The coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) pointed out new challenges to teaching in laboratory-based disciplines, such as chemistry, biology, and biochemistry with on-site practical sessions interrupted or suspended during 2020 and 2021. Observation and experimentation are part of education in science-based disciplines and provide necessary skills for professional and academic careers. In an effort to solve this disruption to experimental observations, we designed a set of home-based experiences related to chemistry and biochemistry. These included visual identification of lipids, sugars, proteins, and DNA in biological samples using materials easily found at home, such as alcohol, soap, and oil, among others. Each activity was documented with smartphones and discussed in a final portfolio. Fifty-two students were part of an introductory cell biochemistry course. The home-based laboratories were organized into 2.5-h sessions that included a lab session, a post lab session, and a period for preparing the experiment at home. Thirty-six (17 men and 19 women) students answered a survey designed to assess three major domains: (1) student’s demographics and home environment, (2) general perceptions of the laboratory activities, and (3) specific perceptions of each laboratory activity. Sixty two percent of the students thought that these activities helped them to understand how to isolate and identify macromolecules. Eleven percent said these home activities did not contribute to their understanding while 27% stated the activities were not significant for the topic. We conclude that, although the addition of in-house experiments provides a complementary tool for understanding the main concepts in biochemistry along with improving skills in scientific thinking, this should be accompanied by a good feedback mechanism from the instructors. In addition, student to student interaction should be part of the at home activities to increase student motivation. A Flipped laboratory methodology plus tools where metacognition is evaluated, appear to be appropriate to promote the understanding of concepts in the context of the laboratory. And although some aspects of the experimental experience can be substitute with online resources and in home experiences, others can only be achieved by the in-person experience.
Chronic diabetes mellitus (DM) can lead to kidney damage associated with increased reactive oxygen species (ROS), proteinuria, and tubular damage. Altered protein expression levels of transforming growth factor-beta 1 (TGF-β1), fibronectin, and renal NADPH oxidase (NOX-4) are associated with the profibrotic phenotype in renal tubular cells. NOX-4 is one of the primary sources of ROS in the diabetic kidney and responsible for the induction of profibrotic factors in collecting duct (CD) cells. The renal medulla is predominantly composed of CDs; in DM, these CD cells are exposed to high glucose (HG) load. Currently there is no published literature describing the expression of these markers in the renal medulla in male and female mice during the early phase of DM, or the role of NOX-4-induced ROS. Our aim was to evaluate changes in transcripts and protein abundances of TGF-β1, fibronectin, and NOX-4 along with ROS levels in renal medullary tissues from male and female mice during a short period of streptozotocin (STZ)-induced type 1 DM and the effect of HG in cultured CD cells. CF-1 mice were injected with or without a single dose of STZ (200 mg/kg) and euthanized at day 6. STZ females showed higher expression of fibronectin and TGF-β1 when compared to control mice of either gender. Interestingly, STZ female mice showed a >30-fold increase on mRNA levels and a 3-fold increase in protein levels of kidney medullary NOX-4. Both male and female STZ mice showed increased intrarenal ROS. In primary cultures of inner medullary CD cells exposed to HG over 48 h, the expression of TGF-β1, fibronectin, and NOX-4 were augmented. M-1 CD cells exposed to HG showed increased ROS, fibronectin, and TGF-β1; this effect was prevented by NOX-4 inhibition. Our data suggest that at as early as 6 days of STZ-induced DM, the expression of profibrotic markers TGF-β1 and fibronectin increases in renal medullary CD cells. Antioxidants mechanisms in male and female in renal medullary tissues seems to be differentially regulated by the actions of NOX-4.
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