7 research outputs found

    Separating the concerns of distributed deployment and dynamic composition in internet application systems

    No full text
    The Internet is currently evolving from a global information network into a distributed application system. For example, some Internet applications are based on executing remote services which have been previously installed on possibly multiple Internet nodes, whereas parts of other Internet applications are dynamically moved from several remote nodes to be executed on a single node. In this paper, we focus on the related problem of how the parts of an Internet application that have been independently deployed on multiple Internet nodes can be transparently located, seamlessly retrieved and dynamically composed on a particular node by request. Vie propose a novel deployment and composition approach using so called modules and module federations and show how to separate the logical application composition from the physical module deployment. The realization of our proposal in Java and C++ is presented and the use of the approach in ongoing research projects is demonstrated

    Multi-omics analyses of the ulcerative colitis gut microbiome link Bacteroides vulgatus proteases with disease severity.

    No full text
    Ulcerative colitis (UC) is driven by disruptions in host-microbiota homoeostasis, but current treatments exclusively target host inflammatory pathways. To understand how host-microbiota interactions become disrupted in UC, we collected and analysed six faecal- or serum-based omic datasets (metaproteomic, metabolomic, metagenomic, metapeptidomic and amplicon sequencing profiles of faecal samples and proteomic profiles of serum samples) from 40 UC patients at a single inflammatory bowel disease centre, as well as various clinical, endoscopic and histologic measures of disease activity. A validation cohort of 210 samples (73 UC, 117 Crohn's disease, 20 healthy controls) was collected and analysed separately and independently. Data integration across both cohorts showed that a subset of the clinically active UC patients had an overabundance of proteases that originated from the bacterium Bacteroides vulgatus. To test whether B. vulgatus proteases contribute to UC disease activity, we first profiled B. vulgatus proteases found in patients and bacterial cultures. Use of a broad-spectrum protease inhibitor improved B. vulgatus-induced barrier dysfunction in vitro, and prevented colitis in B. vulgatus monocolonized, IL10-deficient mice. Furthermore, transplantation of faeces from UC patients with a high abundance of B. vulgatus proteases into germfree mice induced colitis dependent on protease activity. These results, stemming from a multi-omics approach, improve understanding of functional microbiota alterations that drive UC and provide a resource for identifying other pathways that could be inhibited as a strategy to treat this disease
    corecore