeners and are capable of eliciting neurotoxic effects. NDL-PCBs remain understudied, including their effects on aquatic organisms. In the first study, I collected extensive chemistry data and data on neurobehavioral and cardiac endpoints to test the acute effects of exposure to an NDL-PCB mixture on early life stage zebrafish. Neurobehavioral effects observed in the first study indicated a potential for longer term behavioral effects in these fish. In the second study, I collected data on feeding, social, and memory behavior of zebrafish at time points beyond the acute exposure from the first study. Acute and longer-term behavioral endpoints in the first and second studies demonstrated effects from PCB exposure but did not indicate mechanisms. In the third study, I collected untargeted and targeted metabolomic data on amino acid, sugar, anionic compound, and neurotransmitter profiles to determine the specific pathways affected by exposure to an NDL-PCB mixture. These combined data from these studies provide a unique insight into the chemical profile of an NDL-PCB …
Date: July 2023
Creator: Green, Corey
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hypoxia-Induced Cardiac Arrest Alters Central Nervous System Concentrations of the GLYT2 Glycine Transporter in Zebrafish (Danio rerio) (open access)

Hypoxia-Induced Cardiac Arrest Alters Central Nervous System Concentrations of the GLYT2 Glycine Transporter in Zebrafish (Danio rerio)

Hypoxia as a stressor has physiological implications that have been a focal point for many physiological studies in recent years. In some studies, hypoxia had large effects on the organ tissue degeneration, which ultimately effects multiple ecological processes. These organ tissue studies played a part in the development of new fields like neurocardiology, a specialty that studied the relationship between the brain and the heart. This thesis focuses on how hypoxia-induced cardiac arrest alters the amounts of GLYT2, a glycine reuptake transporter, in the central nervous system of zebrafish, Danio rerio. At 7 days post-fertilization (dpf), zebrafish were exposed to acute, severe hypoxia until they lost equilibrium, and minutes later, subsequent cardiac arrest occurred. Zebrafish were then placed into recovery groups to measure the GLYT2 levels at multiple points in zebrafish recovery. Fish were then sacrificed, and their brains dissected. Using immunofluorescence, the outer left optic tectum of the zebrafish was imaged, and mean image pixel fluorescent intensity was taken. There were significant changes (one-way ANOVA) in the levels of GLYT2 compared to that of the control groups during the course of recovery. GLYT2 levels continued to rise through the 24-hour recovery mark but did not show significant difference after …
Date: July 2023
Creator: Auzenne, Alexis
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library

Neurotoxic Effects of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in Vertebrates, from Behavioral to Cellular Levels

Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are ubiquitous environmental toxicants found in anthropogenic mixtures such as crude oil, air pollution, vehicle exhaust, and in some natural combustion reactions. Single PAHs such as benzo[a]pyrene (BaP) also impact fish behavior when animals are exposed in early life stages and for short periods of time. Aquatic animals such as fish may encounter BaP through road runoff and oil spills, but few studies have examined the impact of aqueous exposure on adult fish, and fewer have examined the resulting fitness-relevant behavioral consequences of BaP and PAH mixtures and their long-term persistence. This dissertation targets this gap in the literature by examining how aqueous exposure to BaP influences anxiety-like behavior, learning, and memory in adult zebrafish, and how parental exposure to the PAH mixture, crude oil, combined with hypoxia affects social and exploratory behavior in unexposed larval zebrafish. We found that learning and memory were not affected by 24 hour exposure to BaP, that anxiety-like behavior was minimally affected, and that locomotor parameters such as distance moved and times spent in darting and immobile states were significantly altered by exposure to BaP. Additionally, we found that parental exposure to crude oil and hypoxia decreased larval velocity. Additionally, …
Date: July 2023
Creator: Dunton, Alicia D.
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library

Secondary Production of Dragonflies: Comparing Ecosystem Function of Ponds within an Urban Landscape in North Central Texas

The change of land use to include more urban areas is considered one of the main threats to biodiversity worldwide. Urban stormwater retention ponds have been built to collect storm runoff intensified by the increase in impervious surfaces. Although subject to environmental pressures like habitat degradation and pollution, these stormwater retention ponds are diversity hotspots by providing habitat for several aquatic and semi-aquatic species, including dragonflies. Previous research in Denton, Texas, has demonstrated that urban stormwater retention ponds support high taxa richness of adult dragonflies, but not for the aquatic nymphs. The current study builds on what we have seen by focusing on the immature aquatic stage as nymphs using secondary production of dominant dragonfly taxa and community structure to compare ecosystem function in three ponds with differing intensities of land use. Comparing communities and secondary production resulted in specific conductivity, dissolved oxygen, complex vegetation, and abundance explaining the differences between dragonfly communities. Secondary production was dependent on abundance which followed the intensity of urban land use surrounding the pond. This study supports that urban land use does have an effect on the functioning of the ponds and shows the importance of studying the communities over a year to get …
Date: July 2023
Creator: Stallings, Gillian Carol
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library

Combined Effects of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons and Ultraviolet Light on Benthic and Pelagic Macroinvertebrates

Crude oil commonly enters freshwater aquatic ecosystems as thin sheens forming on the water surface. Oil contains mixtures of toxic compounds called polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), some of which are known to be photodynamic, increasing toxicity when combined with ultraviolet radiation. Benthic macroinvertebrate communities are commonly utilized as bioindicators, and as such rely on abundant data in literature concerning benthic macroinvertebrates' relative tolerances to a wide range of pollutants. A series of 10 plastic traps, half of which were filtered from UV radiation, were deployed in an urban pond for 27 days to determine colonization preferences of benthic macroinvertebrates to UV exposure. Results of this in situ experiment indicated that the majority of aquatic insects collected from traps inhabited the UV exposed treatment group, particularly the nonbiting midge, Chironomidae. A series of bioassays were then completed to investigate the sensitivities of a Chironomidae species to thin sheens of crude oil in the presence and absence of UV radiation. All bioassays were conducted using 10 day old Chironomus dilutus larvae cultured in the lab. The series of C. dilutus bioassays were all conducted under the same water quality parameters, temperatures, and oil sheen dosing methods, under a 16:8 photoperiod and exposed …
Date: May 2023
Creator: Chapman, Abigail L.
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Conservation, Connectivity, and Coexistence: Understanding Corridor Efficacy in Fragmented Landscapes (open access)

Conservation, Connectivity, and Coexistence: Understanding Corridor Efficacy in Fragmented Landscapes

Conservation corridors, areas of land connecting patches of natural land cover, are frequently cited and implemented as a restorative strategy to counteract fragmentation. Current corridor ecology focuses on experimental corridor systems or designed and built conservation corridors to assess functionality. Such systems and designs are typically short, straight swaths of homogenous land cover with unambiguous transitions between patches. Quantifying the degree to which amorphous landscape configurations, tortuosity, and heterogeneity of land cover and land uses within the corridor has on functional connectedness is a crucial yet overlooked component of corridor efficacy studies. Corridor literature lacks a robust and repeatable methodology for delineating existing landscape elements, recognizing arbitrary edges, and identifying the start and end of ambiguous transitions between the patches and corridor. Using a set of landscapes being studied as part of a global assessment of corridor efficacy, I designed a workflow that standardizes the boundary of corridor-patch interfaces. The proposed method is a quantitative and repeatable approach that minimizes the subjectivity in corridor delineations. This research investigates the degree to which the existence of a corridor modifies the structural and functional connectivity between patches connected by a corridor compared to an intact reference area.
Date: May 2023
Creator: Long, Amanda M.
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Greater, Lesser, Guessers: A Look into the Hybridization of Greater and Lesser Prairie-Chickens (open access)

Greater, Lesser, Guessers: A Look into the Hybridization of Greater and Lesser Prairie-Chickens

My thesis focuses on the conservation consequences of the hybridization of Lesser Prairie-Chickens in Kansas. Specifically, examining how past land management practices altering the species ranges impact the distinctiveness of Lesser Prairie-Chickens. Each chapter is an individual publication that addresses if the Greater and Lesser Prairie-Chicken are distinct when applying the morphological and biological species concepts. Chapter 2 compares the evolutionary history and morphological construct of Lesser Prairie-Chickens and other Galliformes using morphometric analysis. Chapter 3 uses low-resolution microsatellite data to reflect recent changes at the population level. This study aims to observe the Greater and Lesser Prairie-Chicken using the morphological and biological species concepts, two of the many species concepts, to determine the distinctiveness and rate of hybridization for these closely related species.
Date: May 2023
Creator: Stein, Carleigh M.
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library

The Impact of Invasive Salmonids on Ecosystem Functioning in South America's Sub-Antarctic Inland and Marine Waters

Invasions from coho salmon were first reported in the Cape Horn Biosphere Reserve (CHBR) in 2019 which is the most southern distribution registered to date. The CHBR is known for its high number of endemic species and unique biodiversity, such as the native fishes Galaxias maculatus and Aplochiton taeniatus. There are now three invasive salmonid species in the rivers of CHBR and are a potential threat to the native fish taxa. Stable isotope and gut content analysis were used to understand resource utilization by both native galaxiid and invasive salmonid taxa, as well as aquatic macroinvertebrates and riparian spiders. The natural laboratory study approach applied to this research, allowed for comparisons of differences within streams that contain conditions in which fish do not occur naturally, to sites in which high densities of invasive salmonid exist. Analysis of the trophic niche and diet in this study showed the importance of marine resource use by the native galaxiid and coho salmon juveniles supported with elevated δ15N and δ34S ratios. Diet analysis also confirmed there was the highest similarity between the coho salmon juveniles and the native fish. Altered behavior and habitat use was shown through the isotope and diet analysis for the …
Date: May 2023
Creator: Moore, Sabrina
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library

Alterations in the Expression of Proteins Associated with Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease Observed in the Liver of the C57Bl/6 Wild-Type Male Mouse in Response to Exposure of Mixed Vehicle Emissions and/or High Fat Diet Consumption

Recent epidemiological studies have demonstrated a correlation between the manifestation of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and ambient air pollution levels, which is exacerbated by the presence of other risk factors, such as diabetes, dyslipidemia, obesity, and hypertension. We investigated the hypothesis that exposure to a mixture of gasoline and diesel engine emissions (MVE) coupled with the concurrent consumption of a high-fat (HF) diet promotes the development of a NAFLD phenotype within the liver. Three-month-old male C57Bl/6 mice were placed on either a low fat or HF diet and exposed via whole-body inhalation to either filtered (FA) air or MVE (30 µg PM/m3 gasoline engine emissions + 70 µg PM/m3 diesel engine emissions) 6 hr/day for 30 days. Histology revealed mild microvesicular steatosis and hepatocyte hypertrophy in response to MVE exposure alone, compared to FA controls, yielding a classification of "borderline NASH" under the criteria of the modified NAFLD active score (NAS) system. As anticipated, animals on a HF diet exhibited moderate steatosis; however, we also observed inflammatory infiltrates, hepatocyte hypertrophy, and increased lipid accumulation, with the combined effect of HF diet and MVE exposure. Immunofluorescence staining and RT-qPCR of the liver revealed the presence of lipid peroxidation, altered expression …
Date: December 2022
Creator: Schneider, Leah Jayne
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library

Data Mining Using Direct Injection Triple Quadrupole Mass Spectrometry, Infrared Spectroscopy, Inductively Coupled Plasma Optical Emission Spectroscopy, and Polymerase Chain Reaction for the Rapid Identification of Nutraceuticals and Contaminants

There has been a rapid surge toward "organic" products devoid of GMOs, MSGs, and other common compounds found in processed foods that continue to indicate an association with an increased risk for disease. These consumers seek nutrients and vitamins that are lacking in their diet and lifestyle in the form of nutraceuticals for disease prevention and treatment as well as overall lifestyle enhancement. However, these products generally lack clinical evidence as well as legal definition. Due to this ambiguity, nutraceuticals are neither considered a food product nor a pharmaceutical product. Furthermore, due to their alleged natural properties allowing for safe, therapeutic effects, nutraceuticals are being eagerly sought after by consumers in the place of pharmaceuticals. Additionally, since nutraceutical substances are "naturally" derived, there is a general lack of regulation regarding the manufacturing and distribution process. This mismanagement leads to lack of quality assurance (QA) and quality control (QC) protocols strictly implemented to define appropriate production and storage parameters. Without these critical measures, consumers are subjected to contamination of their products resulting from improper storage conditions and unmanaged production. These contaminants often include heavy metal impurities, pesticides, bacterial activity, and may also be adulterated with illicit drugs, all leading to detrimental …
Date: December 2022
Creator: Yazici, Micayla Rose Morgan
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Migration Tracking, Survival, and Pairing Behavior of American Kestrels Wintering in North Central Texas (open access)

Migration Tracking, Survival, and Pairing Behavior of American Kestrels Wintering in North Central Texas

The American Kestrel (Falco sparverius) is the smallest and most abundant falcon in North America with a wide geographic range. Unfortunately, surveys have suggested that some kestrel populations have been in decline since the 1950s, though the nominal causes of this decline are unknown. Migratory movement patterns and connectivity have yet to be established for any population of migratory kestrels. In Chapter 2, I investigated methods for attaching migration trackers to kestrels. Specifically, I showed that leg-loop style harnesses may have negatively affected return rates whereas backpack harnesses did not. Based on these results, I recommend that backpack-style Teflon harnesses is the safest and most effective method for attaching tracking devices to small raptors. In Chapter 3, I quantified survivorship for kestrels wintering in north Texas to identify the timing of kestrel mortality. Notably, I found that juvenile kestrels had similar annual survival rates as adults (81.6% versus 79.5%). High overwintering survival in north Texas indicated that once kestrels arrived on their wintering grounds, they were highly likely to survive to spring migration. In Chapter 4, I investigated pairing behaviors previously undocumented in wintering kestrels. I found that winter pairing was relatively common, but more prevalent in urban environments than …
Date: December 2022
Creator: Biles, Kelsey S
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library

Inferring a Network of Horizontal Gene Flow among Prokaryotes Using Complementary Approaches

Horizontal gene transfer (HGT), a mechanism that facilitates exchange of genetic material between organisms from different lineages, has a profound impact on prokaryotic evolution. To infer HGT, we first developed a comparative genomics-based tool, APP, which can perform phyletic pattern analysis using completely sequenced genomes to identify genes are unique to a genome or have sporadic distribution in its close relatives. Performance assessment against currently available tools on a manually created 18-genome dataset and 2 benchmarking datasets revealed the superior accuracy of APP over other methods. We then utilized a parametric method to construct a gene exchange network. The composition-based method, Jenson-Shannon Codon Bias (JS-CB), groups genes into clusters based on similar codon usage bias. These clusters were analyzed using APP and examined for the enrichment HGT associated marker genes, then annotated as of native or alien origin based on these multiple lines of evidence. Intergenome clustering enabled identification of genes mobilized across alien components of the genomes (alien-alien transfer) and from native components of donor genomes to the recipient genomes (native-alien transfer). Functional classification of alien gene clusters revealed that metabolism associated genes are most frequently mobilized, in concurrence with previous reports, and additionally, a large number of genes …
Date: August 2022
Creator: Sengupta, Soham
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Multi-Level Effects of Oxygen Exposure in Endothermic Insects (open access)

Multi-Level Effects of Oxygen Exposure in Endothermic Insects

This dissertation examined the phenotypic plasticity of endothermic, flight and respiratory physiology in response to developmental oxygen exposure in the moth Manduca sexta. Development in both 10% O2 hypoxia and 30% O2 hyperoxia treatments were used to look at the physiological consequence on both ends of the oxygen spectrum. Hypoxic insects reached smaller sizes as adults and had longer pupation lengths than controls. Hyperoxic insects were larger at the end of the larval stage, had increased larval growth rates, but also had longer developmental larval developmental times and pupation lengths than controls. There was a decrease in both metabolic rate and thorax temperatures of hypoxic reared insects at normoxic levels. In flight trials hypoxic insects had the lowest critical flight PO2, and the hyperoxic insects had the highest PO2. There was an increase in hypoxic insect flight muscle mitochondria oxygen consumption in permeabilized fibers, but this did not translate to the isolated flight muscle mitochondria metabolic rates. Rearing oxygen level did not significantly affect mitochondrial density and size; myofibril density and size, or tracheal density and size in flight muscle. Overall, I found that higher levels of organization were more susceptible to the effects of chronic oxygen exposure and found …
Date: August 2022
Creator: Wilmsen, Sara M
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library

Regulation of Receptors in Neuronal Cilia with Development, Seizures, and Knockouts: Implications for Excitability

Neurons commonly have a primary cilium, which is a non-motile organelle extending from the centrosome into the extracellular space. In most brain regions, neuronal cilia are enriched in either somatostatin receptor type 3 (SstR3) or melanin concentrating hormone receptor type 1 (MCHR1), or both. The present immunohistochemical study provides novel evidence that primary cilia regulate neuronal excitability via G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs), and that their identity is governed by brain region and by competition, both in adulthood and in postnatal development. The hippocampus, which is particularly vulnerable to seizures, has opposing gradients of SstR3(+) and MCHR1(+) ciliary GPCRs. We hypothesized that there is a competition between these two ciliary GPCRs, which might take place on any level from gene expression to presence in the cilium. We examined whether receptor colocalization occurs transiently in development before ciliary GPCR dominance is established in neurons in the CNS. In postnatal CA1 and CA3, the first GPCR to appear in cilia was the one that will dominate in adults: MCHR1 in CA1 and SstR3 in CA3. Some days later, the second GPCR was expressed along with the first; dual-receptor cilia were the exclusive type until single-receptor cilia emerged again around P14. Single-receptor cilia then …
Date: August 2022
Creator: Shrestha, Jessica
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library

Temperature Change and Its Consequences for the Physiology of the Eurythermic Sheepshead Minnow (Cyprinodon variegatus)

The estuarine sheepshead minnow (Cyprinodon variegatus) is the most eurythermic fish species, with a thermal tolerance window between 0.6°C and 45.1°C. However, little is known about the physiological mechanisms that allow this species to survive this temperature range. In order to understand how sheepshead minnow physiology is affected by temperature acclimation and acute changes in temperature, I conducted research on this species using a multi-level approach. I began at the organismal level, and examined the effects of these temperature changes on the sheepshead minnow's metabolic rate and swimming performance. The next chapter investigated the effects of changing temperatures on cardiac function (i.e., tissue/organ specific effects). In the final chapter, I conducted research at the sub-cellular level, and determined how mitochondrial bioenergetics / function is impacted by changing temperatures. This research shows that while sheepshead minnows are able to sustain heart function and mitochondrial respiration over a broad range of temperatures; they also display a plastic temperature response which is associated with the downregulation of standard metabolic rate and cardiac remodeling to maintain force generation. Collectively, these physiological responses may contribute to the sheepshead minnow's ability to maintain physiological and organismal function across a large temperature range.
Date: August 2022
Creator: Reynolds, Amanda Caroline
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
CO2 Transport and Acid-Base Status during Fluctuations in Metabolic Status in Reptiles (open access)

CO2 Transport and Acid-Base Status during Fluctuations in Metabolic Status in Reptiles

Reptiles can often experience perturbations that greatly influence their metabolic status (e.g., temperature, exercise, digestion, and ontogeny). The most common cause of fluctuations in metabolic status in post-embryonic reptiles is arguably digestion and physical activity (which will be further referred to as exercise). The objective of this thesis is to determine the mechanisms involved in CO2 transport during digestion, determine the mechanisms that allow for the maintenance of acid-base homeostasis during digestion, and observing the effect of an understudied form of exercise in semi-aquatic reptiles on the regulation of metabolic acidosis and base deficit. This dissertation provided evidence for potentially novel and under investigated mechanisms for acid-base homeostasis (e.g., small intestine and tissue buffering capacity; Chapters 3 & 4), while also debunking a proposed hypothesis for the function of an anatomical feature that still remains a mystery to comparative physiologist (Chapter 2). This thesis is far from systematic and exhaustive in its approach, however, the work accomplished in this dissertation has become the foundation for multiple distinct paths for ecologically relevant investigations of the regulation of metabolic acidosis/alkalosis in reptiles.
Date: December 2021
Creator: Conner, Justin Lawrence
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library

Influence of Hypoxia on Acute Lead Toxicity and Calcium Homeostasis in Early Life Stage Zebrafish (Danio rerio)

The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of Pb and hypoxia co-exposure on Pb toxicity and Ca homeostasis in early life stage (ELS) zebrafish (Danio rerio). Previous evidence indicates that exposure of ELS zebrafish to hypoxia (~20% air saturation) reduces Ca uptake, likely through down-regulation of the apical epithelial Ca channel (ECaC). Considering that Pb and Ca are known antagonists and compete for uptake pathways, it was hypothesized that co-exposure of Pb with hypoxia would decrease Pb toxicity by reducing Pb uptake (likely mediated through a reduced number of ECaCs). However, it was shown that at 96 hpf, whole body accumulation of both Pb and Ca was lower at 40% air saturation compared to 100% and 20% air saturation. This result closely aligned with the 96h LC50 results which showed the highest mortality of zebrafish at 40% compared to the other air saturation levels. This suggests that toxicity is likely the result of exacerbated hypocalcemia at 40% air saturation due to both Pb competition for Ca binding to Ca uptake channels/transporters, such as ECaC, and potentially reduced expression of such channels/transporters in response to this level of hypoxia. Overall, it appears that ELS zebrafish respond differentially to …
Date: December 2021
Creator: Moghimi, Mehrnaz
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library