23 research outputs found
Identification and characterization of a novel non-structural protein of bluetongue virus
Bluetongue virus (BTV) is the causative agent of a major disease of livestock (bluetongue). For over two decades, it has been widely accepted that the 10 segments of the dsRNA genome of BTV encode for 7 structural and 3 non-structural proteins. The non-structural proteins (NS1, NS2, NS3/NS3a) play different key roles during the viral replication cycle. In this study we show that BTV expresses a fourth non-structural protein (that we designated NS4) encoded by an open reading frame in segment 9 overlapping the open reading frame encoding VP6. NS4 is 77–79 amino acid residues in length and highly conserved among several BTV serotypes/strains. NS4 was expressed early post-infection and localized in the nucleoli of BTV infected cells. By reverse genetics, we showed that NS4 is dispensable for BTV replication in vitro, both in mammalian and insect cells, and does not affect viral virulence in murine models of bluetongue infection. Interestingly, NS4 conferred a replication advantage to BTV-8, but not to BTV-1, in cells in an interferon (IFN)-induced antiviral state. However, the BTV-1 NS4 conferred a replication advantage both to a BTV-8 reassortant containing the entire segment 9 of BTV-1 and to a BTV-8 mutant with the NS4 identical to the homologous BTV-1 protein. Collectively, this study suggests that NS4 plays an important role in virus-host interaction and is one of the mechanisms played, at least by BTV-8, to counteract the antiviral response of the host. In addition, the distinct nucleolar localization of NS4, being expressed by a virus that replicates exclusively in the cytoplasm, offers new avenues to investigate the multiple roles played by the nucleolus in the biology of the cell
Three classical Cepheid variable stars in the nuclear bulge of the Milky Way
The nuclear bulge is a region with a radius of about 200 parsecs around the
centre of the Milky Way. It contains stars with ages ranging from a few million
years to over a billion years, yet its star-formation history and the
triggering process for star formation remain to be resolved. Recently, episodic
star formation, powered by changes in the gas content, has been suggested.
Classical Cepheid variable stars have pulsation periods that decrease with
increasing age, so it is possible to probe the star-formation history on the
basis of the distribution of their periods. Here we report the presence of
three classical Cepheids in the nuclear bulge with pulsation periods of
approximately 20 days, within 40 parsecs (projected distance) of the central
black hole. No Cepheids with longer or shorter periods were found. We infer
that there was a period about 25 million years ago, and possibly lasting until
recently, in which star formation increased relative to the period of 30-70
million years ago.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, 1 table (including main paper and supplemantary
information
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An Ultra Deep Field survey with WFIRST
Studying the formation and evolution of galaxies at the earliest cosmic
times, and their role in reionization, requires the deepest imaging possible.
Ultra-deep surveys like the HUDF and HFF have pushed to mag \mAB30,
revealing galaxies at the faint end of the LF to 911 and
constraining their role in reionization. However, a key limitation of these
fields is their size, only a few arcminutes (less than a Mpc at these
redshifts), too small to probe large-scale environments or clustering
properties of these galaxies, crucial for advancing our understanding of
reionization. Achieving HUDF-quality depth over areas 100 times larger
becomes possible with a mission like the Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope
(WFIRST), a 2.4-m telescope with similar optical properties to HST, with a
field of view of 1000 arcmin, 100 the area of the
HST/ACS HUDF.
This whitepaper motivates an Ultra-Deep Field survey with WFIRST, covering
100300 the area of the HUDF, or up to 1 deg, to
\mAB30, potentially revealing thousands of galaxies and AGN at the
faint end of the LF, at or beyond \,\,910 in the epoch of
reionization, and tracing their LSS environments, dramatically increasing the
discovery potential at these redshifts.
(Note: This paper is a somewhat expanded version of one that was submitted as
input to the Astro2020 Decadal Survey, with this version including an Appendix
(which exceeded the Astro2020 page limits), describing how the science drivers
for a WFIRST Ultra Deep Field might map into a notional observing program,
including the filters used and exposure times needed to achieve these depths.
Morphological Mutations of Dwarf Galaxies
Dwarf galaxies (DGs) are extremely challenging objects in extragalactic
astrophysics. They are expected to originate as the first units in Cold
Dark-Matter cosmology. They are the galaxy type most sensitive to environmental
influences and their division into multiple types with various properties have
invoked the picture of their variant morphological transformations. Detailed
observations reveal characteristics which allow to deduce the evolutionary
paths and to witness how the environment has affected the evolution. Here we
review peculiarities of general morphological DG types and refer to processes
which can deplete gas-rich irregular DGs leading to dwarf ellipticals, while
gas replenishment implies an evolutionary cycling. Finally, as the less
understood DG types the Milky Way satellite dwarf spheroidal galaxies are
discussed in the context of transformation.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures, Proceedings of Symposium 3 of JENAM 2010 "Dwarf
Galaxies: Key to Galaxy Formation and Evolution", Polychronis Papaderos,
Simone Recchi, Gerhard Hensler (Eds.), Springer Publisher, Heidelberg, ISBN
978-3-642-22017-
Astro2020 Science White Paper: Construction of an L* Galaxy: the Transformative Power of Wide Fields for Revealing the Past, Present and Future of the Great Andromeda System
The Great Andromeda Galaxy (M31) is the nexus of the near-far galaxy evolution connection and a principal data point for near-field cosmology. Due to its proximity (780 kpc), M31 can be resolved into individual stars like the Milky Way (MW). Unlike the MW, we have the advantage of a global view of M31, enabling M31 to be observed with techniques that also apply to more distant galaxies. Moreover, recent evidence suggests that M31 may have survived a major merger within the last several Gyr, shaping the morphology of its stellar halo and triggering a starburst, while leaving the stellar disk largely intact. The MW and M31 thus provide complementary opportunities for in-depth studies of the disks, halos, and satellites of L* galaxies. Our understanding of the M31 system will be transformed in the 2020s if they include wide field facilities for both photometry (HST-like sensitivity and resolution) and spectroscopy (10-m class telescope, >1 sq. deg. field, highly multiplexed, R~ 3000 to 6000). We focus here on the power of these facilities to constrain the past, present, and future merger history of M31, via chemo-dynamical analyses and star formation histories of phase-mixed stars accreted at early times, as well as stars in surviving tidal debris features, M31's extended disk, and intact satellite galaxies that will eventually be tidally incorporated into the halo. This will yield an unprecedented view of the hierarchical formation of the M31 system and the subhalos that built it into the L* galaxy we observe today
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Pressure support versus thermal broadening in the Lyman alpha forest - I. Effects of the equation of state on longitudinal structure
In the low-density intergalactic medium that gives rise to the Lyman α (Lyα) forest, gas temperature and density are tightly correlated. The velocity scale of thermal broadening and the Hubble flow across the gas Jeans scale are of similar magnitude (HλJ∼σth). To separate the effects of gas pressure support and thermal broadening on the Lyα forest, we compare spectra extracted from two smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations evolved with different photoionization heating rates (and thus different Jeans scales) and from the pressureless dark matter distribution, imposing different temperature–density relations on the evolved particle distributions. The dark matter spectra are similar but not identical to those created from the full gas distributions, showing that thermal broadening sets the longitudinal (line-of-sight) scale of the Lyα forest. The turnover scales in the flux power spectrum and flux autocorrelation function are determined mainly by thermal broadening rather than pressure. However, the insensitivity to pressure arises partly from a cancellation effect with a sloped temperature–density relation (T∝ρ0.6 in our simulations): the high-density peaks in the colder, lower pressure simulation are less smoothed by pressure support than in the hotter simulation, and it is this higher density gas that experiences the strongest thermal broadening. Changes in thermal broadening and pressure support have comparably important effects on the flux probability distribution, which responds directly to the gas overdensity distribution rather than the scale on which it is smooth. Tests on a lower resolution simulation (2 × 1443 versus 2 × 2883 particles in a 12.5 h−1 Mpc comoving box) show that our statistical results are converged even at this lower resolution. While thermal broadening generally dominates the longitudinal structure in the Lyα forest, we show in Peeples et al. that pressure support determines the transverse coherence of the forest observed towards close quasar pairs