81 research outputs found

    Identifying related cancer types based on their incidence among people with multiple cancers

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    BACKGROUND: There are several reasons that someone might be diagnosed with more than one primary cancer. The aim of this analysis was to determine combinations of cancer types that occur more often than expected. The expected values in previous analyses are based on age-and-gender-adjusted risks in the population. However, if cancer in people with multiple primaries is somehow different than cancer in people with a single primary, then the expected numbers should not be based on all diagnoses in the population. METHODS: In people with two or more cancer types, the probability that a specific type is diagnosed was determined as the number of diagnoses for that cancer type divided by the total number of cancer diagnoses. If two types of cancer occur independently of one another, then the probability that someone will develop both cancers by chance is the product of the individual probabilities for each type. The expected number of people with both cancers is the number of people at risk multiplied by the separate probabilities for each cancer. We performed the analysis on records of cancer diagnoses in British Columbia, Canada between 1970 and 2004. RESULTS: There were 28,159 people with records of multiple primary cancers between 1970 and 2004, including 1,492 people with between three and seven diagnoses. Among both men and women, the combinations of esophageal cancer with melanoma, and kidney cancer with oral cancer, are observed more than twice as often as expected. CONCLUSION: Our analysis suggests there are several pairs of primary cancers that might be related by a shared etiological factor. We think that our method is more appropriate than others when multiple diagnoses of primary cancer are unlikely to be the result of therapeutic or diagnostic procedures

    The Long-Baseline Neutrino Experiment: Exploring Fundamental Symmetries of the Universe

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    The preponderance of matter over antimatter in the early Universe, the dynamics of the supernova bursts that produced the heavy elements necessary for life and whether protons eventually decay --- these mysteries at the forefront of particle physics and astrophysics are key to understanding the early evolution of our Universe, its current state and its eventual fate. The Long-Baseline Neutrino Experiment (LBNE) represents an extensively developed plan for a world-class experiment dedicated to addressing these questions. LBNE is conceived around three central components: (1) a new, high-intensity neutrino source generated from a megawatt-class proton accelerator at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, (2) a near neutrino detector just downstream of the source, and (3) a massive liquid argon time-projection chamber deployed as a far detector deep underground at the Sanford Underground Research Facility. This facility, located at the site of the former Homestake Mine in Lead, South Dakota, is approximately 1,300 km from the neutrino source at Fermilab -- a distance (baseline) that delivers optimal sensitivity to neutrino charge-parity symmetry violation and mass ordering effects. This ambitious yet cost-effective design incorporates scalability and flexibility and can accommodate a variety of upgrades and contributions. With its exceptional combination of experimental configuration, technical capabilities, and potential for transformative discoveries, LBNE promises to be a vital facility for the field of particle physics worldwide, providing physicists from around the globe with opportunities to collaborate in a twenty to thirty year program of exciting science. In this document we provide a comprehensive overview of LBNE's scientific objectives, its place in the landscape of neutrino physics worldwide, the technologies it will incorporate and the capabilities it will possess.Comment: Major update of previous version. This is the reference document for LBNE science program and current status. Chapters 1, 3, and 9 provide a comprehensive overview of LBNE's scientific objectives, its place in the landscape of neutrino physics worldwide, the technologies it will incorporate and the capabilities it will possess. 288 pages, 116 figure

    The Confidence Database

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    Understanding how people rate their confidence is critical for the characterization of a wide range of perceptual, memory, motor and cognitive processes. To enable the continued exploration of these processes, we created a large database of confidence studies spanning a broad set of paradigms, participant populations and fields of study. The data from each study are structured in a common, easy-to-use format that can be easily imported and analysed using multiple software packages. Each dataset is accompanied by an explanation regarding the nature of the collected data. At the time of publication, the Confidence Database (which is available at https://osf.io/s46pr/) contained 145 datasets with data from more than 8,700 participants and almost 4 million trials. The database will remain open for new submissions indefinitely and is expected to continue to grow. Here we show the usefulness of this large collection of datasets in four different analyses that provide precise estimations of several foundational confidence-related effects

    Structure and lability of archaeal dehydroquinase

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    The structure and thermal melting data for dehydroquinase from A. fulgidus are reported. The protein melts in vitro well below the organism’s growth temperature

    Crystallization of the class IV adenylyl cyclase from Yersinia pestis

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    Structure and Dynamics of a Site-Specific Labeled Fc Fragment with Altered Effector Functions

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    Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) are a class of biotherapeutic drugs designed as targeted therapies for the treatment of cancer. Among the challenges in generating an effective ADC is the choice of an effective conjugation site on the IgG. One common method to prepare site-specific ADCs is to engineer solvent-accessible cysteine residues into antibodies. Here, we used X-ray diffraction and hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass spectroscopy to analyze the structure and dynamics of such a construct where a cysteine has been inserted after Ser 239 (Fc-239i) in the antibody heavy chain sequence. The crystal structure of this Fc-C239i variant at 0.23 nm resolution shows that the inserted cysteine structurally replaces Ser 239 and that this causes a domino-like backward shift of the local polypeptide, pushing Pro 238 out into the hinge. Proline is unable to substitute conformationally for the wild-type glycine at this position, providing a structural reason for the previously observed abolition of both FcγR binding and antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity. Energy estimates for the both the FcγR interface (7 kcal/mol) and for the differential conformation of proline (20 kcal/mol) are consistent with the observed disruption of FcγR binding, providing a quantifiable case where strain at a single residue appears to disrupt a key biological function. Conversely, the structure of Fc-C239i is relatively unchanged at the intersection of the CH2 and CH3 domains; the site known to be involved in binding of the neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn), and an alignment of the Fc-C239i structure with an Fc structure in a ternary Fc:FcRn:HSA (human serum albumin) complex implies that these favorable contacts would be maintained. Hydrogen deuterium exchange mass spectroscopy (HDX-MS) data further suggest a significant increase in conformational mobility for the Fc-C239i protein relative to Fc that is evident even far from the insertion site but still largely confined to the CH2 domain. Together, the findings provide a detailed structural and dynamic basis for previously observed changes in ADC functional binding to FcγR, which may guide further development of ADC designs

    Stray Light Correction in the Optical Spectroscopy of Crystals

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    It has long been known in spectroscopy that light not passing through a sample, but reaching the detector (i.e., stray light), results in a distortion of the spectrum known as absorption flattening. In spectroscopy with crystals, one must either include such stray light or take steps to exclude it. In the former case, the derived spectra are not accurate. In the latter case, a significant amount of the crystal must be masked off and excluded. In this paper, we describe a method that allows use of the entire crystal by correcting the distorted spectrum
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