451 research outputs found
A study of fuel consumption of three types of household charcoal stoves in Ghana
The purpose of this study was to find out the amounts of charcoal consumed using the traditional Ghanaian coalpot in contrast with two improved stoves, “Ahinbenso” and “Gyapa” stoves. The study covered 80 purposively selected charcoal-consuming households in the Greater Accra Region of Ghana. Each household was allowed a 1- week measurement of charcoal consumption for each of the three stoves and data were analyzed with Excel. Thestudy results showed fuel (charcoal) efficiency of 31 and 23 per cent for “Gyapa” and “Ahinbenso” over the traditional coalpot, respectively. The “Gyapa” stove saves 0.51 kg of charcoal per day or 186 kg of charcoalannually, which translates into about US$25.00 per year per household. For every 1,000 “Gyapa” stoves in use, the savings would be 186 tons of charcoal per year, equal to 1,488 tons of wood and 31.83 ha of forestland. It is,therefore, recommended that promotional activities on the use of “Gyapa” stove among charcoal-consuming households in Ghana should be strengthened
Identifying common genetic variants associated with disease risk and clinical outcome in epithelial ovarian cancer
Combinations of common germline low-moderate susceptibility alleles may be
responsible for some of the 90% of ovarian cancer (OC) cases not explained by
known risk genes. These alleles may also affect survival of OC patients.
The effects of 34 tagging single nucleotide polymorphisms (tSNPs) from candidate
oncogenes (BRAF, ERBB2, KRAS, NMI and PIK3CA) and 63 tSNPs from
“functionally” relevant genes (AIFM2, AKTIP, AXIN2, CASP5, FILIP1L, RBBP8,
RGC32, RUVBL1 and STAG3) on the risk and survival of OC sufferers were evaluated
with ~1,800 cases and 3,045 controls. Associations were found between disease risk
and NMI rs11683487 (P-dominant=0.004) and RUVBL1 rs13063604 (P-trend=0.0192).
These associations were not independently validated with additional samples,
however, they remained significant when the results from both stages of genotyping
were combined (P<0.05). Global tests of association with OC risk were significant
for BRAF, ERBB2, CASP5 and RUVBL1 (P-global<0.05). However, there was no
evidence of an excess of significant associations from 340 SNPs investigated with
the admixture maximum likelihood test (P-trend=0.068).
BRAF, FILIP1L, KRAS, RBBP8 and RUVBL1 were also associated with the survival
of all OC cases (P<0.05). When analysis was restricted to the 4 main histological
subtypes of OC, additional associations were identified. Although these results are
of particular interest, they were based on relatively small numbers of samples and
have not been corrected for multiple testing, therefore they should be treated with caution. The results from the secondary objective of the project, to evaluate whole
genome amplification (WGA) of DNA and SNP multiplex platforms, are also
described.
To conclude, associations were identified between candidate oncogenes and
functionally relevant genes on the survival and susceptibility of ovarian cancer. The
performance of WGA DNA on SNP multiplex genotyping platforms highlighted the
importance of comparing WGA DNA with corresponding gDNA in order to
ascertain quality of genotyping on the platform
Role of Geoinformatics for Ghana oil and gas industry
The Geoinformatics Engineer (GE), who uses mathematical theory and precise measurements for the collection and distribution of geospatial data, plays a significant role in the oil and gas industry. The paper reviews the role the HE would play in t he recent oil and gas discovery in Ghana. This is because the GE is required in the planning and execution of nearly every form of activities at the upstream, midstream and downstream; for example offshore and onshore construction, exploration and engineering for the production and dissemination of oil and gas. Ghana is at the initial stages in the commercial production of oil and gas; and thus needs research institutions with excellent practical and research skills, such as the Department of Geomat ic Engineering (DGE), Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), Ghana and School of Earth Sciences and Engineering (SESE), Hohai University, China, in employing Geoinformatics theories, applications and principles for geospatial decision making for sustainable production of oil and gas for Ghana and the Sub - Saharan Africa. SESE expertise in 3S Technology would greatly assist in the construction and monitoring of oil and gas infrastructures at the upstream, midstream and downstr eam. The pap er recommends useful suggestions for smooth management of the oil and gas industry focusing on GEs and research institutions
The database of experimentally supported targets: a functional update of TarBase
TarBase5.0 is a database which houses a manually curated collection of experimentally supported microRNA (miRNA) targets in several animal species of central scientific interest, plants and viruses. MiRNAs are small non-coding RNA molecules that exhibit an inhibitory effect on gene expression, interfering with the stability and translational efficiency of the targeted mature messenger RNAs. Even though several computational programs exist to predict miRNA targets, there is a need for a comprehensive collection and description of miRNA targets with experimental support. Here we introduce a substantially extended version of this resource. The current version includes more than 1300 experimentally supported targets. Each target site is described by the miRNA that binds it, the gene in which it occurs, the nature of the experiments that were conducted to test it, the sufficiency of the site to induce translational repression and/or cleavage, and the paper from which all these data were extracted. Additionally, the database is functionally linked to several other relevant and useful databases such as Ensembl, Hugo, UCSC and SwissProt. The TarBase5.0 database can be queried or downloaded from http://microrna.gr/tarbase
PlantNATsDB: a comprehensive database of plant natural antisense transcripts
Natural antisense transcripts (NATs), as one type of regulatory RNAs, occur prevalently in plant genomes and play significant roles in physiological and pathological processes. Although their important biological functions have been reported widely, a comprehensive database is lacking up to now. Consequently, we constructed a plant NAT database (PlantNATsDB) involving approximately 2 million NAT pairs in 69 plant species. GO annotation and high-throughput small RNA sequencing data currently available were integrated to investigate the biological function of NATs. PlantNATsDB provides various user-friendly web interfaces to facilitate the presentation of NATs and an integrated, graphical network browser to display the complex networks formed by different NATs. Moreover, a ‘Gene Set Analysis’ module based on GO annotation was designed to dig out the statistical significantly overrepresented GO categories from the specific NAT network. PlantNATsDB is currently the most comprehensive resource of NATs in the plant kingdom, which can serve as a reference database to investigate the regulatory function of NATs. The PlantNATsDB is freely available at http://bis.zju.edu.cn/pnatdb/
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Carbon dynamics, net primary productivity (NPP) and human appropriated NPP (HANPP) across a forest‐cocoa farm landscape in West Africa
Terrestrial net primary productivity (NPP) is an important metric of ecosystem functioning; however, there is little empirical data on the NPP of human-modified ecosystems, particularly smallholder,perennial crops like cocoa (Theobroma cacao), which are extensive across the tropics. Human appropriated NPP (HANPP) is a measure of the proportion of a natural system’s NPP that has either been reduced through land-use change or harvested directly and, previously, has been calculated to estimate the scale of the human impact on the biosphere. Additionally, human-modification can create shifts in NPP allocation and decomposition, with concomitant impacts on the carbon cycle. This study presents the results of three years of intensive monitoring of forest and smallholder cocoa farms across disturbance, management intensity, distance from forest and farm age gradients. We measured among the highest reported NPP values in tropical forest, 17.57 ± 2.1 and 17.7 ± 1.6 Mg C ha-1 yr-1 for intact and logged forest respectively; however, the average NPP of cocoa farms was still higher, 18.8 ± 2.5 Mg C ha-1 yr-1, which we found was driven by cocoa pod production. We found a dramatic shift in litterfall residence times, where cocoa leaves decomposed more slowly than forest leaves and shade tree litterfall decomposed considerably faster, indicating significant changes in rates of nutrient cycling. The average HANPP value for all cocoa farms was 2.1 ± 1.1 Mg C ha-1 yr-1; however, depending on the density of shade trees it ranged from -4.6 to 5.2 Mg C ha-1 yr-1. Therefore, rather than being related to cocoa yield, HANPP was reduced by maintaining higher shade levels. Across our monitored farms 18.9% of farm NPP was harvested (i.e. whole cocoa pods) and only 1.1% (i.e.cocoa beans) was removed from the system; suggesting that the scale of HANPP in smallholder cocoa agroforestry systems is relatively small
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Full genomic characterization of a porcine rotavirus strain detected in an asymptomatic piglet in Accra, Ghana
Abstract: Background: The introduction of rotavirus A vaccination across the developing world has not proved to be as efficacious as first hoped. One cause of vaccine failure may be infection by zoonotic rotaviruses that are very variable antigenically from the vaccine strain. However, there is a lack of genomic information about the circulating rotavirus A strains in farm animals in the developing world that may be a source of infection for humans. We therefore screened farms close to Accra, Ghana for animals sub-clinically infected with rotavirus A and then sequenced the virus found in one of these samples. Results: 6.1% of clinically normal cows and pigs tested were found to be Rotavirus A virus antigen positive in the faeces. A subset of these (33.3%) were also positive for virus RNA. The most consistently positive pig sample was taken forward for metagenomic sequencing. This gave full sequence for all open reading frames except segment 5 (NSP1), which is missing a single base at the 5′ end. The virus infecting this pig had genome constellation G5-P[7]-I5-R1-C1-M1-A8-N1-T7-E1-H1, a known porcine genotype constellation. Conclusions: Farm animals carry rotavirus A infection sub-clinically at low frequency. Although the rotavirus A genotype discovered here has a pig-like genome constellation, a number of the segments most closely resembled those isolated from humans in suspected cases of zoonotic transmission. Therefore, such viruses may be a source of variable gene segments for re-assortment with other viruses to cause vaccine breakdown. It is recommended that further human and pig strains are characterized in West Africa, to better understand this dynamic
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Full genomic characterization of a porcine rotavirus strain detected in an asymptomatic piglet in Accra, Ghana
Abstract: Background: The introduction of rotavirus A vaccination across the developing world has not proved to be as efficacious as first hoped. One cause of vaccine failure may be infection by zoonotic rotaviruses that are very variable antigenically from the vaccine strain. However, there is a lack of genomic information about the circulating rotavirus A strains in farm animals in the developing world that may be a source of infection for humans. We therefore screened farms close to Accra, Ghana for animals sub-clinically infected with rotavirus A and then sequenced the virus found in one of these samples. Results: 6.1% of clinically normal cows and pigs tested were found to be Rotavirus A virus antigen positive in the faeces. A subset of these (33.3%) were also positive for virus RNA. The most consistently positive pig sample was taken forward for metagenomic sequencing. This gave full sequence for all open reading frames except segment 5 (NSP1), which is missing a single base at the 5′ end. The virus infecting this pig had genome constellation G5-P[7]-I5-R1-C1-M1-A8-N1-T7-E1-H1, a known porcine genotype constellation. Conclusions: Farm animals carry rotavirus A infection sub-clinically at low frequency. Although the rotavirus A genotype discovered here has a pig-like genome constellation, a number of the segments most closely resembled those isolated from humans in suspected cases of zoonotic transmission. Therefore, such viruses may be a source of variable gene segments for re-assortment with other viruses to cause vaccine breakdown. It is recommended that further human and pig strains are characterized in West Africa, to better understand this dynamic
Association between Common Germline Genetic Variation in 94 Candidate Genes or Regions and Risks of Invasive Epithelial Ovarian Cancer
Background: Recent studies have identified several single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the population that are associated with variations in the risks of many different diseases including cancers such as breast, prostate and colorectal. For ovarian cancer, the known highly penetrant susceptibility genes (BRCA1 and BRCA2) are probably responsible for only 40% of the excess familial ovarian cancer risks, suggesting that other susceptibility genes of lower penetrance exist.Methods: We have taken a candidate approach to identifying moderate risk susceptibility alleles for ovarian cancer. To date, we have genotyped 340 SNPs from 94 candidate genes or regions, in up to 1,491 invasive epithelial ovarian cancer cases and 3,145 unaffected controls from three different population based studies from the UK, Denmark and USA.Results: After adjusting for population stratification by genomic control, 18 SNPs (5.3%) were significant at the 5% level, and 5 SNPs (1.5%) were significant at the 1% level. The most significant association was for the SNP rs2107425, located on chromosome 11p15.5, which has previously been identified as a susceptibility allele for breast cancer from a genome wide association study (P-trend = 0.0012). When SNPs/genes were stratified into 7 different pathways or groups of validation SNPs, the breast cancer associated SNPs were the only group of SNPs that were significantly associated with ovarian cancer risk (P-heterogeneity = 0.0003; P-trend = 0.0028; adjusted (for population stratification) P-trend = 0.006). We did not find statistically significant associations when the combined data for all SNPs were analysed using an admixture maximum likelihood (AML) experiment- wise test for association (P-heterogeneity = 0.051; P-trend = 0.068).Conclusion: These data suggest that a proportion of the SNPs we evaluated were associated with ovarian cancer risk, but that the effect sizes were too small to detect associations with individual SNPs
Non-falciparum malaria infections in pregnant women in West Africa
Background
Non-Plasmodium falciparum malaria infections are found in many parts of sub-Saharan Africa but little is known about their importance in pregnancy.
Methods
Blood samples were collected at first antenatal clinic attendance from 2526 women enrolled in a trial of intermittent screening and treatment of malaria in pregnancy (ISTp) versus intermittent preventive treatment (IPTp) conducted in Burkina Faso, The Gambia, Ghana and Mali. DNA was extracted from blood spots and tested for P. falciparum, Plasmodium vivax, Plasmodium malariae and Plasmodium ovale using a nested PCR test. Risk factors for a non-falciparum malaria infection were investigated and the influence of these infections on the outcome of pregnancy was determined.
Results
P. falciparum infection was detected frequently (overall prevalence by PCR: 38.8 %, [95 % CI 37.0, 40.8]), with a prevalence ranging from 10.8 % in The Gambia to 56.1 % in Ghana. Non-falciparum malaria infections were found only rarely (overall prevalence 1.39 % [95 % CI 1.00, 1.92]), ranging from 0.17 % in the Gambia to 3.81 % in Mali. Ten non-falciparum mono-infections and 25 mixed falciparum and non-falciparum infections were found. P. malariae was the most frequent non-falciparum infection identified; P. vivax was detected only in Mali. Only four of the non-falciparum mono-infections were detected by microscopy or rapid diagnostic test. Recruitment during the late rainy season and low socio-economic status were associated with an increased risk of non-falciparum malaria as well as falciparum malaria. The outcome of pregnancy did not differ between women with a non-falciparum malaria infection and those who were not infected with malaria at first ANC attendance.
Conclusions
Non-falciparum infections were infrequent in the populations studied, rarely detected when present as a mono-infection and unlikely to have had an important impact on the outcome of pregnancy in the communities studied due to the small number of women infected with non-falciparum parasites
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