KU News: New research effort will clarify aging differences in males and females of many species

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New research effort will clarify aging differences in males and females of many species
LAWRENCE — Researchers from the University of Kansas will join a multi-institution effort to better grasp mechanisms and evolutionary history of sex differences in aging across an array of animal species. The research project, organized as the IISAGE Biology Integration Institute, is funded by a five-year, $12.5 million award from the National Science Foundation, of which about $1 million will come to KU. KU’s primary role in the project will be to contribute data from Lepidoptera (moths and butterflies).
Addiction research center series features experts in substance use and treatment, eating behaviors and LGBTQ+ health disparities
LAWRENCE – The Cofrin Logan Center for Addiction Research & Treatment at the University of Kansas will launch its fall seminar series this week with a talk presented by a University of Kentucky scientist who studies cocaine use disorder. William Stoops will present at 11:30 a.m. Sept. 16 in the Dole Human Development Center, room 1031. The event will also be livestreamed via YouTube; details will be shared on the center’s website.
Full stories below.
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Contact: Brendan Lynch, KU News Service, 785-864-8855, [email protected], @BrendanMLynch
New research effort will clarify aging differences in males and females of many species
LAWRENCE — Researchers from the University of Kansas will join a multi-institution effort to better grasp mechanisms and evolutionary history of sex differences in aging across an array of animal species.
The research project, organized as the IISAGE Biology Integration Institute, is funded by a five-year, $12.5 million award from the National Science Foundation (of which about $1 million will come to KU).
“This project has its genesis in the observation that the average lifespan of males and females is often strikingly different, but the extent and direction of these differences varies widely among animal species,” said Jamie Walters, associate professor of ecology & evolutionary biology, who is leading the KU portion of the grant work.
“In some species, like humans and many other mammals, females live longer than males,” Walters said. “However, in many other species, like some bats, some birds and many insects, the opposite pattern is found. There are many hypothesized explanations for why such differences in aging exist, but which ones are the most common or prominent has not been resolved. This is why our IISAGE integration institute is such an exciting project – we’ll be collecting comparable data from many different animal species with the aim of finding the common mechanisms underlying sex-differences in aging.”
The KU researcher said the consortium includes experts in mice, fish, lizards, turtles, flies and moths, “as well researchers with expertise in computational biology and machine learning — statistics — who will help weave together the data collected from diverse animals into an integrated inference.”
Beyond a better scientific understanding of sex differences in aging, the project could lead to medical advances and inform society as it deals with the challenges of climate change in coming years.
“Understanding the common principles and mechanisms in sex-specific aging has notable implications not only for human health, but also for how organisms will be impacted by changing climate, including animal agriculture and the conservation of biodiversity,” Walters said.
Walters’ lab at KU integrates advanced genomic methodologies with basic organismal biology to better comprehend evolutionary processes at the molecular level. His primary role in the IISAGE Biology Integration Institute project will be to contribute data from Lepidoptera (moths and butterflies).
“This work dovetails with my long-standing interest in studying sex chromosomes, which are the foundation of one major hypothesis explaining sex differences in aging,” he said. “In many animals, it is the males who carry ‘different’ sex chromosomes — the X and Y. And often it’s also the males that age faster, suggesting there is something important about having a Y chromosome, or at least having ‘different’ sex chromosomes, that determines longevity. However, moths and butterflies have ‘reversed’ sex chromosomes, with females having ‘different’ sex chromosomes and carrying the Y. Notably, it seems often female Lepidoptera are shorter lived. But in any case, including Lepidoptera in the study allows us to separate having a Y chromosome from being male, thus separating the impact of sex chromosomes on aging from the impact of being male or female.”
The IISAGE collaboration is led by Nicole Riddle, associate professor of biology at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. She said the results of the investigation someday could benefit human health.
“There are significant variations that we see in nature with regards to lifespan and sex differences in aging,” Riddle said. “It has long been a puzzle why in some animal species the females live longer and in others, males outlive their counterparts. We don’t know why this is, and our findings will help us better understand these diverse patterns of aging, and how those could potentially be manipulated to our benefit. This understanding can impact our food supply, how we adapt to rising temperatures or even how to defy the frailty that accompanies older age altogether.”
In addition to KU and UAB, researchers involved in the IISAGE Biology Integration Institute come from sites including Michigan State University, Cornell University, Marquette University, Brown University, the University of Houston and the University of Maryland.
The new institute also will include a Research Experiences for Undergraduates program, a traveling museum exhibition and a citizen-science project tailored for K-12 school students in after-school programs.
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Contact: Jen Humphrey, Life Span Institute, 785-864-6621, [email protected], @kulifespan
Addiction research center series features experts in substance use and treatment, eating behaviors and LGBTQ+ health disparities
LAWRENCE – The Cofrin Logan Center for Addiction Research & Treatment at the University of Kansas will launch its fall seminar series this week with a talk presented by a University of Kentucky scientist who studies cocaine use disorder.
William Stoops, professor of behavioral science, psychiatry and psychology at the University of Kentucky, will present at 11:30 a.m. Sept. 16 in the Dole Human Development Center, room 1031. The event will also be livestreamed via YouTube; details will be shared on the center’s website.
Stoops will describe research that has evaluated some non-abstinence outcomes for treating cocaine use disorder that may serve as novel targets and be used to identify and advance treatments.
Additional speakers in the series:
1. Ashley Gearhardt, 11:30 a.m. Oct. 21 in 1031 Dole. Gearhardt, associate professor of psychology at the University of Michigan, studies how certain foods may be capable of triggering an addictive process and what activates reward systems to driving eating behavior.
2. Annesa Flentje, 11:30 a.m. Nov. 4 in 1031 Dole. Flentje is an associate professor at the University of California-San Francisco School of Nursing and studies health and health disparities among sexual and gender minorities.
“Through our seminar series, we highlight pressing issues in addictions research and treatment and educate the public about addictions science in an effort to increase knowledge and reduce stigma,” said Michael Amlung, associate director for training at the center and associate professor in the KU Department of Applied Behavioral Science. “The series is a key component of the educational and outreach missions of the Cofrin Logan Center.”
Based at the KU Life Span Institute, the Cofrin Logan Center brings together researchers, practitioners, KU students and community partners to address challenges in addiction. Researchers affiliated with the center explore a wide range of behavioral health challenges, while clinical staff members of the center deliver direct addiction treatment and therapy services to individuals in the community, as well as arts-based therapy programs.
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Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, director of news and media relations, [email protected]
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