<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rdf:RDF xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/" xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#">
<channel rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/10464/2236">
<title>Doctoral Theses</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/10464/2236</link>
<description/>
<items>
<rdf:Seq>
<rdf:li rdf:resource="http://hdl.handle.net/10464/4083"/>
<rdf:li rdf:resource="http://hdl.handle.net/10464/4082"/>
<rdf:li rdf:resource="http://hdl.handle.net/10464/4081"/>
<rdf:li rdf:resource="http://hdl.handle.net/10464/4080"/>
</rdf:Seq>
</items>
<dc:date>2013-06-19T18:05:03Z</dc:date>
</channel>
<item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/10464/4083">
<title>Identification and characterization of retinoic acid-induced morphological and electrophysiological changes in an invertebrate nervous system</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/10464/4083</link>
<description>Identification and characterization of retinoic acid-induced morphological and electrophysiological changes in an invertebrate nervous system
Vesprini, Nicholas
The vitamin A metabolite, retinoic acid (RA) is known to play an important role in the&#13;
development, patterning and regeneration of nervous tissue, both in the embryo and in the adult.&#13;
Classically, RA is known to mediate the transcription of target genes through the binding and&#13;
activation ofits nuclear receptors: the retinoic acid receptors (RARs) and retinoid X receptors&#13;
(RXRs). Recently, mounting evidence from many animal models has implicated a number of&#13;
RA-mediated effects operating independently of gene transcription, and thus highlights nove~&#13;
nongenornic actions of RA. For example, recent work utilizing cultured neurons from the pond&#13;
snaa Lymnaea stagnalis, has shown that RA can elicit a regenerative response, growth cone&#13;
turning, independently of "classical" transcriptional activation While this work illustrates a&#13;
novel regeneration-inducing effect in culture, it is currently -unknown whether RA also induces&#13;
regeneration in situ. This study has sought to determine RA's regenerative effucts at the&#13;
morphological and molecular levels by utilizing an in situ approach focusing on a single&#13;
identified dopaminergic neuron which possesses a known "mapped" morphology within the&#13;
CNS. These studies show, for the first time in an invertebrate, that RA can increase neurite&#13;
outgrowth of dopaminergic cells that have undergone a nerve-crush injury. Utilizing Western&#13;
blot analysis, it was shown that this effect appears to be independent of any changes in whole&#13;
CNS expression levels of either the RAR or RXR. Additionally, utilizing immunohistochemistry,&#13;
to examine protein localization, there does not appear to be any obvious changes in the RXR&#13;
expression level at the crush site. Changes in cell morphology such as neurity extension are&#13;
known to be modulated by changes in neuronal firing activity. It has been previously shown that&#13;
exposure to RA over many days can lead to changes in the electrophysiological properties of&#13;
cultured Lymnaea neurons; however, no studies have investigated whether short-term exposure&#13;
to RA can elicit electrophysiological changes and/or changes in firing pattern of neurons in&#13;
Lymnaea or any other species. The studies performed here show, for the first time in any species, that short-tenn treatment with RA can elicit significant changes in the firing properties of both&#13;
identified dopaminergic neurons and peptidergic neurons. This effect appears to be independent&#13;
of protein synthesis, activation of protein kinase A or phospholipase C, and calcium influx but is&#13;
both dose-dependent and isomer-dependent. These studies provide evidence that the RXR, but&#13;
not RAR, may be involved, and that intracellular calcium concentrations decrease upon RAexposure&#13;
with a time course, dose-dependency and isomer-dependency that coincide with the&#13;
RA-induced electrophysiological changes. Taken together, these studies provide important&#13;
evidence highlighting RA as a multifunctional molecule, inducing morphological, molecular and&#13;
electrophysiological changes within the CNS, and highlight the many pathways through which&#13;
RA may operate to elicit its effects.
</description>
<dc:date>2012-07-31T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</item>
<item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/10464/4082">
<title>Critical Connections: Teachers Writing for Social Justice</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/10464/4082</link>
<description>Critical Connections: Teachers Writing for Social Justice
Smith, Sherry Ramrattan
This qualitative research study explores how teachers who write social justicefocused&#13;
curriculum support resources conceptualize curriculum and social justice.&#13;
Curriculum used in schools reflects underlying assumptions and choices about what&#13;
knowledge is valuable. Class-based, cultural, racial, and religious stereotypes are&#13;
reinforced in schooling contexts. Are the resources teachers create, select, and use to&#13;
promote social justice reproducing and reinforcing forms of oppression? Why do teachers&#13;
pursue social justice through curriculum writing? What are their hopes for this work?&#13;
Exploring how Teachers' beliefs and values influence cy.rriculum writing engages the&#13;
teachers writing and using curriculum support resources in critical reflective thought&#13;
about their experiences and efforts to promote social justice. Individual and focus group&#13;
interviews were conducted with four teacher-curriculum writers from Ontario schools. In&#13;
theorizing my experiences as a teacher-curriculum writer, I reversed roles and&#13;
participated in individual interviews. I employed a critical feminist lens to analyze the&#13;
qualitati ve data. The participants' identities influenced how they understand social justice&#13;
and write curriculum. Their understandings of injustices, either personal or gathered&#13;
through students, family members, or oth.e. r teachers, influenced their curriculum writing .&#13;
The teacher-curriculum writers in the study believed all teachers need critical&#13;
understandings of curriculum and social justice. The participants made a case for&#13;
representation from historically disadvantaged and underrepresented groups on&#13;
curriculum writing teams. In an optimistic conclusion, the possibility of a considerate&#13;
curriculum is proposed as a way to engage the public in working with teachers for social&#13;
justice.
</description>
<dc:date>2012-07-31T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</item>
<item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/10464/4081">
<title>Regulation of Systemic Acquired Resistance through the Interaction of Arabidopsis thaliana Transcription factors TGAI and TGA2 with NPRI</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/10464/4081</link>
<description>Regulation of Systemic Acquired Resistance through the Interaction of Arabidopsis thaliana Transcription factors TGAI and TGA2 with NPRI
Rochon, Amanda
Arabidopsis thaliana is an established model plant system for studying plantpathogen&#13;
interactions. The knowledge garnered from examining the mechanism of&#13;
induced disease resistance in this model system can be applied to eliminate the cost and&#13;
danger associated with current means of crop protection.&#13;
A specific defense pathway, known as systemic acquired resistance (SAR),&#13;
involves whole plant protection from a wide variety of bacterial, viral and fungal&#13;
pathogens and remains induced weeks to months after being triggered. The ability of&#13;
Arabidopsis to mount SAR depends on the accumulation of salicylic acid (SA), the NPRI&#13;
(non-expressor of pathogenesis related gene 1) protein and the expression of a subset of&#13;
pathogenesis related (PR) genes. NPRI exerts its effect in this pathway through&#13;
interaction with a closely related class of bZIP transcription factors known as TGA&#13;
factors, which are named for their recognition of the cognate DNA motif TGACG.&#13;
We have discovered that one of these transcription factors, TGA2, behaves as a&#13;
repressor in unchallenged Arabidopsis and acts to repress NPRI-dependent activation of&#13;
PRJ. TGA1, which bears moderate sequence similarity to TGA2, acts as a transcriptional&#13;
activator in unchallenged Arabidopsis, however the significance of this activity is&#13;
J&#13;
unclear. Once SAR has been induced, TGAI and TGA2 interact with NPRI to form&#13;
complexes that are capable of activating transcription. Curiously, although TGAI is&#13;
capable of transactivating, the ability of the TGAI-NPRI complex to activate&#13;
transcription results from a novel transactivation domain in NPRI. This transactivation&#13;
domain, which depends on the oxidation of cysteines 521 and 529, is also responsible for&#13;
the transactivation ability of the TGA2-NPRI complex. Although the exact mechanism preventing TGA2-NPRI interaction in&#13;
unchallenged Arabidopsis is unclear, the regulation of TGAI-NPRI interaction is based&#13;
on the redox status of cysteines 260 and 266 in TGAl. We determined that a&#13;
glutaredoxin, which is an enzyme capable of regulating a protein's redox status, interacts&#13;
with the reduced form of TGAI and this interaction results .in the glutathionylation of&#13;
TGAI and a loss of interaction with NPRl.&#13;
Taken together, these results expand our understanding of how TGA transcription&#13;
factors and NPRI behave to regulate events and gene expression during SAR.&#13;
Furthermore, the regulation of the behavior of both TGAI and NPRI by their redox&#13;
status and the involvement of a glutaredoxin in modulating TGAI-NPRI interaction&#13;
suggests the redox regulation of proteins is a general mechanism implemented in SAR.
</description>
<dc:date>2012-07-31T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</item>
<item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/10464/4080">
<title>Evolutionary Origin and Maintenance of Sociality in the Small Carpenter Bees</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/10464/4080</link>
<description>Evolutionary Origin and Maintenance of Sociality in the Small Carpenter Bees
Rehan, Sandra
Many arthropods exhibit behaviours precursory to social life, including adult&#13;
longevity, parental care, nest loyalty and mutual tolerance, yet there are few examples of&#13;
social behaviour in this phylum. The small carpenter bees, genus Ceratina, provide&#13;
important insights into the early stages of sociality. I described the biology and social&#13;
behaviour of five facultatively social species which exhibit all of the preadaptations for&#13;
successful group living, yet present ecological and behavioural characteristics that seemingly&#13;
disfavour frequent colony formation. These species are socially polymorphic with both&#13;
/&#13;
solitary and social nests collected in sympatry. Social colonies consist of two adult females,&#13;
one contributing both foraging and reproductive effort and the second which remains at the&#13;
nest as a passive guard. Cooperative nesting provides no overt reproductive benefits over&#13;
solitary nesting, although brood survival tends to be greater in social colonies.&#13;
Three main theories explain cooperation among conspecifics: mutual benefit, kin&#13;
selection and manipulation. Lifetime reproductive success calculations revealed that mutual&#13;
benefit does not explain social behaviour in this group as social colonies have lower per&#13;
capita life time reproductive success than solitary nests. Genetic pedigrees constructed from&#13;
allozyme data indicate that kin selection might contribute to the maintenance of social nesting&#13;
-,&#13;
as social colonies consist of full sisters and thus some indirect fitness benefits are inherently&#13;
bestowed on subordinate females as a result of remaining to help their dominant sister. These&#13;
data suggest that the origin of sociality in ceratinines has principal costs and the great&#13;
ecological success of highly eusociallineages occurred well after social origins.&#13;
Ecological constraints such as resource limitation, unfavourable weather conditions&#13;
and parasite pressure have long been considered some of the most important selective&#13;
pressures for the evolution of sociality. I assessed the fitness consequences of these three ecological factors for reproductive success of solitary and social colonies and found that nest&#13;
sites were not limiting, and the frequency of social nesting was consistent across brood&#13;
rearing seasons. Local weather varied between seasons but was not correlated with&#13;
reproductive success. Severe parasitism resulted in low reproductive success and total nest&#13;
failure in solitary nests. Social colonies had higher reproductive success and were never&#13;
extirpated by parasites. I suggest that social nesting represents a form of bet-hedging. The&#13;
high frequency of solitary nests suggests that this is the optimal strategy when parasite&#13;
pressure is low. However, social colonies have a selective advantage over solitary nesting&#13;
females during periods of extreme parasite pressure.&#13;
Finally, the small carpenter bees are recorded from all continents except Antarctica. I&#13;
constructed the first molecular phylogeny of ceratinine bees based on four gene regions of&#13;
selected species covering representatives from all continents and ecological regions.&#13;
Maximum parsimony and Bayesian Inference tree topology and fossil dating support an&#13;
African origin followed by an Old World invasion and New World radiation. All known Old&#13;
World ceratinines form social colonies while New World species are largely solitary; thus&#13;
geography and phylogenetic inertia are likely predictors of social evolution in this genus.&#13;
This integrative approach not only describes the behaviour of several previously&#13;
unknown or little-known Ceratina species, bu~ highlights the fact that this is an important,&#13;
though previously unrecognized, model for studying evolutionary transitions from solitary to&#13;
social behaviour.
</description>
<dc:date>2012-07-31T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</item>
</rdf:RDF>
