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Louise Abbott

Louise Abbott

Verified

Texas A&M University · Ophthalmology

Active 1980–2024

h-index33
Citations3.4k
Papers1315 last 5y
Funding$438k
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Research topics

  • Biology
  • Neuroscience
  • Endocrinology
  • Internal medicine
  • Anatomy

Selected publications

  • Teratogenicity of Rangeland Lupinus: The Crooked Calf Disease

    2024-12-03 · 1 citations

    book-chapterSenior author

    Crooked calf disease is a pattern of congenital anomalies observed in the off-spring of range-grazed beef and dairy cattle in the western United States and Alaska (James, 1977; Keeler, 1973a; Leipold et al., 1969; Shupe et al., 1967a). Usually, no more than 10% of a herd is affected in any one calving season, but up to 40% of calves from a single herd have been reported to be affected (Shupe et al., 1967b; Finnell and Gay, unpublished data). Economic losses for producers are incurred in at least three ways from this condition. First, many of the affected calves die or must be destroyed soon after birth because they cannot stand to suckle or follow the dam. Second, crooked calf disease may be accompanied by dystocia, requiring assistance with calving and potential loss of the dam as well as the calf. Finally, there is the loss of prospective replacement heifers when affected calves are produced (Leipold et al., 1969).

  • Imaging, Specimen Preparation

    Encyclopedia of Computational Neuroscience · 2022-01-01

    book-chapter1st authorCorresponding
  • Exposure to Toxicants Affects Everyone, Especially the Very Young

    International Journal of Molecular Sciences · 2022-06-29 · 3 citations

    editorialOpen access1st authorCorresponding

    Toxicology is an incredibly complex and diverse area of biomedical science that includes numerous areas of specialization [...].

  • Connectome, Mouse

    Encyclopedia of Computational Neuroscience · 2022-01-01

    book-chapterSenior author
  • Mercury Toxicity and Neurogenesis in the Mammalian Brain

    International Journal of Molecular Sciences · 2021-07-14 · 46 citations

    reviewOpen access1st authorCorresponding

    The mammalian brain is formed from billions of cells that include a wide array of neuronal and glial subtypes. Neural progenitor cells give rise to the vast majority of these cells during embryonic, fetal, and early postnatal developmental periods. The process of embryonic neurogenesis includes proliferation, differentiation, migration, the programmed death of some newly formed cells, and the final integration of differentiated neurons into neural networks. Adult neurogenesis also occurs in the mammalian brain, but adult neurogenesis is beyond the scope of this review. Developing embryonic neurons are particularly susceptible to neurotoxicants and especially mercury toxicity. This review focused on observations concerning how mercury, and in particular, methylmercury, affects neurogenesis in the developing mammalian brain. We summarized information on models used to study developmental mercury toxicity, theories of pathogenesis, and treatments that could be used to reduce the toxic effects of mercury on developing neurons.

  • Effect of Cadmium and Nickel Exposure on Early Development in Zebrafish (Danio rerio) Embryos

    Water · 2020-10-26 · 37 citations

    articleOpen access

    Exposure to even low concentrations of heavy metals can be toxic to aquatic organisms, especially during embryonic development. Thus, this study aimed to investigate the toxicity of nickel and cadmium in zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryos exposed to environmentally relevant concentrations of each metal alone or in combination from 4 h through to 72 h postfertilization. Neither metal altered survival, but individual and combined exposures decreased hatching rate. Whereas cadmium did not affect total body length, trunk area, eye diameter, or eye area, nickel alone and in combination with cadmium decreased each morphological parameter. Yolk sac area, an index of metabolic rate, was not affected by nickel, but was larger in embryos exposed to high cadmium concentrations or nickel and cadmium combined at high concentrations. Nickel decreased spontaneous movement, whereas cadmium alone or nickel and cadmium combined had no effect. Neither metal altered elicited movement, but nickel and cadmium combined decreased elicited movement. Myosin protein expression in skeletal muscle was not altered by cadmium exposure. However, exposure to nickel at low concentrations and combined exposure to nickel and cadmium decreased myosin expression. Overall, nickel was more toxic than cadmium. In conclusion, we observed that combined exposures had a greater effect on movement than gross morphology, and no significant additive or synergistic interactions were present. These results imply that nickel and cadmium are toxic to developing embryos, even at very low exposure concentrations, and that these metals act via different mechanisms.

  • Issue Information

    Anatomia Histologia Embryologia · 2020-01-01

    paratextOpen access
  • Adult neurogenesis in the mammalian dentate gyrus

    Anatomia Histologia Embryologia · 2019-09-30 · 166 citations

    review1st authorCorresponding

    Earlier observations in neuroscience suggested that no new neurons form in the mature central nervous system. Evidence now indicates that new neurons do form in the adult mammalian brain. Two regions of the mature mammalian brain generate new neurons: (a) the border of the lateral ventricles of the brain (subventricular zone) and (b) the subgranular zone (SGZ) of the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus. This review focuses only on new neuron formation in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus. During normal prenatal and early postnatal development, neural stem cells (NSCs) give rise to differentiated neurons. NSCs persist in the dentate gyrus SGZ, undergoing cell division, with some daughter cells differentiating into functional neurons that participate in learning and memory and general cognition through integration into pre-existing neural networks. Axons, which emanate from neurons in the entorhinal cortex, synapse with dendrites of the granule cells (small neurons) of the dentate gyrus. Axons from granule cells synapse with pyramidal cells in the hippocampal CA3 region, which send axons to synapse with CA1 hippocampal pyramidal cells that send their axons out of the hippocampus proper. Adult neurogenesis includes proliferation, differentiation, migration, the death of some newly formed cells and final integration of surviving cells into neural networks. We summarise these processes in adult mammalian hippocampal neurogenesis and discuss the roles of major signalling molecules that influence neurogenesis, including neurotransmitters and some hormones. The recent controversy raised concerning whether or not adult neurogenesis occurs in humans also is discussed.

  • Morphological and functional comparison of lingual papillae in suckling and adult feral cats: Forensic evidence

    Anatomia Histologia Embryologia · 2019-07-01 · 9 citations

    article

    Feral cats are considered as strays and are more likely to hunt in the street. We investigated the effect of environmental adaptations on the structures of lingual papillae in feral cats, which could be used as forensic evidence for their identification. There are no reported studies about the structural comparison of lingual papillae between suckling and adult feral cats. The present study described the lingual papillae of both suckling and adult cats macroscopically and microscopically via light and scanning electron microscopy. A total of nine tongue samples each for suckling and adult feral cats were examined grossly and histologically. Papillae distributions of suckling cats were similar to those observed in adult cats. Meanwhile, the shapes of those papillae were markedly different from that of corresponding papillae in adults. The change in taste bud position and size seemed to be related to the progressive growth of the papillae between adult and suckling cats; absence of taste buds in foliate papillae of feral cats at any stage; and marginal papillae which were a characteristic feature for all suckling cats. All previous elements could be affected by the specific feeding behaviour and mastication mode adaptation in suckling and adult feral cats which might help to identify suckling and adult feral cats among other breeds and animal species. We anticipate these findings may provide promising forensic evidence to discriminate between adult and suckling feral cat remains as well as prediction of environmental harshness and feeding behaviour.

  • Robust Cell Detection for Large-Scale 3D Microscopy Using GPU-Accelerated Iterative Voting

    Frontiers in Neuroanatomy · 2018-04-26 · 6 citations

    articleOpen access

    High-throughput imaging techniques, such as Knife-Edge Scanning Microscopy (KESM),are capable of acquiring three-dimensional whole-organ images at sub-micrometer resolution. These images are challenging to segment since they can exceed several terabytes (TB) in size, requiring extremely fast and fully automated algorithms. Staining techniques are limited to contrast agents that can be applied to large samples and imaged in a single pass. This requires maximizing the number of structures labeled in a single channel, resulting in images that are densely packed with spatial features. In this paper, we propose a three-dimensional approach for locating cells based on iterative voting. Due to the computational complexity of this algorithm, a highly efficient GPU implementation is required to make it practical on large data sets. The proposed algorithm has a limited number of input parameters and is highly parallel.

Recent grants

Frequent coauthors

  • David Mayerich

    University of Houston

    25 shared
  • Yoonsuck Choe

    23 shared
  • John Keyser

    Texas A&M University

    21 shared
  • Jaerock Kwon

    14 shared
  • Sang‐Soep Nahm

    Konkuk University

    10 shared
  • Bruce H. McCormick

    10 shared
  • Daniel E. Miller

    University of Waterloo

    9 shared
  • Bjoern Busse

    Universität Hamburg

    8 shared

Education

  • DVM

    Washington State University

    1998
  • BA, Biology

    Whitman College

    1975
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