615 research outputs found
Modelling bacterial speciation
A central problem in understanding bacterial speciation is how clusters of closely related strains emerge and persist in the face of recombination. We use a neutral FisherâWright model in which genotypes, defined by the alleles at 140 house-keeping loci, change in each generation by mutation or recombination, and examine conditions in which an initially uniform population gives rise to resolved clusters. Where recombination occurs at equal frequency between all members of the population, we observe a transition between clonal structure and sexual structure as the rate of recombination increases. In the clonal situation, clearly resolved clusters are regularly formed, break up or go extinct. In the sexual situation, the formation of distinct clusters is prevented by the cohesive force of recombination. Where the rate of recombination is a declining log-linear function of the genetic distance between the donor and recipient strain, distinct clusters emerge even with high rates of recombination. These clusters arise in the absence of selection, and have many of the properties of species, with high recombination rates and thus sexual cohesion within clusters and low rates between clusters. Distance-scaled recombination can thus lead to a population splitting into distinct genotypic clusters, a process that mimics sympatric speciation. However, empirical estimates of the relationship between sequence divergence and recombination rate indicate that the decline in recombination is an insufficiently steep function of genetic distance to generate species in nature under neutral drift, and thus that other mechanisms should be invoked to explain speciation in the presence of recombination
Seroprevalence of rubella antibodies and determinants of susceptibility to rubella in a cohort of pregnant women in Canada, 2008â2011
Long term control of rubella and congenital rubella syndrome relies on high population-level immunity
against rubella, particularly among women of childbearing age. In Canada, all pregnant women should be
screened so that susceptible new mothers can be offered vaccination for rubella before discharge. This
study was undertaken to estimate rubella susceptibility in a cohort of pregnant women in Canada and
to identify associated socio-economic and demographic factors. Biobanked plasma samples were
obtained from the Maternal-Infant Research on Environmental Chemicals (MIREC) study, in which pregnant
women were recruited between 2008 and 2011. Socio-demographic characteristics and obstetric
histories were collected. Second trimester plasma samples (n = 1,752) were tested for rubella-specific
IgG using an in-house enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The percentage of women with IgG titers
<5 IU/mL, 5â10 IU/mL, and 10 IU/mL were 2.3%, 10.1%, and 87.6%, respectively. Rates of seronegativity,
defined as <5 IU/mL, were 3.1% in women who had no previous live birth and 1.6% in women who had
given birth previously. Among the latter group, seronegativity was higher in women with high school
education or less (adjusted OR (aOR) 5.93, 95% CI 2.08â16.96) or with a college or trade school diploma
(aOR 3.82, 95% CI 1.45â10.12), compared to university graduates, and those born outside Canada (aOR
2.60, 95% CI 1.07â6.31). In conclusion, a large majority of pregnant women were found to be immune
to rubella. Further research is needed to understand inequalities in vaccine uptake or access, and more
effort is needed to promote catch-up measles-mumps-rubella vaccination among socioeconomically disadvantaged
and immigrant women of childbearing age
A new Neocalamites (Sphenophyta) with prickles and attached cones from the Upper Triassic of China
Remains of the extinct sphenophyte (horsetail) . Neocalamites are most widespread in the Middle-Upper Triassic and are typically represented by stem and leaf fragments. Here we report on spectacular new finds of . Neocalamites from the Late Triassic Yangcaogou Formation in Liaoning Province, China that include bedding surfaces dominated by nearly complete aerial stems with attached leaf whorls and rare bractless cones. They reveal a monopodial growth habit for the stems, which are covered with downward projecting prickles that probably provided protection against herbivores. These features provide the basis for a new proposed species, . Neocalamites horridus. The nodes bear whorls of very long leaves mainly free to their bases, and one specimen bears an attached cone on a long peduncle. Identical dispersed cones have also been recovered. The leaves of adjacent monopodial stems most likely interlocked to support growth in large stands akin to the role now played by branches in large modern . Equisetum species. The new Chinese . Neocalamites is among the most confidently reconstructed species, and indicates a greater diversity of sphenophyte morphology during the Mesozoic than previously realized.Fil: Zan, Shuqin. Geological Museum Of China; ChinaFil: Axsmith, Brian J.. University of Alabama at Birmingahm; Estados UnidosFil: Escapa, Ignacio HernĂĄn. Museo PaleontolĂłgico Egidio Feruglio; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas; ArgentinaFil: Fraser, Nicholas. National Museum Of Scotland; Reino UnidoFil: Liu, Feng Xiang. Geological Museum Of China; ChinaFil: Xing, De-He. Shenyang Institute Of Geology And Mineral Resources; Chin
Electron losses from the radiation belts caused by EMIC waves
Electromagnetic Ion Cyclotron (EMIC) waves cause electron loss in the radiation belts by resonating with high energy electrons at energies greater than about 500 keV. However, their effectiveness has not been fully quantified. Here we determine the effectiveness of EMIC waves by using wave data from the fluxgate magnetometer on CRRES to calculate bounce averaged pitch angle and energy diffusion rates for L* =3.5 - 7 for five levels of Kp between 12 - 18 MLT. To determine the electron loss EMIC diffusion rates were included in the BAS Radiation Belt Model together with whistler mode chorus, plasmaspheric hiss and radial diffusion. By simulating a 100 day period in 1990 we show that EMIC waves caused a significant reduction in the electron flux for energies greater than 2 MeV but only for pitch angles lower than about 60°.The simulations show that the distribution of electrons left behind in space looks like a pancake distribution. Since EMIC waves cannot remove electrons at all pitch angles even at 30 MeV, our results suggest that EMIC waves are unlikely to set an upper limit on the energy of the flux of radiation belt electrons
Sequences, sequence clusters and bacterial species
Whatever else they should share, strains of bacteria assigned to the same species should have house-keeping genes that are similar in sequence. Single gene sequences (or rRNA gene sequences) have very few informative sites to resolve the strains of closely related species, and relationships among similar species may be confounded by interspecies recombination. A more promising approach (multilocus sequence analysis, MLSA) is to concatenate the sequences of multiple house-keeping loci and to observe the patterns of clustering among large populations of strains of closely related named bacterial species. Recent studies have shown that large populations can be resolved into non-overlapping sequence clusters that agree well with species assigned by the standard microbiological methods. The use of clustering patterns to inform the division of closely related populations into species has many advantages for poorly studied bacteria (or to re-evaluate well-studied species), as it provides a way of recognizing natural discontinuities in the distribution of similar genotypes. Clustering patterns can be used by expert groups as the basis of a pragmatic approach to assigning species, taking into account whatever additional data are available (e.g. similarities in ecology, phenotype and gene content). The development of large MLSA Internet databases provides the ability to assign new strains to previously defined species clusters and an electronic taxonomy. The advantages and problems in using sequence clusters as the basis of species assignments are discussed
Aromatase Inhibition Reduces Insulin Sensitivity in Healthy Men
CONTEXT: Deficiency of aromatase, the enzyme that catalyzes the conversion of androgens to estrogens, is associated with insulin resistance in humans and mice. OBJECTIVE: We hypothesized that pharmacological aromatase inhibition results in peripheral insulin resistance in humans. DESIGN: This was a double-blind, randomized, controlled, crossover study. SETTING: The study was conducted at a clinical research facility. PARTICIPANTS: Seventeen healthy male volunteers (18â50 y) participated in the study. INTERVENTION: The intervention included oral anastrozole (1 mg daily) and placebo, each for 6 weeks with a 2-week washout period. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Glucose disposal and rates of lipolysis were measured during a stepwise hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp. Data are mean (SEM). RESULTS: Anastrozole therapy resulted in significant estradiol suppression (59.9 ± 3.6 vs 102.0 ± 5.7 pmol/L, P = < .001) and a more modest elevation of total T (25.8 ± 1.2 vs 21.4 ± 0.7 nmol/L, P = .003). Glucose infusion rate, during the low-dose insulin infusion, was lower after anastrozole administration (12.16 ± 1.33 vs 14.15 ± 1.55 ÎŒmol/kg·min, P = .024). No differences in hepatic glucose production or rate of lipolysis were observed. CONCLUSION: Aromatase inhibition reduces insulin sensitivity, with respect to peripheral glucose disposal, in healthy men. Local generation and action of estradiol, at the level of skeletal muscle, is likely to be an important determinant of insulin sensitivity
Policy Recommendations for Meeting the Grand Challenge to Ensure Healthy Development for All Youth
This brief was created forSocial Innovation for Americaâs Renewal, a policy conference organized by the Center for Social Development in collaboration with the American Academy of Social Work & Social Welfare, which is leading theGrand Challenges for Social Work initiative to champion social progress. The conference site includes links to speeches, presentations, and a full list of the policy briefs
The argument of the broken pane: Suffragette consumerism and newspapers
Within the cut-throat world of newspaper advertising the newspapers of Britain's Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) Votes for Women and the Suffragette managed to achieve a balance that has often proved to be an impossible challenge for social movement pressânamely the maintenance of a highly political stance whilst simultaneously exploiting the market system with advertising and merchandising. When the militant papers advocated window smashing of West End stores in 1912â1913, the companies who were the target still took advertisements. Why? What was the relationship between news values, militant violence and advertising income? âDo-it-yourselfâ journalism operated within a context of ethical consumerism and promotionally orientated militancy. This resulted in newspaper connections between politics, commerce and a distinct market profile, evident in the customisation of advertising, retailer dialogue with militants and longer-term loyaltyâsymptomatic of a wider trend towards newspaper commercialism during this period
Particulate methane monooxygenase contains only mononuclear copper centers
Bacteria that oxidize methane to methanol are central to mitigating emissions of methane, a potent greenhouse gas. The nature of the copper active site in the primary metabolic enzyme of these bacteria, particulate methane monooxygenase (pMMO), has been controversial owing to seemingly contradictory biochemical, spectroscopic, and crystallographic results. We present biochemical and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopic characterization most consistent with two monocopper sites within pMMO: one in the soluble PmoB subunit at the previously assigned active site (CuB) and one ~2 nanometers away in the membrane-bound PmoC subunit (CuC). On the basis of these results, we propose that a monocopper site is able to catalyze methane oxidation in pMMO
- âŠ