January 14, 2016

From GcatWiki
Jump to: navigation, search

Article Discussion

"Adaptive Responses to Feeding in Burmese Pythons: Pay Before Pumping" (1995)

  • Small Intestine mass doubled and other organ masses also increased 1-3 days post-feeding.
  • Post-feeding effects also includes upregulation of intestinal uptake transporters and hydrolytic enzymes.
  • The mucosal layer of the small intestine experiences greater increase in mass as compared to the serosa.


"A Vertebrate Model of Extreme Physiological Regulation" (1998)

  • Snake post-prandial responses are adaptive rather than phylogenetic.
  • We need to investigate the sglt-1 gene.


Questions to Consider:

  • Transport Mechanism:
    • Is there an increase in transcription?
    • Is there a hormonal response?
    • Are there post-translational modifications?
  • Can we find an ortholog and trace it back to the Burmese Python?
  • Can we find intestinal genes involved in housekeeping, cell-proliferation, or up-take?
  • How will our results be affected if we only sampled serosa from the Small Intestine?
  • How does the brush-border get bigger?


Ashlyn's Main Page


References

  • Secor, Stephen M., and Diamond, Jared. “Adaptive Responses to Feeding in Burmese Pythons: Pay Before Pumping.” The Journal of Experimental Biology. 198 (1995): 1313-1325.
Secor and Diamond (1995)
  • Secor, Stephen M., and Diamond, Jared. “A vertebrate model of extreme physiological regulation.” Nature. 395 (1998): 659-662.
Secor and Diamond (1998)