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1.
Explor Res Clin Soc Pharm ; 15: 100469, 2024 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39035022

ABSTRACT

Digital healthcare has rapidly evolved during and in the post-COVID pandemic era, expanding the roles and responsibilities of community pharmacists. Services like telepharmacy, e-prescriptions, remote medication therapy management, and digital monitoring of chronic conditions, have evolved into everyday routine pharmacy practices. Pharmacists are at the forefront and the most accessible healthcare professionals for patients and are increasingly pivotal in providing comprehensive patient care, including digital patient care services. To ensure that future generations of pharmacists are digitally competent, it is crucial that digital health education is provided to pharmacy students. Furthermore, fostering high-quality multidisciplinary research, particularly in collaboration with medicine and other health disciplines, is essential for advancing the digital health skills of the future pharmacy workforce. Despite the growing use of digital health technologies, there are significant between-country differences in digital health education, the clinical settings in which digital health technologies are used, and their implementation in day-to-day practice. This commentary summarizes key insights from the International Digital Health Workshop held at the University of Sydney in November 2023. To help ensure pharmacists are included as participants in future digital health research, recent advances in digital health education and interprofessional research projects across three universities from far-off world regions were presented. Participants discussed a possible collaborative, interprofessional, and international research project on chronic disease prevention using digital health technologies. The need for interdisciplinary digital health curricula was highlighted in the workshop discussions, specifically tailored to address the knowledge requirements of pharmacists and other healthcare professionals.

2.
J Anat ; 2024 Jul 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39036860

ABSTRACT

There has been a long debate about the possibility of multiple contemporaneous species of Australopithecus in both eastern and southern Africa, potentially exhibiting different forms of bipedal locomotion. Here, we describe the previously unreported morphology of the os coxae in the 3.67 Ma Australopithecus prometheus StW 573 from Sterkfontein Member 2, comparing it with variation in ossa coxae in living humans and apes as well as other Plio-Pleistocene hominins. Statistical comparisons indicate that StW 573 and 431 resemble humans in their anteroposteriorly great iliac crest breadth compared with many other early australopiths, whereas Homo ergaster KNM WT 15000 surprisingly also has a relatively anterioposteriorly short iliac crest. StW 573 and StW 431 appear to resemble humans in having a long ischium compared with Sts 14 and KNM WT 15000. A Quadratic Discriminant Function Analysis of morphology compared with other Plio-Pleistocene hominins and a dataset of modern humans and hominoids shows that, while Lovejoy's heuristic model of the Ardipithecus ramidus os coxae falls with Pongo or in an indeterminate group, StW 573 and StW 431 from Sterkfontein Member 4 are consistently classified together with modern humans. Although clearly exhibiting the classic "basin shaped" bipedal pelvis, Sts 14 (also from Sterkfontein), AL 288-1 Australopithecus afarensis, MH2 Australopithecus sediba and KNM-WT 15000 occupy a position more peripheral to modern humans, and in some analyses are assigned to an indeterminate outlying group. Our findings strongly support the existence of two species of Australopithecus at Sterkfontein and the variation we observe in os coxae morphology in early hominins is also likely to reflect multiple forms of bipedality.

3.
Biophys Rev ; 16(2): 145-148, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38737205

ABSTRACT

This article of the continuing "Biophysical Reviews Meet the Editors Series" introduces Ronald Clarke, biophysical chemist, member of the Biophysical Reviews editorial board and current Secretary-General of the International Union of Pure and Applied Biophysics (IUPAB).

4.
J Membr Biol ; 257(1-2): 79-89, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38436710

ABSTRACT

The gastric H+,K+-ATPase is an integral membrane protein which derives energy from the hydrolysis of ATP to transport H+ ions from the parietal cells of the gastric mucosa into the stomach in exchange for K+ ions. It is responsible for the acidic environment of the stomach, which is essential for digestion. Acid secretion is regulated by the recruitment of the H+,K+-ATPase from intracellular stores into the plasma membrane on the ingestion of food. The similar amino acid sequences of the lysine-rich N-termini α-subunits of the H+,K+- and Na+,K+-ATPases, suggests similar acute regulation mechanisms, specifically, an electrostatic switch mechanism involving an interaction of the N-terminal tail with the surface of the surrounding membrane and a modulation of the interaction via regulatory phosphorylation by protein kinases. From a consideration of sequence alignment of the H+,K+-ATPase and an analysis of its coevolution with protein kinase C and kinases of the Src family, the evidence points towards a phosphorylation of tyrosine-7 of the N-terminus by either Lck or Yes in all vertebrates except cartilaginous fish. The results obtained will guide and focus future experimental research.


Subject(s)
Sodium-Potassium-Exchanging ATPase , Stomach , Animals , Sodium-Potassium-Exchanging ATPase/metabolism , Biological Transport , H(+)-K(+)-Exchanging ATPase/chemistry , Ions/metabolism
6.
Biophys Rev ; 15(1): 13-15, 2023 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36909959
8.
Biophys Rev ; 15(6): 1967-1985, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38192346

ABSTRACT

Lipid-protein interactions are normally classified as either specific or general. Specific interactions refer to lipid binding to specific binding sites within a membrane protein, thereby modulating the protein's thermal stability or kinetics. General interactions refer to indirect effects whereby lipids affect membrane proteins by modulating the membrane's physical properties, e.g., its fluidity, thickness, or dipole potential. It is not widely recognized that there is a third distinct type of lipid-protein interaction. Intrinsically disordered N- or C-termini of membrane proteins can interact directly but nonspecifically with the surrounding membrane. Many peripheral membrane proteins are held to the cytoplasmic surface of the plasma membrane via a cooperative combination of two forces: hydrophobic anchoring and electrostatic attraction. An acyl chain, e.g., myristoyl, added post-translationally to one of the protein's termini inserts itself into the lipid matrix and helps hold peripheral membrane proteins onto the membrane. Electrostatic attraction occurs between positively charged basic amino acid residues (lysine and arginine) on one of the protein's terminal tails and negatively charged phospholipid head groups, such as phosphatidylserine. Phosphorylation of either serine or tyrosine residues on the terminal tails via regulatory protein kinases allows for an electrostatic switch mechanism to control trafficking of the protein. Kinase action reduces the positive charge on the protein's tail, weakening the electrostatic attraction and releasing the protein from the membrane. A similar mechanism regulates many integral membrane proteins, but here only electrostatic interactions are involved, and the electrostatic switch modulates protein activity by altering the stabilities of different protein conformational states.

9.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(27): e2123516119, 2022 07 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35759668

ABSTRACT

Sterkfontein is the most prolific single source of Australopithecus fossils, the vast majority of which were recovered from Member 4, a cave breccia now exposed by erosion and weathering at the landscape surface. A few other Australopithecus fossils, including the StW 573 skeleton, come from subterranean deposits [T. C. Partridge et al., Science 300, 607-612 (2003); R. J. Clarke, K. Kuman, J. Hum. Evol. 134, 102634 (2019)]. Here, we report a cosmogenic nuclide isochron burial date of 3.41 ± 0.11 million years (My) within the lower middle part of Member 4, and simple burial dates of 3.49 ± 0.19 My in the upper middle part of Member 4 and 3.61 ± 0.09 My in Jacovec Cavern. Together with a previously published isochron burial date of 3.67 ± 0.16 My for StW 573 [D. E. Granger et al., Nature 522, 85-88 (2015)], these results place nearly the entire Australopithecus assemblage at Sterkfontein in the mid-Pliocene, contemporaneous with Australopithecus afarensis in East Africa. Our ages for the fossil-bearing breccia in Member 4 are considerably older than the previous ages of ca. 2.1 to 2.6 My interpreted from flowstones associated with the same deposit. We show that these previously dated flowstones are stratigraphically intrusive within Member 4 and that they therefore underestimate the true age of the fossils.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Hominidae , Animals , Caves , Cosmic Radiation , Fossils , Skeleton , South Africa
10.
J Appl Psychol ; 107(6): 968-986, 2022 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34672649

ABSTRACT

Because leaders' authority is often insufficient to change team performance, formal team leaders seek informal influence through the occupation of central positions in social networks. Prior research focuses on leader centrality involving simplex ties, that is, either friendship or advice, to the neglect of multiplex ties that involve the overlap of friendship and advice. Friendship and advice ties offer different but complementary resources, so leader centrality in one but not the other network limits leader influence. We provide theory and evidence concerning how leader multiplex centrality affects team performance improvement, particularly if leaders are embedded in team social contexts with sparse friendship and numerous adversarial ties. The research context involved 84 ongoing public university service teams headed by formal leaders. Our results show the importance of leader multiplex centrality relative to leader simplex centrality. First, leader multiplex centrality predicted team performance change over a 2-year period more strongly than leader centrality in either the advice or the friendship team network. Second, leader multiplex centrality positively predicted team performance change for teams featuring dense adversarial networks or sparse friendship networks. It is not sufficient, therefore, for leaders to be either liked or regarded as expert. It is the integration of both advice and friendship in one tie between the leader and followers that facilitates performance change. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).


Subject(s)
Friends , Leadership , Emotions , Group Processes , Humans , Social Networking
11.
Int J Mol Sci ; 24(1)2022 Dec 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36613508

ABSTRACT

The Na+, K+-ATPase is an integral membrane protein which uses the energy of ATP hydrolysis to pump Na+ and K+ ions across the plasma membrane of all animal cells. It plays crucial roles in numerous physiological processes, such as cell volume regulation, nutrient reabsorption in the kidneys, nerve impulse transmission, and muscle contraction. Recent data suggest that it is regulated via an electrostatic switch mechanism involving the interaction of its lysine-rich N-terminus with the cytoplasmic surface of its surrounding lipid membrane, which can be modulated through the regulatory phosphorylation of the conserved serine and tyrosine residues on the protein's N-terminal tail. Prior data indicate that the kinases responsible for phosphorylation belong to the protein kinase C (PKC) and Src kinase families. To provide indications of which particular enzyme of these families might be responsible, we analysed them for evidence of coevolution via the mirror tree method, utilising coevolution as a marker for a functional interaction. The results obtained showed that the most likely kinase isoforms to interact with the Na+, K+-ATPase were the θ and η isoforms of PKC and the Src kinase itself. These theoretical results will guide the direction of future experimental studies.


Subject(s)
Sodium-Potassium-Exchanging ATPase , src-Family Kinases , Animals , Phosphorylation , Sodium-Potassium-Exchanging ATPase/metabolism , src-Family Kinases/genetics , src-Family Kinases/metabolism , Protein Kinase C/metabolism , Ions/metabolism
15.
Folia Primatol (Basel) ; 92(5-6): 243-275, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34583353

ABSTRACT

The StW 573 skeleton of Australopithecus prometheus from Sterkfontein Member 2 is some 93% complete and thus by far the most complete member of that genus yet found. Firmly dated at 3.67 Ma, it is one of the earliest specimens of its genus. A crucial aspect of interpretation of locomotor behaviour from fossil remains is an understanding of the palaeoenvironment in which the individual lived and the manner in which it would have used it. While the value of this ecomorphological approach is largely accepted, it has not been widely used as a stable framework on which to build evolutionary biomechanical interpretations. Here, we collate the available evidence on StW 573's anatomy in order, as far as currently possible, to reconstruct what might have been this individual's realized and potential niche. We explore the concept of a common Australopithecus "bauplan" by comparing the morphology and ecological context of StW 573 to that of paenocontemporaneous australopiths including Australopithecus anamensis and KSD-VP-1/1 Australopithecus afarensis. Each was probably substantially arboreal and woodland-dwelling, relying substantially on arboreal resources. We use a hypothesis-driven approach, tested by: virtual experiments, in the case of extinct species; biomechanical analyses of the locomotor behaviour of living great ape species; and analogical experiments with human subjects. From these, we conclude that the habitual locomotor mode of all australopiths was upright bipedalism, whether on the ground or on branches. Some later australopiths such as Australopithecus sediba undoubtedly became more terrestrial, allowing sacrifice of arboreal stability in favour of manual dexterity. Indeed, modern humans retain arboreal climbing skills but have further sacrificed arboreal effectiveness for enhanced ability to sustain striding terrestrial bipedalism over much greater distances. We compare StW 573's locomotor adaptations to those of living great apes and protohominins, and agree with those earlier observers who suggest that the common panin-hominin last common ancestor was postcranially more like Gorilla than Pan.


Subject(s)
Hominidae , Animals , Biological Evolution , Fossils , Gorilla gorilla
16.
Faraday Discuss ; 232(0): 172-187, 2021 12 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34549220

ABSTRACT

Membrane protein structure and function are modulated via interactions with their lipid environment. This is particularly true for integral membrane pumps, the P-type ATPases. These ATPases play vital roles in cell physiology, where they are associated with the transport of cations and lipids, thereby generating and maintaining crucial (electro-)chemical potential gradients across the membrane. Several pumps (Na+, K+-ATPase, H+, K+-ATPase and the plasma membrane Ca2+-ATPase) which are located in the asymmetric animal plasma membrane have been found to possess polybasic (lysine-rich) domains on their cytoplasmic surfaces, which are thought to act as phosphatidylserine (PS) binding domains. In contrast, the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase, located within an intracellular organelle membrane, does not possess such a domain. Here we focus on the lysine-rich N-termini of the plasma-membrane-bound Na+, K+- and H+, K+-ATPases. Synthetic peptides corresponding to the N-termini of these proteins were found, via quartz crystal microbalance and circular dichroism measurements, to interact via an electrostatic interaction with PS-containing membranes, thereby undergoing an increase in helical or other secondary structure content. As well as influencing ion pumping activity, it is proposed that this interaction could provide a mechanism for sensing the lipid asymmetry of the plasma membrane, which changes drastically when a cell undergoes apoptosis, i.e. programmed cell death. Thus, polybasic regions of plasma membrane-bound ion pumps could potentially perform the function of a "death sensor", signalling to a cell to reduce pumping activity and save energy.


Subject(s)
P-type ATPases , Animals , Cell Membrane , Protein Structure, Secondary , Sodium
17.
J Hum Evol ; 156: 103000, 2021 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34020297

ABSTRACT

The Early Pleistocene site of Swartkrans in South Africa's Cradle of Humankind World Heritage Site has been significant for our understanding of the evolution of both early Homo and Paranthropus, as well as the earliest archaeology of southern Africa. Previous attempts to improve a faunal age estimate of the earliest deposit, Member 1, had produced results obtained with uranium-lead dating (U-Pb) on flowstones and cosmogenic burial dating of quartz, which placed the entire member in the range of >1.7/1.8 Ma and <2.3 Ma. In 2014, two simple burial dates for the Lower Bank, the earliest unit within Member 1, narrowed its age to between ca. 1.8 Ma and 2.2 Ma. A new dating program using the isochron method for burial dating has established an absolute age of 2.22 ± 0.09 Ma for a large portion of the Lower Bank, which can now be identified as containing the earliest Oldowan stone tools and fossils of Paranthropus robustus in South Africa. This date agrees within one sigma with the U-Pb age of 2.25 ± 0.08 Ma previously published for the flowstone underlying the Lower Bank and confirms a relatively rapid rate of accumulation for a large portion of the talus.


Subject(s)
Archaeology , Caves , Fossils , Hominidae , Tool Use Behavior , Animals , History, Ancient , South Africa
18.
J Hum Evol ; 158: 102983, 2021 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33888323

ABSTRACT

The ca. 3.67 Ma adult skeleton known as 'Little Foot' (StW 573), recovered from Sterkfontein Member 2 breccia in the Silberberg Grotto, is remarkable for its morphology and completeness. Preservation of clavicles and scapulae, including essentially complete right-side elements, offers opportunities to assess morphological and functional aspects of a nearly complete Australopithecus pectoral girdle. Here we describe the StW 573 pectoral girdle and offer quantitative comparisons to those of extant hominoids and selected homininans. The StW 573 pectoral girdle combines features intermediate between those of humans and other apes: a long and curved clavicle, suggesting a relatively dorsally positioned scapula; an enlarged and uniquely proportioned supraspinous fossa; a relatively cranially oriented glenoid fossa; and ape-like reinforcement of the axillary margin by a stout ventral bar. StW 573 scapulae are as follows: smaller than those of some homininans (i.e., KSD-VP-1/1 and KNM-ER 47000A), larger than others (i.e., A.L. 288-1, Sts 7, and MH2), and most similar in size to another australopith from Sterkfontein, StW 431. Moreover, StW 573 and StW 431 exhibit similar structural features along their axillary margins and inferior angles. As the StW 573 pectoral girdle (e.g., scapular configuration) has a greater affinity to that of apes-Gorilla in particular-rather than modern humans, we suggest that the StW 573 morphological pattern appears to reflect adaptations to arboreal behaviors, especially those with the hand positioned above the head, more than human-like manipulatory capabilities. When compared with less complete pectoral girdles from middle/late Miocene apes and that of the penecontemporaneous KSD-VP-1/1 (Australopithecus afarensis), and mindful of consensus views on the adaptiveness of arboreal positional behaviors soliciting abducted glenohumeral joints in early Pliocene taxa, we propose that the StW 573 pectoral girdle is a reasonable model for hypothesizing pectoral girdle configuration of the crown hominin last common ancestor.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Fossils , Hominidae/anatomy & histology , Shoulder/anatomy & histology , Animals , Female , Gorilla gorilla/anatomy & histology , Humans , Male , Scapula/anatomy & histology
19.
Elife ; 102021 03 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33648628

ABSTRACT

Numerous aspects of early hominin biology remain debated or simply unknown. However, recent developments in high-resolution imaging techniques have opened new avenues in the field of paleoanthropology. More specifically, X-ray synchrotron-based analytical imaging techniques have the potential to provide crucial details on the ontogeny, physiology, biomechanics, and biological identity of fossil specimens. Here we present preliminary results of our X-ray synchrotron-based investigation of the skull of the 3.67-million-year-old Australopithecus specimen StW 573 ('Little Foot') at the I12 beamline of the Diamond Light Source (United Kingdom). Besides showing fine details of the enamel (i.e., hypoplasias) and cementum (i.e., incremental lines), as well as of the cranial bone microarchitecture (e.g., diploic channels), our synchrotron-based investigation reveals for the first time the 3D spatial organization of the Haversian systems in the mandibular symphysis of an early hominin.


Subject(s)
Fossils/anatomy & histology , Hominidae/anatomy & histology , Skull/anatomy & histology , Animals , Fossils/diagnostic imaging , Haversian System/anatomy & histology , Mandible/anatomy & histology , Skull/diagnostic imaging , Synchrotrons , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods , Tooth/anatomy & histology , Tooth/diagnostic imaging
20.
Soft Matter ; 17(10): 2688-2694, 2021 Mar 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33533359

ABSTRACT

Ionic liquids (ILs) have exhibited enormous potential as electrolytes, designer solvents and reaction media, as well as being surprisingly effective platforms for amphiphile self-assembly and for preserving structure of complex biomolecules. This has led to their exploration as media for long-term biopreservation and in biosensors, for which their viability depends on their ability to sustain both structure and function within complex, multicomponent nanoscale compartments and assemblies. Here we show that a tethered lipid bilayer can be assembled directly in a purely IL environment that retains its structure upon exchange between IL and aqueous buffer, and that the membrane transporter valinomycin can be incorporated so as to retain its functionality and cation selectivity. This paves the way for the development of long-lived, non-aqueous microreactors and sensor assemblies, and demonstrates the potential for complex proteins to retain functionality in non-aqueous, ionic liquid solvents.


Subject(s)
Ionic Liquids , Cations , Ion Transport , Lipid Bilayers , Solvents
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