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Diesel exhaust and house dust mite allergen lead to common changes in the airway methylome and hydroxymethylome.
Exposures to diesel exhaust particles (DEP) from traffic and house dust mite (HDM) allergens significantly increase risks of airway diseases, including asthma. This negative impact of DEP and HDM may in part be mediated by epigenetic mechanisms. Beyond functioning as a mechanical barrier, airway epithelial cells provide the first line of immune defense towards DEP and HDM exposures. To understand the epigenetic responses of airway epithelial cells to these exposures, we exposed human bronchial epithelial cells to DEP and HDM and studied genome-wide 5-methyl-cytosine (5mC) and 5-hydroxy-methylcytosine (5hmC) at base resolution. We found that exposures to DEP and HDM result in elevated TET1 and DNMT1 expression, associated with 5mC and 5hmC changes. Interestingly, over 20% of CpG sites are responsive to both exposures and changes in 5mC at these sites negatively correlated with gene expression differences. These 5mC and 5hmC changes are located in genes and pathways related to oxidative stress responses, epithelial function and immune cell responses and are enriched for binding sites of transcription factors (TFs) involved in these pathways. Histone marks associated with promoters, enhancers and actively transcribed gene bodies were associated with exposure-induced DNA methylation changes. Collectively, our data suggest that exposures to DEP and HDM alter 5mC and 5hmC levels at regulatory regions bound by TFs, which coordinate with histone marks to regulate gene networks of oxidative stress responses, epithelial function and immune cell responses. These observations provide novel insights into the epigenetic mechanisms that mediate the epithelial responses to DEP and HDM in airways
Phytochemical and antimicrobial studies on the leaves and stem ofDesmodium scorpiurus Der (sw)
Phytochemical studies on the aerial parts of Desmodium scorpiurus Der (sw) revealed the presence of alkaloids, saponins, glycosides, steroids and carbohydrates. The petroleum spirit, chloroform and methanol extracts were screened for antimicrobial activity using clinical isolates of Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, Salmonella typhi, Bacillus cereus, Streptococcus pyrogenes and Klebsiella pneumoniae. The results showed that the plant is very active against Pseudomonas aeruginosa,Escherichia coli and Streptococcus pyrogenes with minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of 2 x 102 mg/ml
A partial skeleton of an enantiornithine bird from the early Cretaceous of northwestern China
Although recent discoveries from Lower Cretaceous sediments in northeastern China have greatly improved our understanding of the initial stages of avian diversification in eastern Asia, the early evolution of Aves elsewhere on the continent remains poorly understood. In 2004, a collaborative field effort directed by personnel from the Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences and Carnegie Museum of Natural History recovered multiple partial to nearly complete avian skeletons from outcrops of the Lower Cretaceous Xiagou Formation exposed in the Changma Basin of northwestern Gansu Province, China. Here we describe a thrush-sized partial skeleton comprised of a fragmentary pelvic girdle and largely complete hind limbs. A phylogenetic analysis of 20 avian ingroup taxa and 169 anatomical characters places the specimen in Enantiomithes, and within that clade, in Enenantiomithes. When coupled with additional recent discoveries from the Changma Basin, the new skeleton improves our understanding of early avian evolution and diversification in central Asia
State Transfer Between a Mechanical Oscillator and Microwave Fields in the Quantum Regime
Recently, macroscopic mechanical oscillators have been coaxed into a regime
of quantum behavior, by direct refrigeration [1] or a combination of
refrigeration and laser-like cooling [2, 3]. This exciting result has
encouraged notions that mechanical oscillators may perform useful functions in
the processing of quantum information with superconducting circuits [1, 4-7],
either by serving as a quantum memory for the ephemeral state of a microwave
field or by providing a quantum interface between otherwise incompatible
systems [8, 9]. As yet, the transfer of an itinerant state or propagating mode
of a microwave field to and from a mechanical oscillator has not been
demonstrated owing to the inability to agilely turn on and off the interaction
between microwave electricity and mechanical motion. Here we demonstrate that
the state of an itinerant microwave field can be coherently transferred into,
stored in, and retrieved from a mechanical oscillator with amplitudes at the
single quanta level. Crucially, the time to capture and to retrieve the
microwave state is shorter than the quantum state lifetime of the mechanical
oscillator. In this quantum regime, the mechanical oscillator can both store
and transduce quantum information
Enantiopure and racemic radical-cation salts of B(malate)2−anions with BEDT-TTF
We have synthesized the first examples of radical-cation salts of BEDT-TTF with chiral borate anions, [B(malate)2]−, prepared from either enantiopure or racemic bidentate malate ligands. In the former case only one of two diastereoisomers of the borate anion is incorporated, while for the hydrated racemic salt one racemic pair of borate anions containing a R and a S malate ligand is incorporated. Their conducting and magnetic properties are reported. The tight-binding band calculation indicates that the chiral salt has an effective half-filled flat band, which is likely to be caused by the chiral structural feature
Exploring the proton spin structure
Understanding the spin structure of the proton is one of the main challenges
in hadronic physics. While the concepts of spin and orbital angular momentum
are pretty clear in the context of non-relativistic quantum mechanics, the
generalization of these concepts to quantum field theory encounters serious
difficulties. It is however possible to define meaningful decompositions of the
proton spin that are (in principle) measurable. We propose a summary of the
present situation including recent developments and prospects of future
developments.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, 2 tables, contribution to the proceedings of the
DAE-BRNS High Energy Physics Symposium 2014, Dec 8-12, Guwahati, Indi
Speed and Accuracy of Static Image Discrimination by Rats
When discriminating dynamic noisy sensory signals, human and primate subjects
achieve higher accuracy when they take more time to decide, an effect
attributed to accumulation of evidence over time to overcome neural noise. We
measured the speed and accuracy of twelve freely behaving rats discriminating
static, high contrast photographs of real-world objects for water reward in a
self-paced task. Response latency was longer in correct trials compared to
error trials. Discrimination accuracy increased with response latency over the
range of 500-1200ms. We used morphs between previously learned images to vary
the image similarity parametrically, and thereby modulate task difficulty from
ceiling to chance. Over this range we find that rats take more time before
responding in trials with more similar stimuli. We conclude that rats'
perceptual decisions improve with time even in the absence of temporal
information in the stimulus, and that rats modulate speed in response to
discrimination difficulty to balance speed and accuracy
Fabrication and operation of a two-dimensional ion-trap lattice on a high-voltage microchip
Microfabricated ion traps are a major advancement towards scalable quantum computing with trapped ions. The development of more versatile ion-trap designs, in which tailored arrays of ions are positioned in two dimensions above a microfabricated surface, will lead to applications in fields as varied as quantum simulation, metrology and atom–ion interactions. Current surface ion traps often have low trap depths and high heating rates, because of the size of the voltages that can be applied to them, limiting the fidelity of quantum gates. Here we report on a fabrication process that allows for the application of very high voltages to microfabricated devices in general and use this advance to fabricate a two-dimensional ion-trap lattice on a microchip. Our microfabricated architecture allows for reliable trapping of two-dimensional ion lattices, long ion lifetimes, rudimentary shuttling between lattice sites and the ability to deterministically introduce defects into the ion lattice
PÉRDIDAS DE CARBONO EN SUELOS DE LA LLANURA COSTERA DE NAYARIT, MÉXICO
Se analizaron las pérdidas de carbono orgánico en suelos a partir de 12 perfiles localizados en el delta del rÃo San Pedro y distribuidos por nivel geomorfológico en la llanura costera del estado de Nayarit, México. El estudio se realizó comparando el contenido de carbono de los suelos con mayor conservación bajo bosque y cultivados. Los niveles considerados para este análisis fueron llanura alta, llanura media y sus depresiones, llanura baja y barras costeras. Las reservas de carbono (RCO) se determinaron teniendo en cuenta la densidad aparente (Da), el espesor de cada horizonte y el contenido de carbono. Los resultados se ponderaron para las profundidades 0-20, 0-50 y 0-100 cm. Las pérdidas de carbono identificadas fueron del 36 % para suelos Cambisoles de la llanura alta, 40 % para Feozem y Cambisoles de la llanura media, 60 % en suelos Feozem y Solonetz de las depresiones de la llanura media, 67 % para Cambisoles de la llanura baja y 90 % para Arenosoles de las barras costeras. Se demostró que la actividad agrÃcola intensiva y continuada, ha ocasionado pérdidas en el contenido de carbono; asà mismo, la capa agrÃcola (20 cm) resulta la más afectada por esta actividad antropogénica
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