288 research outputs found

    Concert recording 2021-11-02

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    [Track 1]. Fortitude / Kent Eshelman -- [Track 2]. English madrigal suite. I. My Bonny Lass / Thomas Morley ; arranged by Michael Forbers ; II. Dear, may some other / John Hilton ; arranged by Michael Forbers ; III. Let go, why do you stay me? / John Bennett ; arranged by Michael Forbers ; IV. Late in my rash accounting / Thomas Weelkes ; arranged by Michael Forbers ; V. Rest, sweet nymphs / Francis Pilkington ; arranged by Michael Forbers ; VI. Sing and we chant it / Thomas Morley ; arranged by Michael Forbers -- [Track 3]. Three Bruckner motets. Vexilla regis ; Locus iste ; Pange langua / Anton Bruckner ; arranged by John Stevens -- [Track 4]. Four pieces. I. Andante tranquillo ; II. Allegro vivace ; III. Larghetto ; IV. Allegro / Gordon Jacob -- [Track 5]. The village choir / Alexander Borodin ; arranged by Tubalate-- [Track 6]. Beale Street blues / W.C. Handy ; arranged by Gale/Doughty

    Concert recording 2022-04-21

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    [Track 1]. Two part invention / Phillip Sparkle -- [Track 2]. Three furies. II. Very clean; gently inebriated ; III. Relentless throughout / James Grant -- [Track 3]. Five Portraits from Middle Earth. I. Gandalf ; II. Gollum ; III. Bilbo Baggins ; IV. Balrog! ; V. Tom Bombadil / Rodney Newton -- [Track 4]. Ave Maria / Anton Bruckner ; arr. D. Sabuorin -- [Track 5 ]. Wabash cannon ball / Traditional ; arr. J. Garrett ; [Track 6]. Fugue in g minor The little / J.S. Bach ; arr. Forbes -- [Track 7]. Study on a theme from Peter Grimes / Benjamin Britten, John C. Ross -- [Track 8]. Celestial suite. I. Eclipse ; II. Canzone lunaire ; III. Solar plexus / Stephen Bulla

    Concert recording 2022-04-21

    Get PDF
    [Track 1]. Two part invention / Phillip Sparkle -- [Track 2]. Three furies. II. Very clean; gently inebriated ; III. Relentless throughout / James Grant -- [Track 3]. Five Portraits from Middle Earth. I. Gandalf ; II. Gollum ; III. Bilbo Baggins ; IV. Balrog! ; V. Tom Bombadil / Rodney Newton -- [Track 4]. Ave Maria / Anton Bruckner ; arr. D. Sabuorin -- [Track 5 ]. Wabash cannon ball / Traditional ; arr. J. Garrett ; [Track 6]. Fugue in g minor The little / J.S. Bach ; arr. Forbes -- [Track 7]. Study on a theme from Peter Grimes / Benjamin Britten, John C. Ross -- [Track 8]. Celestial suite. I. Eclipse ; II. Canzone lunaire ; III. Solar plexus / Stephen Bulla

    Long-read metabarcoding of the eukaryotic rDNA operon to phylogenetically and taxonomically resolve environmental diversity

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    High‐throughput DNA metabarcoding of amplicon sizes below 500 bp has revolutionized the analysis of environmental microbial diversity. However, these short regions contain limited phylogenetic signal, which makes it impractical to use environmental DNA in full phylogenetic inferences. This lesser phylogenetic resolution of short amplicons may be overcome by new long‐read sequencing technologies. To test this idea, we amplified soil DNA and used PacBio Circular Consensus Sequencing (CCS) to obtain an ~4500‐bp region spanning most of the eukaryotic small subunit (18S) and large subunit (28S) ribosomal DNA genes. We first treated the CCS reads with a novel curation workflow, generating 650 high‐quality operational taxonomic units (OTUs) containing the physically linked 18S and 28S regions. To assign taxonomy to these OTUs, we developed a phylogeny‐aware approach based on the 18S region that showed greater accuracy and sensitivity than similarity‐based methods. The taxonomically annotated OTUs were then combined with available 18S and 28S reference sequences to infer a well‐resolved phylogeny spanning all major groups of eukaryotes, allowing us to accurately derive the evolutionary origin of environmental diversity. A total of 1,019 sequences were included, of which a majority (58%) corresponded to the new long environmental OTUs. The long reads also allowed us to directly investigate the relationships among environmental sequences themselves, which represents a key advantage over the placement of short reads on a reference phylogeny. Together, our results show that long amplicons can be treated in a full phylogenetic framework to provide greater taxonomic resolution and a robust evolutionary perspective to environmental DNA

    Parasites dominate hyperdiverse soil protist communities in Neotropical rainforests

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    High animal and plant richness in tropical rainforest communities has long intrigued naturalists. It is unknown if similar hyperdiversity patterns are reflected at the microbial scale with unicellular eukaryotes (protists). Here we show, using environmental metabarcoding of soil samples and a phylogeny-aware cleaning step, that protist communities in Neotropical rainforests are hyperdiverse and dominated by the parasitic Apicomplexa, which infect arthropods and other animals. These host-specific parasites potentially contribute to the high animal diversity in the forests by reducing population growth in a density-dependent manner. By contrast, too few operational taxonomic units (OTUs) of Oomycota were found to broadly drive high tropical tree diversity in a host-specific manner under the Janzen-Connell model. Extremely high OTU diversity and high heterogeneity between samples within the same forests suggest that protists, not arthropods, are the most diverse eukaryotes in tropical rainforests. Our data show that protists play a large role in tropical terrestrial ecosystems long viewed as being dominated by macroorganisms

    The Relationship between Ultraviolet Radiation Exposure and Vitamin D Status

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    This paper reviews the main factors influencing the synthesis of vitamin D, with particular focus on ultraviolet radiation exposure. On the global level, the main source of vitamin D is the sun. The effect of solar radiation on vitamin D synthesis depends to some extent on the initial vitamin D levels. At moderate to high latitudes, diet becomes an increasingly important source of vitamin D due to decreased solar intensity and cold temperatures, which discourage skin exposure. During the mid-winter season, these factors result in decreased solar radiation exposure, hindering extensively the synthesis of vitamin D in these populations

    Noncomparabilities & Non Standard Logics

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    Many normative theories set forth in the welfare economics, distributive justice and cognate literatures posit noncomparabilities or incommensurabilities between magnitudes of various kinds. In some cases these gaps are predicated on metaphysical claims, in others upon epistemic claims, and in still others upon political-moral claims. I show that in all such cases they are best given formal expression in nonstandard logics that reject bivalence, excluded middle, or both. I do so by reference to an illustrative case study: a contradiction known to beset John Rawls\u27s selection and characterization of primary goods as the proper distribuendum in any distributively just society. The contradiction is avoided only by reformulating Rawls\u27s claims in a nonstandard form, which form happens also to cohere quite attractively with Rawls\u27s intuitive argumentation on behalf of his claims

    Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis in Papua New Guinean Children: The Cost of Continuing Inadequate Measles Vaccine Coverage

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    Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE) is a disabling and usually fatal brain disorder that typically occurs 3–10 years after acute measles infection. Papua New Guinea (PNG) has particularly high rates of SSPE. We report 22 cases of PNG children presenting to the provincial referral hospital in Madang Province who probably contracted acute measles when <12 months of age during a national epidemic in 2002 and who developed SSPE 5–7 years later. Based on these cases, the estimated annual SSPE incidence in Madang province in 2007–2009 was 54/million population aged <20 years. Four sub-districts had an annual incidence >100/million population aged <20 years, the highest rates ever reported. Young PNG children do not respond well to measles vaccine. Because of this, efforts such as supplementary measles immunisation programs should continue in order to reduce the pool of non-immune older people surrounding the youngest and most vulnerable members of PNG communities

    Nutritional Programming of Lifespan by FOXO Inhibition on Sugar-Rich Diets

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    Consumption of unhealthy diets is exacerbating the burden of age-related ill health in aging populations. Such diets can program mammalian physiology to cause long-term, detrimental effects. Here, we show that, in Drosophila melanogaster, an unhealthy, high-sugar diet in early adulthood programs lifespan to curtail later-life survival despite subsequent dietary improvement. Excess dietary sugar promotes insulin-like signaling, inhibits dFOXO—the Drosophila homolog of forkhead box O (FOXO) transcription factors—and represses expression of dFOXO target genes encoding epigenetic regulators. Crucially, dfoxo is required both for transcriptional changes that mark the fly’s dietary history and for nutritional programming of lifespan by excess dietary sugar, and this mechanism is conserved in Caenorhabditis elegans. Our study implicates FOXO factors, the evolutionarily conserved determinants of animal longevity, in the mechanisms of nutritional programming of animal lifespan

    Methionine sulfoximine supplementation enhances productivity in GS-CHOK1SV cell lines through glutathione biosynthesis

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    In Lonza Biologics' GS Gene Expression System™, recombinant protein-producing GS-CHOK1SV cell lines are generated by transfection with an expression vector encoding both GS and the protein product genes followed by selection in MSX and glutamine-free medium. MSX is required to inhibit endogenous CHOK1SV GS, and in effect create a glutamine auxotrophy in the host that can be complemented by the expression vector encoded GS in selected cell lines. However, MSX is not a specific inhibitor of GS as it also inhibits the activity of GCL (a key enzyme in the glutathione biosynthesis pathway) to a similar extent. Glutathione species (GSH and GSSG) have been shown to provide both oxidizing and reducing equivalents to ER-resident oxidoreductases, raising the possibility that selection for transfectants with increased GCL expression could result in the isolation of GS-CHOKISV cell lines with improved capacity for recombinant protein production. In this study we have begun to address the relationship between MSX supplementation, the amount of intracellular GCL subunit and mAb production from a panel of GS-CHOK1SV cell lines. We then evaluated the influence of reduced GCL activity on batch culture of an industrially relevant mAb-producing GS-CHOK1SV cell line. To the best of our knowledge, this paper describes for the first time the change in expression of GCL subunits and recombinant mAb production in these cell lines with the degree of MSX supplementation in routine subculture. Our data also shows that partial inhibition of GCL activity in medium containing 75 µM MSX increases mAb productivity, and its more specific inhibitor BSO used at a concentration of 80 µM in medium increases the specific rate of mAb production eight-fold and the concentration in harvest medium by two-fold. These findings support a link between the inhibition of glutathione biosynthesis and recombinant protein production in industrially relevant systems and provide a process-driven method for increasing mAb productivity from GS-CHOK1SV cell lines
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