314 research outputs found

    Strauss, antes de Liszt y Wagner: algunas observaciones

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    Es una traducción de: Larry Todd, R.: “Strauss before Liszt and Wagner: some observations”, en Richard Strauss: New Perspectives on the Composer and his World, ed. Bryan Gillian, Duke University Press, 1992, pp. 3-40.Jaime Fatás Cabeza (traductor).A principios de la década de 1880 la inspiración de Strauss proviene de la tradición alemana de la música absoluta, sin duda influenciado por las opiniones supremacistas de su padre, el trompista Franz Strauss, que favorece la tradición instrumental ejemplar del clasicismo vienés de compositores como Mendelssohn y Schumann frente a la música de Liszt y Wagner y las nuevas opiniones de los «Zukunftsmusiker», como Alexander Ritter. El impresionable joven Strauss se encontraba en una posición poco usual: dominaba la tradición instrumental alemana pero, ya a partir de 1885, empezaba a sentirse atraído por los ideales de la «Zukunftsmusik» y, siempre bajo la influencia del enigmático Ritter y después de estudiar los dramas musicales de Wagner, acabó por convencerse de que se podía justificar la música como una expresión de la voluntad, según los principios de Schopenhauer, y que el linaje del “Ausdruckmusiker” procedía de Beethoven, pasando por Liszt y Wagner. El desarrollo de Strauss durante esta época muestra también una influencia notable de Brahms. A pesar de una pasajera reacción negativa, Strauss acabaría por convertirse en un completo entusiasta. Quizá este profundo cambio se debió a la influencia del director Hans von Bülow, del cual Strauss fue ayudante. En su ensayo, Larry Todd aduce que, debido a estas circunstancias, la progresión de Strauss, de Mendelssohn y Schumann a Brahms, era casi inevitable, y que es muy probable que se viera reforzada gracias al contacto personal con Brahms. La “experiencia” Brahms representó más o menos la fase final del periodo estudiantil de Strauss y le permitió intensificar su dependencia en la tradición instrumental alemana; y, sin embargo, también le sirvió de estímulo para analizar esa dependencia

    Dynamic DNA cytosine methylation in the Populus trichocarpa genome: tissue-level variation and relationship to gene expression

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    This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by BioMed Central Ltd and can be found at: http://www.biomedcentral.com/.Background: DNA cytosine methylation is an epigenetic modification that has been implicated in many biological processes. However, large-scale epigenomic studies have been applied to very few plant species, and variability in methylation among specialized tissues and its relationship to gene expression is poorly understood. \ud \ud Results: We surveyed DNA methylation from seven distinct tissue types (vegetative bud, male inflorescence [catkin], female catkin, leaf, root, xylem, phloem) in the reference tree species black cottonwood (Populus trichocarpa). Using 5-methyl-cytosine DNA immunoprecipitation followed by Illumina sequencing (MeDIP-seq), we mapped a total of 129,360,151 36- or 32-mer reads to the P. trichocarpa reference genome. We validated MeDIP-seq results by bisulfite sequencing, and compared methylation and gene expression using published microarray data. Qualitative DNA methylation differences among tissues were obvious on a chromosome scale. Methylated genes had lower expression than unmethylated genes, but genes with methylation in transcribed regions ("gene body methylation") had even lower expression than genes with promoter methylation. Promoter methylation was more frequent than gene body methylation in all tissues except male catkins. Male catkins differed in demethylation of particular transposable element categories, in level of gene body methylation, and in expression range of genes with methylated transcribed regions. Tissue-specific gene expression patterns were correlated with both gene body and promoter methylation. \ud \ud Conclusions: We found striking differences among tissues in methylation, which were apparent at the chromosomal scale and when genes and transposable elements were examined. In contrast to other studies in plants, gene body methylation had a more repressive effect on transcription than promoter methylation

    Genome resequencing reveals multiscale geographic structure and extensive linkage disequilibrium in the forest tree Populus trichocarpa

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    This is the publisher’s final pdf. The article is copyrighted by the New Phytologist Trust and published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. It can be found at: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291469-8137. To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work.•Plant population genomics informs evolutionary biology, breeding, conservation and bioenergy feedstock development. For example, the detection of reliable phenotype–genotype associations and molecular signatures of selection requires a detailed knowledge about genome-wide patterns of allele frequency variation, linkage disequilibrium and recombination.\ud •We resequenced 16 genomes of the model tree Populus trichocarpa and genotyped 120 trees from 10 subpopulations using 29 213 single-nucleotide polymorphisms.\ud •Significant geographic differentiation was present at multiple spatial scales, and range-wide latitudinal allele frequency gradients were strikingly common across the genome. The decay of linkage disequilibrium with physical distance was slower than expected from previous studies in Populus, with r² dropping below 0.2 within 3–6 kb. Consistent with this, estimates of recent effective population size from linkage disequilibrium (N[subscript e] ≈ 4000–6000) were remarkably low relative to the large census sizes of P. trichocarpa stands. Fine-scale rates of recombination varied widely across the genome, but were largely predictable on the basis of DNA sequence and methylation features.\ud •Our results suggest that genetic drift has played a significant role in the recent evolutionary history of P. trichocarpa. Most importantly, the extensive linkage disequilibrium detected suggests that genome-wide association studies and genomic selection in undomesticated populations may be more feasible in Populus than previously assumed

    Rush to Judgment: The STI-Treatment Trials and HIV in Sub-Saharan Africa

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    Introduction: The extraordinarily high incidence of HIV in sub-Saharan Africa led to the search for cofactor infections that could explain the high rates of transmission in the region. Genital inflammation and lesions caused by sexually transmitted infections (STIs) were a probable mechanism, and numerous observational studies indicated several STI cofactors. Nine out of the ten randomized controlled trials (RCTs), however, failed to demonstrate that treating STIs could lower HIV incidence. We evaluate all 10 trials to determine if their design permits the conclusion, widely believed, that STI treatment is ineffective in reducing HIV incidence. Discussion: Examination of the trials reveals critical methodological problems sufficient to account for statistically insignificant outcomes in nine of the ten trials. Shortcomings of the trials include weak exposure contrast, confounding, non-differential misclassification, contamination and effect modification, all of which consistently bias the results toward the null. In any future STI-HIV trial, ethical considerations will again require weak exposure contrast. The complexity posed by HIV transmission in the genital microbial environment means that any future STI-HIV trial will face confounding, non-differential misclassification and effect modification. As a result, it is unlikely that additional trials would be able to answer the question of whether STI control reduces HIV incidence. Conclusions: Shortcomings in published RCTs render invalid the conclusion that treating STIs and other cofactor infections is ineffective in HIV prevention. Meta-analyses of observational studies conclude that STIs can raise HIV transmission efficiency two- to fourfold. Health policy is always implemented under uncertainty. Given the known benefits of STI control, the irreparable harm from not treating STIs and the likely decline in HIV incidence resulting from STI control, it is appropriate to expand STI control programmes and to use funds earmarked for HIV prevention to finance those programmes
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