88 research outputs found
A revised multi-tissue, multi-platform epigenetic clock model for methylation array data
Epigenetic changes have long been investigated in association with the process of aging in humans. DNA methylation has been extensively used as a surrogate measure of biological age and correlations between "DNA methylation age" and chronological age have been established. A wide variety of epigenetic clocks has been designed to predict age in different tissues and on data obtained from different methylation platforms. We aimed to extend the scope of one of the most used epigenetic age predictors, the Horvath pan-tissue epigenetic clock, to improve its accuracy on data acquired from the latest Illumina methylation platform (BeadChip EPIC). We present three models trained on close to 6,000 samples of various source tissues and platforms and demonstrate their superior performance (Pearson correlation (r) = 0.917-0.921 and median absolute error (MAE) = 3.60-3.85 years) compared to the original model (r= 0.880 and MAE =5.13 years) on a test set of more than 4,000 samples. The gain in accuracy was especially pronounced on EPIC array data (r= 0.89, MAE = 3.54 years vs. r= 0.83, MAE = 6.09 years), which was not available at the time when the original model was created. Our updated epigenetic clocks predict chronological age with great precision in an independent test cohort of samples on multiple tissue types and data platforms. Two of the three presented models exclusively use the covariates of the original epigenetic clock, albeit with different coefficients, allowing for straightforward adaptation for prefiltered datasets previously processed with the original predictor
Quantum Criticality at the Origin of Life
Why life persists at the edge of chaos is a question at the very heart of
evolution. Here we show that molecules taking part in biochemical processes
from small molecules to proteins are critical quantum mechanically. Electronic
Hamiltonians of biomolecules are tuned exactly to the critical point of the
metal-insulator transition separating the Anderson localized insulator phase
from the conducting disordered metal phase. Using tools from Random Matrix
Theory we confirm that the energy level statistics of these biomolecules show
the universal transitional distribution of the metal-insulator critical point
and the wave functions are multifractals in accordance with the theory of
Anderson transitions. The findings point to the existence of a universal
mechanism of charge transport in living matter. The revealed bio-conductor
material is neither a metal nor an insulator but a new quantum critical
material which can exist only in highly evolved systems and has unique material
properties.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Optimal multihump filter for photometric redshifts
We propose a novel type filter for multicolor imaging to improve on the
photometric redshift estimation of galaxies. An extra filter - specific to a
certain photometric system - may be utilized with high efficiency. We present a
case study of the Hubble Space Telescope's Advanced Camera for Surveys and show
that one extra exposure could cut down the mean square error on photometric
redshifts by 34% over the z<1.3 redshift range.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, LaTeX AASTeX, accepted to A
Objective Identification of Informative Wavelength Regions in Galaxy Spectra
Understanding the diversity in spectra is the key to determining the physical
parameters of galaxies. The optical spectra of galaxies are highly convoluted
with continuum and lines which are potentially sensitive to different physical
parameters. Defining the wavelength regions of interest is therefore an
important question. In this work, we identify informative wavelength regions in
a single-burst stellar populations model by using the CUR Matrix Decomposition.
Simulating the Lick/IDS spectrograph configuration, we recover the widely used
Dn(4000), Hbeta, and HdeltaA to be most informative. Simulating the SDSS
spectrograph configuration with a wavelength range 3450-8350 Angstrom and a
model-limited spectral resolution of 3 Angstrom, the most informative regions
are: first region-the 4000 Angstrom break and the Hdelta line; second
region-the Fe-like indices; third region-the Hbeta line; fourth region-the G
band and the Hgamma line. A Principal Component Analysis on the first region
shows that the first eigenspectrum tells primarily the stellar age, the second
eigenspectrum is related to the age-metallicity degeneracy, and the third
eigenspectrum shows an anti-correlation between the strengths of the Balmer and
the Ca K and H absorptions. The regions can be used to determine the stellar
age and metallicity in early-type galaxies which have solar abundance ratios,
no dust, and a single-burst star formation history. The region identification
method can be applied to any set of spectra of the user's interest, so that we
eliminate the need for a common, fixed-resolution index system. We discuss
future directions in extending the current analysis to late-type galaxies.Comment: 36 Pages, 13 Figures, 4 Tables. AJ Accepte
The size distribution of galaxies in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
abridged: We use a complete sample of about 140,000 galaxies from the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) to study the size distribution of galaxies and its
dependence on their luminosity, stellar mass, and morphological type. The large
SDSS database provides statistics of unprecedented accuracy. For each type of
galaxy, the size distribution at given luminosity (or stellar mass) is well
described by a log-normal function, characterized by its median and
dispersion . For late-type galaxies, there is a characteristic
luminosity at (assuming ) corresponding to a stellar
mass M_0\sim 10^{10.6}\Msun. Galaxies more massive than have
and , while less massive
galaxies have and . For
early-type galaxies, the - relation is significantly steeper,
, but the - relation is similar
to that of late-type galaxies. Faint red galaxies have sizes quite independent
of their luminosities.Comment: 42 pages, 18 figures, 2 tables; replaced with the version accepted by
MNRA
Large Scale Clustering of Sloan Digital Sky Survey Quasars: Impact of the Baryon Density and the Cosmological Constant
We report the first result of the clustering analysis of Sloan Digital Sky
Survey (SDSS) quasars. We compute the two-point correlation function (2PCF) of
SDSS quasars in redshift space at ,
with particular attention to its baryonic signature. Our sample consists of
19986 quasars extracted from the SDSS Data Release 4 (DR4). The redshift range
of the sample is (the mean redshift is )
and the reddening-corrected -band apparent magnitude range is . Due to the relatively low number density of the
quasar sample, the bump in the power spectrum due to the baryon density,
, is not clearly visible. The effect of the baryon density is,
however, to distort the overall shape of the 2PCF.The degree of distortion
makes it an interesting alternate measure of the baryonic signature. Assuming a
scale-independent linear bias and the spatially flat universe, i.e.,
, where
and denote the density parameters of dark matter and the
cosmological constant, we combine the observed quasar 2PCF and the predicted
matter 2PCF to put constraints on and . Our
result is fitted as at the 2 confidence level, which is consistent with
results from other cosmological observations such as WMAP. (abridged)Comment: 26 pages, 12 figures, Accepted for publication in the PAS
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