Stress-omics: A multi-omics approach to discriminate stress states in a marine mammal
Repeated or chronic stress, such as that caused by anthropogenic activity and environmental disturbance, may affect animal health and fitness and contribute to population declines by consequential changes in food webs. However, the physiological impacts of repeated stress have not been extensively s...
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ftunivpacificdc:oai:scholarlycommons.pacific.edu:researchday-1226 2023-08-27T04:09:15+02:00 Stress-omics: A multi-omics approach to discriminate stress states in a marine mammal Deyarmin, Jared S McCormley, Molly Champagne, Cory Stephan, Alicia Houser, Dorian Crocker, Daniel Khudyakov, Jane 2018-04-28T17:00:00Z https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/researchday/2018/events/20 unknown Scholarly Commons https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/researchday/2018/events/20 Pacific Research & Scholarship Day Bioinformatics Integrative Biology Other Animal Sciences text 2018 ftunivpacificdc 2023-08-07T20:27:43Z Repeated or chronic stress, such as that caused by anthropogenic activity and environmental disturbance, may affect animal health and fitness and contribute to population declines by consequential changes in food webs. However, the physiological impacts of repeated stress have not been extensively studied in wild animals, hindering development of biomarkers that conservation practitioners can use to identify chronically stressed individuals. Baseline endocrine measurements are commonly used for stress diagnosis, but they may be less robust indicators of stress than their downstream molecular mediators. We used a non-targeted, multi-omics approach to profile global changes in target gene and protein abundance in response to acute and repeated stress in northern elephant seals (Mirounga angustirostris). Text Elephant Seals University of the Pacific: Scholarly Commons |
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University of the Pacific: Scholarly Commons |
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unknown |
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Bioinformatics Integrative Biology Other Animal Sciences |
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Bioinformatics Integrative Biology Other Animal Sciences Deyarmin, Jared S McCormley, Molly Champagne, Cory Stephan, Alicia Houser, Dorian Crocker, Daniel Khudyakov, Jane Stress-omics: A multi-omics approach to discriminate stress states in a marine mammal |
topic_facet |
Bioinformatics Integrative Biology Other Animal Sciences |
description |
Repeated or chronic stress, such as that caused by anthropogenic activity and environmental disturbance, may affect animal health and fitness and contribute to population declines by consequential changes in food webs. However, the physiological impacts of repeated stress have not been extensively studied in wild animals, hindering development of biomarkers that conservation practitioners can use to identify chronically stressed individuals. Baseline endocrine measurements are commonly used for stress diagnosis, but they may be less robust indicators of stress than their downstream molecular mediators. We used a non-targeted, multi-omics approach to profile global changes in target gene and protein abundance in response to acute and repeated stress in northern elephant seals (Mirounga angustirostris). |
format |
Text |
author |
Deyarmin, Jared S McCormley, Molly Champagne, Cory Stephan, Alicia Houser, Dorian Crocker, Daniel Khudyakov, Jane |
author_facet |
Deyarmin, Jared S McCormley, Molly Champagne, Cory Stephan, Alicia Houser, Dorian Crocker, Daniel Khudyakov, Jane |
author_sort |
Deyarmin, Jared S |
title |
Stress-omics: A multi-omics approach to discriminate stress states in a marine mammal |
title_short |
Stress-omics: A multi-omics approach to discriminate stress states in a marine mammal |
title_full |
Stress-omics: A multi-omics approach to discriminate stress states in a marine mammal |
title_fullStr |
Stress-omics: A multi-omics approach to discriminate stress states in a marine mammal |
title_full_unstemmed |
Stress-omics: A multi-omics approach to discriminate stress states in a marine mammal |
title_sort |
stress-omics: a multi-omics approach to discriminate stress states in a marine mammal |
publisher |
Scholarly Commons |
publishDate |
2018 |
url |
https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/researchday/2018/events/20 |
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Elephant Seals |
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Elephant Seals |
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Pacific Research & Scholarship Day |
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https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/researchday/2018/events/20 |
_version_ |
1775350425730416640 |