The immunocompetence handicap hypothesis (ICHH) provides a functional explanation for how sexual ornaments can provide honest signals of male quality. A key aspect of this hypothesis is that testosterone (T) has a bimodal effect: a higher T level enhances the expression of ornaments (increasing mating success and, ultimately, fitness); however, at the same time, it suppresses immune function. Tests of the latter assumption, which have focused mainly on aspects of adaptive immunity in birds, led to equivocal results. We performed a hormone-implant experiment in male three-spined sticklebacks (Gasterosteus aculeatus) to test the key assumptions of the ICHH in a fish, where the dominant circulating androgen is 11-ketotestosterone (11kT) rather than T. Males were implanted with 11-ketoandrostenedione, which is a natural precursor of 11kT. Each individual's circulating 11kT level, ornamentation, and immunocompetence were measured 2 weeks later. In addition, we quantified oxidative tissue damage because the ICHH has been hypothesized to work via oxidative stress. We found that the males' 11kT levels correlated positively with ornamentation but negatively with immunocompetence, in particular, measures of innate immunity. Moreover, there was a trend for fish with high 11kT levels to suffer more from oxidative stress. Thus, our data provide support for the ICHH.
After the introduction in September 1991 of donor screening for hepatitis C, 95 potentially infectious blood donors who had given blood before this date were identified at the Oxford blood centre. Three hundred and ninety-nine blood components issued previously from these donors were identified in the course of the national HCV look-back programme. Of 399 questionnaires sent to hospital blood banks 392 were returned, identifying 290 recipients of whom 177 (61%) had died, and 113 (39%) were still alive 4-13 years after transfusion. One hundred and four recipients were traced and tested. Forty-nine recipients were not HCV infected. Forty-four of 58 (76%) recipients who received blood from donors found to be HCV RNA positive after September 1991 gave positive test results for HCV RNA. Eleven of 58 showed only antibody (anti-HCV), and 3/58 who had apparently received infectious blood showed no sign of past infection. The 11 who showed anti-HCV only, together with the three who showed no sign of past infection despite strong evidence of receiving HCV RNA-positive blood, had a mean age at transfusion of 27 years, compared with mean age at transfusion of 46 years in the 44 recipients with persistent HCV infection. Virus genotyping in 33/44 HCV RNA-positive recipients revealed five different genotypes. These did not seem to influence the outcome. Virus genotypes in 31 donor-recipient pairs showed complete concordance. Liver biopsies in 23/44 RNA-positive recipients showed minimal inflammation in four, mild in eight and moderate in 11. Liver fibrosis, Ishak grades 1-3, was present in 16/23 recipients. One other male recipient, not subjected to a liver biopsy, developed a hepatocellular carcinoma which caused his death at the age of 71, 8 years after transfusion.
The complex geometry of the human brain contains many folds and fissures, making it impossible to view the entire surface at once. Since most of the cortical activity occurs on these folds, it is desirable to be able to view the entire surface of the brain in a single view. This can be achieved using quasi-conformal flat maps of the cortical surface. Computational and visualization tools are now needed to be able to interact with these flat maps of the brain to gain information about spatial and functional relationships that might not otherwise be apparent. Such information can contribute to earlier diagnostic tools for diseases and improved treatment. Our group is developing visualization and analysis tools that will help elucidate new information about the human brain through the interaction between a cortical surface and its corresponding quasiconformal flat map.
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