551 research outputs found
cis-Regulatory Changes in Kit Ligand Expression and Parallel Evolution of Pigmentation in Sticklebacks and Humans
SummaryDramatic pigmentation changes have evolved within most vertebrate groups, including fish and humans. Here we use genetic crosses in sticklebacks to investigate the parallel origin of pigmentation changes in natural populations. High-resolution mapping and expression experiments show that light gills and light ventrums map to a divergent regulatory allele of the Kit ligand (Kitlg) gene. The divergent allele reduces expression in gill and skin tissue and is shared by multiple derived freshwater populations with reduced pigmentation. In humans, Europeans and East Asians also share derived alleles at the KITLG locus. Strong signatures of selection map to regulatory regions surrounding the gene, and admixture mapping shows that the KITLG genomic region hasĀ a significant effect on human skin color. These experiments suggest that regulatory changes in Kitlg contribute to natural variation in vertebrate pigmentation, and that similar genetic mechanisms may underlie rapid evolutionary change in fish and humans
The Spectrum of Angiographic Findings in Transitional Cell Carcinoma of the Kidney
The spectrum of angiographic finding in 20 patients with transitional cell carcinomas of the kidney is described. In 15 of 20 patients (75%), prospective diagnosis of transitional cell carcinomas were made because of a combination of the angiographic findings; tumour vessels, tumour stain, prominent pelviureteric arteries and arterial encasement. In 4 patients with negative angiograms the lesions were relatively small in size and were situated within the renal parenchyma, primarily involving the calyces. The use of pharmacoangiographic agents such as epine-phrine and priscoline improved the angiographic visualization of transitional cell carcinomas of the kidney. For the past several years angiography has had a central role in the evaluation of patients with hematuria and renal masses 1 . 5,6,7,8. Although the use of diagnostic ultrasound and renal puncture have eliminated angiography from the diagnosis of renal cysts, most renal masses which are solid or which have equivocal findings at ultrasound still undergo angiography. At the same time, the decreasing use of retrograde urography has resulted in more frequent angiography in patients with unilateral nonfunctioning kidneys. Transitional cell carcinomas of the renal pelvis are an important cause of both hematuria and non-functioning kidneys. We have therefore reviewed our material to reassess the angiographic abnormalities caused by the transitional cell carcinomas and the overall accuracy of the angiography in the diagnosis of these lesions.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73228/1/j.1440-1673.1977.tb03191.x.pd
Prevention of Alzheimer's disease in high risk groups: statin therapy in subjects with PSEN1 mutations or heterozygosity for apolipoprotein E epsilon 4
Because cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) abnormalities in presymptomatic subjects with PSEN1 (presenilin 1) mutations may be observed 4 to 12 years prior to the estimated age at onset, it is possible to test putative therapies on the CSF analytes that correlate with neurodegeneration during this presymptomatic window of clinical opportunity. It is also possible to test the same therapy on a comparison group with increased risk status conferred by both hyperlipidemia and heterozygosity for apolipoprotein EĪµ4. To our knowledge, the only putative therapy thus far tested in such a common design has been statin therapy. The results of these tests show increases in soluble amyloid precursor protein (sAPP)Ī± correlating with statin-induced decreases in serum cholesterol levels in the non-PSEN1 subjects. This result could be one functional correlate for part of the substantial risk reduction for late onset Alzheimer\u27s disease recently reported in the Rotterdam study, a large, long-term prospective statin trial. Statin therapy significantly decreased both sAPPĪ± and sAPPĪ² in presymptomatic PSEN1 subjects. Initially, elevated phospho-tau levels in PSEN1 subjects did not further increase during the 2 to 3 years of statin therapy, possibly indicative of a prophylactic effect. These results suggest that large and longer term trials of statin therapy correlating changes in CSF biomarker levels with clinical course may be warranted in both presymptomatic PSEN1 and non-PSEN1 subjects
Single-cell analysis of long non-coding RNAs in the developing human neocortex
Single cell transcriptomics of lncRNA expression in K562 cell cultures. A Distributions of median lncRNA expression to median mRNA expression ratios (lncRNA:mRNA) in populations, in silico merged single cells, and single cells from K562 cultures. B Proportion of K562 cells that expressed each lncRNA (blue) and mRNA (red), separated by maximum expression in single cells. C Same as in (B) but grouped by maximum expression quantile. D Distributions of non-zero lncRNA (blue) and mRNA (red) expression in 46 single K562 cells. Green squares, housekeeping genes; black triangles, ERCC Spike-In Controls. (PDF 454 kb
Mach edges: local features predicted by 3rd derivative spatial filtering
Edges are key points of information in visual scenes. One important class of models supposes that edges correspond to the steepest parts of the luminance profile, implying that they can be found as peaks and troughs in the response of a gradient (1st derivative) filter, or as zero-crossings in the 2nd derivative (ZCs). We tested those ideas using a stimulus that has no local peaks of gradient and no ZCs, at any scale. The stimulus profile is analogous to the Mach ramp, but it is the luminance gradient (not the absolute luminance) that increases as a linear ramp between two plateaux; the luminance profile is a blurred triangle-wave. For all image-blurs tested, observers marked edges at or close to the corner points in the gradient profile, even though these were not gradient maxima. These Mach edges correspond to peaks and troughs in the 3rd derivative. Thus Mach edges are inconsistent with many standard edge-detection schemes, but are nicely predicted by a recent model that finds edge points with a 2-stage sequence of 1st then 2nd derivative operators, each followed by a half-wave rectifier
Effect of root age on the biomechanics of seminal and nodal roots of barley (<i>Hordeum vulgare L.</i>) in contrasting soil environments
Acknowledgments The James Hutton Institute receives funding from the Scottish Government. The authors would also like to thank Jim McNicol from Biomathematics and Statistics Scotland for his advice on statistical analysis.Peer reviewedPostprin
- ā¦