6,608 research outputs found

    Television viewing time and risk of incident obesity and central obesity: the English longitudinal study of ageing

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    Background Research suggests television viewing time may be associated with incident obesity and central obesity in young adults. No study has investigated these associations in older English adults. The aim of this study was to investigate longitudinal associations between television viewing time and incident obesity and central obesity in a sample of older English adults. Analyses of data from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. At baseline (2008), participants reported their television viewing time. Research nurses recorded obesity and central obesity by body mass index and waist circumference, respectively, at four year follow-up. Associations between television viewing time and incident obesity (BMI > 30 kg/m2) and central obesity (waist >102 cm men; > 88 cm women) at four year follow-up were examined using adjusted logistic regression. Participants gave full written informed consent to participate in the study and ethical approval was obtained from the London Multicentre Research Ethics Committee. Results A total of 3777 initially non-obese participants (aged 64.8 ± 8.6 yrs, 46.4% male) were included in the analyses using BMI as an outcome and 2947 for the analyses using waist circumference. No significant associations were found between television viewing time and incident obesity. A significant association was found between watching ≥6 hrs/d of television (compared to <2 hrs/d) and central obesity (Odds Ratio 1.48; 95% confidence interval 1.07 to 2.03) after adjustment for covariables including physical activity. Conclusions In this sample of older community dwelling English adults greater television viewing time was associated with incident central obesity, but not total obesity when measured by BMI. Interventions to reduce the incidence of central obesity in this age group that focus on reducing TV time, as well as targeting other health behaviours (eg, increasing physical activity levels, improving dietary intake) might prove useful

    Knowing the hay from the needle: Yeast two-hybrid screens in Aspergillus nidulans - a set of clones to identify common false positives .

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    With the purpose of examining interacting components of the septation process in Aspergillus nidulans, a yeast two-hybrid library of A. nidulans hyphal cDNA has been constructed. The yeast interaction trap is based on the in vivo detection of heterologous protein-protein interactions that will activate transcription in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (bakers yeast). Although the system potentially is powerful, much effort is necessary to identify background interactors due to heterologous complementation and non-specific initiation of transcription. A set of false positives was identified, which can be used to reduce the background in future yeast two-hybrid screens of A. nidulans libraries

    The bacterial transposon Tn7 causes premature polyadenylation of mRNA in eukaryotic organisms: TAGKO mutagenesis in filamentous fungi

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    TAGKO is a Tn7-based transposition system for genome wide mutagenesis in filamentous fungi. The effects of transposon insertion on the expression of TAGKO alleles were examined in Magnaporthe grisea and Mycosphaerella graminicola. Northern analysis showed that stable, truncated transcripts were expressed in the TAGKO mutants. Mapping of the 3′-ends of TAGKO cDNAs revealed that they all contain Tn7 end sequences, regardless of the transposon orientation. Polyadenylation signals characteristic of eukaryotic genes, preceded by stop codons in all frames, are located in both ends of the bacterial transposon. Thus, TAGKO transcripts are prematurely polyadenylated, and truncated proteins are predicted to be translated in the fungal mutants. Depending on the extent of protein truncation, TAGKO mutations in HPD4 (encoding p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase) resulted in tyrosine sensitivity in the two fungi. Similarly, a particular M.grisea CBS1 (encoding cystathionine β-synthase) TAGKO cDNA failed to complement cysteine auxotrophy in a yeast CBS mutant. TAGKO, therefore, represents a useful tool for in vivo study of truncated gene products in filamentous fungi.postprin

    Bacterial Transposons containing Markers for Fungal Gene Disruption

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    We have constructed 2 tn5-containing plasmids, pLH1 and pLH3, specialized towards mutagenesis of genes from fungi which are auxotrophic for arginine or sensitive to hygromycin (such as the filamentous fungi Aspergillus nidulans and Magnaporthe grisea.) These plasmids are also a useful means of integrating additional marker genes in the plasmid backbone

    Letter from Thomas L. Hamer to James B. Finley

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    Hon. Thomas L. Hamer (lawyer) expresses appreciation for the letter of advice and counsel he recently received from Finley. He speaks with regret about his withdrawal from the local Methodist Episcopal Church. He and his wife withdrew quietly due to problems which are not named. But he says they are as much Methodist as they ever were. He is not satisfied with his spiritual life, but still has hope that reaches beyond the grave and hopes to reach the haven of rest beyond this vale of tears and to meet there you, my elder worthy brother. Abstract Number - 215https://digitalcommons.owu.edu/finley-letters/1213/thumbnail.jp

    Critical and off-critical studies of the Baxter-Wu model with general toroidal boundary conditions

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    The operator content of the Baxter-Wu model with general toroidal boundary conditions is calculated analytically and numerically. These calculations were done by relating the partition function of the model with the generating function of a site-colouring problem in a hexagonal lattice. Extending the original Bethe-ansatz solution of the related colouring problem we are able to calculate the eigenspectra of both models by solving the associated Bethe-ansatz equations. We have also calculated, by exploring the conformal invariance at the critical point, the mass ratios of the underlying massive theory governing the Baxter-Wu model in the vicinity of its critical point.Comment: 32 pages latex, to appear in J. Phys. A: Math. Ge

    Path Integral Monte Carlo Approach to the U(1) Lattice Gauge Theory in (2+1) Dimensions

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    Path Integral Monte Carlo simulations have been performed for U(1) lattice gauge theory in (2+1) dimensions on anisotropic lattices. We extractthe static quark potential, the string tension and the low-lying "glueball" spectrum.The Euclidean string tension and mass gap decrease exponentially at weakcoupling in excellent agreement with the predictions of Polyakov and G{\" o}pfert and Mack, but their magnitudes are five times bigger than predicted. Extrapolations are made to the extreme anisotropic or Hamiltonian limit, and comparisons are made with previous estimates obtained in the Hamiltonian formulation.Comment: 12 pages, 16 figure

    Conformal invariance studies of the Baxter-Wu model and a related site-colouring problem

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    The partition function of the Baxter-Wu model is exactly related to the generating function of a site-colouring problem on a hexagonal lattice. We extend the original Bethe ansatz solution of these models in order to obtain the eigenspectra of their transfer matrices in finite geometries and general toroidal boundary conditions. The operator content of these models are studied by solving numerically the Bethe-ansatz equations and by exploring conformal invariance. Since the eigenspectra are calculated for large lattices, the corrections to finite-size scaling are also calculated.Comment: 12 pages, latex, to appear in J. Phys. A: Gen. Mat

    Aggio et al. Respond to “Lessons for Research on Cognitive Aging”

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    We thank Dr. Belsky (1) for his interest in our study (2), in which we investigated associations between physical activity and cognitive function in young people. He raises several important issues on the role of physical activity as a public health strategy in the prevention of cognitive decline. The issue of “neuroselection,” wherein individuals with better cognitive function are more likely to engage in healthy behaviors such as physical activity and refrain from unhealthy ones such as smoking, is a potential source of bias in observational studies. The alternative hypothesis is that of “neuroprotection,” in which engagement in healthy behaviors is likely to lead to enhanced cognitive development
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