Bowen Peters (blowbotany62)

Drought stress affects vegetative and reproductive growth processes and synthesis of secondary metabolites in plants. We assessed relevant indicators of vegetative and reproductive growth in Bupleurum chinense DC. during drought stress. Samples were collected on days 4, 8, 12, 20, and 24 of a drought treatment according to drought stress severity in order to elucidate potential effects on synthesis of flavonoids in leaves and saikosaponins in roots of B. chinense. The results showed that B. chinense can adapt to drought stress mainly by increasing concentrations of osmoregulatory substances (soluble protein and proline) and increasing activity of protective enzymes (superoxide dismutase and catalase), as observed on days 12 and 20 of the treatment. Secondary metabolite concentrations in B. chinense roots and leaves showed significant differences-drought stress increased saikosaponin concentrations in roots by 9.85% and 6.41% during vegetative and reproductive growth, respectively, on day 20, and saikosaponin gh physiological changes and regulation of secondary metabolite production in different plant tissues.Traditional theories of neuroeconomics focus on reinforcement learning and reward value. We propose here a novel reframing of reinforcement learning and motivation that includes a hippocampal-dependent regulatory mechanism which balances cue-induced behavioral excitation with behavioral inhibition. This mechanism enables interoceptive cues produced by respective food or drug satiety to antagonize the ability of excitatory food- and drug-related environmental cues to retrieve the memories of food and drug reinforcers, thereby suppressing the power of those cues to evoke appetitive behavior. When the operation of this mechanism is impaired, ability of satiety signals to inhibit appetitive behavior is weakened because the relative balance between inhibition and simple excitation is shifted toward increased retrieval of food and drug memories by environmental cues. In the present paper, we (1) describe the associative processes that constitute this mechanism of hippocampal-dependent behavior inhibition; (2) describe how a prevailing obesity-promoting diet and drugs of abuse produce hippocampal pathophysiologies that can selectively impair this inhibitory function; and (3) propose how glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1), an incretin hormone that is recognized as an important satiety signal, may work to protect the hippocampal-dependent inhibition. Our perspective may add to neuroscientific and neuroeconomic analyses of both overeating and drug abuse by outlining the role of hippocampal-dependent memory processes in the control of both food and drug seeking behaviors. In addition, this view suggests that consideration should be given to diet- and drug induced hippocampal pathophysiologies, as potential novel targets for the treatment of dysregulated energy and drug intake.It has been reported that suicide is associated with ambient temperature; however, the heterogeneity in this association and its underlying factors have not been extensively investigated. Therefore, we investigated the spatial and temporal variation in the temperature-suicide association and examined climatic, demographic, and socioeconomic factors that may underlie such heterogeneity. We analyzed the daily time-series data for the suicide counts and ambient temperature, which were collected for the 47 prefectures of Japan from 1972 to 2015, using a two-stage analysis. In the first stage, the prefecture-specific temperature-suicide association was estimated by using a generalized linear model. In the second stage, the prefecture-specific associations were pooled, and key factors explaining the spatial and temporal variation were identified by using mixed effects meta-regression. Results showed that there is an inverted J-shape nonlinear association between temperature and suicide; the suicide risk increased with temperature but leveled off above 24.4 °C. The nati