658 research outputs found

    Nutrient transporter expression in both the placenta and fetal liver are affected by maternal smoking

    Get PDF
    ACKNOWLEGDEMENTS Authors would like to thank the nurses of ward 309 (Aberdeen Royal Infirmary) for consenting participants and NHS Grampian Biorepository staff. Also, Gary Cameron for performing the LC-MS/MS cotinine analyses and Ms Linda Robertson for technical assistance. The authors state there are no conflicts of interest. Author contributions: NW, PF and PAF designed the research; NW conducted research, analysed data and wrote paper; PAF responsible for ethics (SAFeR study). All authors read and approved the final manuscript. Authors would like to thank the study funders: Glasgow Childrenā€™s Hospital Charity YRSS/PHD/2016/05 and UK Medical Research Council: MR/L010011/1, to PAF & PJOS and MR/P011535/1 to PAF. The funders played no role in the conduct, analysis or publication of the studyPeer reviewedPublisher PD

    Placental transporter localization and expression in the Human : the importance of species, sex, and gestational age differences

    Get PDF
    Grant Support: This work was supported by the Medical Research Council, UK (MR/L010011/1 to PAF, PJOS) and a Glasgow Children's Hospital Charity Research Fund and University of Aberdeen, UK, Elphinstone Scholarship to NW.Peer reviewedPublisher PD

    Non-Native Plants Disrupt Dual Promotion of Native Alpha and Beta Diversity

    Get PDF
    Abstract Non-native species can alter patterns of species diversity at multiple spatial scales, but the processes that underlie multi-scale effects remain unclear. Here we show that non-native species reduce native diversity at multiple scales through simultaneous disruption of two processes of native community assembly: species immigration, which enhances alpha diversity, and community divergence, which enhances beta diversity. Community divergence refers to the process in which local communities diverge over time in species composition because the history of species immigration and, consequently, the way species affect one another within communities are variable among communities. Continuous experimental removal of species over four years of floodplain succession revealed that, when non-native species were excluded, stochastic variation in the timing of a dominant native species' arrival allowed local communities to diverge, thereby enhancing beta diversity, without compromising promotion of alpha diversity by species immigration. In contrast, when non-native species were allowed to enter experimental plots, they not only reduced native alpha diversity by limiting immigration, but also diminished the dominant native species' role in enhancing native beta diversity. Our results highlight the importance of community assembly and succession for understanding multi-scale effects of non-native species

    Functional assessment of AIPL1 variations identified in Leber congenital amaurosis patients.

    Get PDF

    Projected sea level rise and changes in extreme storm surge and wave events during the 21st century in the region of Singapore

    Get PDF
    Singapore is an island state with considerable population, industries, commerce and transport located in coastal areas at elevations less than 2 m making it vulnerable to sea-level rise. Mitigation against future inundation events requires a quantitative assessment of risk. To address this need, regional projections of changes in (i) long-term mean sea level and (ii) the frequency of extreme storm surge and wave events have been combined to explore potential changes to coastal flood risk over the 21st century. Local changes in time mean sea level were evaluated using the process-based climate model data and methods presented in the IPCC AR5. Regional surge and wave solutions extending from 1980 to 2100 were generated using ~ 12 km resolution surge (Nucleus for European Modelling of the Ocean ā€“ NEMO) and wave (WaveWatchIII) models. Ocean simulations were forced by output from a selection of four downscaled (~ 12 km resolution) atmospheric models, forced at the lateral boundaries by global climate model simulations generated for the IPCC AR5. Long-term trends in skew surge and significant wave height were then assessed using a generalised extreme value model, fit to the largest modelled events each year. An additional atmospheric solution downscaled from the ERA-Interim global reanalysis was used to force historical ocean model simulations extending from 1980ā€“2010, enabling a quantitative assessment of model skill. Simulated historical sea surface height and significant wave height time series were compared to tide gauge data and satellite altimetry data respectively. Central estimates of the long-term mean sea level rise at Singapore by 2100 were projected to be 0.52 m (0.74 m) under the RCP 4.5 (8.5) scenarios respectively. Trends in surge and significant wave height 2 year return levels were found to be statistically insignificant and/or physically very small under the more severe RCP8.5 scenario. We conclude that changes to long-term mean sea level constitute the dominant signal of change to the projected inundation risk for Singapore during the 21st century. We note that the largest recorded surge residual in the Singapore Strait of ~ 84 cm lies between the central and upper estimates of sea level rise by 2100, highlighting the vulnerability of the region

    Mapping the mechanisms of retinal degeneration caused by mutations in the co-chaperone AIPL1

    Get PDF
    Mutations in the photoreceptor/pineal-expressed gene AIPL1 cause Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA), the most severe form of childhood inherited retinopathy. AIPL1 is a photoreceptor-specific co-chaperone that interacts with HSP90 via a C-terminal tetratricopeptide repeat (TPR) domain to facilitate the correct assembly and activity of retinal cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE6). The AIPL1 N-terminal FKBP-like domain interacts directly with the isoprenyl moiety of the PDE6 catalytic subunits. We investigated the functional impact of novel LCA-associated AIPL1 variants. Our data reveal that the relative domain organization and integrity of AIPL1 is important for PDE6-mediated catalysis, with variants mapping to one domain also affecting the activity of the other independently folded domain. The functional assessment and confirmation of likely pathogenic AIPL1 variants is moreover important for the accurate diagnosis and effective triage of patients for AIPL1-targeted gene replacement therapy

    Investigating Methodological Differences in the Assessment of Dendritic Morphology of Basolateral Amygdala Principal Neurons-A Comparison of Golgi-Cox and Neurobiotin Electroporation Techniques

    Get PDF
    Quantitative assessments of neuronal subtypes in numerous brain regions show large variations in dendritic arbor size. A critical experimental factor is the method used to visualize neurons. We chose to investigate quantitative differences in basolateral amygdala (BLA) principal neuron morphology using two of the most common visualization methods: Golgi-Cox staining and neurobiotin (NB) filling. We show in 8-week-old Wistar rats that NB-filling reveals significantly larger dendritic arbors and different spine densities, compared to Golgi-Cox-stained BLA neurons. Our results demonstrate important differences and provide methodological insights into quantitative disparities of BLA principal neuron morphology reported in the literature
    • ā€¦
    corecore