1,555 research outputs found

    Proceedings of Abstracts Engineering and Computer Science Research Conference 2019

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    © 2019 The Author(s). This is an open-access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. For further details please see https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. Note: Keynote: Fluorescence visualisation to evaluate effectiveness of personal protective equipment for infection control is © 2019 Crown copyright and so is licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. Under this licence users are permitted to copy, publish, distribute and transmit the Information; adapt the Information; exploit the Information commercially and non-commercially for example, by combining it with other Information, or by including it in your own product or application. Where you do any of the above you must acknowledge the source of the Information in your product or application by including or linking to any attribution statement specified by the Information Provider(s) and, where possible, provide a link to this licence: http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/This book is the record of abstracts submitted and accepted for presentation at the Inaugural Engineering and Computer Science Research Conference held 17th April 2019 at the University of Hertfordshire, Hatfield, UK. This conference is a local event aiming at bringing together the research students, staff and eminent external guests to celebrate Engineering and Computer Science Research at the University of Hertfordshire. The ECS Research Conference aims to showcase the broad landscape of research taking place in the School of Engineering and Computer Science. The 2019 conference was articulated around three topical cross-disciplinary themes: Make and Preserve the Future; Connect the People and Cities; and Protect and Care

    EVOLUTION AND DYNAMICS OF TRANSCRIPTIONAL REGULATION IN BACTERIA

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    Although transcription is one of the most important biological functions of cells, our understanding of its regulation is still limited. In this dissertation, we have studied the transcriptional regulation in prokaryotes in three aspects. First, we investigated the extent to which cis-regulatory elements are conserved during the course of evolution using the LexA regulons in cyanobacteria as an example. We found that in most cyanobacterial genomes analyzed, LexA appears to function as the transcriptional regulator of the key SOS response genes. The loss of lexA in some genomes might lead to the degradation of its binding sites. Second, directional RNA-seq techniques have recently become the workhorse for transcriptome profiling in prokaryotes, however, it is a challenging task to accurately assemble highly labile prokaryotic transcriptomes for further analyses. To fill this gap, we have developed a hidden Markov model based transcriptome assembler which outperforms the state-of-the-art assemblers. Using our tool, we characterized alternative operon structures in E. coli K12 under various growth conditions and growth phases, and found that they are more complex and dynamic than previously anticipated. Lastly, we determined anti-sense and non-coding transcription patterns in E. coli K12 under various growth conditions and time points. We found that a large portion of genes have antisense transcription in a condition-dependent manner. Most antisense transcripts are initiated and restricted to the 5?-end of the gene on the sense strand, and their expression levels are correlated with those of the genes on the sense strand, suggesting that these antisense transcripts might play an important role in transcriptional regulation

    Modeling growth and adaptation in bacteria

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    Bakterielle Wirte wie Escherichia coli dienen der Produktion industrieller rekombinanter Proteine. Dieser Prozess verursacht systemischen Stress und führt zu umfangreichen Veränderungen in mRNA- und Proteinexpression. In meiner Arbeit analysiere ich Regulationsmechanismen der zellulären Reaktion auf diesen Stress. Zudem untersuche ich die zelluläre Ressourcenallokation mittels eines stationären Ganzzellmodells von E. coli, basierend auf der Resource Balance Analysis. Das Modell berücksichtigt Kosten zellulärer Prozesse und Einschränkungen wie Energie, Effizienz und Raum. Es unterstützt die Experimentplanung in der Bioproduktion. Weiterhin habe ich an der Entwicklung von RBApy mitgewirkt, einer Software zur Erstellung und Simulation von RBA-Modellen. Schließlich entwickle ich ein Modell zur Untersuchung der Regulation von Stressreaktionen durch die Tendenz der Zelle, wachstumsoptimale Ressourcenstrategien anzuwenden. Das Modell berücksichtigt zelluläre Beschränkungen und zeigt, dass die erhaltene Stressreaktion der experimentell ermittelten Reaktion ähnelt. Die Integration von Ressourcenzuteilung in Zellmodelle ermöglicht Einsichten in regulatorische Ereignisse und Anpassungen während der Bioproduktion, was zur Optimierung der rekombinanten Proteinexpression in Escherichia coli beiträgt.Bacterial hosts such as Escherichia coli are used for the production of industrial recombinant proteins. This process causes systemic stress and leads to extensive changes in mRNA and protein expression. In my work, I analyze regulatory mechanisms of the cellular response to this stress. In addition, I investigate cellular resource allocation using a steady-state whole-cell model of E. coli based on resource balance analysis. The model accounts for costs of cellular processes and constraints such as energy, efficiency, and space. It supports experiment design in bioproduction. Furthermore, I contributed to the development of RBApy, a software to create and simulate RBA models. Finally, I developed a model to study the regulation of stress responses by the tendency of the cell to adopt growth-optimal resource strategies. The model accounts for cellular constraints and shows that the obtained stress response resembles the experimentally determined response. Integrating resource allocation into cell models provides insights into regulatory events and adaptations during bioproduction, which contributes to the optimization of recombinant protein expression in Escherichia coli

    Doctor of Philosophy

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    dissertationThermal ablation is widely used, first line local-regional therapy for unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Although high temperature delivered by thermal energy results in efficient coagulation necrosis in tumor cells, various factors including tumor size, shape, location, and cirrhosis can lead to un-uniform heat distribution and inefficient cell damage. As a result, the incomplete ablation causes high rates of tumor recurrence and poor survival for HCC patients. Cells that are not completely ablated can induce heat shock proteins (HSPs), which are cellular gatekeepers to protect tumor cells from thermal damage and prepare them for future neoplastic growth. Synchronous adjuvant chemotherapy targeting those cells can achieve more complete tumor abrogation and prevent future tumor recurrence. This dissertation describes a strategy to combat postablation recurrence by synchronous inhibition of heat shock protein 90 (HSP90) by thermo-responsive, elastin-like polypeptide (ELP)-based biopolymer conjugates. ELP copolymer carries high concentrations of a potent HSP90 inhibitor, geldanamycin (GA), which inhibit the induction of HSP90 and further destabilize numerous HSP90 client proteins critical for cell survival. It is hypothesized that combination of thermal ablation with concomitant inhibition of HSP90 via ELP-GA conjugates can achieve synergistic anticancer effect. Specifically, the ablation-created hyperthermia will sensitize tumor cells to be more vulnerable to the drug, which will be conjugated with high concentrations through thermally targeted, ELP-based biopolymer systems. The ELP conjugates, in turn, will reach and kill the remaining viable cells to prevent future recurrence. ELP-GA conjugates that ferry multiple GAs and rapidly respond to hyperthermia were synthesized, characterized, and evaluated for activity in HCC models. The cytotoxicity of ELP-GA conjugates was enhanced with hyperthermia treatment, and effective HSP90 inhibition was achieved in HCC cell lines. In a tumor-bearing mouse model, electrocautery-based thermal ablation offered effective destruction of tumor core and created a hyperthermia zone for targeted delivery and accumulation of ELP-GA conjugates. Results demonstrate that the combination of thermal ablation and targeted HSP90 inhibition can enhance the anticancer effect and cellular delivery of macromolecular chemotherapeutics to achieve safe, synergistic, and long-term anticancer effect with no tumor recurrence observed. The combination approach paves the way for developing molecular-targeted intervention to increase the efficacy of first-line local-regional therapies for HCC

    Gene expression data analysis using novel methods: Predicting time delayed correlations and evolutionarily conserved functional modules

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    Microarray technology enables the study of gene expression on a large scale. One of the main challenges has been to devise methods to cluster genes that share similar expression profiles. In gene expression time courses, a particular gene may encode transcription factor and thus controlling several genes downstream; in this case, the gene expression profiles may be staggered, indicating a time-delayed response in transcription of the later genes. The standard clustering algorithms consider gene expression profiles in a global way, thus often ignoring such local time-delayed correlations. We have developed novel methods to capture time-delayed correlations between expression profiles: (1) A method using dynamic programming and (2) CLARITY, an algorithm that uses a local shape based similarity measure to predict time-delayed correlations and local correlations. We used CLARITY on a dataset describing the change in gene expression during the mitotic cell cycle in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The obtained clusters were significantly enriched with genes that share similar functions, reflecting the fact that genes with a similar function are often co-regulated and thus co-expressed. Time-shifted as well as local correlations could also be predicted using CLARITY. In datasets, where the expression profiles of independent experiments are compared, the standard clustering algorithms often cluster according to all conditions, considering all genes. This increases the background noise and can lead to the missing of genes that change the expression only under particular conditions. We have employed a genetic algorithm based module predictor that is capable to identify group of genes that change their expression only in a subset of conditions. With the aim of supplementing the Ustilago maydis genome annotation, we have used the module prediction algorithm on various independent datasets from Ustilago maydis. The predicted modules were cross-referenced in various Saccharomyces cerevisiae datasets to check its evolutionarily conservation between these two organisms. The key contributions of this thesis are novel methods that explore biological information from DNA microarray data

    Synthesis of Biological and Mathematical Methods for Gene Network Control

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    abstract: Synthetic biology is an emerging field which melds genetics, molecular biology, network theory, and mathematical systems to understand, build, and predict gene network behavior. As an engineering discipline, developing a mathematical understanding of the genetic circuits being studied is of fundamental importance. In this dissertation, mathematical concepts for understanding, predicting, and controlling gene transcriptional networks are presented and applied to two synthetic gene network contexts. First, this engineering approach is used to improve the function of the guide ribonucleic acid (gRNA)-targeted, dCas9-regulated transcriptional cascades through analysis and targeted modification of the RNA transcript. In so doing, a fluorescent guide RNA (fgRNA) is developed to more clearly observe gRNA dynamics and aid design. It is shown that through careful optimization, RNA Polymerase II (Pol II) driven gRNA transcripts can be strong enough to exhibit measurable cascading behavior, previously only shown in RNA Polymerase III (Pol III) circuits. Second, inherent gene expression noise is used to achieve precise fractional differentiation of a population. Mathematical methods are employed to predict and understand the observed behavior, and metrics for analyzing and quantifying similar differentiation kinetics are presented. Through careful mathematical analysis and simulation, coupled with experimental data, two methods for achieving ratio control are presented, with the optimal schema for any application being dependent on the noisiness of the system under study. Together, these studies push the boundaries of gene network control, with potential applications in stem cell differentiation, therapeutics, and bio-production.Dissertation/ThesisDoctoral Dissertation Biomedical Engineering 201

    Gene expression data analysis using novel methods: Predicting time delayed correlations and evolutionarily conserved functional modules

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    Microarray technology enables the study of gene expression on a large scale. One of the main challenges has been to devise methods to cluster genes that share similar expression profiles. In gene expression time courses, a particular gene may encode transcription factor and thus controlling several genes downstream; in this case, the gene expression profiles may be staggered, indicating a time-delayed response in transcription of the later genes. The standard clustering algorithms consider gene expression profiles in a global way, thus often ignoring such local time-delayed correlations. We have developed novel methods to capture time-delayed correlations between expression profiles: (1) A method using dynamic programming and (2) CLARITY, an algorithm that uses a local shape based similarity measure to predict time-delayed correlations and local correlations. We used CLARITY on a dataset describing the change in gene expression during the mitotic cell cycle in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The obtained clusters were significantly enriched with genes that share similar functions, reflecting the fact that genes with a similar function are often co-regulated and thus co-expressed. Time-shifted as well as local correlations could also be predicted using CLARITY. In datasets, where the expression profiles of independent experiments are compared, the standard clustering algorithms often cluster according to all conditions, considering all genes. This increases the background noise and can lead to the missing of genes that change the expression only under particular conditions. We have employed a genetic algorithm based module predictor that is capable to identify group of genes that change their expression only in a subset of conditions. With the aim of supplementing the Ustilago maydis genome annotation, we have used the module prediction algorithm on various independent datasets from Ustilago maydis. The predicted modules were cross-referenced in various Saccharomyces cerevisiae datasets to check its evolutionarily conservation between these two organisms. The key contributions of this thesis are novel methods that explore biological information from DNA microarray data

    Sinergismo de alta pressão hidrostática com vários agentes físicos e químicos para o tratamento de biomateriais e perfil de inativação de "S. aureus", "P. aeruginosa" e "K. Pneumoniae" como superbactérias

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    Orientador: Carlos Francisco Sampaio BonafeTese (doutorado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de BiologiaResumo: A capacidade de aquisição de resistência a antibióticos de várias espécies bacterianas vem ganhando destaque, dia após dia, devido tanto ao aumento nas taxas de incidência quanto as possíveis consequências relacionadas. Dentre as espeícies bacterianas capazes de desenvolver resistência a antibióticos, Staphylococcus aureus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa e Klebsiella pneumonia são potenciais patógenos oportunistas em infecções hospitalares (IACS)... O resumo poderá ser visualizado no texto completo da tese digitalAbstract: Antibiotic resistance acquiring capability of several bacterial species is gaining attention day by day due to increase in incident rate and related consequences. Staphylococcus aureus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Klebsiella pneumonia are potential opportunistic pathogen concerning hospital-acquired infections (HAIs)... The abstract is available with the full electronic documentDoutoradoBioquimicaDoutora em Biologia Funcional e MolecularCAPE

    Acute lung injury in paediatric intensive care: course and outcome

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    Introduction: Acute lung injury (ALI) and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) carry a high morbidity and mortality (10-90%). ALI is characterised by non-cardiogenic pulmonary oedema and refractory hypoxaemia of multifactorial aetiology [1]. There is limited data about outcome particularly in children. Methods This retrospective cohort study of 85 randomly selected patients with respiratory failure recruited from a prospectively collected database represents 7.1% of 1187 admissions. They include those treated with High Frequency Oscillation Ventilation (HFOV). The patients were admitted between 1 November 1998 and 31 October 2000. Results: Of the 85, 49 developed acute lung injury and 47 had ARDS. There were 26 males and 23 females with a median age and weight of 7.7 months (range 1 day-12.8 years) and 8 kg (range 0.8-40 kg). There were 7 deaths giving a crude mortality of 14.3%, all of which fulfilled the Consensus I [1] criteria for ARDS. Pulmonary occlusion pressures were not routinely measured. The A-a gradient and PaO2/FiO2 ratio (median + [95% CI]) were 37.46 [31.82-43.1] kPa and 19.12 [15.26-22.98] kPa respectively. The non-survivors had a significantly lower PaO2/FiO2 ratio (13 [6.07-19.93] kPa) compared to survivors (23.85 [19.57-28.13] kPa) (P = 0.03) and had a higher A-a gradient (51.05 [35.68-66.42] kPa) compared to survivors (36.07 [30.2-41.94]) kPa though not significant (P = 0.06). Twenty-nine patients (59.2%) were oscillated (Sensormedics 3100A) including all 7 non-survivors. There was no difference in ventilation requirements for CMV prior to oscillation. Seventeen of the 49 (34.7%) were treated with Nitric Oxide including 5 out of 7 non-survivors (71.4%). The median (95% CI) number of failed organs was 3 (1.96-4.04) for non-survivors compared to 1 (0.62-1.62) for survivors (P = 0.03). There were 27 patients with isolated respiratory failure all of whom survived. Six (85.7%) of the non-survivors also required cardiovascular support.Conclusion: A crude mortality of 14.3% compares favourably to published data. The A-a gradient and PaO2/FiO2 ratio may be of help in morbidity scoring in paediatric ARDS. Use of Nitric Oxide and HFOV is associated with increased mortality, which probably relates to the severity of disease. Multiple organ failure particularly respiratory and cardiac disease is associated with increased mortality. ARDS with isolated respiratory failure carries a good prognosis in children

    Bioprocess Monitoring and Control

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    Process monitoring and control are fundamental to all processes; this holds especially for bioprocesses, due to their complex nature. Usually, bioprocesses deal with living cells, which have their own regulatory systems. It helps to adjust the cell to its environmental condition. This must not be the optimal condition that the cell needs to produce whatever is desired. Therefore, a close monitoring of the cell and its environment is essential to provide optimal conditions for production. Without measurement, no information of the current process state is obtained. In this book, methods and techniques are provided for the monitoring and control of bioprocesses. From new developments for sensors, the application of spectroscopy and modelling approaches, the estimation and observer implementation for ethanol production and the development and scale-up of various bioprocesses and their closed loop control information are presented. The processes discussed here are very diverse. The major applications are cultivation processes, where microorganisms were grown, but also an incubation process of bird’s eggs, as well as an indoor climate control for humans, will be discussed. Altogether, in 12 chapters, nine original research papers and three reviews are presented
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