MOSAIC: Why we see red when we look at ocean plants?
GREEN was the dominant colour for plants both on land and in the ocean until about 250 million years ago when changes in the ocean’s oxygen content — possibly sparked by a cataclysmic event — helped bring basic ocean plants with a red colour to prominence — a status they retain today. That’s the view of a group led by marine scientists from Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, in a paper, The Evolutionary Inheritance of Elemental Stoichiometry in Marine Phytoplankton in a recent issue of the journal Nature.
Studying ancient fossils plus current species of microscopic ocean plants called phytoplankton, scientists found evidence that a “phytoplankton schism” took place after a global ocean oxygen depletion killed 85 per cent of the organisms living in the ocean about 250 million years ago at the end of the Permian era. “This paved the way for the evolution of red phytoplankton,” said one of the paper’s authors, Paul G. Falkowski, professor in the Environmental Biophysics and Molecular Ecology Program at Rutgers’ Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences (IMCS).
The Permian era, prior to the advent of the dinosaurs, ended in a global extinction scientists believe may have been linked to extraterrestrial collisions or earthly eruptions or explosions.
“Plants on land are green, and they inherited the cell components that gave them a green colour about 400 million years ago,” Falkowski said. “But most of plants or phytoplankton in the ocean are red — they inherited their pigments about 250 million years ago. Our paper suggests that a global ocean oxygen depletion changed the chemistry of the ocean and selected for red phytoplankton. The ocean has been dominated by the red line ever since.” — Samina Iqbal
Battling Parkinsons
LEVODOPA came as a miracle for the treatment of Parkinson’s disease, states a recent issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. Parkinsons Disease is signified by involuntary movements of the muscles due to excess stimuli being produced from certain areas of the brain. Levodopa despite being the best therapy,has shown unexpected complications, as increased frequent involuntary movements, causing disability.
In 1995, researchers from France, reported that this “levodopa syndrome” responded to high-frequency, deep-brain stimulation targeting the subthalamic nucleus. A recent study on 49 patients with Parkinson’s disease, receiving subthalamic stimulation and a follow up for five years, showed marked amelioration of the classic levodopa-responsive symptoms. Movements improved considerably and were often eliminated, because the doses of dopaminergic drugs were greatly reduced.
Side effects were observed as motor disability, including postural instability, freezing of gait, and speech deficits. Progressive dementia developed in a few cases and psychiatric disorders, including hypomania, apathy, and depression, were seen in some.
Although its mechanisms of action remain uncertain, stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus is clearly a major advance in the treatment of Parkinson’s disease. However, its efficacy is no greater than that of the traditional gold standard, levodopa.
The unique contribution of stimulation therapy, is the marked and sustained effect on the disabling motor complications associated with levodopa therapy.
The resistance of many features of Parkinson’s disease to both levodopa and stimulation therapy, calls for more research that will find the cause of the disorder. — Dr Fatema Jawad
What is a carat?
A Carat (Karat in USA and Germany) was originally a unit of mass (weight) based on the Carob seed or bean used by ancient merchants in the Middle East. The Carob seed is from the Carob or locust bean tree. The carat is still used as such for the weight of gem stones (a carat is about 200 mg). For gold, it has come to be used for measuring the purity of gold where pure gold is defined as 24 carats.
How and when this change occurred is not clear. It does involve the Romans who also used the name Siliqua Graeca (Keration in Greek, Qirat in Arabic, now Carat in modern times) for the bean of the Carob tree. The Romans also used the name Siliqua for a small silver coin which was one-twentyfourth of the golden solidus of Constantine. This latter had a mass of about 4.54 grammes, so the Siliqua was approximately equivalent in value to the mass of 1 Keration or Siliqua Graeca of gold, i.e the value of 1/24th of a Solidus is about 1 Keration of gold, i.e one carat.—WGC
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