1,587 research outputs found

    Phenotypic Mapping of The Chicken Embryonic Thymic Microenvironment Developing Within an Organ Culture System

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    The chicken thymic microenvironment, as it developed in an embryonic thymus organ culture system, was phenotypically mapped using a panel of mAb defining both epithelial and nonepithelial stromal cell antigens. We have previously reported that thymocyte proliferation and differentiation will proceed for up to 6–8 days in thymus organ culture, hence demonstrating the functional integrity of the thymic microenvironment in vitro. During this time, the stromal component reflected that of the normal embryo with cortical and medullary epithelial areas readily identifiable by both morphology and surface-antigen expression. An abundance of subcapsular and cortical epithelial antigens was detected in the cultured thymus, particularly those normally expressed by the epithelium lining the capsule, trabeculae, and vascular regions (type epithelium) in the adult and embryonic thymus. Medullary epithelial antigens developed in organ culture, although were present in lower frequency than observed in the age-matched embryonic thymus. MHC class II expression by both epithelial and nonepithelial cells was maintained at high levels throughout the culture period. With increasing time in culture, the ratio of epithelial to nonepithelial cells decreased, concurrent with a decrease in thymocyte frequency and suggestive of a bidirectional interaction between these two cell types. Thus, a functionally intact thymic microenvironment appears to be maintained in embryonic thymus organ culture, a model that is currently being exploited to assess the role of stromal antigens, as defined by our mAb, in the process of thymopoiesis

    Persistent Homology in Sparse Regression and its Application to Brain Morphometry

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    Sparse systems are usually parameterized by a tuning parameter that determines the sparsity of the system. How to choose the right tuning parameter is a fundamental and difficult problem in learning the sparse system. In this paper, by treating the the tuning parameter as an additional dimension, persistent homological structures over the parameter space is introduced and explored. The structures are then further exploited in speeding up the computation using the proposed soft-thresholding technique. The topological structures are further used as multivariate features in the tensor-based morphometry (TBM) in characterizing white matter alterations in children who have experienced severe early life stress and maltreatment. These analyses reveal that stress-exposed children exhibit more diffuse anatomical organization across the whole white matter region.Comment: submitted to IEEE Transactions on Medical Imagin

    Nutrients in the nexus

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    Synthetic nitrogen (N) fertilizer has enabled modern agriculture to greatly improve human nutrition during the twentieth century, but it has also created unintended human health and environmental pollution challenges for the twentyfirst century. Averaged globally, about half of the fertilizer-N applied to farms is removed with the crops, while the other half remains in the soil or is lost from farmers’ fields, resulting in water and air pollution. As human population continues to grow and food security improves in the developing world, the dual development goals of producing more nutritious food with low pollution will require both technological and socioeconomic innovations in agriculture. Two case studies presented here, one in sub-Saharan Africa and the other in Midwestern United States, demonstrate how management of nutrients, water, and energy is inextricably linked in both small-scale and large-scale food production, and that science-based solutions to improve the efficiency of nutrient use can optimize food production while minimizing pollution. To achieve the needed large increases in nutrient use efficiency, however, technological developments must be accompanied by policies that recognize the complex economic and social factors affecting farmer decision-making and national policy priorities. Farmers need access to affordable nutrient supplies and support information, and the costs of improving efficiencies and avoiding pollution may need to be shared by society through innovative policies. Success will require interdisciplinary partnerships across public and private sectors, including farmers, private sector crop advisors, commodity supply chains, government agencies, university research and extension, and consumers
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