1,254 research outputs found

    Early- and late-migrating cranial neural crest cell populations have equivalent developmental potential in vivo

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    We present the first in vivo study of the long-term fate and potential of early-migrating and late-migrating mesencephalic neural crest cell populations, by performing isochronic and heterochronic quail-to-chick grafts. Both early- and late-migrating populations form melanocytes, neurons, glia, cartilage and bone in isochronic, isotopic chimeras, showing that neither population is lineage-restricted. The early-migrating population distributes both dorsally and ventrally during normal development, while the late-migrating population is confined dorsally and forms much less cartilage and bone. When the late-migrating population is substituted heterochronically for the early-migrating population, it contributes extensively to ventral derivatives such as jaw cartilage and bone. Conversely, when the early-migrating population is substituted heterochronically for the late-migrating population, it no longer contributes to the jaw skeleton and only forms dorsal derivatives. When the late-migrating population is grafted into a late-stage host whose neural crest had previously been ablated, it migrates ventrally into the jaws. Thus, the dorsal fate restriction of the late-migrating mesencephalic neural crest cell population in normal development is due to the presence of earlier-migrating neural crest cells, rather than to any change in the environment or to any intrinsic difference in migratory ability or potential between early- and late-migrating cell populations. These results highlight the plasticity of the neural crest and show that its fate is determined primarily by the environment

    The Neural Crest Migrating into the Twenty-First Century

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    From the initial discovery of the neural crest over 150 years ago to the seminal studies of Le Douarin and colleagues in the latter part of the twentieth century, understanding of the neural crest has moved from the descriptive to the experimental. Now, in the twenty-first century, neural crest research has migrated into the genomic age. Here, we reflect upon the major advances in neural crest biology and the open questions that will continue to make research on this incredible vertebrate cell type an important subject in developmental biology for the century to come

    20 million pregnant women with group B streptococcus carriage: consequences, challenges, and opportunities for prevention.

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    PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis (IAP) is currently the only recommended preventive approach against clinical consequences of maternal Group B Streptococcus (GBS) colonization. In this review, we discuss new findings of total perinatal GBS burden and relative effectiveness of differing targeting of IAP, notably microbiology-based and risk factor-based screening, including potential limitations. Finally, we provide updates on maternal GBS vaccines and their potential cost-effectiveness in disease reduction. RECENT FINDINGS: Updated estimates of the burden of GBS related to pregnancy outcomes show (1) early-onset GBS disease incidence and deaths are high in some low- and middle-income countries where IAP has not been implemented and (2) late-onset GBS disease, preterm birth, and stillbirth, which are not preventable by IAP, remain a public health problem in both high and low-middle income settings. Observational evidence indicates that microbiology-based screening may be more effective than risk factor-based screening, but even in high-income countries, compliance is imperfect. To address the need for alternative prevention strategies, several maternal vaccine candidates are in clinical development, and modelling suggests these could be cost-effective in most scenarios. SUMMARY: Recent progress in GBS vaccine research holds promise of reducing the large and preventable burden of mortality and disability caused by GBS disease, especially in higher-burden settings where clinical and laboratory services may be limited. Importantly vaccines also hold potential to prevent GBS stillbirths and GBS-associated preterm births

    A versatile gene trap to visualize and interrogate the function of the vertebrate proteome

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    We report a multifunctional gene-trapping approach, which generates full-length Citrine fusions with endogenous proteins and conditional mutants from a single integration event of the FlipTrap vector. We identified 170 FlipTrap zebrafish lines with diverse tissue-specific expression patterns and distinct subcellular localizations of fusion proteins generated by the integration of an internal citrine exon. Cre-mediated conditional mutagenesis is enabled by heterotypic lox sites that delete Citrine and “flip” in its place mCherry with a polyadenylation signal, resulting in a truncated fusion protein. Inducing recombination with Cerulean-Cre results in fusion proteins that often mislocalize, exhibit mutant phenotypes, and dramatically knock down wild-type transcript levels. FRT sites in the vector enable targeted genetic manipulation of the trapped loci in the presence of Flp recombinase. Thus, the FlipTrap captures the functional proteome, enabling the visualization of full-length fluorescent fusion proteins and interrogation of function by conditional mutagenesis and targeted genetic manipulation

    Resonant Lifetime of Core-Excited Organic Adsorbates from First Principles

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    We investigate by first-principles simulations the resonant electron-transfer lifetime from the excited state of an organic adsorbate to a semiconductor surface, namely isonicotinic acid on rutile TiO2_2(110). The molecule-substrate interaction is described using density functional theory, while the effect of a truly semi-infinite substrate is taken into account by Green's function techniques. Excitonic effects due to the presence of core-excited atoms in the molecule are shown to be instrumental to understand the electron-transfer times measured using the so-called core-hole-clock technique. In particular, for the isonicotinic acid on TiO2_2(110), we find that the charge injection from the LUMO is quenched since this state lies within the substrate band gap. We compute the resonant charge-transfer times from LUMO+1 and LUMO+2, and systematically investigate the dependence of the elastic lifetimes of these states on the alignment among adsorbate and substrate states.Comment: 24 pages, 6 figures, to appear in Journal of Physical Chemistry

    Episode H5N8 d'influenza aviaire en France en 2016-2017 : quel rôle pour la faune sauvage ?

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    L'influenza aviaire (IA) est une menace permanente, qui arrive parfois en Europe par le biais des oiseaux migrateurs. Un dispositif de surveillance est en place en permanence pour surveiller les mortalités dans l'avifaune, et particulièrement celles des oiseaux d'eau migrateurs. En octobre 2016, un épisode d'IA H5N8 qui était surveillé depuis sa survenue en République de Touva (Fédération de Russie, avril 2016) s'est déclaré en Europe. Il a entraîné des pertes conséquentes dans certaines populations d'oiseaux sauvages en Europe, ainsi que dans des filières avicoles. La situation en France s'est révélée paradoxale : l'atteinte a été majeure dans la filière avicole de canards gras du Sud- Ouest, mais les cas dans la faune sauvage sont restés peu nombreux et circonscrits. Ce n'est pas faute d'avoir renforcé la surveillance, soit événementielle (analyse des oiseaux trouvés morts) soit active autour des foyers domestiques. Plus de 800 cadavres d'oiseaux sauvages ont été analysés, dont beaucoup d'anatidés, 90 ont été détectés infectés regroupés en 55 cas dans l'avifaune libre et captive, et dix sites stratégiques ont fait l'objet d'une recherche intensifiée des cadavres et n'ont permis de trouver aucun cas positif supplémentaire. Plus de 300 oiseaux commensaux des élevages domestiques foyers ont été analysés et se sont tous révélés négatifs. Les performances du système de surveillance ne semblent pas pouvoir être mises en cause, et il apparaît donc qu'il y a bien eu des différences de circulation du virus par rapport à nos voisins d'outre-Rhin, mal expliquées à ce stade mais la situation en France est similaire à celle observée en Italie et en Espagne cet hiver, et correspond assez bien à l'épisode H5N8 qui avait circulé en Europe fin 2014/début 2015, sans toucher la France. (Résumé d'auteur

    Summary of the NuSTEC Workshop on Neutrino-Nucleus Pion Production in the Resonance Region

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    The NuSTEC workshop held at the University of Pittsburgh in October 2019 brought theorists and experimentalists together to discuss the state of modeling and measurements related to pion production in neutrino-nucleus scattering in the kinematic region where pions are produced through both resonant and non-resonant mechanisms. Modeling of this region is of critical importance to the current and future accelerator- and atmospheric-based neutrino oscillation experiments. For the benefit of the community, links to the presentations are accompanied by annotations from the speakers highlighting significant points made during the presentations and resulting discussions
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