1,615 research outputs found
Application of the NASA airborne oceanographic lidar to the mapping of chlorophyll and other organic pigments
Laser fluorosensing techniques used for the airborne measurement of chlorophyll a and other naturally occurring waterborne pigments are reviewed. Previous experiments demonstrating the utility of the airborne oceanographic lidar (AOL) for assessment of various marine parameters are briefly discussed. The configuration of the AOL during the NOAA/NASA Superflux experiments is described. The participation of the AOL in these experiments is presented and the preliminary results are discussed. The importance of multispectral receiving capability in a laser fluorosensing system for providing reproducible measurements over wide areas having spatial variations in water column transmittance properties is addressed. This capability minimizes the number of truthing points required and is usable even in shallow estuarine areas where resuspension of bottom sediment is common. Finally, problems encountered on the Superflux missions and the resulting limitations on the AOL data sets are addressed and feasible solutions to these problems are provided
Recommended from our members
The evolution of meiotic recombination in vertebrates: the case of snakes
Comparisons among model organisms make clear that, despite the fundamental importance of recombination in sexually-reproducing species, the mechanisms by which it is directed to the genome can vary markedly. Notably, in mice and humans, recombination almost exclusively occurs where the protein PRDM9 binds DNA. In such species, fine-scale recombination rates along the genome are rapidly evolving, as shifts in PRDM9 binding affinity remodel the landscape. In other species such as birds or canids, PRDM9 has been lost and recombination occurs preferentially at promoter-like features, leading to the conservation of recombination rates over large evolutionary distances. Increased recombination near promoters is also seen in human and mouse knockouts for PRDM9, indicating that this mechanism is normally out-competed by PRDM9 binding. The rapid evolution of complete orthologs of PRDM9 in non-mammalian vertebrates suggests that the protein may play a similar role in directing recombination outside of mammals.
In chapter 2 of this work, we test this hypothesis by focusing on the corn snake Pantherophis guttatus, a representative vertebrate species with a single, complete PRDM9 ortholog that is rapidly evolving. We improved the assembly and annotation of the corn snake reference genome and resequenced 24 unrelated corn snake samples to high coverage in order to infer historical recombination rates across the genome from patterns of linkage disequilibrium. We find evidence for elevated recombination around computationally predicted PRDM9 binding sites but, surprisingly, also near promoter features. To verify these findings, we resequenced two pedigrees, identified the PRDM9 alleles segregating in the families and called crossover events that occurred in the parents.
This analysis confirmed that crossover events overlap both PRDM9 binding sites and promoter features more than expected by chance. Thus, unlike in mammalian species that rely on PRDM9, in corn snakes there appears to be a mixed use of PRDM9 binding sites and promoter like features, and we find evidence that the relative importance of these features differs between macro- and microchomosomes. We hypothesize that the dual usage of these features reflects a tug of war between PRDM9 and promoter features, whose strength in snakes and possibly other vertebrates has been shifted by changes to a gene that reads the histone modifications made by PRDM9, and likely other genes. In chapter 3, I discuss how follow-up experiments based on these observations could help answer long-standing questions related to the conditions under which PRDM9-directed recombination localization is favorable. Beyond the specific results, this work illustrates how the study of non-model organisms can inform our understanding of basic genetic mechanisms
High frequency sampling of the 1984 spring bloom within the mid-Atlantic Bight: Synoptic shipboard, aircraft, and in situ perspectives of the SEEP-I experiment
Moorings of current meters, thermistors, transmissometers, and fluorometers on the mid-Atlantic shelf, south of Long Island, suggest a cumulative seaward export of perhaps 0.35 g C/sq m/day between the 80 and 120 m isobaths during February-April 1984. Such a horizontal loss of algal carbon over the lower third of the water column would be 23 to 78% of the March-April 1984 primary production. This physical carbon loss is similar to daily grazing losses from zooplankton of 32-40% of the algal fixation of carbon. Metabolic demands of the benthos could be met by just the estimated fecal pellet flux, without direct consumption of algal carbon, while bacterioplankton needs could be served by excretory release of dissolved organic matter during photosynthesis. Sediment traps tethered 10 m off the bottom at the 120 m isobath and 50 m above the 500 m isobath caught as much as 0.16 to 0.26 g C /sq m/day during March-April 1984, in reasonable agreement with the flux estimated from the other moored instruments
Elimination of visually evoked BOLD responses during carbogen inhalation: Implications for calibrated MRI
Breathing a mixture of 10% CO2 with 90% O2 (referred to here as carbogen-10) increases blood flow due to the vasodilatory effect of CO2, and raises blood O2 saturation due to the enriched oxygen level. These effects both tend to reduce the level of deoxygenated hemoglobin in brain tissues, thereby reducing the potential for further increases in BOLD contrast. In the present study, blocks of intense visual stimulation (60 s) were presented amid longer blocks (180 s) during which subjects breathed various fractional concentrations (0–100%) of carbogen-10 diluted with medical air. When breathing undiluted carbogen-10, the BOLD response to visual stimulation was reduced below the level of noise against the background of the carbogen-10 response. At these concentrations, the total (visual+carbogen) BOLD response amplitude (7.5±1.0%, n=6) converged toward that seen with carbogen alone (7.5 ± 1.0%, n = 6). In spite of the almost complete elimination of the visual BOLD response, pseudo-continuous arterial spin-labeling on a separate cohort indicated a largely preserved perfusion response (89±34%, n=5) to the visual stimulus during inhalation of carbogen-10. The previously discussed observations suggest that venous saturation can be driven to very high levels during carbogen inhalation, a finding which has significant implications for calibrated MRI techniques. The latter methods involve estimation of the relative change in venous O2 saturation by expressing activation-induced BOLD signal increases as a fraction of the maximal BOLD signal M that would be observed as venous saturation approaches 100%. While the value of M has generally been extrapolated from much smaller BOLD responses induced using hypercapnia or hyperoxia, our results suggest that these effects could be combined through carbogen inhalation to obtain estimates of M based on larger BOLD increases. Using a hybrid BOLD calibration model taking into account changes in both blood flow and arterial oxygenation, we estimated that inhalation of carbogen-10 led to an average venous saturation of 91%, allowing us to compute an estimated M value of 9.5%
Are juveniles who have committed sexual offenses the same everywhere? psychometric properties of the juvenile sex offender assessment protocol–II in a portuguese youth sample
Over the last decade, we have witnessed consistent advances in risk assessment procedures, namely the validation of those used with juveniles who have committed sexual offenses. The adaptation of these instruments into other languages requires research examining the conceptual and metric equivalence of the instruments, not just translation equivalence. Informed by data from 141 boys, aged 13 to 18, the psychometric properties of the Portuguese version of the Juvenile Sex Offender Assessment Protocol–II (J-SOAP-II), regarding reliability and construct validation, are presented and discussed. Factor structure, internal consistency, and interrater reliability were examined, and a reliable factorial structure that was consistent with the original validation of the J-SOAP was found. Scales 2 and 3 had good internal consistency, and Scale 1 had acceptable internal consistency. Results regarding concurrent validity revealed mostly statistically significant correlations. The implications of this research for juvenile sex offender risk assessments are discussed.The author(s) received no financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article
Detection of Multiple Pathways in the Spinal Cord White Matter Using Q-Ball Imaging
International audienceHigh angular resolution MRI such as q-ball imaging (QBI) allows to recover complex white matter architecture. We applied this technique to an ex vivo spinal cord of one cat using a 3T scanner, 100 directions and b-values varying from 1000 to 3000 s/mm2. As a result, QBI can retrieve crossing fibre information, where the diffusion tensor imaging approach is constrained to a single diffusion direction. To our knowledge, this is the first study demonstrating the benefits of QBI in observing longitudinal, commissural and dorso-ventral fibres in the spinal cord. It is a first step towards in vivo characterization of the healthy and injured spinal cord using high angular resolution diffusion imaging (HARDI) and QBI
At what time does a quantum experiment have a result?
This paper provides a general method for defining a generalized quantum
observable (or POVM) that supplies properly normalized conditional
probabilities for the time of occurrence (i.e., of detection). This method
treats the time of occurrence as a probabilistic variable whose value is to be
determined by experiment and predicted by the Born rule. This avoids the
problematic assumption that a question about the time at which an event occurs
must be answered through instantaneous measurements of a projector by an
observer, common to both Rovelli (1998) and Oppenheim et al. (2000). I also
address the interpretation of experiments purporting to demonstrate the quantum
Zeno effect, used by Oppenheim et al. (2000) to justify an inherent uncertainty
for measurements of times.Comment: To appear in proceedings of 2015 ETH Zurich Workshop on Time in
Physic
Suspension cultured transgenic cells of Nicotiana tabacum expressing tryptophan decarboxylase and strictosidine synthase cDNAs from Catharanthus roseus produce strictosidine upon secologanin feeding
A transgenic cell suspension culture of Nicotiana tabacum L. ‘Petit Havana’ SR1 was established expressing tryptophan decarboxylase and strictosidine synthase cDNA clones from Catharanthus roseus (L.) G. Don
under the direction of cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter and nopaline synthase terminator sequences. During a growth cycle, the transgenic tobacco cells showed
relatively constant tryptophan decarboxylase activity and
an about two- to sixfold higher strictosidine synthase activity, enzyme activities not detectable in untransformed
tobacco cells. The transgenic culture accumulated tryptamine and produced strictosidine upon feeding of secologanin, demonstrating the in vivo functionality of the two
transgene-encoded enzymes. The accumulation of strictosidine, which occurred predominantly in the medium, could
be enhanced by feeding both secologanin and tryptamine.
No strictosidine synthase activity was detected in the medium, indicating the involvement of secologanin uptake
and strictosidine release by the cells.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Suspension cultured transgenic cells of Nicotiana tabacum expressing tryptophan decarboxylase and strictosidine synthase cDNAs from Catharanthus roseus produce strictosidine upon secologanin feeding
A transgenic cell suspension culture of Nicotiana tabacum L. ‘Petit Havana’ SR1 was established expressing tryptophan decarboxylase and strictosidine synthase cDNA clones from Catharanthus roseus (L.) G. Don
under the direction of cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter and nopaline synthase terminator sequences. During a growth cycle, the transgenic tobacco cells showed
relatively constant tryptophan decarboxylase activity and
an about two- to sixfold higher strictosidine synthase activity, enzyme activities not detectable in untransformed
tobacco cells. The transgenic culture accumulated tryptamine and produced strictosidine upon feeding of secologanin, demonstrating the in vivo functionality of the two
transgene-encoded enzymes. The accumulation of strictosidine, which occurred predominantly in the medium, could
be enhanced by feeding both secologanin and tryptamine.
No strictosidine synthase activity was detected in the medium, indicating the involvement of secologanin uptake
and strictosidine release by the cells.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Cyclospora: an enigma worth unraveling.
In part, Cyclospora cayetanensis owes its recognition as an emerging pathogen to the increased use of staining methods for detecting enteric parasites such as Cryptosporidium. First reported in patients in New Guinea in 1977 but thought to be a coccidian parasite of the genus Isospora, C. cayetanensis received little attention until it was again described in 1985 in New York and Peru. In the early 1990s, human infection associated with waterborne transmission of C. cayetanensis was suspected; foodborne transmission was likewise suggested in early studies. The parasite was associated with several disease outbreaks in the United States during 1996 and 1997. This article reviews current knowledge about C. cayetanensis (including its association with waterborne and foodborne transmission), unresolved issues, and research needs
- …