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Dive into the research topics where Oliver J. Larkin is active.

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Featured researches published by Oliver J. Larkin.


BMC Genomics | 2012

Microgravity simulation by diamagnetic levitation: effects of a strong gradient magnetic field on the transcriptional profile of Drosophila melanogaster

Raúl Herranz; Oliver J. Larkin; Camelia E. Dijkstra; Richard Hill; Paul Anthony; M. R. Davey; L. Eaves; Jack J. W. A. van Loon; F. Javier Medina; Roberto Marco

BackgroundMany biological systems respond to the presence or absence of gravity. Since experiments performed in space are expensive and can only be undertaken infrequently, Earth-based simulation techniques are used to investigate the biological response to weightlessness. A high gradient magnetic field can be used to levitate a biological organism so that its net weight is zero.ResultsWe have used a superconducting magnet to assess the effect of diamagnetic levitation on the fruit fly D. melanogaster in levitation experiments that proceeded for up to 22 consecutive days. We have compared the results with those of similar experiments performed in another paradigm for microgravity simulation, the Random Positioning Machine (RPM). We observed a delay in the development of the fruit flies from embryo to adult. Microarray analysis indicated changes in overall gene expression of imagoes that developed from larvae under diamagnetic levitation, and also under simulated hypergravity conditions. Significant changes were observed in the expression of immune-, stress-, and temperature-response genes. For example, several heat shock proteins were affected. We also found that a strong magnetic field, of 16.5 Tesla, had a significant effect on the expression of these genes, independent of the effects associated with magnetically-induced levitation and hypergravity.ConclusionsDiamagnetic levitation can be used to simulate an altered effective gravity environment in which gene expression is tuned differentially in diverse Drosophila melanogaster populations including those of different age and gender. Exposure to the magnetic field per se induced similar, but weaker, changes in gene expression.


Astrobiology | 2009

Bacillus thuringiensis Conjugation in Simulated Microgravity

Elise Beuls; Rob Van Houdt; Natalie Leys; Camelia E. Dijkstra; Oliver J. Larkin; Jacques Mahillon

Spaceflight experiments have suggested a possible effect of microgravity on the plasmid transfer among strains of the Gram-positive Bacillus thuringiensis, as opposed to no effect recorded for Gram-negative conjugation. To investigate these potential effects in a more affordable experimental setup, three ground-based microgravity simulators were tested: the Rotating Wall Vessel (RWV), the Random Positioning Machine (RPM), and a superconducting magnet. The bacterial conjugative system consisted in biparental matings between two B. thuringiensis strains, where the transfer frequencies of the conjugative plasmid pAW63 and its ability to mobilize the nonconjugative plasmid pUB110 were assessed. Specifically, potential plasmid transfers in a 0 g position (simulated microgravity) were compared to those obtained under 1 g (normal gravity) condition in each device. Statistical analyses revealed no significant difference in the conjugative and mobilizable transfer frequencies between the three different simulated microgravitational conditions and our standard laboratory condition. These important ground-based observations emphasize the fact that, though no stimulation of plasmid transfer was observed, no inhibition was observed either. In the case of Gram-positive bacteria, this ability to exchange plasmids in weightlessness, as occurs under Earths conditions, should be seen as particularly relevant in the scope of spread of antibiotic resistances and bacterial virulence.


Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2011

Diamagnetic levitation enhances growth of liquid bacterial cultures by increasing oxygen availability

Camelia E. Dijkstra; Oliver J. Larkin; Paul Anthony; M. R. Davey; L. Eaves; Catherine E. D. Rees; Richard Hill

Diamagnetic levitation is a technique that uses a strong, spatially varying magnetic field to reproduce aspects of weightlessness, on the Earth. We used a superconducting magnet to levitate growing bacterial cultures for up to 18 h, to determine the effect of diamagnetic levitation on all phases of the bacterial growth cycle. We find that diamagnetic levitation increases the rate of population growth in a liquid culture and reduces the sedimentation rate of the cells. Further experiments and microarray gene analysis show that the increase in growth rate is owing to enhanced oxygen availability. We also demonstrate that the magnetic field that levitates the cells also induces convective stirring in the liquid. We present a simple theoretical model, showing how the paramagnetic force on dissolved oxygen can cause convection during the aerobic phases of bacterial growth. We propose that this convection enhances oxygen availability by transporting oxygen around the liquid culture. Since this process results from the strong magnetic field, it is not present in other weightless environments, e.g. in Earth orbit. Hence, these results are of significance and timely to researchers considering the use of diamagnetic levitation to explore effects of weightlessness on living organisms and on physical phenomena.


BMC Plant Biology | 2013

Meristematic cell proliferation and ribosome biogenesis are decoupled in diamagnetically levitated Arabidopsis seedlings

Ana I. Manzano; Oliver J. Larkin; Camelia E. Dijkstra; Paul Anthony; M. R. Davey; L. Eaves; Richard Hill; Raúl Herranz; F. Javier Medina

BackgroundCell growth and cell proliferation are intimately linked in the presence of Earth’s gravity, but are decoupled under the microgravity conditions present in orbiting spacecraft. New technologies to simulate microgravity conditions for long-duration experiments, with stable environmental conditions, in Earth-based laboratories are required to further our understanding of the effect of extraterrestrial conditions on the growth, development and health of living matter.ResultsWe studied the response of transgenic seedlings of Arabidopsis thaliana, containing either the CycB1-GUS proliferation marker or the DR5-GUS auxin-mediated growth marker, to diamagnetic levitation in the bore of a superconducting solenoid magnet. As a control, a second set of seedlings were exposed to a strong magnetic field, but not to levitation forces. A third set was exposed to a strong field and simulated hypergravity (2 g). Cell proliferation and cell growth cytological parameters were measured for each set of seedlings. Nucleolin immunodetection was used as a marker of cell growth. Collectively, the data indicate that these two fundamental cellular processes are decoupled in root meristems, as in microgravity: cell proliferation was enhanced whereas cell growth markers were depleted. These results also demonstrated delocalisation of auxin signalling in the root tip despite the fact that levitation of the seedling as a whole does not prevent the sedimentation of statoliths in the root cells.ConclusionsIn our model system, we found that diamagnetic levitation led to changes that are very similar to those caused by real- [e.g. on board the International Space Station (ISS)] or mechanically-simulated microgravity [e.g. using a Random Positioning Machine (RPM)]. These changes decoupled meristematic cell proliferation from ribosome biogenesis, and altered auxin polar transport.


Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2012

Effect of magnetically simulated zero-gravity and enhanced gravity on the walk of the common fruitfly

Richard Hill; Oliver J. Larkin; Camelia E. Dijkstra; Ana I. Manzano; Emilio de Juan; M. R. Davey; Paul Anthony; L. Eaves; F. Javier Medina; Roberto Marco; Raúl Herranz

Understanding the effects of gravity on biological organisms is vital to the success of future space missions. Previous studies in Earth orbit have shown that the common fruitfly (Drosophila melanogaster) walks more quickly and more frequently in microgravity, compared with its motion on Earth. However, flight preparation procedures and forces endured on launch made it difficult to implement on the Earths surface a control that exposed flies to the same sequence of major physical and environmental changes. To address the uncertainties concerning these behavioural anomalies, we have studied the walking paths of D. melanogaster in a pseudo-weightless environment (0g*) in our Earth-based laboratory. We used a strong magnetic field, produced by a superconducting solenoid, to induce a diamagnetic force on the flies that balanced the force of gravity. Simultaneously, two other groups of flies were exposed to a pseudo-hypergravity environment (2g*) and a normal gravity environment (1g*) within the spatially varying field. The flies had a larger mean speed in 0g* than in 1g*, and smaller in 2g*. The mean square distance travelled by the flies grew more rapidly with time in 0g* than in 1g*, and slower in 2g*. We observed no other clear effects of the magnetic field, up to 16.5 T, on the walks of the flies. We compare the effect of diamagnetically simulated weightlessness with that of weightlessness in an orbiting spacecraft, and identify the cause of the anomalous behaviour as the altered effective gravity.


BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2013

Suboptimal evolutionary novel environments promote singular altered gravity responses of transcriptome during Drosophila metamorphosis

Raúl Herranz; Oliver J. Larkin; Richard Hill; Irene López-Vidriero; Jack J. W. A. van Loon; F. Javier Medina

BackgroundPrevious experiments have shown that the reduced gravity aboard the International Space Station (ISS) causes important alterations in Drosophila gene expression. These changes were shown to be intimately linked to environmental space-flight related constraints.ResultsHere, we use an array of different techniques for ground-based simulation of microgravity effects to assess the effect of suboptimal environmental conditions on the gene expression of Drosophila in reduced gravity. A global and integrative analysis, using “gene expression dynamics inspector” (GEDI) self-organizing maps, reveals different degrees in the responses of the transcriptome when using different environmental conditions or microgravity/hypergravity simulation devices. Although the genes that are affected are different in each simulation technique, we find that the same gene ontology groups, including at least one large multigene family related with behavior, stress response or organogenesis, are over represented in each case.ConclusionsThese results suggest that the transcriptome as a whole can be finely tuned to gravity force. In optimum environmental conditions, the alteration of gravity has only mild effects on gene expression but when environmental conditions are far from optimal, the gene expression must be tuned greatly and effects become more robust, probably linked to the lack of experience of organisms exposed to evolutionary novel environments such as a gravitational free one.


Nanoscale | 2014

Tuneable paramagnetic susceptibility and exciton g-factor in Mn-doped PbS colloidal nanocrystals

Lyudmila Turyanska; Richard Hill; O. Makarovsky; Fabrizio Moro; Andrew N. Knott; Oliver J. Larkin; A. Patanè; A. J. Meaney; Peter C. M. Christianen; Michael W. Fay; Richard J. Curry


Microgravity Science and Technology | 2009

Germination of Arabidopsis Seed in Space and in Simulated Microgravity: Alterations in Root Cell Growth and Proliferation

Ana I. Manzano; Isabel Matía; Fernando González-Camacho; Eugénie Carnero-Diaz; Jack J. W. A. van Loon; Camelia E. Dijkstra; Oliver J. Larkin; Paul Anthony; M. R. Davey; Roberto Marco; F. Javier Medina


Archive | 2008

Drosophila Behaviour & Gene expression in altered gravity conditions: Comparison between Space and ground facilities

Raúl Herranz; David A. Laván; Camelia E. Dijkstra; Oliver J. Larkin; Michael R. Davey; F. Javier Medina; Jack J. W. A. van Loon; Roberto Marco; Peter Schiller


Archive | 2014

in Arabidopsis seedlings

Raúl Herranz; Miguel A. Valbuena; Khaled Youssef; Francisco-Javier Medina; Aránzazu Manzano; Oliver J. Larkin; Paul Anthony; M. R. Davey; L. Eaves; Richard Hill; Herranz R

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Richard Hill

University of Nottingham

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Paul Anthony

University of Nottingham

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L. Eaves

University of Nottingham

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M. R. Davey

University of Nottingham

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Raúl Herranz

Spanish National Research Council

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F. Javier Medina

Spanish National Research Council

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Ana I. Manzano

Spanish National Research Council

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Roberto Marco

Autonomous University of Madrid

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