172 research outputs found
Modern Statistical Models and Methods for Estimating Fatigue-Life and Fatigue-Strength Distributions from Experimental Data
Engineers and scientists have been collecting and analyzing fatigue data
since the 1800s to ensure the reliability of life-critical structures.
Applications include (but are not limited to) bridges, building structures,
aircraft and spacecraft components, ships, ground-based vehicles, and medical
devices. Engineers need to estimate S-N relationships (Stress or Strain versus
Number of cycles to failure), typically with a focus on estimating small
quantiles of the fatigue-life distribution. Estimates from this kind of model
are used as input to models (e.g., cumulative damage models) that predict
failure-time distributions under varying stress patterns. Also, design
engineers need to estimate lower-tail quantiles of the closely related
fatigue-strength distribution. The history of applying incorrect statistical
methods is nearly as long and such practices continue to the present. Examples
include treating the applied stress (or strain) as the response and the number
of cycles to failure as the explanatory variable in regression analyses
(because of the need to estimate strength distributions) and ignoring or
otherwise mishandling censored observations (known as runouts in the fatigue
literature). The first part of the paper reviews the traditional modeling
approach where a fatigue-life model is specified. We then show how this
specification induces a corresponding fatigue-strength model. The second part
of the paper presents a novel alternative modeling approach where a
fatigue-strength model is specified and a corresponding fatigue-life model is
induced. We explain and illustrate the important advantages of this new
modeling approach.Comment: 93 pages, 27 page
The cockayne syndrome B protein is essential for neuronal differentiation and neuritogenesis
Cockayne syndrome (CS) is a progressive developmental and neurodegenerative disorder resulting in premature death at childhood and cells derived from CS patients display DNA repair and transcriptional defects. CS is caused by mutations in csa and csb genes, and patients with csb mutation are more prevalent. A hallmark feature of CSB patients is neurodegeneration but the precise molecular cause for this defect remains enigmatic. Further, it is not clear whether the neurodegenerative condition is due to loss of CSB-mediated functions in adult neurogenesis. In this study, we examined the role of CSB in neurogenesis by using the human neural progenitor cells that have self-renewal and differentiation capabilities. In this model system, stable CSB knockdown dramatically reduced the differentiation potential of human neural progenitor cells revealing a key role for CSB in neurogenesis. Neurite outgrowth, a characteristic feature of differentiated neurons, was also greatly abolished in CSB-suppressed cells. In corroboration with this, expression of MAP2 (microtubule-associated protein 2), a crucial player in neuritogenesis, was also impaired in CSB-suppressed cells. Consistent with reduced MAP2 expression in CSB-depleted neural cells, tandem affinity purification and chromatin immunoprecipitation studies revealed a potential role for CSB in the assembly of transcription complex on MAP2 promoter. Altogether, our data led us to conclude that CSB has a crucial role in coordinated regulation of transcription and chromatin remodeling activities that are required during neurogenesis
Emericella quadrilineata as Cause of Invasive Aspergillosis
This opportunistic fungus is frequently misidentified because of its morphologic similarity to E. nidulans
Emergence of Azole Resistance in Aspergillus fumigatus and Spread of a Single Resistance Mechanism
Paul Verweij and colleagues show that azole resistance has emerged inAspergillus fumigatus in The Netherlands and that a dominant resistance mechanism is present in clinical isolates
High Resolution Genotyping of Clinical Aspergillus flavus Isolates from India Using Microsatellites
Contains fulltext :
124312.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)BACKGROUND: Worldwide, Aspergillus flavus is the second leading cause of allergic, invasive and colonizing fungal diseases in humans. However, it is the most common species causing fungal rhinosinusitis and eye infections in tropical countries. Despite the growing challenges due to A. flavus, the molecular epidemiology of this fungus has not been well studied. We evaluated the use of microsatellites for high resolution genotyping of A. flavus from India and a possible connection between clinical presentation and genotype of the involved isolate. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: A panel of nine microsatellite markers were selected from the genome of A. flavus NRRL 3357. These markers were used to type 162 clinical isolates of A. flavus. All nine markers proved to be polymorphic displaying up to 33 alleles per marker. Thirteen isolates proved to be a mixture of different genotypes. Among the 149 pure isolates, 124 different genotypes could be recognized. The discriminatory power (D) for the individual markers ranged from 0.657 to 0.954. The D value of the panel of nine markers combined was 0.997. The multiplex multicolor approach was instrumental in rapid typing of a large number of isolates. There was no correlation between genotype and the clinical presentation of the infection. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: There is a large genotypic diversity in clinical A. flavus isolates from India. The presence of more than one genotype in clinical samples illustrates the possibility that persons may be colonized by multiple genotypes and that any isolate from a clinical specimen is not necessarily the one actually causing infection. Microsatellites are excellent typing targets for discriminating between A. flavus isolates from various origins
What can comparative genomics tell us about species concepts in the genus Aspergillus?
Understanding the nature of speciesβ boundaries is a fundamental
question in evolutionary biology. The availability of genomes from several
species of the genus Aspergillus allows us for the first time to
examine the demarcation of fungal species at the whole-genome level. Here, we
examine four case studies, two of which involve intraspecific comparisons,
whereas the other two deal with interspecific genomic comparisons between
closely related species. These four comparisons reveal significant variation
in the nature of species boundaries across Aspergillus. For example,
comparisons between A. fumigatus and Neosartorya fischeri
(the teleomorph of A. fischerianus) and between A. oryzae
and A. flavus suggest that measures of sequence similarity and
species-specific genes are significantly higher for the A. fumigatus
- N. fischeri pair. Importantly, the values obtained from the
comparison between A. oryzae and A. flavus are remarkably
similar to those obtained from an intra-specific comparison of A.
fumigatus strains, giving support to the proposal that A. oryzae
represents a distinct ecotype of A. flavus and not a distinct
species. We argue that genomic data can aid Aspergillus taxonomy by
serving as a source of novel and unprecedented amounts of comparative data, as
a resource for the development of additional diagnostic tools, and finally as
a knowledge database about the biological differences between strains and
species
TDP-43 Identified from a Genome Wide RNAi Screen for SOD1 Regulators
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) is a late-onset, progressive neurodegenerative disease affecting motor neurons in the brain stem and spinal cord leading to loss of voluntary muscular function and ultimately, death due to respiratory failure. A subset of ALS cases are familial and associated with mutations in superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) that destabilize the protein and predispose it to aggregation. In spite of the fact that sporadic and familial forms of ALS share many common patho-physiological features, the mechanistic relationship between SOD1-associated and sporadic forms of the disease if any, is not well understood. To better understand any molecular connections, a cell-based protein folding assay was employed to screen a whole genome RNAi library for genes that regulate levels of soluble SOD1. Statistically significant hits that modulate SOD1 levels, when analyzed by pathway analysis revealed a highly ranked network containing TAR DNA binging protein (TDP-43), a major component of aggregates characteristic of sporadic ALS. Biochemical experiments confirmed the action of TDP-43 on SOD1. These results highlight an unexpected relationship between TDP-43 and SOD1 which may have implications in disease pathogenesis
UVSSA and USP7, a new couple in transcription-coupled DNA repair
Transcription-coupled nucleotide excision repair (TC-NER) specifically removes transcription-blocking lesions from our genome. Defects in this pathway are associated with two human disorders: Cockayne syndrome (CS) and UV-sensitive syndrome (UVSS). Despite a similar cellular defect in the UV DNA damage response, patients with these syndromes exhibit strikingly distinct symptoms; CS patients display severe developmental, neurological, and premature aging features, whereas the phenotype of UVSS patients is mostly restricted to UV hypersensitivity. The exact molecular mechanism behind these clinical differences is still unknown; however, they might be explained by additional functions of CS proteins beyond TC-NER. A short overview of the current hypotheses addressing possible molecular mechanisms and the proteins involved are presented in this review. In addition, we will focus on two new players involved in TC-NER which were recently identified: UV-stimulated scaffold protein A (UVSSA) and ubiquitin-specific protease 7 (USP7). UVSSA has been found to be the causative gene for UVSS and, together with USP7, is implicated in regulating TC-NER activity. We will discuss the function of UVSSA and USP7 and how the discovery of these proteins contributes to a better understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying the clinical differences between UVSS and the more severe CS
The Werner Syndrome Protein Suppresses Telomeric Instability Caused by Chromium (VI) Induced DNA Replication Stress
Telomeres protect the chromosome ends and consist of guanine-rich repeats coated by specialized proteins. Critically short telomeres are associated with disease, aging and cancer. Defects in telomere replication can lead to telomere loss, which can be prevented by telomerase-mediated telomere elongation or activities of the Werner syndrome helicase/exonuclease protein (WRN). Both telomerase and WRN attenuate cytotoxicity induced by the environmental carcinogen hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)), which promotes replication stress and DNA polymerase arrest. However, it is not known whether Cr(VI)-induced replication stress impacts telomere integrity. Here we report that Cr(VI) exposure of human fibroblasts induced telomeric damage as indicated by phosphorylated H2AX (Ξ³H2AX) at telomeric foci. The induced Ξ³H2AX foci occurred in S-phase cells, which is indicative of replication fork stalling or collapse. Telomere fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) of metaphase chromosomes revealed that Cr(VI) exposure induced an increase in telomere loss and sister chromatid fusions that were rescued by telomerase activity. Human cells depleted for WRN protein exhibited a delayed reduction in telomeric and non-telomeric damage, indicated by Ξ³H2AX foci, during recovery from Cr(VI) exposure, consistent with WRN roles in repairing damaged replication forks. Telomere FISH of chromosome spreads revealed that WRN protects against Cr(VI)-induced telomere loss and downstream chromosome fusions, but does not prevent chromosome fusions that retain telomere sequence at the fusion point. Our studies indicate that environmentally induced replication stress leads to telomere loss and aberrations that are suppressed by telomerase-mediated telomere elongation or WRN functions in replication fork restoration
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