509 research outputs found
Adenovirus-based phospholamban antisense expression as a novel approach to improve cardiac contractile dysfunction: comparison of a constitutive viral versus an endothelin-1-responsive cardiac promoter
BACKGROUND: A decrease in sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+) pump (SERCA2)
activity is believed to play a role in the impairment of diastolic
function of the failing heart. Because the expression ratio of
phospholamban (PL) to SERCA2 may be a target to improve contractile
dysfunction, a PL antisense RNA strategy was developed under the control
of either a constitutive cytomegalovirus (CMV) or an inducible atrial
natriuretic factor (ANF) promoter. The latter is upregulated in
hypertrophied and failing heart, allowing "induction-by-disease" gene
therapy. METHODS AND RESULTS: Part of the PL cDNA was cloned in antisense
and sense directions into adenovectors under the control of either a CMV
(Ad5CMVPLas and Ad5CMVPLs, respectively) or ANF (Ad5ANFPLas and Ad5ANFPLs,
respectively) promoter. Infection of cultured rat neonatal cardiomyocytes
with Ad5CMVPLas reduced PL mRNA to 30+/-7% of baseline and PL protein to
24+/-3% within 48 and 72 hours, respectively. The effects were vector dose
dependent. Ad5CMVPLas increased the Ca(2+) sensitivity of SERCA2 and
reduced the time to 50% recovery of the Ca(2+) transient. A decrease of PL
protein was also achieved by infection with Ad5ANFPLas, and the presence
of the hypertrophic stimulus, endothelin-1, led to enhanced downregulation
of PL. The adenovectors expressing PL sense RNA had no effect on any of
the tested parameters. CONCLUSIONS: Vector-mediated PL antisense RNA
expression may become a feasible approach to modulate myocyte Ca(2+)
homeostasis in the failing heart. The inducible ANF promoter for the first
time offers the perspective for induction-by-disease gene therapy, ie,
selective expression of therapeutic genes in hypertrophied and failing
cardiomyocytes
Building and Improving Reference Genome Assemblies: This paper reviews the problems and algorithms of assembling a complete genome from millions of short DNA sequencing reads
A genome sequence assembly provides the foundation for studies of genotypic and phenotypic variation, genome structure, and evolution of the target organism. In the past four decades, there has been a surge of new sequencing technologies, and with these developments, computational scientists have developed new algorithms to improve genome assembly. Here we discuss the relationship between sequencing technology improvements and assembly algorithm development and how these are applied to extend and improve human and nonhuman genome assemblies. © 1963-2012 IEEE
cGMP stimulation of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator Cl- channels co-expressed with cGMP-dependent protein kinase type II but not type Ibeta
In order to investigate the involvement of cGMP-dependent protein kinase
(cGK) type II in cGMP-provoked intestinal Cl- secretion, cGMP-dependent
activation and phosphorylation of cystic fibrosis transmembrane
conductance regulator (CFTR) Cl- channels was analyzed after expression of
cGK II or cGK Ibeta in intact cells. An intestinal cell line which stably
expresses CFTR (IEC-CF7) but contains no detectable endogenous cGK II was
infected with a recombinant adenoviral vector containing the cGK II coding
region (Ad-cGK II) resulting in co-expression of active cGK II. In these
cells, CFTR was activated by membrane-permeant analogs of cGMP or by the
cGMP-elevating hormone atrial natriuretic peptide as measured by 125I-
efflux assays and whole-cell patch clamp analysis. In contrast, infection
with recombinant adenoviruses expressing cGK Ibeta or luciferase did not
convey cGMP sensitivity to CFTR in IEC-CF7 cells. Concordant with the
activation of CFTR by only cGK II, infection with Ad-cGK II but not Ad-cGK
Ibeta enabled cGMP analogs to increase CFTR phosphorylation in intact
cells. These and other data provide evidence that endogenous cGK II is a
key mediator of cGMP-provoked activation of CFTR in cells where both
proteins are co-localized, e. g. intestinal epithelial cells. Furthermore,
they demonstrate that neither the soluble cGK Ibeta nor cAMP-dependent
protein kinase are able to substitute for cGK II in this cGMP-regulated
function
High-Resolution Ice Cores from US ITASE (West Antarctica): Development and Validation of Chronologies and Determination of Precision and Accuracy
Shallow ice cores were obtained from widely distributed sites across the West Antarctic ice sheet, as part of the United States portion of the International Trans-Antarctic Scientific Expedition (US ITASE) program. The US ITASE cores have been dated by annual-layer counting, primarily through the identification of summer peaks in non-sea-salt sulfate (nssSO(4)(2-)) concentration. Absolute dating accuracy of better than 2 years and relative dating accuracy better than 1 year is demonstrated by the identification of multiple volcanic marker horizons in each of the cores, Tambora, Indonesia (1815), being the most prominent. Independent validation is provided by the tracing of isochronal layers from site to site using high-frequency ice-penetrating radar observations, and by the timing of mid-winter warming events in stable-isotope ratios, which demonstrate significantly better than 1 year accuracy in the last 20 years. Dating precision to 1 month is demonstrated by the occurrence of summer nitrate peaks and stable-isotope ratios in phase with nssSO(4)(2-), and winter-time sea-salt peaks out of phase, with phase variation of \u3c 1 month. Dating precision and accuracy are uniform with depth, for at least the last 100 years
Statistics of the gravitational force in various dimensions of space: from Gaussian to Levy laws
We discuss the distribution of the gravitational force created by a
Poissonian distribution of field sources (stars, galaxies,...) in different
dimensions of space d. In d=3, it is given by a Levy law called the Holtsmark
distribution. It presents an algebraic tail for large fluctuations due to the
contribution of the nearest neighbor. In d=2, it is given by a marginal
Gaussian distribution intermediate between Gaussian and Levy laws. In d=1, it
is exactly given by the Bernouilli distribution (for any particle number N)
which becomes Gaussian for N>>1. Therefore, the dimension d=2 is critical
regarding the statistics of the gravitational force. We generalize these
results for inhomogeneous systems with arbitrary power-law density profile and
arbitrary power-law force in a d-dimensional universe
Can forest management based on natural disturbances maintain ecological resilience?
Given the increasingly global stresses on forests, many ecologists argue that managers must maintain ecological resilience: the capacity of ecosystems to absorb disturbances without undergoing fundamental change. In this review we ask: Can the emerging paradigm of natural-disturbance-based management (NDBM) maintain ecological resilience in managed forests? Applying resilience theory requires careful articulation of the ecosystem state under consideration, the disturbances and stresses that affect the persistence of possible alternative states, and the spatial and temporal scales of management relevance. Implementing NDBM while maintaining resilience means recognizing that (i) biodiversity is important for long-term ecosystem persistence, (ii) natural disturbances play a critical role as a generator of structural and compositional heterogeneity at multiple scales, and (iii) traditional management tends to produce forests more homogeneous than those disturbed naturally and increases the likelihood of unexpected catastrophic change by constraining variation of key environmental processes. NDBM may maintain resilience if silvicultural strategies retain the structures and processes that perpetuate desired states while reducing those that enhance resilience of undesirable states. Such strategies require an understanding of harvesting impacts on slow ecosystem processes, such as seed-bank or nutrient dynamics, which in the long term can lead to ecological surprises by altering the forest's capacity to reorganize after disturbance
Measurement of the branching fraction
The branching fraction is measured in a data sample
corresponding to 0.41 of integrated luminosity collected with the LHCb
detector at the LHC. This channel is sensitive to the penguin contributions
affecting the sin2 measurement from The
time-integrated branching fraction is measured to be . This is the most precise measurement to
date
Model-independent search for CP violation in D0âKâK+ÏâÏ+ and D0âÏâÏ+Ï+Ïâ decays
A search for CP violation in the phase-space structures of D0 and View the MathML source decays to the final states KâK+ÏâÏ+ and ÏâÏ+Ï+Ïâ is presented. The search is carried out with a data set corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 1.0 fbâ1 collected in 2011 by the LHCb experiment in pp collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of 7 TeV. For the KâK+ÏâÏ+ final state, the four-body phase space is divided into 32 bins, each bin with approximately 1800 decays. The p-value under the hypothesis of no CP violation is 9.1%, and in no bin is a CP asymmetry greater than 6.5% observed. The phase space of the ÏâÏ+Ï+Ïâ final state is partitioned into 128 bins, each bin with approximately 2500 decays. The p-value under the hypothesis of no CP violation is 41%, and in no bin is a CP asymmetry greater than 5.5% observed. All results are consistent with the hypothesis of no CP violation at the current sensitivity
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