279 research outputs found
Prenatal exposures and exposomics of asthma
This review examines the causal investigation of preclinical development of childhood asthma using exposomic tools. We examine the current state of knowledge regarding early-life exposure to non-biogenic indoor air pollution and the developmental modulation of the immune system. We examine how metabolomics technologies could aid not only in the biomarker identification of a particular asthma phenotype, but also the mechanisms underlying the immunopathologic process. Within such a framework, we propose alternate components of exposomic investigation of asthma in which, the exposome represents a reiterative investigative process of targeted biomarker identification, validation through computational systems biology and physical sampling of environmental medi
Women in Science 2013
“Women in Science” summarizes research done by Smith College’s Summer Research Fellowship (SURF) Program participants. Ever since its 1967 start, SURF has been a cornerstone of Smith’s science education. In 2013, 167 students participated in SURF, supervised by 57 faculty mentor-advisors drawn from the Clark Science Center’s fourteen science, mathematics, and engineering departments and programs, and associated centers and units. At summer’s end, SURF participants were asked to summarize their research experiences for this publication.https://scholarworks.smith.edu/clark_womeninscience/1000/thumbnail.jp
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
This book provides a comprehensive overview of the basic and clinical sciences of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus. It is suitable for basic scientists looking for detailed coverage of their areas of interest. It describes how advances in molecular biology have increased our understanding of this disease. It is a valuable clinical resource for practicing clinicians from different disciplines including rheumatologists, rheumatology fellows and residents. This book provides convenient access to information you need about cytokines, genetics, Fas pathway, toll like receptors and atherogenesis in SLE. Animal models have been reviewed as well. How to avoid delay in SLE diagnosis and management, in addition to various clinical manifestations including pregnancy and SLE have all been explained thoroughly in this book
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Modelling timing in blood cancers
Dysregulation of biological processes in normal cells can lead to the abnormal growth of tumours. Oncogenesis requires the acquisition of advantageous mutations to expand in a fluctuating environment. Cancer cells gain these genetic and epigenetic alterations at different timing in their development, resulting in the formation of heterogeneous cell populations which interact and compete with each others inside tumours. At later stages, by escaping the immune system and acquiring malignant properties, some cancer cells manage to evade the primary tumour and spread in different organs to form metastases. Hence, tumour development in healthy tissues endure several biological changes whilst progressing and the order between these molecular and cellular events may modify prognosis.
This thesis addresses the influence of biological event timing on blood cancer progression and clinical outcomes. It first investigates the therapeutic efficacy of p53 restoration in a lymphoma mouse model. While several therapy schedules are tested, all fail due to resistance emergence. Computational modelling establishes the cell dynamics in these tumours and how to use it to propose alternative treatment strategies. Data availability leads this work to explore the impact of molecular evolution in myeloid malignancies. Notably, one study has found that Myeloproliferative Neoplasms patients with both JAK2 and TET2 mutations have different disease characteristics with distinct mutation order. My analyses identify HOXA9 as a potential prognosis marker and biological switch responsible for patient stratification in these patients and in Acute Myeloid Leukemia. Additionally, a molecular network identifies the hematopoietic regulators involved in the branching evolution of Myeloproliferative Neoplasms. Further investigations of the Acute Myeloid Leukemia data show the possible involvement of APP, a gene associated to Alzheimer disease, in early cell fate commitment in hematopoiesis and in poor survival prognosis in undifferentiated leukemia when lowly expressed. Finally, this thesis examines the regulatory dynamics behind three clusters of Acute Myeloid Leukemia patients with distinct levels of HOXA9 and APP expression. By building a program inferring molecular motifs from biological observations, genes which may interact with HOXA9 and APP are identified.Microsoft Research and the MRC Cancer Unit
Automated Validation of State-Based Client-Centric Isolation with TLA <sup>+</sup>
Clear consistency guarantees on data are paramount for the design and implementation of distributed systems. When implementing distributed applications, developers require approaches to verify the data consistency guarantees of an implementation choice. Crooks et al. define a state-based and client-centric model of database isolation. This paper formalizes this state-based model in, reproduces their examples and shows how to model check runtime traces and algorithms with this formalization. The formalized model in enables semi-automatic model checking for different implementation alternatives for transactional operations and allows checking of conformance to isolation levels. We reproduce examples of the original paper and confirm the isolation guarantees of the combination of the well-known 2-phase locking and 2-phase commit algorithms. Using model checking this formalization can also help finding bugs in incorrect specifications. This improves feasibility of automated checking of isolation guarantees in synthesized synchronization implementations and it provides an environment for experimenting with new designs.</p
Handbook of Life Course Health Development
Health development science; Developmental origins of chronic illnesses; Community; Diabetes; Autism; Obesity; Nutrition; Health disparities across the lifespan; Fetal programmin
Women in Science 2014
Women in Science 2014 summarizes research done by Smith College’s Summer Research Fellowship (SURF) Program participants. Ever since its 1967 start, SURF has been a cornerstone of Smith’s science education. In 2014, 150 students participated in SURF (141 hosted on campus and nearby eld sites), supervised by 61 faculty mentor-advisors drawn from the Clark Science Center and connected to its eighteen science, mathematics, and engineering departments and programs and associated centers and units. At summer’s end, SURF participants were asked to summarize their research experiences for this publication.https://scholarworks.smith.edu/clark_womeninscience/1003/thumbnail.jp
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