70 research outputs found
Risk factors for youth violence: Youth violence commission, International Society For Research On Aggression (ISRA)
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/144599/1/ab21766.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/144599/2/ab21766_am.pd
EWI-2 Inhibits Cell-Cell Fusion at the HIV-1 Virological Presynapse.
Cell-to-cell transfer of virus particles at the Env-dependent virological synapse (VS) is a highly efficient mode of HIV-1 transmission. While cell-cell fusion could be triggered at the VS, leading to the formation of syncytia and preventing exponential growth of the infected cell population, this is strongly inhibited by both viral (Gag) and host (ezrin and tetraspanins) proteins. Here, we identify EWI-2, a protein that was previously shown to associate with ezrin and tetraspanins, as a host factor that contributes to the inhibition of Env-mediated cell-cell fusion. Using quantitative fluorescence microscopy, shRNA knockdowns, and cell-cell fusion assays, we show that EWI-2 accumulates at the presynaptic terminal (i.e., the producer cell side of the VS), where it contributes to the fusion-preventing activities of the other viral and cellular components. We also find that EWI-2, like tetraspanins, is downregulated upon HIV-1 infection, most likely by Vpu. Despite the strong inhibition of fusion at the VS, T cell-based syncytia do form in vivo and in physiologically relevant culture systems, but they remain small. In regard to that, we demonstrate that EWI-2 and CD81 levels are restored on the surface of syncytia, where they (presumably) continue to act as fusion inhibitors. This study documents a new role for EWI-2 as an inhibitor of HIV-1-induced cell-cell fusion and provides novel insight into how syncytia are prevented from fusing indefinitely
California Men's Health Study (CMHS): a multiethnic cohort in a managed care setting
BACKGROUND: We established a male, multiethnic cohort primarily to study prostate cancer etiology and secondarily to study the etiologies of other cancer and non-cancer conditions. METHODS/DESIGN: Eligible participants were 45-to-69 year old males who were members of a large, prepaid health plan in California. Participants completed two surveys on-line or on paper in 2002 – 2003. Survey content included demographics; family, medical, and cancer screening history; sexuality and sexual development; lifestyle (diet, physical activity, and smoking); prescription and non-prescription drugs; and herbal supplements. We linked study data with clinical data, including laboratory, hospitalization, and cancer data, from electronic health plan files. We recruited 84,170 participants, approximately 40% from minority populations and over 5,000 who identified themselves as other than heterosexual. We observed a wide range of education (53% completed less than college) and income. PSA testing rates (75% overall) were highest among black participants. Body mass index (BMI) (median 27.2) was highest for blacks and Latinos and lowest for Asians, and showed 80.6% agreement with BMI from clinical data sources. The sensitivity and specificity can be assessed by comparing self-reported data, such as PSA testing, diabetes, and history of cancer, to health plan data. We anticipate that nearly 1,500 prostate cancer diagnoses will occur within five years of cohort inception. DISCUSSION: A wide variety of epidemiologic, health services, and outcomes research utilizing a rich array of electronic, biological, and clinical resources is possible within this multiethnic cohort. The California Men's Health Study and other cohorts nested within comprehensive health delivery systems can make important contributions in the area of men's health
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Decoding human fetal liver haematopoiesis.
Definitive haematopoiesis in the fetal liver supports self-renewal and differentiation of haematopoietic stem cells and multipotent progenitors (HSC/MPPs) but remains poorly defined in humans. Here, using single-cell transcriptome profiling of approximately 140,000 liver and 74,000 skin, kidney and yolk sac cells, we identify the repertoire of human blood and immune cells during development. We infer differentiation trajectories from HSC/MPPs and evaluate the influence of the tissue microenvironment on blood and immune cell development. We reveal physiological erythropoiesis in fetal skin and the presence of mast cells, natural killer and innate lymphoid cell precursors in the yolk sac. We demonstrate a shift in the haemopoietic composition of fetal liver during gestation away from being predominantly erythroid, accompanied by a parallel change in differentiation potential of HSC/MPPs, which we functionally validate. Our integrated map of fetal liver haematopoiesis provides a blueprint for the study of paediatric blood and immune disorders, and a reference for harnessing the therapeutic potential of HSC/MPPs.We acknowledge funding from the Wellcome Human Cell Atlas Strategic Science Support (WT211276/Z/18/Z); M.H. is funded by Wellcome (WT107931/Z/15/Z), The Lister Institute for Preventive Medicine and NIHR and Newcastle-Biomedical Research Centre; S.A.T. is funded by Wellcome (WT206194), ERC Consolidator and EU MRG-Grammar awards and; S.B. is funded by Wellcome (WT110104/Z/15/Z) and St. Baldrick’s Foundation; E.L. is funded by a Wellcome Sir Henry Dale and Royal Society Fellowships, European Haematology Association, Wellcome and MRC to the Wellcome-MRC Cambridge Stem Cell Institute and BBSRC
The SPARC Toroidal Field Model Coil Program
The SPARC Toroidal Field Model Coil (TFMC) Program was a three-year effort
between 2018 and 2021 that developed novel Rare Earth Yttrium Barium Copper
Oxide (REBCO) superconductor technologies and then successfully utilized these
technologies to design, build, and test a first-in-class, high-field (~20 T),
representative-scale (~3 m) superconducting toroidal field coil. With the
principal objective of demonstrating mature, large-scale, REBCO magnets, the
project was executed jointly by the MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center (PSFC)
and Commonwealth Fusion Systems (CFS). The TFMC achieved its programmatic goal
of experimentally demonstrating a large-scale high-field REBCO magnet,
achieving 20.1 T peak field-on-conductor with 40.5 kA of terminal current, 815
kN/m of Lorentz loading on the REBCO stacks, and almost 1 GPa of mechanical
stress accommodated by the structural case. Fifteen internal demountable
pancake-to-pancake joints operated in the 0.5 to 2.0 nOhm range at 20 K and in
magnetic fields up to 12 T. The DC and AC electromagnetic performance of the
magnet, predicted by new advances in high-fidelity computational models, was
confirmed in two test campaigns while the massively parallel, single-pass,
pressure-vessel style coolant scheme capable of large heat removal was
validated. The REBCO current lead and feeder system was experimentally
qualified up to 50 kA, and the crycooler based cryogenic system provided 600 W
of cooling power at 20 K with mass flow rates up to 70 g/s at a maximum design
pressure of 20 bar-a for the test campaigns. Finally, the feasibility of using
passive, self-protection against a quench in a fusion-scale NI TF coil was
experimentally assessed with an intentional open-circuit quench at 31.5 kA
terminal current.Comment: 17 pages 9 figures, overview paper and the first of a six-part series
of papers covering the TFMC Progra
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Monsoons: global energetics and local physics as drivers of past, present and future monsoons
Global constraints on momentum and energy govern the structure of the zonal mean tropical circulation and rainfall. The continental-scale monsoon systems are also facets of a momentum- and energy-constrained global circulation, but their modern and paleo variability deviates substantially from that of the longitudinal mean through mechanisms neither fully understood nor well simulated. A framework grounded in global constraints yet encompassing the complexities of monsoon dynamics is needed to identify the causes of mismatch between theory, models, and observations and, ultimately, improve regional climate projection. In a first step towards this goal, disparate regional processes must be distilled into gross measures of energy flow in and out of continents and from the surface to the tropopause, so that monsoon dynamics may be coherently diagnosed across modern and paleo observations and across idealized and comprehensive simulations. Accounting for zonal asymmetries in the circulation, land/ocean differences in surface fluxes, and the character of convective systems, such a monsoon framework would integrate our understanding at all relevant scales: from the fine details of how moisture and energy are lifted in the updrafts of thunderclouds, up to the global circulations
RA-MAP, molecular immunological landscapes in early rheumatoid arthritis and healthy vaccine recipients
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic inflammatory disorder with poorly defined aetiology characterised by synovial inflammation with variable disease severity and drug responsiveness. To investigate the peripheral blood immune cell landscape of early, drug naive RA, we performed comprehensive clinical and molecular profiling of 267 RA patients and 52 healthy vaccine recipients for up to 18 months to establish a high quality sample biobank including plasma, serum, peripheral blood cells, urine, genomic DNA, RNA from whole blood, lymphocyte and monocyte subsets. We have performed extensive multi-omic immune phenotyping, including genomic, metabolomic, proteomic, transcriptomic and autoantibody profiling. We anticipate that these detailed clinical and molecular data will serve as a fundamental resource offering insights into immune-mediated disease pathogenesis, progression and therapeutic response, ultimately contributing to the development and application of targeted therapies for RA.</p
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