224 research outputs found
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Expert-based development of a standard in CO2 sequestration monitoring technology
Bureau of Economic Geolog
PTTG1 Levels Are Predictive of Saracatinib Sensitivity in Ovarian Cancer Cell Lines
Src kinase is recognized as a key target for molecular cancer therapy. However, methods to efficiently select patients responsive to Src inhibitors are lacking. We explored the sensitivity of ovarian cancer cell lines to the Src kinase inhibitor saracatinib to identify predictive markers of drug sensitivity using gene microarrays. Pituitary tumor transforming gene 1 (PTTG1) was selected as a potential biomarker as mRNA levels were correlated with saracatinib resistance, as well as higher PTTG1 protein expression. PTTG1 expression was correlated with proliferation, cell division, and mitosis in ovarian cancer tissues data sets. In sensitive cell lines, saracatinib treatment decreased PTTG1 and fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF2) protein levels. Downregulating PTTG1 by siRNAs increased saracatinib sensitivity in two resistant cell lines. Our results indicate PTTG1 may be a valuable biomarker in ovarian cancer to predict sensitivity to saracatinib, and could form the basis of a targeted prospective saracatinib trial for ovarian cancer
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The SIOX architecture – coupling automatic monitoring and optimization of parallel I/O
Performance analysis and optimization of high-performance I/O systems is a daunting task. Mainly, this is due to the overwhelmingly complex interplay of the involved hardware and software layers. The Scalable I/O for Extreme Performance (SIOX) project provides a versatile environment for monitoring I/O activities and learning from this information. The goal of SIOX is to automatically suggest and apply performance optimizations, and to assist in locating and diagnosing performance problems.
In this paper, we present the current status of SIOX. Our modular architecture covers instrumentation of POSIX, MPI and other high-level I/O libraries; the monitoring data is recorded asynchronously into a global database, and recorded traces can be visualized. Furthermore, we offer a set of primitive plug-ins with additional features to demonstrate the flexibility of our architecture: A surveyor plug-in to keep track of the observed spatial access patterns; an fadvise plug-in for injecting hints to achieve read-ahead for strided access patterns; and an optimizer plug-in which monitors the performance achieved with different MPI-IO hints, automatically supplying the best known hint-set when no hints were explicitly set. The presentation of the technical status is accompanied by a demonstration of some of these features on our 20 node cluster. In additional experiments, we analyze the overhead for concurrent access, for MPI-IO’s 4-levels of access, and for an instrumented climate application.
While our prototype is not yet full-featured, it demonstrates the potential and feasibility of our approach
Capturing the essence of folding and functions of biomolecules using Coarse-Grained Models
The distances over which biological molecules and their complexes can
function range from a few nanometres, in the case of folded structures, to
millimetres, for example during chromosome organization. Describing phenomena
that cover such diverse length, and also time scales, requires models that
capture the underlying physics for the particular length scale of interest.
Theoretical ideas, in particular, concepts from polymer physics, have guided
the development of coarse-grained models to study folding of DNA, RNA, and
proteins. More recently, such models and their variants have been applied to
the functions of biological nanomachines. Simulations using coarse-grained
models are now poised to address a wide range of problems in biology.Comment: 37 pages, 8 figure
Role of Complement Activation in Obliterative Bronchiolitis Post Lung Transplantation
Obliterative bronchiolitis (OB) post lung transplantation involves IL-17 regulated autoimmunity to type V collagen and alloimmunity, which could be enhanced by complement activation. However, the specific role of complement activation in lung allograft pathology, IL-17 production, and OB are unknown. The current study examines the role of complement activation in OB. Complement regulatory protein (CRP) (CD55, CD46, Crry/CD46) expression was down regulated in human and murine OB; and C3a, a marker of complement activation, was up regulated locally. IL-17 differentially suppressed Crry expression in airway epithelial cells in vitro. Neutralizing IL-17 recovered CRP expression in murine lung allografts and decreased local C3a production. Exogenous C3a enhanced IL-17 production from alloantigen or autoantigen (type V collagen) reactive lymphocytes. Systemically neutralizing C5 abrogated the development of OB, reduced acute rejection severity, lowered systemic and local levels of C3a and C5a, recovered CRP expression, and diminished systemic IL-17 and IL-6 levels. These data indicated that OB induction is in part complement dependent due to IL-17 mediated down regulation of CRPs on airway epithelium. C3a and IL-17 are part of a feed forward loop that may enhance CRP down regulation, suggesting that complement blockade could be a therapeutic strategy for OB
Tightening the knot in phytochrome by single molecule atomic force microscopy
A growing number of proteins have been shown to adopt knotted folds. Yet the
biological roles and biophysical properties of these knots remain poorly
understood. We have used protein engineering and atomic force microscopy to
explore single-molecule mechanics of the figure-of-eight knot in the
chromophore-binding domain of the red/far red photoreceptor, phytochrome. Under
load, apo phytochrome unfolds at forces of ~47 pN, while phytochrome carrying
its covalently bound tetrapyrrole chromophore unfolds at ~73 pN. These forces
are among the lowest measured in mechanical protein unfolding, hence the
presence of the knot does not automatically indicate a super-stable protein.
Our experiments reveal a stable intermediate along the mechanical unfolding
pathway, reflecting sequential unfolding of two distinct subdomains in
phytochrome, potentially the GAF and PAS domains. For the first time, our
experiments allow direct determination of knot size under load. In the unfolded
chain, the tightened knot is reduced to 17 amino acids, resulting in apparent
shortening of the polypeptide chain by 6.2 nm. Steered molecular dynamics
simulations corroborate this number. Finally, we found that covalent
phytochrome dimers created for these experiments retain characteristic
photoreversibility, unexpectedly arguing against dramatic rearrangement of the
native GAF dimer interface upon photoconversion.Comment: 12 pages plus five figures; has been submitted to Biophysical J.
Replacement on 9/16 is ONLY to correct a typo in the meta data; the uploaded
file is identical to first versio
Cooperation of local motions in the Hsp90 molecular chaperone ATPase mechanism
The Hsp90 chaperone is a central node of protein homeostasis activating a large number of diverse client proteins. Hsp90 functions as a molecular clamp that closes and opens in response to the binding and hydrolysis of ATP. Crystallographic studies define distinct conformational states of the mechanistic core implying structural changes that have not yet been observed in solution. Here, we engineered one-nanometer fluorescence probes based on photo-induced electron transfer into yeast Hsp90 to observe these motions. We found that the ATPase activity of the chaperone was reflected in the kinetics of specific structural rearrangements at remote positions that acted cooperatively. Nanosecond single-molecule fluorescence fluctuation analysis uncovered that critical structural elements that undergo rearrangement are mobile on a sub-millisecond time scale. We identified a two-step mechanism for lid closure over the nucleotide-binding pocket. The activating co-chaperone Aha1 mobilizes the lid of apo Hsp90, suggesting an early role in the catalytic cycle
Detecting intratumoral heterogeneity of EGFR activity by liposome-based in vivo transfection of a fluorescent biosensor
Despite decades of research in the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) signalling field, and many targeted anti-cancer drugs that have been tested clinically, the success rate for these agents in the clinic is low, particularly in terms of the improvement of overall survival. Intratumoral heterogeneity is proposed as a major mechanism underlying treatment failure of these molecule-targeted agents. Here we highlight the application of fluorescence lifetime microscopy (FLIM)-based biosensing to demonstrate intratumoral heterogeneity of EGFR activity. For sensing EGFR activity in cells, we used a genetically encoded CrkII-based biosensor which undergoes conformational changes upon tyrosine-221 phosphorylation by EGFR. We transfected this biosensor into EGFR-positive tumour cells using targeted lipopolyplexes bearing EGFR-binding peptides at their surfaces. In a murine model of basal-like breast cancer, we demonstrated a significant degree of intratumoral heterogeneity in EGFR activity, as well as the pharmacodynamic effect of a radionuclide-labeled EGFR inhibitor in situ. Furthermore, a significant correlation between high EGFR activity in tumour cells and macrophage-tumour cell proximity was found to in part account for the intratumoral heterogeneity in EGFR activity observed. The same effect of macrophage infiltrate on EGFR activation was also seen in a colorectal cancer xenograft. In contrast, a non-small cell lung cancer xenograft expressing a constitutively active EGFR conformational mutant exhibited macrophage proximity-independent EGFR activity. Our study validates the use of this methodology to monitor therapeutic response in terms of EGFR activity. In addition, we found iNOS gene induction in macrophages that are cultured in tumour cell-conditioned media as well as an iNOS activity-dependent increase in EGFR activity in tumour cells. These findings point towards an immune microenvironment-mediated regulation that gives rise to the observed intratumoral heterogeneity of EGFR signalling activity in tumour cells in vivo
Committee autonomy in parliamentary systems – coalition logic or congressional rationales?
The Institutions of Politics; Design, Workings, and implications ( do not use, ended 1-1-2020
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