18 research outputs found

    Multidecadal accumulation of anthropogenic and remineralized dissolved inorganic carbon along the Extended Ellett Line in the northeast Atlantic Ocean

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    Marine carbonate chemistry measurements have been carried out annually since 2009 during UK research cruises along the Extended Ellett Line (EEL), a hydrographic transect in the northeast Atlantic Ocean. The EEL intersects several water masses that are key to the global thermohaline circulation, and therefore the cruises sample a region in which it is critical to monitor secular physical and biogeochemical changes. We have combined results from these EEL cruises with existing quality-controlled observational data syntheses to produce a hydrographic time series for the EEL from 1981 to 2013. This reveals multidecadal increases in dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) throughout the water column, with a near-surface maximum rate of 1.80 ± 0.45 ”mol kg−1 yr−1. Anthropogenic CO2 accumulation was assessed, using simultaneous changes in apparent oxygen utilization (AOU) and total alkalinity (TA) as proxies for the biogeochemical processes that influence DIC. The stable carbon isotope composition of DIC (ÎŽ13CDIC) was also determined and used as an independent test of our method. We calculated a volume-integrated anthropogenic CO2 accumulation rate of 2.8 ± 0.4 mg C m−3 yr−1 along the EEL, which is about double the global mean. The anthropogenic CO2 component accounts for only 31 ± 6% of the total DIC increase. The remainder is derived from increased organic matter remineralization, which we attribute to the lateral redistribution of water masses that accompanies subpolar gyre contraction. Output from a general circulation ecosystem model demonstrates that spatiotemporal heterogeneity in the observations has not significantly biased our multidecadal rate of change calculations and indicates that the EEL observations have been tracking distal changes in the surrounding North Atlantic and Nordic Seas

    Polar Data Forum IV – An Ocean of Opportunities

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    This paper reports on the Hackathon Sessions organised at the Polar Data Forum IV (PDF IV) (20–24 September 2021), during which 351 participants from 50 different countries discussed collaboratively about the latest developments in polar data management. The 4th edition of the PDF hosted lively discussions on (i) best practices for polar data management, (ii) data policy, (ii) documenting data flows into aggregators, (iv) data interoperability, (v) polar federated search, (vi) semantics and vocabularies, (vii) Virtual Research Environments (VREs), and (viii) new polar technologies. This paper provides an overview of the organisational aspects of PDF IV and summarises the polar data objectives and outcomes by describing the conclusions drawn from the Hackathon Sessions

    Prognostic value of discs large homolog 7 transcript levels in prostate cancer.

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    Hypoxia has been associated with malignant progression, metastasis and resistance to therapy. Hence, we studied expression of hypoxia-regulated genes in 100 prostate cancer (CaP) bulk tissues and 71 adjacent benign tissues. We found 24 transcripts significantly overexpressed (p ≀ 0.02). Importantly, higher transcript levels of disc large (drosophila) homolog-associated protein 5 (DLGAP5)/discs large homolog 7 (DLG7)/hepatoma up-regulated protein (HURP), hyaluronan-mediated motility receptor (HMMR) and cyclin B1 (CCNB1) were associated with higher Gleason score and more advanced systemic progression. Since the products of HMMR and CCNB1 have been identified recently as molecular markers of CaP progression, we postulated that DLG7 has prognostic value too. To test this hypothesis, we measured transcript levels for DLG7 in a 150-pair case-control cohort. The cases (progression to systemic disease within six years of surgery) and controls (no progression within eight years) were matched for clinical and pathologic prognostic variables, including grade, stage, and preoperative serum levels of PSA. The overall prognostic ability of DLG7, as tested in receiver operating characteristic analysis was of 0.74 (95% CI, 0.68 to 0.8). Overall, our data indicate that expression of DLG7, a hypoxia-controlled gene, holds prognostic potential in high-risk CaP; this also demonstrates that variation of oxygen tension may constitute a tool for identification of novel biomarkers for CaP

    Three hypoxia-controlled genes associated with Gleason score and prognosis.

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    <p>Among the hypoxia-regulated genes significantly overexpressed in CaP, cyclin B1 (CCNB1), DLGAP5 and hyaluronan-mediated motility receptor (HMMR) were associated with Gleason score and disease outcome.</p

    Transcript levels for CCNB1, DLG7, and HMMR measured in CaP and noncancerous prostate tissue.

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    <p>Panels on the left compare transcript levels in CaP bulk tissue (full symbols) with the levels measured in benign prostate tissue (open symbols) from men free of CaP (BP) and in benign prostate tissue (BPC) adjacent to CaP of combined Gleason score 6 (gs6). Panels on the right display transcript levels measured in non-neoplastic prostate epithelial cells isolated by laser capture microdissection (LCM) in benign tissues (open symbols): BP, benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) and BPC adjacent to CaP of the indicated Gleason score (gs). Full symbols in panels on the right denote transcript levels measured in LCM-isolated CaP cells: high-grade prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia (HGPIN), the cells isolated from areas of combined Gleason scores 6 through 8 and cells isolated from lymph node metastases (met). CCNB1, cyclin B1; DLG7, discs large homolog 7; HMMR, hyaluronan-mediated motility receptor.</p

    Metal-free binding and coupling of carbon monoxide at a boron-boron triple bond

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    Many metal-containing compounds, and some metal-free compounds, will bind carbon monoxide. However, only a handful of metal-containing compounds have been shown to induce the coupling of two or more CO molecules, potentially a method for use of CO as a one-carbon-atom building block for the synthesis of organic molecules. In this work, CO was added to a boron-boron triple bond at room temperature and atmospheric pressure, resulting in a compound into which four equivalent of CO are incorporated: a flat, bicyclic, bis(boralactone). By the controlled addition of one CO to the diboryne compound, an intermediate in the CO coupling reaction was isolated and structurally characterized. Electrochemical measurements confirm the strongly reducing nature of the diboryne compound
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