228 research outputs found
Synergistic innate immune recognition of Coxsackievirus B5 by RIG-I and MDA5
Coxsackievirus B5 (CBV5) is a positive sense, single-stranded RNA virus belonging to the Enterovirus genus of the Picornaviridae family. It can cause many serious diseases, including viral myocarditis (which can lead on to dilated cardiomyopathy), aseptic meningitis, and pancreatitis. The structure and cell cycle of CBV5 is typical of a picornavirus.
Viral RNA is detected by Toll-like receptors (TLRs) and retinoic acid inducible gene-I (RIG-I)-like receptors (RLRs). The RLR family, consisting of RIG-I, MDA5 (melanoma differentiation-associated gene 5), and LGP2, are pattern recognition receptors that detect a range of different viruses. RIG-I and MDA5 are homologous cytoplasmic proteins containing an N-terminal region with two caspase activation and recruitment domains (CARDs), a central SF2 type DExD/H-box RNA helicase domain, and a C-terminal repressor domain (RD). Once a viral ligand has been detected and bound by RIG-I and MDA5, both signal downstream through their CARDs to activate IRF3/7 and NF-κB indirectly, via the protein intermediate IPS-1 (IFN-β promoter stimulator 1), and initiate an immune response.
RIG-I and MDA5 contribute to antiviral signalling in different ways depending on the virus involved. MDA5 has been shown to be critical for Picornaviridae detection, whilst RIG-I can detect a wide variety of different viruses and pathogen associated molecular patterns.
Results presented here show the expression levels of both are upregulated in response to CBV5 infection in human cardiac cells, with MDA5 expression levels being slightly greater than RIG-I. However, in Huh cells, RIG-I expression levels are greater than those of MDA5, indicating that it plays a role in CBV5 sensing. The presence of both phospho-IκB (corresponding to NF-κB activation) and IRF3 is detected in both cardiac cells and Huh cells in response to CBV5, and IFN-β production is also greatly upregulated. RIG-I and MDA5 colocalise with the adaptor protein IPS-1 in response to CBV5 infection, again indicating the synergistic response by the two RLRs, and both RLRs form homodimers in the cytoplasm. Overall, this suggest that both MDA5 and RIG-I act synergistically to detect CBV5 and initiate a downstream immune response, although MDA5 appears to be the marginally stronger sensor
Atmospheric dispersion and the implications for phase calibration
The success of any ALMA phase-calibration strategy, which incorporates phase
transfer, depends on a good understanding of how the atmospheric path delay
changes with frequency (e.g. Holdaway & Pardo 2001). We explore how the wet
dispersive path delay varies for realistic atmospheric conditions at the ALMA
site using the ATM transmission code. We find the wet dispersive path delay
becomes a significant fraction (>5 per cent) of the non-dispersive delay for
the high-frequency ALMA bands (>160 GHz, Bands 5 to 10). Additionally, the
variation in dispersive path delay across ALMA's 4-GHz contiguous bandwidth is
not significant except in Bands 9 and 10. The ratio of dispersive path delay to
total column of water vapour does not vary significantly for typical amounts of
water vapour, water vapour scale heights and ground pressures above Chajnantor.
However, the temperature profile and particularly the ground-level temperature
are more important. Given the likely constraints from ALMA's ancillary
calibration devices, the uncertainty on the dispersive-path scaling will be
around 2 per cent in the worst case and should contribute about 1 per cent
overall to the wet path fluctuations at the highest frequencies.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures, ALMA Memo 59
Attitudes of Aboriginal Students to Schooling
In this paper the attitudes of Aboriginal students to schooling are examined. Aboriginal children from upper primary and lower secondary years responded to a questionnaire related to various aspects of their schooling experience, their intentions about remaining at school and their future education. The questionnaire contained 73 items constructed primarily with a four-point Likert scale. An analysis indicated that the questionnaire was highly reliable as a whole and in its components. The paper reports that these Aboriginal students responded highly positively on a number of significant issues in regard to their attitudes to schooling. They generally had positive attitudes to school, intended to remain at school to the end of year 12 and wished to succeed in further education
Completion of a SCUBA survey of Lynds dark clouds and implications for low-mass star formation
We have carried out a survey of optically-selected dark clouds using the
bolometer array SCUBA on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope, at 850 microns
wavelength. The survey covers a total of 0.5 square degrees and is unbiased
with reference to cloud size, star formation activity, or the presence of
infrared emission. Several new protostars and starless cores have been
discovered; the protostars are confirmed through the detection of their
accompanying outflows in CO(2-1) emission. The survey is believed to be
complete for Class 0 and Class I protostars, and yields two important results
regarding the lifetimes of these phases. First, the ratio of Class 0 to Class
protostars in the sample is roughly unity, very different from the 1:10 ratio
that has previously been observed for the rho Ophiuchi star-forming region.
Assuming star formation to be a homogeneous process in the dark clouds, this
implies that the Class 0 lifetime is similar to the Class I phase, which from
infrared surveys has been established to be approximately 200,000 yr. It also
suggests there is no rapid initial accretion phase in Class 0 objects. A burst
of triggered star formation some 100,000 yr ago can explain the earlier results
for rho Ophiuchus. Second, the number of starless cores is approximately twice
that of the total number of protostars, indicating a starless core lifetime of
approximately 800,000 yr. These starless cores are therefore very short-lived,
surviving only two or three free-fall times. This result suggests that, on size
scales of 10,000 AU at least, the dynamical evolution of starless cores is
probably not controlled by magnetic processes.Comment: 67 pages including 32 figures (highly compressed). Accepted for
publication in the Astronomical Journal. Available with full resolution
(legible) figures at http://www.mrao.cam.ac.uk/%7ejsr/papers/lynds2.ps.g
Teacher Perceptions of the Characteristics of Effective Teachers of Aboriginal Middle School Students
This paper reports a component of research that involved interviewing teachers identified as effective with Aboriginal students in selected primary and secondary schools in urban and regional Western Australia. The research shows that characteristics of effective teachers include understanding Aboriginal culture, history, and students’ home backgrounds; an ability to develop good relationships with Aboriginal students and their families, a sense of humour, and preparedness to invest time to interact with Aboriginal students out of the classroom in order to strengthen relationships. The research also indicates that effective teachers understand that Aboriginal students are often more independent than others, do not chastise or embarrass them in front of others, set challenging and achievable objectives, and include cultural relevance and recognition in the curriculum and classroom environment. This research provides directions for teacher pre-service training, teacher induction, and teacher in-service professional development. It is suggested that schools consider middle schooling pedagogy and curriculum principles as a means of better providing for adolescent Aboriginal students
Pheochromocytoma in a Twelve-Year-Old Girl with SDHB-Related Hereditary Paraganglioma-Pheochromocytoma Syndrome
A twelve-year-old girl presented with a history of several weeks of worsening headaches accompanied by flushing and diaphoresis. The discovery of markedly elevated blood pressure and tachycardia led the child\u27s pediatrician to consider the diagnosis of a catecholamine-secreting tumor, and an abdominal CT scan confirmed the presence of a pheochromocytoma. The patient was found to have a mutation in the succinyl dehydrogenase B (SDHB) gene, which is causative for SDHB-related hereditary paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma syndrome. Herein, we describe her presentation and medical management and discuss the clinical implications of SDHB deficiency
The Progenitors of Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxies
Dwarf spheroidal (dSph) galaxies present an evolutionary puzzle that we
explore in 40 early- and late-type dwarfs in the Local Group and nearby field.
Although dSphs formed stars over extended periods, today all but one are free
of detectable interstellar matter (ISM), even in the Fornax dSph, where stars
still formed 100 Myr ago. Combining metallicities for red giants with HI data
from the literature, we show that the well-known offset in
luminosity-metallicity (L-Z) relations for dSphs and dwarf irregular (dIrr)
galaxies exists also when comparing only their old stellar populations: dSphs
have higher mean stellar metallicities for a fixed luminosity. Evidently
younger dSphs experienced more efficient enrichment than young dIrrs. Dwarf
galaxies, whose locus in the L-Z diagram is consistent with that of dSphs even
for baryonic luminosities, are the ``transition-type dwarfs'' Phoenix, DDO210,
LGS3, Antlia, and KKR25. They have mixed dIrr/dSph morphologies, low stellar
masses, low angular momentum, and HI contents of less than a few 10^6 solar
masses. Unlike dIrrs, many transition-type dwarfs would closely resemble dSphs
if their gas were removed; they are likely dSph progenitors. As gas removal is
key, we consider the empirical evidence for various gas removal processes. We
suggest that internal gas removal mechanisms are inadequate and favor ram
pressure stripping to make dSphs. A combination of initial conditions and
environment seems to support the formation of dSphs, which appear to form from
small galaxies with active early star formation, whose evolution halts due to
externally induced gas loss. Transition-type dwarfs then are dSphs that kept
their ISM, and therefore should replace dSphs in isolated locations where
stripping is ineffective. (Abridged)Comment: 25 pages in AASTeX two-column preprint style, 1 table, 3 figures.
Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal (April 2003 issue
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