March 2008

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Illinois Wesleyan University student Andrew Tharp and Renee Countryman, assistant professor of psychology, have been conducting research related to newer pharmaceutical treatments for Alzheimer’s disease.

Tharp, a senior psychology major from Lake in the Hills, Ill., and Countryman are studying the effects of the drug Guanfacine on rats with induced memory deficiencies similar to Alzheimer’s.

Alzheimer’s disease, a brain disorder that usually affects people age 65 and older, causes memory loss and behavioral issues associated with dementia.

A known cause of Alzheimer’s symptoms is a decrease of acetylcholine in the brain. Acetylcholine, a chemical neurotransmitter, carries messages between neurons and other cells. In order to mimic this condition in rats Tharp and Countryman administered a drug that decreases acetylcholine thereby affecting the rats’ memory.

According to Countryman, current drugs are designed to increase the level of acetylcholine in the brain by inhibiting an enzyme that normally functions to destroy any excess amounts of acetylcholine. However, as Alzheimer’s disease progresses, acetylcholine naturally becomes less available in the brain. Drugs that inhibit this enzyme eventually become ineffective when there is little or no acetylcholine left to prevent from being destroyed.

“The problem is Alzheimer’s treatments just don’t work for humans in the long-term, they may work for a short period, but they always stop working over time,” says Countryman.

The drug that Tharp and Countryman are studying, however, takes a different approach to improving memory loss by focusing on a different neurotransmitter. Guanfacine increases the levels of the neurotransmitter norepinephrine, associated with attention and awareness. By increasing norepinephrine levels in the brain, the drug boosts attention and awareness thereby enhancing perceptions and hopefully improving memory.

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BLOOMINGTON, Ill. – Judy Huff, the senior office coordinator for Illinois Wesleyan University’s Center for Natural Sciences, has been named the 2008 winner of the University’s Max. L. Starkey Service Award at the 17th annual recognition banquet at Bloomington’s Double Tree Hotel on Wednesday, March 26.

Huff, who has been with Illinois Wesleyan since 1990, helps to support five departments on campus and more than 50 faculty members. She was recognized for tireless dedication and strong work ethic, and is considered a vital resource to both students and faculty members.

The Starkey Award, established in 2001, is presented to a member of the administrative, technical, support, security or physical plant staffs nominated by his or her peers for extraordinary service. The award is named in honor of the late Max Starkey, a 1957 Illinois Wesleyan graduate who was University comptroller from 1957 to 1996.

The banquet recognized members of the IWU community for their work throughout the year and included a special tribute to employees who celebrated milestone anniversaries in five-year increments.

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BLOOMINGTON, Ill. – Kylee Eblin, a 2003 graduate of Illinois Wesleyan University, received the Society of Toxicology’s Women in Toxicology Student Achievement Award on Wednesday, March 19.

Currently a pharmacology and toxicology doctoral student at The University of Arizona College of Pharmacy, Eblin is focusing her research on the potentially carcinogenic effects of low-level arsenic exposure on bladder cells.

Eblin is one of three students nationwide selected for the award given by The Society of Toxicology, the leading organization dedicated to creating a safer and healthier world by advancing the science of toxicology.

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BLOOMINGTON, Ill. – Illinois Wesleyan University student Jamie Rogers has been chosen by the Council on Undergraduate Research (CUR) to present her research on Capitol Hill at the annual Posters on the Hill session in April.

Rogers, a senior chemistry major from St. Louis, is one of 60 students from across the nation who has been invited to Washington, D.C. According to CUR, which hosts the event, Posters on the Hill allows members of Congress to gain an understanding of the importance of funding undergraduate scientific research.

“Undergraduate research can sometimes be forgotten because it is not on the vast scale of graduate schools,” said Rogers. “But quality undergraduate programs like Illinois Wesleyan are key building blocks for all students. I know this presentation is important not just for me, but for all future undergraduate students.”

Rogers will present a poster of her research on “Environmentally Friendly Organic Synthesis Using Bismuth Compounds” that will be viewed by U.S. Senators during the Posters on the Hill session. “The research is about achieving chemical reactions in a green way, using a catalyst like bismuth bromide. Catalysts make reactions go more smoothly. A green catalyst means it is better for the environment and the chemists working with them,” said Rogers, who works on the project with Illinois Wesleyan chemistry Professor Ram Mohan.

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BLOOMINGTON, Ill. – Illinois Wesleyan University senior Dan Haeger spent a ten-week summer internship at the University of California Santa Barbara (UCSB) investigating various ways to manufacture blue lasers so that their products can be more consumer friendly. Blue laser devices are being developed by researchers as the next step in cutting-edge electronics, with the hopes of replacing red laser products such as DVD players.“We’re trying to make a certain generation of electronics cheaper and more affordable for the public,” says Haeger, a physics and economics double-major from Wheaton, Ill.

According to Haeger, blue lasers provide the latest advances in technology, but they are more expensive to manufacture than red lasers. Blue lasers currently cost around $200-$300 to produce, while the price of red lasers is drastically lower at $0.99. Prior to the mid 1990s, popular electronics such as DVD players, laser printers and medical equipment commonly used red lasers because of their availability. Over the past five years, however, red laser products have been replaced by blue laser technologies to provide consumers with higher sound and image quality with more storage capacity.

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