769 research outputs found
Duality and Central Charges in Supersymmetric Quantum Mechanics
We identify a class of point-particle models that exhibit a target-space
duality. This duality arises from a construction based on supersymmetric
quantum mechanics with a non-vanishing central charge. Motivated by analogies
to string theory, we are led to speculate regarding mechanisms for restricting
the background geometry.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure, late
A BPS Interpretation of Shape Invariance
We show that shape invariance appears when a quantum mechanical model is
invariant under a centrally extended superalgebra endowed with an additional
symmetry generator, which we dub the shift operator. The familiar mathematical
and physical results of shape invariance then arise from the BPS structure
associated with this shift operator. The shift operator also ensures that there
is a one-to-one correspondence between the energy levels of such a model and
the energies of the BPS-saturating states. These findings thus provide a more
comprehensive algebraic setting for understanding shape invariance.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figures, LaTe
Multiple Factors Independently Regulate \u3ci\u3ehilA\u3c/i\u3e and Invasion Gene Expression in \u3ci\u3eSalmonella enterica\u3c/i\u3e Serovar Typhimurium
HilA activates the expression of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium invasion genes. To learn more
about regulation of hilA, we isolated Tn5 mutants exhibiting reduced hilA and/or invasion gene expression. In
addition to expected mutations, we identified Tn5 insertions in pstS, fadD, flhD, flhC, and fliA. Analysis of the
pstS mutant indicates that hilA and invasion genes are repressed by the response regulator PhoB in the absence
of the Pst high-affinity inorganic phosphate uptake system. This system is required for negative control of the
PhoR-PhoB two-component regulatory system, suggesting that hilA expression may be repressed by PhoRPhoB
under low extracellular inorganic phosphate conditions. FadD is required for uptake and degradation of
long-chain fatty acids, and our analysis of the fadD mutant indicates that hilA is regulated by a FadDdependent,
FadR-independent mechanism. Thus, fatty acid derivatives may act as intracellular signals to
regulate hilA expression. flhDC and fliA encode transcription factors required for flagellum production,
motility, and chemotaxis. Complementation studies with flhC and fliA mutants indicate that FliZ, which is
encoded in an operon with fliA, activates expression of hilA, linking regulation of hilA with motility. Finally,
epistasis tests showed that PhoB, FadD, FliZ, SirA, and EnvZ act independently to regulate hilA expression and
invasion. In summary, our screen has identified several distinct pathways that can modulate S. enterica serovar
Typhimuriumâs ability to express hilA and invade host cells. Integration of signals from these different
pathways may help restrict invasion gene expression during infection
Egulating gene expression through RNA nuclear retention
Multiple mechanisms have evolved to regulate the eukaryotic genome. We have identified CTN-RNA, a mouse tissue-specific w8 kb nuclear-retained poly(A) + RNA that regulates the level of its protein-coding partner. CTN-RNA is transcribed from the protein-coding mouse cationic amino acid transporter 2 (mCAT2) gene through alternative promoter and poly(A) site usage. CTN-RNA is diffusely distributed in nuclei and is also localized to paraspeckles. The 3ïżœUTR of CTN-RNA contains elements for adenosine-to-inosine editing, involved in its nuclear retention. Interestingly, knockdown of CTN-RNA also downregulates mCAT2 mRNA. Under stress, CTN-RNA is posttranscriptionally cleaved to produce protein-coding mCAT2 mRNA. Our findings reveal a role of the cell nucleus in harboring RNA molecules that are not immediately needed to produce proteins but whose cytoplasmic presence is rapidly required upon physiologic stress. This mechanism of action highlights an important paradigm for the role of a nuclear-retained stable RNA transcript in regulating gene expression
The effect of FTO variation on increased osteoarthritis risk is mediated through body mass index : a mendelian randomisation study
Objective:
Variation in the fat mass and obesity-associated (FTO) gene influences susceptibility to obesity. A variant in the FTO gene has been implicated in genetic risk to osteoarthritis (OA). We examined the role of the FTO polymorphism rs8044769 in risk of knee and hip OA in cases and controls incorporating body mass index (BMI) information.
Methods:
5409 knee OA patients, 4355 hip OA patients and up to 5362 healthy controls from 7 independent cohorts from the UK and Australia were genotyped for rs8044769. The association of the FTO variant with OA was investigated in case/control analyses with and without BMI adjustment and in analyses matched for BMI category. A mendelian randomisation approach was employed using the FTO variant as the instrumental variable to evaluate the role of overweight on OA.
Results:
In the meta-analysis of all overweight (BMIâ„25) samples versus normal-weight controls irrespective of OA status the association of rs8044769 with overweight is highly significant (OR[CIs] for allele G=1.14 [01.08 to 1.19], p=7.5Ă10â7). A significant association with knee OA is present in the analysis without BMI adjustment (OR[CIs]=1.08[1.02 to 1.14], p=0.009) but the signal fully attenuates after BMI adjustment (OR[CIs]=0.99[0.93 to 1.05], p=0.666). We observe no evidence for association in the BMI-matched meta-analyses. Using mendelian randomisation approaches we confirm the causal role of overweight on OA.
Conclusions:
Our data highlight the contribution of genetic risk to overweight in defining risk to OA but the association is exclusively mediated by the effect on BMI. This is consistent with what is known of the biology of the FTO gene and supports the causative role of high BMI in OA
Multiple Factors Independently Regulate \u3ci\u3ehilA\u3c/i\u3e and Invasion Gene Expression in \u3ci\u3eSalmonella enterica\u3c/i\u3e Serovar Typhimurium
HilA activates the expression of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium invasion genes. To learn more
about regulation of hilA, we isolated Tn5 mutants exhibiting reduced hilA and/or invasion gene expression. In
addition to expected mutations, we identified Tn5 insertions in pstS, fadD, flhD, flhC, and fliA. Analysis of the
pstS mutant indicates that hilA and invasion genes are repressed by the response regulator PhoB in the absence
of the Pst high-affinity inorganic phosphate uptake system. This system is required for negative control of the
PhoR-PhoB two-component regulatory system, suggesting that hilA expression may be repressed by PhoRPhoB
under low extracellular inorganic phosphate conditions. FadD is required for uptake and degradation of
long-chain fatty acids, and our analysis of the fadD mutant indicates that hilA is regulated by a FadDdependent,
FadR-independent mechanism. Thus, fatty acid derivatives may act as intracellular signals to
regulate hilA expression. flhDC and fliA encode transcription factors required for flagellum production,
motility, and chemotaxis. Complementation studies with flhC and fliA mutants indicate that FliZ, which is
encoded in an operon with fliA, activates expression of hilA, linking regulation of hilA with motility. Finally,
epistasis tests showed that PhoB, FadD, FliZ, SirA, and EnvZ act independently to regulate hilA expression and
invasion. In summary, our screen has identified several distinct pathways that can modulate S. enterica serovar
Typhimuriumâs ability to express hilA and invade host cells. Integration of signals from these different
pathways may help restrict invasion gene expression during infection
Antarctic ice sheet paleo-constraint database
We present a database of observational constraints on past Antarctic Ice Sheet changes during the last glacial cycle intended to consolidate the observations that represent our understanding of past Antarctic changes, for state-space estimation, and paleo-model calibrations. The database is a major expansion of the initial work of Briggs and Tarasov (2013). It includes new data types and multi-tier data quality assessment. The updated constraint database âAntICE2â consists of observations of past grounded and floating ice sheet extent, past ice thickness, past relative sea level, borehole temperature profiles, and present-day bedrock displacement rates. In addition to paleo-observations, the present-day ice sheet geometry and surface ice velocities are incorporated to constrain the present-day ice sheet configuration. The method by which the data is curated using explicitly defined criteria is detailed. Moreover, the observational uncertainties are specified. The methodology by which the constraint database can be applied to evaluate a given ice sheet reconstruction is discussed. The implementation of the âAntICE2â database for Antarctic Ice Sheet model calibrations will improve Antarctic Ice Sheet predictions during past warm and cold periods and yield more robust paleo model spin ups for forecasting future ice sheet changes
Offspring's Leukocyte Telomere Length, Paternal Age, and Telomere Elongation in Sperm
Leukocyte telomere length (LTL) is a complex genetic trait. It shortens with age and is associated with a host of aging-related disorders. Recent studies have observed that offspring of older fathers have longer LTLs. We explored the relation between paternal age and offspring's LTLs in 4 different cohorts. Moreover, we examined the potential cause of the paternal age on offspring's LTL by delineating telomere parameters in sperm donors. We measured LTL by Southern blots in Caucasian men and women (n=3365), aged 18â94 years, from the Offspring of the Framingham Heart Study (Framingham Offspring), the NHLBI Family Heart Study (NHLBI-Heart), the Longitudinal Study of Aging Danish Twins (Danish Twins), and the UK Adult Twin Registry (UK Twins). Using Southern blots, Q-FISH, and flow-FISH, we also measured telomere parameters in sperm from 46 young (<30 years) and older (>50 years) donors. Paternal age had an independent effect, expressed by a longer LTL in males of the Framingham Offspring and Danish Twins, males and females of the NHLBI-Heart, and females of UK Twins. For every additional year of paternal age, LTL in offspring increased at a magnitude ranging from half to more than twice of the annual attrition in LTL with age. Moreover, sperm telomere length analyses were compatible with the emergence in older men of a subset of sperm with elongated telomeres. Paternal age exerts a considerable effect on the offspring's LTL, a phenomenon which might relate to telomere elongation in sperm from older men. The implications of this effect deserve detailed study
Imputation of variants from the 1000 Genomes Project modestly improves known associations and can identify low-frequency variant-phenotype associations undetected by HapMap based imputation
notes: PMCID: PMC3655956This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.Genome-wide association (GWA) studies have been limited by the reliance on common variants present on microarrays or imputable from the HapMap Project data. More recently, the completion of the 1000 Genomes Project has provided variant and haplotype information for several million variants derived from sequencing over 1,000 individuals. To help understand the extent to which more variants (including low frequency (1% †MAF <5%) and rare variants (<1%)) can enhance previously identified associations and identify novel loci, we selected 93 quantitative circulating factors where data was available from the InCHIANTI population study. These phenotypes included cytokines, binding proteins, hormones, vitamins and ions. We selected these phenotypes because many have known strong genetic associations and are potentially important to help understand disease processes. We performed a genome-wide scan for these 93 phenotypes in InCHIANTI. We identified 21 signals and 33 signals that reached P<5Ă10(-8) based on HapMap and 1000 Genomes imputation, respectively, and 9 and 11 that reached a stricter, likely conservative, threshold of P<5Ă10(-11) respectively. Imputation of 1000 Genomes genotype data modestly improved the strength of known associations. Of 20 associations detected at P<5Ă10(-8) in both analyses (17 of which represent well replicated signals in the NHGRI catalogue), six were captured by the same index SNP, five were nominally more strongly associated in 1000 Genomes imputed data and one was nominally more strongly associated in HapMap imputed data. We also detected an association between a low frequency variant and phenotype that was previously missed by HapMap based imputation approaches. An association between rs112635299 and alpha-1 globulin near the SERPINA gene represented the known association between rs28929474 (MAFâ=â0.007) and alpha1-antitrypsin that predisposes to emphysema (Pâ=â2.5Ă10(-12)). Our data provide important proof of principle that 1000 Genomes imputation will detect novel, low frequency-large effect associations
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