974 research outputs found
Sortilin is associated with the chlamydial inclusion and is modulated during infection
© 2016. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd. Chlamydia species are obligate intracellular pathogens that have a major impact on human health. The pathogen replicates within an intracellular niche called an inclusion and is thought to rely heavily on host-derived proteins and lipids, including ceramide. Sortilin is a transmembrane receptor implicated in the trafficking of acid sphingomyelinase, which is responsible for catalysing the breakdown of sphingomyelin to ceramide. In this study, we examined the role of sortilin in Chlamydia trachomatis L2 development. Western immunoblotting and immunocytochemistry analysis revealed that endogenous sortilin is not only associated with the inclusion, but that protein levels increase in infected cells. RNAimediated depletion of sortilin, however, had no detectable impact on ceramide delivery to the inclusion or the production of infectious progeny. This study demonstrates that whilst Chlamydia redirects sortilin trafficking to the chlamydial inclusion, RNAi knockdown of sortilin expression is insufficient to determine if this pathway is requisite for the development of the pathogen
Expanded genetic analysis of a PALB2 c.3113G>A mutation carrying multiple-case breast cancer family via exome sequencing
Early exploration of two candidate breast cancer susceptibility genes identified by whole-exome sequencing
One-dimensional Topological Edge States of Bismuth Bilayers
The hallmark of a time-reversal symmetry protected topologically insulating
state of matter in two-dimensions (2D) is the existence of chiral edge modes
propagating along the perimeter of the system. To date, evidence for such
electronic modes has come from experiments on semiconducting heterostructures
in the topological phase which showed approximately quantized values of the
overall conductance as well as edge-dominated current flow. However, there have
not been any spectroscopic measurements to demonstrate the one-dimensional (1D)
nature of the edge modes. Among the first systems predicted to be a 2D
topological insulator are bilayers of bismuth (Bi) and there have been recent
experimental indications of possible topological boundary states at their
edges. However, the experiments on such bilayers suffered from irregular
structure of their edges or the coupling of the edge states to substrate's bulk
states. Here we report scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) experiments which
show that a subset of the predicted Bi-bilayers' edge states are decoupled from
states of Bi substrate and provide direct spectroscopic evidence of their 1D
nature. Moreover, by visualizing the quantum interference of edge mode
quasi-particles in confined geometries, we demonstrate their remarkable
coherent propagation along the edge with scattering properties that are
consistent with strong suppression of backscattering as predicted for the
propagating topological edge states.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, and supplementary materia
Inhibition of activin/nodal signalling is necessary for pancreatic differentiation of human pluripotent stem cells
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
A statistical method for region-based meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies in genetically diverse populations
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have become the preferred experimental design in exploring the genetic etiology of complex human traits and diseases. Standard SNP-based meta-analytic approaches have been utilized to integrate the results from multiple experiments. This fundamentally assumes that the patterns of linkage disequilibrium (LD) between the underlying causal variants and the directly genotyped SNPs are similar across the populations for the same SNPs to emerge with surrogate evidence of disease association. We introduce a novel strategy for assessing regional evidence of phenotypic association that explicitly incorporates the extent of LD in the region. This provides a natural framework for combining evidence from multi-ethnic studies of both dichotomous and quantitative traits that (i) accommodates different patterns of LD, (ii) integrates different genotyping platforms and (iii) allows for the presence of allelic heterogeneity between the populations. Our method can also be generalized to perform gene-based or pathway-based analyses. Applying this method on real GWAS data in type 2 diabetes (T2D) boosted the association evidence in regions well-established for T2D etiology in three diverse South-East Asian populations, as well as identified two novel gene regions and a biologically convincing pathway that are subsequently validated with data from the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium
Ethnic and gender specific life expectancies of the Singapore population, 1965 to 2009 - Converging, or diverging?
10.1186/1471-2458-13-1012BMC Public Health131
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Propagation of the Madden–Julian Oscillation and scale interaction with the diurnal cycle in a high-resolution GCM
The Madden–Julian Oscillation (MJO) is the chief source of tropical intra-seasonal variability, but is simulated poorly by most state-of-the-art GCMs. Common errors include a lack of eastward propagation at the correct frequency and zonal extent, and too small a ratio of eastward- to westward-propagating variability. Here it is shown that HiGEM, a high-resolution GCM, simulates a very realistic MJO with approximately the correct spatial and temporal scale. Many MJO studies in GCMs are limited to diagnostics which average over a latitude band around the equator, allowing an analysis of the MJO’s structure in time and longitude only. In this study a wider range of diagnostics is applied. It is argued that such an approach is necessary for a comprehensive analysis of a model’s MJO. The standard analysis of Wheeler and Hendon (Mon Wea Rev 132(8):1917–1932, 2004; WH04) is applied to produce composites, which show a realistic spatial structure in the MJO envelopes but for the timing of the peak precipitation in the inter-tropical convergence zone, which bifurcates the MJO signal. Further diagnostics are developed to analyse the MJO’s episodic nature and the “MJO inertia” (the tendency to remain in the same WH04 phase from one day to the next). HiGEM favours phases 2, 3, 6 and 7; has too much MJO inertia; and dies out too frequently in phase 3. Recent research has shown that a key feature of the MJO is its interaction with the diurnal cycle over the Maritime Continent. This interaction is present in HiGEM but is unrealistically weak
A mutant O-GlcNAcase enriches Drosophila developmental regulators
YesProtein O-GlcNAcylation is a reversible post-translational modification of serines/threonines on
nucleocytoplasmic proteins. It is cycled by the enzymes O-GlcNAc transferase (OGT) and O-GlcNAc hydrolase
(O-GlcNAcase or OGA). Genetic approaches in model organisms have revealed that protein O-GlcNAcylation is
essential for early embryogenesis. Drosophila melanogaster OGT/supersex combs (sxc) is a polycomb gene,
null mutants of which display homeotic transformations and die at the pharate adult stage. However, the identities
of the O-GlcNAcylated proteins involved, and the underlying mechanisms linking these phenotypes to embryonic
development, are poorly understood. Identification of O-GlcNAcylated proteins from biological samples is
hampered by the low stoichiometry of this modification and limited enrichment tools. Using a catalytically inactive
bacterial O-GlcNAcase mutant as a substrate trap, we have enriched the O-GlcNAc proteome of the developing
Drosophila embryo, identifying, amongst others, known regulators of Hox genes as candidate conveyors of OGT
function during embryonic development.Wellcome Trust Investigator Award (110061); MRC grant (MC_UU_12016/5); and Royal Society Research Grant
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