3,210 research outputs found

    Cryptic homoelogy analysis in species and hybrids of genus Zea

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    Cryptic intergenomic pairing of genus Zea was induced by the use of a diluted colchicine solution in order to elucidate the phylogenetic relations and differentiation of the homoeologous genomes. Results indicate that in species and hybrids with 2n = 20, there was chromosome pairing between the homoeologous A and B genomes with a maximum of 5IV, with the exception of Zea diploperennis and their interspecific hybrids where cryptic homoeologous chromosome pairing was not induced. In almost all 2n = 30 hybrids, observed cryptic pairing increased to a maximum of 10III although Z. mays x Z. mays with 2n = 30 did not show significant differences between treated and untreated materials. Pairing was also observed in species and hybrids with 2n = 40, in which a maximum of 10IV was observed, with the exception of Z. mays with 2n = 40 where treated and untreated cells did not differ significantly.This research was supported by the Universidad Nacional de la Plata, Universidad Nacional de Lomas de Zamora and CONICET.Molina, M.; Lopez, C.; Staltari, S.; Chorzempa, S.; Moreno Ferrero, V. (2013). Cryptic homoelogy analysis in species and hybrids of genus Zea. Biologia Plantarum. 57(3):449-456. doi:10.1007/s10535-012-0299-4S449456573Bass, H.W., Riera-Lizarazu, O., Ananiev, E.V.B., Bordolini, S.J., Rines, H.W., Phillips, R.L., Sedat, J.W., Agard, D.A., Cande, Z.W.: Evidence for the coincident initiation of homologous pairing and synapsis during the telomereclustering (bouquet) stage of meiotic prophase. — J. Cell Sci. 113: 1033–1042, 2000.Bozza, C.G., Pawlowsky, W.P.: The cytogenetics of homologous chromosome pairing in meiosis in plants. — Cytogenet. Genet. Res. 120: 313–319, 2008.Chikashige, Y., Haraguchi, T., Hiraoka, Y.: Nuclear envelope attachment is not necessary for telomere function in fission yeast. — Nucleus 1: 481–486, 2010.Dobley, J., Iltis, H.H.: Taxonomy of Zea (Gramineae). I. A subgeneric classification with key to taxa. — Amer. J. Bot. 67: 982–993, 1980.Dover, G.A., Riley, R.: The effect of spindle inhibitors applied before meiosis on meiotic chromosome pairing. — J. Cell. Sci. 12: 143–161, 1973.Driscoll, C.J., Darvey, N.L.: Chromosome pairing: effect of colchicine on an isochromosome. — Science 169: 290–291, 1970.Driscoll, C.J., Darvey, N.L., Barber, H.N.: Effect of colchicine on meiosis of hexaploid wheat. — Nature 216: 687–688, 1967.Feldman, M., Avivi, L.: Genetic control of bivalent pairing in common wheat. The mode of Ph1 action. — In: Brandham, P.E. (ed.) Kew Chromosome Conference III. Pp. 269–279. Royal Botanic Garden, London 1988.Feldman, F., Liu, B., Segal, G., Abbo, S., Levy. A.: Rapid elimination of low copy DNA sequences in polyploidy wheat: a possible mechanism for differentiation of homeologous chromosomes. — Genetics 147: 1381–1387, 1997.Fukunaga, K., Hill, J., Vigoroux, Y., Matsuoka, Y., Sanchez G., J., Liu, K., Bucker, E., Doebley, J.: Genetic diversity and population structure of teosinte. — Genetics 169: 2241–2254, 2005.Furini, A., Jewell, C.: Somatic embryogenesis and plant regeneration of maize/Tripsacum hybrids. — Maydica 40: 205–210, 1995.García, M.D., Molina, M. del C.: Embryo rescue and induction of somatic embryogenesis as a method to overcome seed inviability in Zea mays ssp. mays (2n = 40) × Zea mays ssp. parviglumis crosses. — Biol. Plant. 44: 497–501, 2001.García, M.D., Molina, M. del C., Caso, 0.H.: [Maize (Zea mays ssp. mays) plant regeneration from tissue culture and its applications in maize breeding.] — Rev. Fac. Agron. UNLP 68: 15–25, 1992. [In Spanish]Goluboskaya, I.N., Harper, L.C., Pawlowski, W.P., Schicnes, D.; Cande, W.Z.: The pam1 gene is required for meiotic bouquet formation and efficient homologous synapsis in maize (Zea mays L.). — Genetics 162: 1979–1993, 2002.González, G., Poggio, L.: Karyotype of Zea luxurians and Z. mays subsp. mays using FISH/DAPI, and analysis of meiotic behavior of hybrids. — Genome 54: 26–32, 2011.Harper, L., Golubovskaya, I., Cande, W.Z.: A bouquet of chromosomes. — J. Cell. Sci. 117: 4025–4032, 2004.Iltis, H.H., Benz B.F: Zea nicaraguensis (Poaceae), a new teosinte from Pacific coastal Nicaragua. — Novon 10: 382–390, 2000.Iltis, H.H.; Dobley J.: Taxonomy of Zea (Gramineae). II Subspecific categories in the Zea mays comple× and a generic synopsis. — Amer. J. Bot. 67: 994–1004, 1980.Jackson, R.C.: Polyploidy and diploidy: new perspectives on chromosome pairing and its evolutionary implications. — Amer. J. Bot. 69: 1512–1523, 1982.Jackson, R.C., Murray, B.G.: Colchicine-induced quadrivalent formation in Helianthus: evidence of ancient polyploidy. — Theor. appl. Genet. 64: 219–222, 1983.Jenczewski, E., Alix, K.: From diploids to allopolyploids: the emergence of efficient pairing control genes in plants. — Crit. Rev. Plant Sci. 23: 21–25, 2004.Jenkins, G., Chatterjee, R.: Chromosome structure and pairing preferences in tetraploid rye (Secale cereale). — Genome 37: 784–793, 1994.Molina, M. del C.: Estudios citogenéticos evolutivos del Género Zea. [Cytogenetic Study of Zea Genus Evolution] — PhD Thesis, Polytechnic University of Valencia, Valencia 2011. [In Spanish].Molina, M. del C., Chorzempa, S.E., García, M.D.: Meiotic pairing in the hybrid (Zea mays × Zea diploperennis) × Zea luxurians. — Maize Genet. Coop. 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Freeman and Company, San Francisco 1978.Swanson-Wagner R., Eichten S., Kumari S., Tiffin P., Stein J., Ware D., Springer N.: Pervasive gene content variation and copy number variation in maize and its undomesticated progenitor. — Genome Res., in press, 2012.Swigonová, Z., Lai, J., Ma, J., Ramakrisma, W., Llaca, V., Bennetzen, J., Messing, J.: Close split of sorghum and maize genome progenitors. — Genome Res. 14: 1916–1923, 2004.Wendel, J.: Genome evolution in polyploidy, — Plant mol. Biol. 42: 225–229, 2000.Zickler, D., Kleckner, N.: The leptotene-zygotene transition of meiosis. — Annu. Rev. Genet. 32: 619–697, 1998

    Pathogen burden, inflammation, proliferation and apoptosis in human in-stent restenosis - Tissue characteristics compared to primary atherosclerosis

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    Pathogenic events leading to in-stent restenosis (ISR) are still incompletely understood. Among others, inflammation, immune reactions, deregulated cell death and growth have been suggested. Therefore, atherectomy probes from 21 patients with symptomatic ISR were analyzed by immunohistochemistry for pathogen burden and compared to primary target lesions from 20 stable angina patients. While cytomegalovirus, herpes simplex virus, Epstein-Barr virus and Helicobacter pylori were not found in ISR, acute and/or persistent chlamydial infection were present in 6/21 of these lesions (29%). Expression of human heat shock protein 60 was found in 8/21 of probes (38%). Indicated by distinct signals of CD68, CD40 and CRP, inflammation was present in 5/21 (24%), 3/21 (14%) and 2/21 (10%) of ISR cases. Cell density of ISR was significantly higher than that of primary lesions ( 977 +/- 315 vs. 431 +/- 148 cells/mm(2); p < 0.001). There was no replicating cell as shown by Ki67 or PCNA. TUNEL+ cells indicating apoptosis were seen in 6/21 of ISR specimens (29%). Quantitative analysis revealed lower expression levels for each intimal determinant in ISR compared to primary atheroma (all p < 0.05). In summary, human ISR at the time of clinical presentation is characterized by low frequency of pathogen burden and inflammation, but pronounced hypercellularity, low apoptosis and absence of proliferation. Copyright (C) 2004 S. Karger AG, Basel

    Network segregation in a model of misinformation and fact checking

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    Misinformation under the form of rumor, hoaxes, and conspiracy theories spreads on social media at alarming rates. One hypothesis is that, since social media are shaped by homophily, belief in misinformation may be more likely to thrive on those social circles that are segregated from the rest of the network. One possible antidote is fact checking which, in some cases, is known to stop rumors from spreading further. However, fact checking may also backfire and reinforce the belief in a hoax. Here we take into account the combination of network segregation, finite memory and attention, and fact-checking efforts. We consider a compartmental model of two interacting epidemic processes over a network that is segregated between gullible and skeptic users. Extensive simulation and mean-field analysis show that a more segregated network facilitates the spread of a hoax only at low forgetting rates, but has no effect when agents forget at faster rates. This finding may inform the development of mitigation techniques and overall inform on the risks of uncontrolled misinformation online

    Towards simulated morality systems: Role-playing games as artificial societies

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    Computer role-playing games (RPGs) often include a simulated morality system as a core design element. Games' morality systems can include both god's eye view aspects, in which certain actions are inherently judged by the simulated world to be good or evil, as well as social simulations, in which non-player characters (NPCs) react to judgments of the player's and each others' activities. Games with a larger amount of social simulation have clear affinities to multi-agent systems (MAS) research on artificial societies. They differ in a number of key respects, however, due to a mixture of pragmatic game-design considerations and their typically strong embeddedness in narrative arcs, resulting in many important aspects of moral systems being represented using explicitly scripted scenarios rather than through agent-based simulations. In this position paper, we argue that these similarities and differences make RPGs a promising challenge domain for MAS research, highlighting features such as moral dilemmas situated in more organic settings than seen in game-theoretic models of social dilemmas, and heterogeneous representations of morality that use both moral calculus systems and social simulation. We illustrate some possible approaches using a case study of the morality systems in the game The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion

    Formation of the black-hole binary M33 X-7 via mass-exchange in a tight massive system

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    M33 X-7 is among the most massive X-Ray binary stellar systems known, hosting a rapidly spinning 15.65 Msun black hole orbiting an underluminous 70 Msun Main Sequence companion in a slightly eccentric 3.45 day orbit. Although post-main-sequence mass transfer explains the masses and tight orbit, it leaves unexplained the observed X-Ray luminosity, star's underluminosity, black hole's spin, and eccentricity. A common envelope phase, or rotational mixing, could explain the orbit, but the former would lead to a merger and the latter to an overluminous companion. A merger would also ensue if mass transfer to the black hole were invoked for its spin-up. Here we report that, if M33 X-7 started as a primary of 85-99 Msun and a secondary of 28-32 Msun, in a 2.8-3.1 day orbit, its observed properties can be consistently explained. In this model, the Main Sequence primary transferred part of its envelope to the secondary and lost the rest in a wind; it ended its life as a ~16 Msun He star with a Fe-Ni core which collapsed to a black hole (with or without an accompanying supernova). The release of binding energy and, possibly, collapse asymmetries "kicked" the nascent black hole into an eccentric orbit. Wind accretion explains the X-Ray luminosity, while the black hole spin can be natal.Comment: Manuscript: 18 pages, 2 tables, 2 figure. Supplementary Information: 34 pages, 6 figures. Advance Online Publication (AOP) on http://www.nature.com/nature on October 20, 2010. To Appear in Nature on November 4, 201

    The atypical iron-coordination geometry of cytochrome f remains unchanged upon binding to plastocyanin, as inferred by XAS

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    The transient complex between cytochrome f and plastocyanin from the cyanobacterium Nostoc sp. PCC 7119 has been analysed by X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy in solution, using both proteins in their oxidized and reduced states. Fe K-edge data mainly shows that the atypical metal coordination geometry of cytochrome f, in which the N-terminal amino acid acts as an axial ligand of the heme group, remains unaltered upon binding to its redox partner, plastocyanin. This fact suggests that cytochrome f provides a stable binding site for plastocyanin and minimizes the reorganization energy required in the transient complex formation, which could facilitate the electron transfer between the two redox partners

    Podoplanin drives dedifferentiation and amoeboid invasion of melanoma

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    Melanoma is an aggressive skin cancer developing from melanocytes, frequently resulting in metastatic disease. Melanoma cells utilize amoeboid migration as mode of local invasion. Amoeboid invasion is characterized by rounded cell morphology and high actomyosin contractility driven by Rho GTPase signalling. Migrastatic drugs targeting actin polymerization and contractility are therefore a promising treatment option for metastatic melanoma. To predict amoeboid invasion and metastatic potential, biomarkers functionally linked to contractility pathways are needed. The glycoprotein podoplanin drives actomyosin contractility in lymphoid fibroblasts and is overexpressed in many cancers. We show that podoplanin enhances amoeboid invasion in melanoma. Podoplanin expression in murine melanoma drives rounded cell morphology, increasing motility, and invasion in vivo. Podoplanin expression is increased in a subset of dedifferentiated human melanoma, and in vitro is sufficient to upregulate melanoma-associated marker Pou3f2/Brn2. Together, our data define podoplanin as a functional biomarker for dedifferentiated invasive melanoma and a promising migrastatic therapeutic target

    Transgenic Potatoes for Potato Cyst Nematode Control Can Replace Pesticide Use without Impact on Soil Quality

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    Current and future global crop yields depend upon soil quality to which soil organisms make an important contribution. The European Union seeks to protect European soils and their biodiversity for instance by amending its Directive on pesticide usage. This poses a challenge for control of Globodera pallida (a potato cyst nematode) for which both natural resistance and rotational control are inadequate. One approach of high potential is transgenically based resistance. This work demonstrates the potential in the field of a new transgenic trait for control of G. pallida that suppresses root invasion. It also investigates its impact and that of a second transgenic trait on the non-target soil nematode community. We establish that a peptide that disrupts chemoreception of nematodes without a lethal effect provides resistance to G. pallida in both a containment and a field trial when precisely targeted under control of a root tip-specific promoter. In addition we combine DNA barcoding and quantitative PCR to recognise nematode genera from soil samples without microscope-based observation and use the method for nematode faunal analysis. This approach establishes that the peptide and a cysteine proteinase inhibitor that offer distinct bases for transgenic plant resistance to G. pallida do so without impact on the non-target nematode soil community

    Do Physicians with Self-Reported Non-English Fluency Practice in Linguistically Disadvantaged Communities?

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    BackgroundLanguage concordance between physicians and patients may reduce barriers to care faced by patients with limited English proficiency (LEP). It is unclear whether physicians with fluency in non-English languages practice in areas with high concentrations of people with LEP.ObjectiveTo investigate whether physician non-English language fluency is associated with practicing in areas with high concentrations of people with LEP.DesignCross-sectional cohort study.ParticipantsA total of 61,138 practicing physicians no longer in training who participated in the California Medical Board Physician Licensure Survey from 2001-2007.MeasuresSelf-reported language fluency in Spanish and Asian languages. Physician practice ZIP code corresponding to: (1) high concentration of people with LEP and (2) high concentration of linguistically isolated households.MethodsPractice location ZIP code was geocoded with geographic medical service study designations. We examined the unadjusted relationships between physician self-reported fluency in Spanish and selected Asian languages and practice location, stratified by race-ethnicity. We used staged logistic multiple variable regression models to isolate the effect of self-reported language fluency on practice location controlling for age, gender, race-ethnicity, medical specialty, and international medical graduate status.ResultsPhysicians with self-reported fluency in Spanish or an Asian language were more likely to practice in linguistically designated areas in these respective languages compared to those without fluency. Physician fluency in an Asian language [adjusted odds ratio (AOR) = 1.77; 95% confidence intervals (CI): 1.63-1.92] was independently associated with practicing in areas with a high number of LEP Asian speakers. A similar pattern was found for Spanish language fluency (AOR = 1.77; 95% CI: 1.43-1.82) and areas with high numbers of LEP Spanish-speakers. Latino and Asian race-ethnicity had the strongest effect on corresponding practice location, and this association was attenuated by language fluency.ConclusionsPhysicians who are fluent in Spanish or an Asian language are more likely to practice in geographic areas where their potential patients speak the corresponding language

    A Case of Idiopathic Adulthood Ductopenia

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    Idiopathic adulthood ductopenia (IAD) is a chronic cholestatic liver disease of unknown etiology characterized by adult onset, an absence of autoantibodies, inflammatory bowel disease, and a loss of interlobular bile ducts. In the present report, a case fulfilling the IAD criteria is described. A 19-year-old man was admitted to the hospital for persistent elevation of transaminases and alkaline phosphatase without clinical symptoms. Viral hepatitis markers and autoantibodies were absent. The patient had a normal extrahepatic biliary tree and had no evidence of inflammatory bowel disease. A liver biopsy specimen showed absence of interlobular bile ducts from 58% of the portal tracts. He was diagnosed with IAD and was treated with ursodeoxycholic acid
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