601 research outputs found
New insights into morphological adaptation in common mole-rats (Cryptomys hottentotus hottentotus) along an aridity gradient
Lithium Abundances in the Solar Twins 16 CYG A and B and the Solar Analog alpha CEN A, Calibration of the 6707 Angstrom Li Region Linelist, and Implications
We present high resolution (R ˜45,000-70,000) and very high S/N (˜1,000) spectroscopy of the Li I 6707 Å region in each component of the binary solar twins 16 Cyg A and B, the solar analog alpha Cen A, and alpha Cen B. Spectra of 16 Cyg were obtained with the University of Hawai\u27i 2.2-m, McDonald Observatory 2.1-m, and Keck 10-m telescopes and have been independently reduced. Comparison of spectral synthesis and the 16 Cyg data, and corresponding similarly obtained solar data, yields 7Li abundances which show excellent concordance between the various data sets. Despite differing in Teff by only 35-40 K, the Li abundances of 16 Cyg A and B differ by a factor of \u3e=4.5. The solar photospheric abundance is intermediate to the two values. This intermediacy indicates that the Sun, whose highly depleted photospheric Li abundance is in gross conflict with standard stellar models, is not an isolated anomaly in its Li abundance evolution. A similar conclusion is reached via comparison of alpha Cen A and metal-rich Hyades dwarfs. The difference in the 16 Cyg components\u27 abundances suggests, though does not directly establish, a slow (possibly rotationally-induced) mixing mechanism operating below the surface convection zone in these stars. Indeed, the Li abundance difference can be viewed as an analog to the Li abundance dispersion seen in cool stars of similar Teff in open and globular clusters, and in Galactic field halo stars. It is possible, in principle anyway, that the low Li abundances of the Sun and 16 Cyg B with respect to 16 Cyg A may be related to the presence of a planetary companion; Li abundances of 47 UMa, and HD 114762 might further support such a connection between planets/disks, angular momentum evolution, and photospheric Li abundances. Due to a variety of uncertainties, however, any conclusions remain tenuous and speculative at this time. Finally, as an interesting aside, we show that current line list uncertainties in the delta6707 region suggest that claims of very small 6Li/7Li ratios ( 0.01) inferred from analysis of the solar photospheric spectrum are overly optimistic-though not necessarily incorrect
Association of polymorphisms in genes of factors involved in regulation of splicing of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator mRNA with acute respiratory distress syndrome in children with pneumonia
Abstract
Background
Previous work has demonstrated a strong association between lung injury in African American children with pneumonia and a polymorphic (TG)mTn region in cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance (CFTR) involved in the generation of a nonfunctional CFTR protein lacking exon 9. A number of splicing factors that regulate the inclusion/exclusion of exon 9 have been identified. The objective of this study was to determine whether genetic variants in these splicing factors were associated with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) in children with pneumonia.
Methods
This is a prospective cohort genetic association study of lung injury in African American and non-Hispanic Caucasian children with community-acquired pneumonia evaluated in the emergency department or admitted to the hospital. Linkage-disequilibrium-tag single nucleotide polymorphisms (LD-tag SNPs) in genes of the following splicing factors (followed by gene name) involved in exon 9 skipping PTB1 (PTBP1), SRp40 (SFRS1), SR2/ASF (SFRS5), TDP-43 (TARDBP), TIA-1 (TIA1), and U2AF65 (U2AF2) were genotyped. SNPs in the gene of the splicing factor CELF2 (CELF2) were selected by conservation score. Multivariable analysis was used to examine association between genotypes and ARDS.
Results
The African American cohort (n = 474) had 29 children with ARDS and the non-Hispanic Caucasian cohort (n = 304) had 32 children with ARDS. In the African American group multivariable analysis indicated that three variants in CELF2, rs7068124 (p = 0.004), rs3814634 (p = 0.032) and rs10905928 (p = 0.044), and two in TIA1, rs2592178 (p = 0.005) and rs13402990 (p = 0.018) were independently associated with ARDS. In the non-Hispanic Caucasian group, a single variant in CELF2, rs2277212 (p = 0.014), was associated with increased risk of developing ARDS.
Conclusions
The data indicate that SNPs in CELF2 may be associated with the risk of developing ARDS in both African American and non-Hispanic Caucasian children with pneumonia and suggest that the potential role of the splicing factor CELF2 in ARDS should be explored further.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/134745/1/13054_2016_Article_1454.pd
NeuroHammer: Inducing Bit-Flips in Memristive Crossbar Memories
Emerging non-volatile memory (NVM) technologies offer unique advantages in
energy efficiency, latency, and features such as computing-in-memory.
Consequently, emerging NVM technologies are considered an ideal substrate for
computation and storage in future-generation neuromorphic platforms. These
technologies need to be evaluated for fundamental reliability and security
issues. In this paper, we present \emph{NeuroHammer}, a security threat in
ReRAM crossbars caused by thermal crosstalk between memory cells. We
demonstrate that bit-flips can be deliberately induced in ReRAM devices in a
crossbar by systematically writing adjacent memory cells. A simulation flow is
developed to evaluate NeuroHammer and the impact of physical parameters on the
effectiveness of the attack. Finally, we discuss the security implications in
the context of possible attack scenarios
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Do Preferences for Attributes of African Indigenous Vegetables Recipes Vary between Men and Women? A case from Western Kenya
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Comparative nutritional analysis between African Indigenous Vegetables grown by urban farmers and those available for purchase in Kibera, Nairobi, Kenya: A Case Study
An excursion in the environmental humanities:some thoughts on fieldwork, collaboration, and disciplinary identity following a day trip to the Island of Lundy
Valgus and varus deformity after wide-local excision, brachytherapy and external beam irradiation in two children with lower extremity synovial cell sarcoma: case report
BACKGROUND: Limb-salvage is a primary objective in the management of extremity soft-tissue sarcoma in adults and children. Wide-local excision combined with radiation therapy is effective in achieving local tumor control with acceptable morbidity and good functional outcomes for most patients. CASE PRESENTATION: Two cases of deformity after wide-local excision, brachytherapy and external beam irradiation for lower-extremity synovial cell sarcoma are presented and discussed to highlight contributing factors, time course of radiation effects and orthopedic management. In an effort to spare normal tissues from the long-term effects of radiation therapy, more focal irradiation techniques have been applied to patients with musculoskeletal tumors including brachytherapy and conformal radiation therapy. As illustrated in this report, the use of these techniques results in the asymmetric irradiation of growth plates and contributes to the development of valgus or varus deformity and leg-length discrepancies. CONCLUSIONS: Despite good functional outcomes, progressive deformity in both patients required epiphysiodesis more than 3 years after initial management. There is a dearth of information related to the effects of radiation therapy on the musculoskeletal system in children. Because limb-sparing approaches are to be highlighted in the next generation of cooperative group protocols for children with musculoskeletal tumors, documentation of the effects of surgery and radiation therapy will lead to improved decision making in the selection of the best treatment approach and in the follow-up of these patients
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Plasma kininogen and kininogen fragments are biomarkers of progressive renal decline in type-1 diabetes
The ability of microalbuminuria to predict early progressive renal function decline in type-1 diabetic patients has been questioned. To resolve this, we determined the plasma proteome differences between microalbuminuric patients with type-1 diabetes and stable renal function (controls) and patients at risk for early progressive renal function decline (cases) and asked whether these differences have value as surrogate biomarkers. Mass spectrometry was used to analyze small (less than 3 kDa) plasma peptides isolated from well-matched case and control plasma obtained at the beginning of an 8-12 year follow-up period. Spearman analysis of plasma peptide abundance and the rate of renal function decline during follow-up identified seven masses with a significant negative correlation with early progressive renal function decline. Tandem mass spectrometry identified three fragments of high molecular weight kininogen. Increased plasma high molecular weight kininogen in the cases was confirmed by immunoblot. One peptide, des-Arg9-BK(1-8), induced Erk1/2 phosphorylation when added apically to two proximal tubular cell lines grown on permeable inserts. Thus, we have identified plasma protein fragments, some of which have biological activity with moderate to strong correlation, with early progressive renal function decline in microalbuminuric patients with type-1 diabetes. Other peptides are candidates for validation as candidate biomarkers of diabetes-associated renal dysfunction
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