59 research outputs found
Comprehensive transcriptome-wide analysis of spliceopathy correction of myotonic dystrophy using CRISPR-Cas9 in iPSCs-derived cardiomyocytes
CTG repeat expansion (CTGexp) is associated with aberrant
alternate splicing that contributes to cardiac dysfunction in
myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1). Excision of this CTGexp
repeat using CRISPR-Cas resulted in the disappearance of
punctate ribonuclear foci in cardiomyocyte-like cells derived
from DM1-induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). This was
associated with correction of the underlying spliceopathy as
determined by RNA sequencing and alternate splicing analysis.
Certain genes were of particular interest due to their role in cardiac
development, maturation, and function (TPM4, CYP2J2,
DMD, MBNL3, CACNA1H, ROCK2, ACTB) or their association
with splicing (SMN2, GCFC2, MBNL3). Moreover, while
comparing isogenic CRISPR-Cas9-corrected versus non-corrected
DM1 cardiomyocytes, a prominent difference in the
splicing pattern for a number of candidate genes was apparent
pertaining to genes that are associated with cardiac function
(TNNT, TNNT2, TTN, TPM1, SYNE1, CACNA1A, MTMR1,
NEBL, TPM1), cellular signaling (NCOR2, CLIP1, LRRFIP2,
CLASP1, CAMK2G), and other DM1-related genes (i.e.,
NUMA1, MBNL2, LDB3) in addition to the disease-causing
DMPK gene itself. Subsequent validation using a selected
gene subset, including MBNL1, MBNL2, INSR, ADD3, and
CRTC2, further confirmed correction of the spliceopathy
following CTGexp repeat excision. To our knowledge, the present
study provides the first comprehensive unbiased transcriptome-
wide analysis of the differential splicing landscape in
DM1 patient-derived cardiac cells after excision of the CTGexp
repeat using CRISPR-Cas9, showing reversal of the abnormal
cardiac spliceopathy in DM1
Distribution of the time at which the deviation of a Brownian motion is maximum before its first-passage time
We calculate analytically the probability density of the time
at which a continuous-time Brownian motion (with and without drift) attains its
maximum before passing through the origin for the first time. We also compute
the joint probability density of the maximum and . In the
driftless case, we find that has power-law tails: for large and for small . In
presence of a drift towards the origin, decays exponentially for large
. The results from numerical simulations are in excellent agreement with
our analytical predictions.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures. Published in Journal of Statistical Mechanics:
Theory and Experiment (J. Stat. Mech. (2007) P10008,
doi:10.1088/1742-5468/2007/10/P10008
Formation of laser plasma channels in a stationary gas
The formation of plasma channels with nonuniformity of about +- 3.5% has been
demonstrated. The channels had a density of 1.2x10^19 cm-3 with a radius of 15
um and with length >= 2.5 mm. The channels were formed by 0.3 J, 100 ps laser
pulses in a nonflowing gas, contained in a cylindrical chamber. The laser beam
passed through the chamber along its axis via pinholes in the chamber walls. A
plasma channel with an electron density on the order of 10^18 - 10^19 cm-3 was
formed in pure He, N2, Ar, and Xe. A uniform channel forms at proper time
delays and in optimal pressure ranges, which depend on the sort of gas. The
influence of the interaction of the laser beam with the gas leaking out of the
chamber through the pinholes was found insignificant. However, the formation of
an ablative plasma on the walls of the pinholes by the wings of the radial
profile of the laser beam plays an important role in the plasma channel
formation and its uniformity. A low current glow discharge initiated in the
chamber slightly improves the uniformity of the plasma channel, while a high
current arc discharge leads to the formation of overdense plasma near the front
pinhole and further refraction of the laser beam. The obtained results show the
feasibility of creating uniform plasma channels in non-flowing gas targets.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Physics of Plasma
Random Convex Hulls and Extreme Value Statistics
In this paper we study the statistical properties of convex hulls of
random points in a plane chosen according to a given distribution. The points
may be chosen independently or they may be correlated. After a non-exhaustive
survey of the somewhat sporadic literature and diverse methods used in the
random convex hull problem, we present a unifying approach, based on the notion
of support function of a closed curve and the associated Cauchy's formulae,
that allows us to compute exactly the mean perimeter and the mean area enclosed
by the convex polygon both in case of independent as well as correlated points.
Our method demonstrates a beautiful link between the random convex hull problem
and the subject of extreme value statistics. As an example of correlated
points, we study here in detail the case when the points represent the vertices
of independent random walks. In the continuum time limit this reduces to
independent planar Brownian trajectories for which we compute exactly, for
all , the mean perimeter and the mean area of their global convex hull. Our
results have relevant applications in ecology in estimating the home range of a
herd of animals. Some of these results were announced recently in a short
communication [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 103}, 140602 (2009)].Comment: 61 pages (pedagogical review); invited contribution to the special
issue of J. Stat. Phys. celebrating the 50 years of Yeshiba/Rutgers meeting
Animal Interactions and the Emergence of Territoriality
Inferring the role of interactions in territorial animals relies upon accurate recordings of the behaviour of neighbouring individuals. Such accurate recordings are rarely available from field studies. As a result, quantification of the interaction mechanisms has often relied upon theoretical approaches, which hitherto have been limited to comparisons of macroscopic population-level predictions from un-tested interaction models. Here we present a quantitative framework that possesses a microscopic testable hypothesis on the mechanism of conspecific avoidance mediated by olfactory signals in the form of scent marks. We find that the key parameters controlling territoriality are two: the average territory size, i.e. the inverse of the population density, and the time span during which animal scent marks remain active. Since permanent monitoring of a territorial border is not possible, scent marks need to function in the temporary absence of the resident. As chemical signals carried by the scent only last a finite amount of time, each animal needs to revisit territorial boundaries frequently and refresh its own scent marks in order to deter possible intruders. The size of the territory an animal can maintain is thus proportional to the time necessary for an animal to move between its own territorial boundaries. By using an agent-based model to take into account the possible spatio-temporal movement trajectories of individual animals, we show that the emerging territories are the result of a form of collective animal movement where, different to shoaling, flocking or herding, interactions are highly heterogeneous in space and time. The applicability of our hypothesis has been tested with a prototypical territorial animal, the red fox (Vulpes vulpes)
Nature Chemical Biology
Excluding the ribosome and riboswitches, developing small molecules that selectively target RNA is a longstanding problem in chemical biology. A typical cellular RNA is difficult to target because it has little tertiary, but abundant secondary structure. We designed allele-selective compounds that target such an RNA, the toxic noncoding repeat expansion (r(CUG)(exp)) that causes myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1). We developed several strategies to generate allele-selective small molecules, including non-covalent binding, covalent binding, cleavage and on-site probe synthesis. Covalent binding and cleavage enabled target profiling in cells derived from individuals with DM1, showing precise recognition of r(CUG)(exp). In the on-site probe synthesis approach, small molecules bound adjacent sites in r(CUG)(exp) and reacted to afford picomolar inhibitors via a proximity-based click reaction only in DM1-affected cells. We expanded this approach to image r(CUG)(exp) in its natural context
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