213,797 research outputs found

    Evolutionary Conservation of the Heterochronic Pathway in C. elegans and C. briggsae

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    Heterochronic genes control the sequence and timing of developmental events during four larval stages of Caenorhabitis nematodes. Mutations in these genes may cause skipping or reiteration of developmental events. C. briggsae is a close relative of C. elegans. These species have similar morphology and share the same ecological niche. C. briggsae undergoes the same developmental pathway consisting of four larval stages before reaching adulthood. It also has the same set of heterochronic genes. Lin-28 is one of the heterochronic genes that also exists in other animals from flies to humans. It conservatively blocks the maturation of let-7 miRNA, the process is generally associated with the stem cell state. lin-28 is silenced as cells differentiate. C. elegans mutants of lin-28 have a reduced number of seam cells and precocious alae. Despite the highly conserved protein sequence, C. briggsae develop a distinct phenotype when its lin 28 is disrupted. Worms did not have a characteristic vulval development defect, they also became lethargic and had a reduced fertility. This observation led to a question of how conserved the heterochronic pathway is in close species

    Conditions at infinity for the inhomogeneous filtration equation

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    We investigate existence and uniqueness of solutions to the filtration equation with an inhomogeneous density in RN{\mathbb R}^N, approaching at infinity a given continuous datum of Dirichlet type.Comment: To appear in Annales de l'Institut Henri Poincar\'e (C) Analyse Non Lin\'eair

    Centro-affine normal flows on curves: Harnack estimates and Ancient solutions

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    We prove that the only compact, origin-symmetric, strictly convex ancient solutions of the planar pp centro-affine normal flows are contracting origin-centered ellipses.Comment: I changed the title and fixed some typos. To appear in Annales de l'Institut Henri Poincar\'e (C) Analyse Non Lin\'eair

    Visualization of C. elegans transgenic arrays by GFP

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    BACKGROUND: Targeting the green fluorescent protein (GFP) via the E. coli lac repressor (LacI) to a specific DNA sequence, the lac operator (lacO), allows visualization of chromosomes in yeast and mammalian cells. In principle this method of visualization could be used for genetic mosaic analysis, which requires cell-autonomous markers that can be scored easily and at single cell resolution. The C. elegans lin-3 gene encodes an epidermal growth factor family (EGF) growth factor. lin-3 is expressed in the gonadal anchor cell and acts through LET-23 (transmembrane protein tyrosine kinase and ortholog of EGF receptor) to signal the vulval precursor cells to generate vulval tissue. lin-3 is expressed in the vulval cells later, and recent evidence raises the possibility that lin-3 acts in the vulval cells as a relay signal during vulval induction. It is thus of interest to test the site of action of lin-3 by mosaic analysis. RESULTS: We visualized transgenes in living C. elegans by targeting the green fluorescent protein (GFP) via the E. coli lac repressor (LacI) to a specific 256 sequence repeat of the lac operator (lacO) incorporated into transgenes. We engineered animals to express a nuclear-localized GFP-LacI fusion protein. C. elegans cells having a lacO transgene result in nuclear-localized bright spots (i.e., GFP-LacI bound to lacO). Cells with diffuse nuclear fluorescence correspond to unbound nuclear localized GFP-LacI. We detected chromosomes in living animals by chromosomally integrating the array of the lacO repeat sequence and visualizing the integrated transgene with GFP-LacI. This detection system can be applied to determine polyploidy as well as investigating chromosome segregation. To assess the GFP-LacI•lacO system as a marker for mosaic analysis, we conducted genetic mosaic analysis of the epidermal growth factor lin-3, expressed in the anchor cell. We establish that lin-3 acts in the anchor cell to induce vulva development, demonstrating this method's utility in detecting the presence of a transgene. CONCLUSION: The GFP-LacI•lacO transgene detection system works in C. elegans for visualization of chromosomes and extrachromosomal transgenes. It can be used as a marker for genetic mosaic analysis. The lacO repeat sequence as an extrachromosomal array becomes a valuable technique allowing rapid, accurate determination of spontaneous loss of the array, thereby allowing high-resolution mosaic analysis. The lin-3 gene is required in the anchor cell to induce the epidermal vulval precursors cells to undergo vulval development

    Recognizing and Curating Photo Albums via Event-Specific Image Importance

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    Automatic organization of personal photos is a problem with many real world ap- plications, and can be divided into two main tasks: recognizing the event type of the photo collection, and selecting interesting images from the collection. In this paper, we attempt to simultaneously solve both tasks: album-wise event recognition and image- wise importance prediction. We collected an album dataset with both event type labels and image importance labels, refined from an existing CUFED dataset. We propose a hybrid system consisting of three parts: A siamese network-based event-specific image importance prediction, a Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) that recognizes the event type, and a Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM)-based sequence level event recognizer. We propose an iterative updating procedure for event type and image importance score prediction. We experimentally verified that image importance score prediction and event type recognition can each help the performance of the other.Comment: Accepted as oral in BMVC 201

    Genetics of intercellular signalling in C. elegans

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    Cell-cell interactions play a significant role in controlling cell fate during development of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. It has been found that two genes, glp-1 and lin-12, are required for many of these decisions. glp-1 is required for induction of mitotic proliferation in the germline by the somatic distal tip cell and for induction of the anterior pharynx early in embryogenesis. lin-12 is required for the interactions between cells of equivalent developmental potential, which allow them to take on different fates. Comparison of these two genes on a molecular level indicates that they are similar in sequence and organization, suggesting that the mechanisms of these two different sets of cell-cell interactions are similar

    Lin Lin Lin v. Atty Gen USA

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    Agenc

    Deformable Part-based Fully Convolutional Network for Object Detection

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    Existing region-based object detectors are limited to regions with fixed box geometry to represent objects, even if those are highly non-rectangular. In this paper we introduce DP-FCN, a deep model for object detection which explicitly adapts to shapes of objects with deformable parts. Without additional annotations, it learns to focus on discriminative elements and to align them, and simultaneously brings more invariance for classification and geometric information to refine localization. DP-FCN is composed of three main modules: a Fully Convolutional Network to efficiently maintain spatial resolution, a deformable part-based RoI pooling layer to optimize positions of parts and build invariance, and a deformation-aware localization module explicitly exploiting displacements of parts to improve accuracy of bounding box regression. We experimentally validate our model and show significant gains. DP-FCN achieves state-of-the-art performances of 83.1% and 80.9% on PASCAL VOC 2007 and 2012 with VOC data only.Comment: Accepted to BMVC 2017 (oral

    Exploring the EGF/Ras and Notch/DSL Signaling Pathways in Members of the Caenorhabditis Genus

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    Many pathways exist in animal systems for cells to communicate and facilitate proper cell division; two such pathways are the EGF/Ras pathway and the Notch/DSL pathway, both of which are crucial to proper vulval development in nematodes of the Caenorhabditis genus. These pathways are conserved in humans and many other species as well, making them viable topics for research. This project seeks to study these pathways, especially the diversity of each path, and how the they work together to allow successful vulvagenesis. To examine pathway diversity, evolutionary trees (generated by TreeFam.org) for genes vital to each pathway were collected and compared to each other. This analysis revealed more gene duplication in the Notch pathway among members of the Caenorhabditis genus, while relatively little gene duplication exists in the EGF/Ras pathway. This suggests that the Notch pathway is more flexible, and allows more evolutionary diversity. To test this prediction, I am comparing the function of these pathways between Caenorhabditis elegans and Caenorhabditis briggsae. For studying the EGF/Ras pathway, I am examining the gene lin-3/EGF. Over expression of lin-3/EGF in C. elegans leads to the inappropriate division of epithelial cells. My data show overexpression of C. briggsae lin-3 causes a similar phenotype in both C. elegans and C. briggsae worms. Additionally, during this project new splice variants of the lin-3 gene were discovered in C. elegans, C. briggsae, and C. remanei. Notably, several of these variants either include or exclude a possible processing site. The tools developed in this project will be valuable assets for further studying these critical signaling pathways in various animal systems.Undergraduate Research Scholarship - College of Arts and SciencesPelotonia FellowshipNo embargoAcademic Major: Zoolog
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