278 research outputs found

    Slope dependence of self-similar structure and entrainment in gravity currents

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    Results from seven direct and large-eddy simulations of gravity currents on slopes ranging from 0.14° to 2.86° that span from the subcritical to the supercritical regime are studied. By considering a long domain, attention is focused on the near-self-similar state approached by these currents far downstream. In the self-similar limit, the various shape factors, local Richardson number, entrainment coefficient, velocity scale and basal drag coefficient reach a constant value, while the current height, volume and momentum fluxes continue to increase linearly. Their dependence on slope is presented.Fil: Salinas, Jorge S.. University of Florida; Estados UnidosFil: Zúñiga, Santiago Luciano. Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica. Gerencia del Área de Energía Nuclear. Instituto Balseiro. Archivo Histórico del Centro Atómico Bariloche e Instituto Balseiro | Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. Instituto Balseiro. Archivo Histórico del Centro Atómico Bariloche e Instituto Balseiro; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Patagonia Norte; ArgentinaFil: Cantero, Mariano Ignacio. Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica. Gerencia del Área de Energía Nuclear. Instituto Balseiro. Archivo Histórico del Centro Atómico Bariloche e Instituto Balseiro | Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. Instituto Balseiro. Archivo Histórico del Centro Atómico Bariloche e Instituto Balseiro; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Patagonia Norte; ArgentinaFil: Shringarpure, M.. No especifíca;Fil: Fedele, J.. No especifíca;Fil: Hoyal, D.. No especifíca;Fil: Balachandar, S.. University of Florida; Estados Unido

    On the definition, evolution, and properties of the outer edge of gravity currents: A direct-numerical and large-eddy simulation study

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    Gravity currents are flows driven by the action of gravity over fluids with different densities. Here, we focus on gravity currents where heavier fluid travels along the bottom of a sloping bed, underneath a large body of stagnant lighter ambient fluid. The thickness of the current increases due to entrainment of ambient fluid into the current. Direct numerical and large eddy simulations of gravity currents and a wall-jet transporting a passive scalar field are performed. We focus on the rate of penetration of mean momentum and mean concentration of the agent responsible for the density difference (temperature, salinity, or sediment volume fraction) into the ambient fluid. The rates of penetration of turbulence-related quantities (i.e., turbulent kinetic energy, Reynolds flux, and stress) into the ambient are analyzed. A robust methodology for defining the upper edge of these quantities and thereby defining the current thickness using these different mean and turbulent quantities is presented. A comparison between downstream evolution of the gravity current with the corresponding behaviors of canonical wall-bounded turbulent flows is presented. The present understanding of turbulent/non-turbulent interface (TNTI) is extended to include subcritical flows where, due to the strong effect of stratification, the TNTI is buried well within the upper edge of the current and confined right above the inner near-bed layer. The present work sheds light on the striking difference between the different definitions of thickness (momentum, concentration, turbulence, etc.) in subcritical gravity currents, where stratification suppresses turbulence in the upper region of the current.Fil: Salinas, Jorge S.. University of Florida; Estados UnidosFil: Balachandar, S.. University of Florida; Estados UnidosFil: Zúñiga, Santiago Luciano. Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica. Centro Atómico Bariloche; Argentina. Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica. Gerencia del Área de Energía Nuclear. Instituto Balseiro; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Shringarpure, M.. No especifíca;Fil: Fedele, J.. No especifíca;Fil: Hoyal, D.. No especifíca;Fil: Cantero, Mariano Ignacio. Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica. Gerencia del Área de Energía Nuclear. Instituto Balseiro; Argentina. Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica. Centro Atómico Bariloche; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; Argentin

    Anatomy of subcritical submarine flows with a lutocline and an intermediate destruction layer

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    Turbidity currents are sediment-laden flows that travel over a sloping bed under a stagnant ambient fluid, driven by the density difference between the current and the ambient. Turbidity currents transport large amounts of carbon, nutrients and fresh water through oceans and play an important role in global geochemical cycling and seafloor ecosystems. Supercritical currents are observed in steeper slopes. Subcritical currents are observed in milder slopes, where the near-bed and interface layers are prevented from interacting across the velocity maximum. Past works show the existence of such a barrier to vertical momentum transfer is essential for the body of the subcritical current to extend over hundreds of kilometers in length without much increase in height. Here we observe the body of subcritical currents to have a three layer structure, where the turbulent near-bed layer and the non-turbulent interface layer are separated by an intermediate layer of negative turbulence production. We explain the mechanism by which this layer prevents the near-bed turbulent structures from penetrating into the interface layer by transferring energy back from turbulence to the mean flow.Fil: Salinas, Jorge Sebastián. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; Argentina. University of Florida; Estados UnidosFil: Balachandar, S.. University of Florida; Estados UnidosFil: Shringarpure, M.. No especifíca;Fil: Fedele, J.. No especifíca;Fil: Hoyal, D.. No especifíca;Fil: Zúñiga, Santiago Luciano. Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica. Gerencia del Área de Energía Nuclear. Instituto Balseiro. Archivo Histórico del Centro Atómico Bariloche e Instituto Balseiro | Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. Instituto Balseiro. Archivo Histórico del Centro Atómico Bariloche e Instituto Balseiro; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Patagonia Norte; ArgentinaFil: Cantero, Mariano Ignacio. Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica. Gerencia del Área de Energía Nuclear. Instituto Balseiro. Archivo Histórico del Centro Atómico Bariloche e Instituto Balseiro | Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. Instituto Balseiro. Archivo Histórico del Centro Atómico Bariloche e Instituto Balseiro; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Patagonia Norte; Argentin

    Sharing health-related data:A privacy test?

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    Greater sharing of potentially sensitive data raises important ethical, legal and social issues (ELSI), which risk hindering and even preventing useful data sharing if not properly addressed. One such important issue is respecting the privacy-related interests of individuals whose data are used in genomic research and clinical care. As part of the Global Alliance for Genomics and Health (GA4GH), we examined the ELSI status of health-related data that are typically considered ‘sensitive’ in international policy and data protection laws. We propose that ‘tiered protection’ of such data could be implemented in contexts such as that of the GA4GH Beacon Project to facilitate responsible data sharing. To this end, we discuss a Data Sharing Privacy Test developed to distinguish degrees of sensitivity within categories of data recognised as ‘sensitive’. Based on this, we propose guidance for determining the level of protection when sharing genomic and health-related data for the Beacon Project and in other international data sharing initiatives

    Molecular Mechanisms of Bortezomib Resistant Adenocarcinoma Cells

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    Bortezomib (Velcade™) is a reversible proteasome inhibitor that is approved for the treatment of multiple myeloma (MM). Despite its demonstrated clinical success, some patients are deprived of treatment due to primary refractoriness or development of resistance during therapy. To investigate the role of the duration of proteasome inhibition in the anti-tumor response of bortezomib, we established clonal isolates of HT-29 adenocarcinoma cells adapted to continuous exposure of bortezomib. These cells were ∼30-fold resistant to bortezomib. Two novel and distinct mutations in the β5 subunit, Cys63Phe, located distal to the binding site in a helix critical for drug binding, and Arg24Cys, found in the propeptide region were found in all resistant clones. The latter mutation is a natural variant found to be elevated in frequency in patients with MM. Proteasome activity and levels of both the constitutive and immunoproteasome were increased in resistant cells, which correlated to an increase in subunit gene expression. These changes correlated with a more rapid recovery of proteasome activity following brief exposure to bortezomib. Increased recovery rate was not due to increased proteasome turnover as similar findings were seen in cells co-treated with cycloheximide. When we exposed resistant cells to the irreversible proteasome inhibitor carfilzomib we noted a slower rate of recovery of proteasome activity as compared to bortezomib in both parental and resistant cells. Importantly, carfilzomib maintained its cytotoxic potential in the bortezomib resistant cell lines. Therefore, resistance to bortezomib, can be overcome with irreversible inhibitors, suggesting prolonged proteasome inhibition induces a more potent anti-tumor response

    CSMET: Comparative Genomic Motif Detection via Multi-Resolution Phylogenetic Shadowing

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    Functional turnover of transcription factor binding sites (TFBSs), such as whole-motif loss or gain, are common events during genome evolution. Conventional probabilistic phylogenetic shadowing methods model the evolution of genomes only at nucleotide level, and lack the ability to capture the evolutionary dynamics of functional turnover of aligned sequence entities. As a result, comparative genomic search of non-conserved motifs across evolutionarily related taxa remains a difficult challenge, especially in higher eukaryotes, where the cis-regulatory regions containing motifs can be long and divergent; existing methods rely heavily on specialized pattern-driven heuristic search or sampling algorithms, which can be difficult to generalize and hard to interpret based on phylogenetic principles. We propose a new method: Conditional Shadowing via Multi-resolution Evolutionary Trees, or CSMET, which uses a context-dependent probabilistic graphical model that allows aligned sites from different taxa in a multiple alignment to be modeled by either a background or an appropriate motif phylogeny conditioning on the functional specifications of each taxon. The functional specifications themselves are the output of a phylogeny which models the evolution not of individual nucleotides, but of the overall functionality (e.g., functional retention or loss) of the aligned sequence segments over lineages. Combining this method with a hidden Markov model that autocorrelates evolutionary rates on successive sites in the genome, CSMET offers a principled way to take into consideration lineage-specific evolution of TFBSs during motif detection, and a readily computable analytical form of the posterior distribution of motifs under TFBS turnover. On both simulated and real Drosophila cis-regulatory modules, CSMET outperforms other state-of-the-art comparative genomic motif finders

    Experimental safety testing confirms that the NSAID nimesulide is toxic to Gyps vultures in India

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    DATA AVAILABILITY : Data will be made available on request.Population declines of Gyps vultures throughout South Asia were caused by unintentional poisoning by the NSAID diclofenac, which was subsequently banned. However, other vulture-toxic NSAIDs are available, including nimesulide, which, in experiments carried out in South Africa, was shown to be toxic to Gyps vultures. We report on safety-testing of nimesulide carried out on Himalayan Griffons G. himalayensis. We gave two vultures a dose of nimesulide by oral gavage at the maximum level of exposure, with two controls dosed with benzyl alcohol. In the two tested birds, plasma nimesulide concentrations peaked after six hours, while serum uric acid concentrations increased steadily up until 24 h post-treatment, after which both birds died, displaying severe visceral gout. The control birds showed no adverse clinical or biochemical signs. We confirm that nimesulide is toxic to Gyps vultures. Veterinary use of nimesulide should be banned in all Gyps vulture range countries in the region.http://www.elsevier.com/locate/etapam2024Paraclinical SciencesSDG-03:Good heatlh and well-bein

    Factors influencing participation in controlled human infection models : a pooled analysis from six enteric fever studies [under peer review]

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    Background: Enteric fever is an acute febrile-illness caused by infection with the human-restricted Salmonella serovars Typhi and Paratyphi. Controlled human infection models (CHIM) of S. Typhi and Paratyphi infection are used to accelerate vaccine development and to better understand host-pathogen interactions. The primary motivations for participants to take part in these studies are unknown. We studied participant motivations, attitudes and the factors influencing CHIM study participation. Methods: Participant surveys were nested in six enteric fever CHIM studies conducted at a single centre in Oxford, UK, between 2011 and 2017. All eligible participants received one invitation to complete an anonymous, self-administered paper or online survey on either day 28 or 60 after challenge. A descriptive analysis was performed on these pooled data. All studies were included, to minimize selection bias. Results: Survey response rates varied from 33.0%-86.1%, yielding 201 participants. In the cohort, 113/198(57.0%) were educated to bachelor’s level, 61.6% were employed, 30.3% were students and 4.6% were unemployed. The most commonly cited motivations for CHIM study participation were a desire to contribute to the progression of medicine (170/201; 84.6%); the prospect of financial reimbursement (166/201; 82.6%) and curiosity about clinical trials (117/201; 57.2%). The majority of respondents (139/197; 70.6%) reported that most people advised them against participation. Conclusion: Motivation to participate in a CHIM study was multi-factorial and heavily influenced by internal drivers beyond monetary reimbursement alone. High educational attainment and employment may be protective factors against financial inducement; however, further research is needed, particularly with CHIM studies expanding to low-income and middle-income countries
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