9 research outputs found

    Prospects for Stability in a Nuclear Subcontinent

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    Transcriptomic epidemiology of smoking: the effect of smoking on gene expression in lymphocytes

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>This investigation offers insights into system-wide pathological processes induced in response to cigarette smoke exposure by determining its influences at the gene expression level.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We obtained genome-wide quantitative transcriptional profiles from 1,240 individuals from the San Antonio Family Heart Study, including 297 current smokers. Using lymphocyte samples, we identified 20,413 transcripts with significantly detectable expression levels, including both known and predicted genes. Correlation between smoking and gene expression levels was determined using a regression model that allows for residual genetic effects.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>With a conservative false-discovery rate of 5% we identified 323 unique genes (342 transcripts) whose expression levels were significantly correlated with smoking behavior. These genes showed significant over-representation within a range of functional categories that correspond well with known smoking-related pathologies, including immune response, cell death, cancer, natural killer cell signaling and xenobiotic metabolism.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Our results indicate that not only individual genes but entire networks of gene interaction are influenced by cigarette smoking. This is the largest <it>in vivo </it>transcriptomic epidemiological study of smoking to date and reveals the significant and comprehensive influence of cigarette smoke, as an environmental variable, on the expression of genes. The central importance of this manuscript is to provide a summary of the relationships between gene expression and smoking in this exceptionally large cross-sectional data set.</p

    Info-nano-bio technologies, their coming convergence and the implications for security (NIAS Report No. R3-2003)

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    There is a close relationship between technology and security and technological have almost invariably found their way into the battlefield. And while in no way suggesting a one-way relationship between technology and human society, it can be seen that new technologies change not only how wars are faught, but when and where they are faught, and less obviously but still equally clearly, why they are faught. As societies change, security objectives change - indeed the very definition of security changes. And that is why it becomes important not only to evaluate the direction of new technologies, but to place them in their domestic and international contexts
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