10 research outputs found

    An overview of the ORACLES (ObseRvations of Aerosols above CLouds and their intEractionS) project: aerosol–cloud–radiation interactions in the southeast Atlantic basin

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    This is the final version. Available on open access from the European Geosciences Union via the DOI in this recordData availability: All ORACLES data are accessible via the digital object identifiers (DOIs) provided under ORACLES Science Team (2020a–d) references: https://doi.org/10.5067/Suborbital/ORACLES/P3/2018_V2 (ORACLES Science Team, 2020a), https://doi.org/10.5067/Suborbital/ORACLES/P3/2017_V2 (ORACLES Science Team, 2020b), https://doi.org/10.5067/Suborbital/ORACLES/P3/2016_V2 (ORACLES Science Team, 2020c), and https://doi.org/10.5067/Suborbital/ORACLES/ER2/2016_V2 (ORACLES Science Team, 2020d). The only exceptions are noted as footnotes to Table B2.Southern Africa produces almost a third of the Earth's biomass burning (BB) aerosol particles, yet the fate of these particles and their influence on regional and global climate is poorly understood. ORACLES (ObseRvations of Aerosols above CLouds and their intEractionS) is a 5-year NASA EVS-2 (Earth Venture Suborbital-2) investigation with three intensive observation periods designed to study key atmospheric processes that determine the climate impacts of these aerosols. During the Southern Hemisphere winter and spring (June–October), aerosol particles reaching 3–5 km in altitude are transported westward over the southeast Atlantic, where they interact with one of the largest subtropical stratocumulus (Sc) cloud decks in the world. The representation of these interactions in climate models remains highly uncertain in part due to a scarcity of observational constraints on aerosol and cloud properties, as well as due to the parameterized treatment of physical processes. Three ORACLES deployments by the NASA P-3 aircraft in September 2016, August 2017, and October 2018 (totaling ∼350 science flight hours), augmented by the deployment of the NASA ER-2 aircraft for remote sensing in September 2016 (totaling ∼100 science flight hours), were intended to help fill this observational gap. ORACLES focuses on three fundamental science themes centered on the climate effects of African BB aerosols: (a) direct aerosol radiative effects, (b) effects of aerosol absorption on atmospheric circulation and clouds, and (c) aerosol–cloud microphysical interactions. This paper summarizes the ORACLES science objectives, describes the project implementation, provides an overview of the flights and measurements in each deployment, and highlights the integrative modeling efforts from cloud to global scales to address science objectives. Significant new findings on the vertical structure of BB aerosol physical and chemical properties, chemical aging, cloud condensation nuclei, rain and precipitation statistics, and aerosol indirect effects are emphasized, but their detailed descriptions are the subject of separate publications. The main purpose of this paper is to familiarize the broader scientific community with the ORACLES project and the dataset it produced.NAS

    A Low-Frequency Inactivating Akt2 Variant Enriched in the Finnish Population is Associated With Fasting Insulin Levels and Type 2 Diabetes Risk

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    To identify novel coding association signals and facilitate characterization of mechanisms influencing glycemic traits and type 2 diabetes risk, we analyzed 109,215 variants derived from exome array genotyping together with an additional 390,225 variants from exome sequence in up to 39,339 normoglycemic individuals from five ancestry groups. We identified a novel association between the coding variant (p.Pro50Thr) in AKT2 and fasting insulin, a gene in which rare fully penetrant mutations are causal for monogenic glycemic disorders. The low-frequency allele is associated with a 12% increase in fasting plasma insulin (FI) levels. This variant is present at 1.1% frequency in Finns but virtually absent in individuals from other ancestries. Carriers of the FI-increasing allele had increased 2-hour insulin values, decreased insulin sensitivity, and increased risk of type 2 diabetes (odds ratio=1.05). In cellular studies, the AKT2-Thr50 protein exhibited a partial loss of function. We extend the allelic spectrum for coding variants in AKT2 associated with disorders of glucose homeostasis and demonstrate bidirectional effects of variants within the pleckstrin homology domain of AKT2.Academy of Finland (129293, 128315, 129330, 131593, 139635, 139635, 121584, 126925, 124282, 129378, 258753); Action on Hearing Loss (G51); Ahokas Foundation; American Diabetes Association (#7-12-MN-02); Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency; Augustinus foundation; Becket foundation; Benzon Foundation; Biomedical Research Council; British Heart Foundation (SP/04/002); Canada Foundation for Innovation; Commission of the European Communities, Directorate C-Public Health (2004310); Copenhagen County; Danish Centre for Evaluation and Health Technology Assessment; Danish Council for Independent Research; Danish Heart Foundation (07-10-R61-A1754-B838-22392F); Danish Medical Research Council; Danish Pharmaceutical Association; Emil Aaltonen Foundation; European Research Council Advanced Research Grant; European Union FP7 (EpiMigrant, 279143; FP7/2007-2013; 259749); Finland's Slottery Machine Association; Finnish Cultural Foundation; Finnish Diabetes Research Foundation; Finnish Foundation for Cardiovascular Research; Finnish Foundation of Cardiovascular Research; Finnish Medical Society; Finnish National Public Health Institute; Finska Läkaresällskapet; Folkhälsan Research Foundation; Foundation for Life and Health in Finland; German Center for Diabetes Research (DZD) ; German Federal Ministry of Education and Research; Health Care Centers in Vasa, Närpes and Korsholm; Health Insurance Foundation (2012B233) ; Helsinki University Central Hospital Research Foundation; Hospital districts of Pirkanmaa, Southern Ostrobothnia, North Ostrobothnia, Central Finland, and Northern Savo; Ib Henriksen foundation; Juho Vainio Foundation; Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (4845–301); Korea National Institute of Health (2012-N73002-00); Li Ka Shing Foundation; Liv och Hälsa; Lundbeck Foundation; Marie-Curie Fellowship (PIEF-GA-2012-329156); Medical Research Council (G0601261, G0900747-91070, G0601966, G0700931); Ministry of Education in Finland; Ministry of Social Affairs and Health in Finland; MRC-PHE Centre for Environment and Health;Municipal Heath Care Center and Hospital in Jakobstad; Närpes Health Care Foundation; National Institute for Health Research (RP-PG-0407-10371); National Institutes of Health (U01 DK085526, U01 DK085501, U01 DK085524, U01 DK085545, U01 DK085584, U01 DK088389, RC2-DK088389, DK085545, DK098032, HHSN268201300046C, HHSN268201300047C, HHSN268201300048C, HHSN268201300049C, HHSN, R01MH107666 and K12CA139160268201300050C, U01 DK062370, R01 DK066358, U01DK085501, R01HL102830, R01DK073541, PO1AG027734, R01AG046949, 1R01AG042188, P30AG038072, R01 MH101820, R01MH090937, P30DK020595, R01 DK078616, NIDDK K24 DK080140, 1RC2DK088389, T32GM007753); National Medical Research Council; National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF-2012R1A2A1A03006155); Nordic Center of Excellence in Disease Genetics; Novo Nordisk; Ollqvist Foundation; OrionFarmos Research Foundation; Paavo Nurmi Foundation; Perklén Foundation; Samfundet Folkhälsan; Signe and Ane Gyllenberg Foundation; Sigrid Juselius Foundation; Social Insurance Institution of Finland; South East Norway Health Authority (2011060); Swedish Cultural Foundation in Finland; Swedish Heart-Lung Foundation; Swedish Research Council; Swedish Research Council (Linné and Strategic Research Grant); The American Federation for Aging Research; The Einstein Glenn Center; The European Commission (HEALTH-F4-2007-201413); The Finnish Diabetes Association; The Folkhälsan Research Foundation; The Påhlssons Foundation; The provinces of Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick; The Sigrid Juselius Foundation; The Skåne Regional Health Authority; The Swedish Heart-Lung Foundation; Timber Merchant Vilhelm Bang’s Foundation; Turku University Foundation; Uppsala University; Wellcome Trust (064890, 083948, 085475, 086596, 090367, 090532, 092447, 095101/Z/10/Z, 200837/Z/16/Z, 095552, 098017, 098381, 098051, 084723, 072960/2/ 03/2, 086113/Z/08/Z, WT098017, WT064890, WT090532, WT098017, 098051, WT086596/Z/08/A and 086596/Z/08/Z). Detailed acknowledgment of funding sources is provided in the Additional Acknowledgements section of the Supplementary Materials

    An overview of the ORACLES (ObseRvations of Aerosols above CLouds and their intEractionS) project: aerosol-cloud-radiation interactions in the Southeast Atlantic basin

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    Southern Africa produces almost a third of the Earth’s biomass burning (BB) aerosol particles, yet the fate of these particles and their influence on regional and global climate is poorly understood. ORACLES (ObseRvations of Aerosols above CLouds and their intEractionS) is a five-year NASA EVS-2 (Earth Venture Suborbital-2) investigation with three Intensive Observation Periods designed to study key atmospheric processes that determine the climate impacts of these aerosols. During the Southern Hemisphere winter and spring (June-October), aerosol particles reaching 3–5 km in altitude are transported westward over the South-East Atlantic, where they interact with one of the largest subtropical stratocumulus subtropical stratocumulus (Sc) cloud decks in the world. The representation of these interactions in climate models remains highly uncertain in part due to a scarcity of observational constraints on aerosol and cloud properties, and due to the parameterized treatment of physical processes. Three ORACLES deployments by the NASA P-3 aircraft in September 2016, August 2017 and October 2018 (totaling ~350 science flight hours), augmented by the deployment of the NASA ER-2 aircraft for remote sensing in September 2016 (totaling ~100 science flight hours), were intended to help fill this observational gap. ORACLES focuses on three fundamental science questions centered on the climate effects of African BB aerosols: (a) direct aerosol radiative effects; (b) effects of aerosol absorption on atmospheric circulation and clouds; (c) aerosol-cloud microphysical interactions. This paper summarizes the ORACLES science objectives, describes the project implementation, provides an overview of the flights and measurements in each deployment, and highlights the integrative modeling efforts from cloud to global scales to address science objectives. Significant new findings on the vertical structure of BB aerosol physical and chemical properties, chemical aging, cloud condensation nuclei, rain and precipitation statistics, and aerosol indirect effects are emphasized, but their detailed descriptions are the subject of separate publications. The main purpose of this paper is to familiarize the broader scientific community with the ORACLES project and the data set it produced

    Identification and Functional Characterization of G6PC2 Coding Variants Influencing Glycemic Traits Define an Effector Transcript at the G6PC2-ABCB11 Locus

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    Erratum: Sequence data and association statistics from 12,940 type 2 diabetes cases and controls

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    This corrects the article DOI: 10.1038/sdata.2017.179

    Sequence data and association statistics from 12,940 type 2 diabetes cases and controls

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    To investigate the genetic basis of type 2 diabetes (T2D) to high resolution, the GoT2D and T2D-GENES consortia catalogued variation from whole-genome sequencing of 2,657 European individuals and exome sequencing of 12,940 individuals of multiple ancestries. Over 27M SNPs, indels, and structural variants were identified, including 99% of low-frequency (minor allele frequency [MAF] 0.1-5%) non-coding variants in the whole-genome sequenced individuals and 99.7% of low-frequency coding variants in the whole-exome sequenced individuals. Each variant was tested for association with T2D in the sequenced individuals, and, to increase power, most were tested in larger numbers of individuals (>80% of low-frequency coding variants in ~82 K Europeans via the exome chip, and ~90% of low-frequency non-coding variants in ~44 K Europeans via genotype imputation). The variants, genotypes, and association statistics from these analyses provide the largest reference to date of human genetic information relevant to T2D, for use in activities such as T2D-focused genotype imputation, functional characterization of variants or genes, and other novel analyses to detect associations between sequence variation and T2D

    Data Descriptor: Sequence data and association statistics from 12,940 type 2 diabetes cases and controls

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    The genetic architecture of type 2 diabetes.

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    The genetic architecture of common traits, including the number, frequency, and effect sizes of inherited variants that contribute to individual risk, has been long debated. Genome-wide association studies have identified scores of common variants associated with type 2 diabetes, but in aggregate, these explain only a fraction of the heritability of this disease. Here, to test the hypothesis that lower-frequency variants explain much of the remainder, the GoT2D and T2D-GENES consortia performed whole-genome sequencing in 2,657 European individuals with and without diabetes, and exome sequencing in 12,940 individuals from five ancestry groups. To increase statistical power, we expanded the sample size via genotyping and imputation in a further 111,548 subjects. Variants associated with type 2 diabetes after sequencing were overwhelmingly common and most fell within regions previously identified by genome-wide association studies. Comprehensive enumeration of sequence variation is necessary to identify functional alleles that provide important clues to disease pathophysiology, but large-scale sequencing does not support the idea that lower-frequency variants have a major role in predisposition to type 2 diabetes

    A low-frequency inactivating <em>AKT2 </em>variant enriched in the Finnish population is associated with fasting insulin levels and type 2 diabetes risk

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    The genetic architecture of type 2 diabetes

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